Squadron Brings The Grammys to Senate Floor In Call to Fix Tix Law
June 8, 2017
Squadron Highlights Ticket Law Flaws With Grammy-Winning Songs Since '10
ALBANY – Today, State Senator Daniel Squadron cited lyrics from Grammy-winning tracks since 2010 on the Senate floor (video here), in opposition to extending of New York’s status-quo broken ticket reselling law. Squadron has pushed for reforms to the state’s broken ticket reselling law to prioritize fans above special interests since its first (and now annual) extension in 2010, including introducing the Fans Against Inflated Rates for Tickets (FAIR Tickets) Act (S.5178) earlier this session (one pager attached).
Squadron’s FAIR Tickets Act would: create a more transparent marketplace by requiring face values on tickets, clear information on the number of tickets available, pricing, and other policies, and identification of secondary sellers; establish a fairer process for fans by instituting a 48-hour “cooling off period” before resale is permitted, ending speculative sales, and requiring clearer fee-disclosure; as well as stop profiteering on free or charity event tickets.
Squadron has previously cited musicians including Kanye West, Jay-Z, and Bruce Springsteen, as well as the Broadway musical “Hamilton” (2014, 2015, 2016 floor speeches).
Squadron’s full floor speech is below:
Beginning in 2010, Albany began to extend this identical law that has benefitted brokers and special interests at the cost of fans. Here today, in 2017, the proposal is to do so yet again. That’s unacceptable. Waiting from 2010 to today to get a fair shot at fairly priced tickets, to protect artists, and give consumers information -- that's not acceptable. 2010 was a long time ago.
Back in 2010, Beyoncé's anthem for “Single Ladies” won a Grammy. To paraphrase Bey:
All the ticket brokers
(All the ticket brokers)
Now put your hands up
If you liked it cause you're profiteering on it
If you liked it cause you're profiteering on it
And you liked it cause you got cha-ching on it
If you liked it cause you're profiteering on it
In 2011, the Grammys gave Lady Gaga a Best Female Pop Vocal Performance award. Meanwhile, Albany was caught up in our own “Bad Romance”:
Ah-ah-Albany
Ah-ah-Albany
Caught in a bad romance
Ah-ah-Albany
Ah-ah-Albany
Caught in a bad romance
They take your tickets and
They need your resales
Alb-any could write a bad romance
They want your tickets
All the brokers resale
Lobby-ists could write a bad romance
Ah-ah-Albany
Caught in a bad romance
The following year (2012) brought us Adele's “Rolling in the Deep.” Of course, it did not bring us any reforms to New York’s ticket law:
There's a fire, starting for our fans
Reaching a fever pitch, and it's bringing fans out the dark
Finally, they can see you crystal clear
Go 'head and sell them out and they’ll lay your ship bare
Resellers have it all
Rolling in the cheap
They have Albany in thrall
Rolling in the deep
2013’s Grammys brought us Fun.’s “We Are Young.” The State Senate kept delivering Fun. for special interests over fans:
Toda-a-a-a--y
Law’s not you-ung
So let's set the law on fire
We can learn brighter, than this nu-uhne
In 2014, the Grammys honored Rihanna’s album “Unapologetic” featuring the great song “Diamonds.” The Senate delivered diamonds for deep money ticket resellers, not fans:
This time it’s gotta end
This time it’s gotta end
This time it’s gotta end
Horrible to pass one more time
2015 brought Pharrell Williams a Grammy -- Session ended with nothing for fans to be “Happy” about:
Fans unhappy
Vote a no if you feel it’s a law without a tooth
Fans unhappy
Vote a no if you feel like transparency is the truth
Fans unhappy
Vote a no if you know what happiness is to fans
Fans unhappy
Vote a no if you feel like that's what you wanna do
Last year we had promise -- Attorney General Schneiderman's issued his report, Governor promised a ticket reselling working group, and Senator Lanza put forward a bill that had significant reforms in it, and we beat back bots bipartisinally together. The Grammy’s awarded “Uptown Funk” by Mark Ronson and Bruno Mars. To fans, I sadly have a funky message from Albany:
'Cause Alb’ny funk gon' give it to you
Don't believe me just watch uh
Don't believe me just watch uh
Don't believe me just watch
Won’t fix it just botch
Hey, hey, hey, oh
This year’s choice is particularly fitting for any fan that feels like they’re talking into an abyss. The Grammys honored “Hello” by Adele:
Hello, it's me
I was wondering if after all these years you'd like to meet
To go over everything
They say that time's supposed to heal ya
But this law ain't done much healing
Hello, can you hear me?
I'm in NY Senate dreaming about what tix used to be
When we were younger
And free
I've forgotten how it felt before the world fell at lobbyists' feet
Hello from the other side
I must have spoke a thousand times
To tell you
I'm sorry
For everything that you’ve done
But when I call, you already seem to be spun
Hello from the outside
At least I can say that I've tried
To tell you
I'm sorry
You’re breaking fan’s hearts
But it don't matter
It clearly
Doesn't tear you apart
Anymore
Anymore
Next year the Grammys come back to New York after 15 years. Real progress on this law would be music to every fan’s ears, and something that we owe them. And if we do, I’ll never drop lyrics on the floor again.
I vote no.
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Squadron recently called for progress on fixing the law and a promised ticket reselling working group, along with musicians and managers. Previously, he has: pushed for oversight hearings on the law; worked with the Archdiocese of NY and Senator Schumer to denounce profiteering from the Pope’s New York visit; and urged ticket reselling websites to remove charity event profiteering event listings. Last year, Squadron was instrumental in the adoption of a law to crack down on illegal ticket purchasing “bots.”
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