@apricotd12 From what I’ve read so far: the MSG prices were really bad because Harry agreed to do dynamic pricing, which is demand-based, and Harry is one of the most on-demand artists right now (just to show numbers: Harry released 1 single with not too much promo and gained around 10million more monthly listeners on spotify. Louis, who is still a succesful artist, gained 1 million monthly listeners after his album release, 3 singles release and months of heavy-duty promo). More than 10 million people registered for pre-sale for MSG, while the whole 30-performances resindency can house only ~600k people. That’s crazy! So yeah, that means: the more people are looking at a ticket, the more that ticket will cost, and that’s how you end up buying an 1000$ nosebleed ticket, while at face value pricing it would be, like, 200$. BUT in Harry’s case, people are buying the expensive tickets as well… So why should he sell his tickets for 200$, when he can sell them for 1000$ and he’ll still sell all his shows out. It’s a business decision, and Harry is a smart business man. He did nothing wrong legally. But. Selling out all the MSG dates at face value would be crazy profit too! Because this way mostly rich people can afford to see Harry live, and a very large portion of his fanbase can’t affordt to ever see him live, because he only caters to the elite. So that’s why they criticize him. He has every right to do this, and he doesn’t owe anyone any explanation, and he doesn’t have to change anything. But at the same time, the critics’ opinions can also be valid. That’s my two cents :D