Aloha !
Quote:
Originally Posted by rokenrola
Still,those countries are not big markets.Like I wrote,numbers between 30 000 and 40 000 are average.
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No, they're not. Again, you bring up incorrect information right after I post it and/or can't seem to take in information.
The number isn't between 30.000 and 40.000. It's between 40.000 and 45.000, putting the Netherlands into the same category like parts of Germany and the U.K. What you're essentially saying is Western Germany being a small market. It's not. There's a show there every tour because it's a big market. There's a steady amount of people going to see them and thus it provides steady income for both the band and the promoter. There's a history there, the market is reliable and thus several parties are willing to invest.
Quote:
Originally Posted by rokenrola
Better 2 shows in eastern europe than one in Belgium or Holland,no matter of price of tickets because they got money beside money from sold tickets.
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Yes, it's the total gross. 30.000 tickets sold in Belgium in 2011 meant a total gross of 2.7 million earned while 35.000 tickets sold in Croatia in the same year meant a total gross of 2.3 million. So without selling those 5.000 tickets they still manage to make 500.000 more. So why bother touring Eastern Europe when you can make the same money by selling fewer tickets?
Quote:
Originally Posted by rokenrola
Then they rarely play both countries since 1995 and skip one or onother from tour to tour. On BWC tour they didnt even visited those two,so to call them big markets for BJ is nonsense.
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Rarely play those countries? Bon Jovi have skipped Holland once and Belgium twice. Holland was skipped on the 2013 tour and Belgium was skipped on the 2013 tour. How is that rarely playing both countries? Bon Jovi seem to skip Glasgow for the first time this tour but Scotland is a big market still.
I've no idea why this is so hard for you to understand.
Salaam Aleikum,
Sebastiaan