Nah, we used to pay somewhere between $20 and $50. Would never have gone if it was $100 back in the day.Hmm. Didn't it used to cost close to $100 per person to see a BBAU live eviction back in the glory days?
Nah, we used to pay somewhere between $20 and $50. Would never have gone if it was $100 back in the day.Hmm. Didn't it used to cost close to $100 per person to see a BBAU live eviction back in the glory days?
Didn't it used to cost close to $100 per person to see a BBAU live eviction back in the glory days?
The majority of people weren't paying that though. No matter where you sat, they were *all* decent with the exception of weather-affected seats. The amphitheatre really wasn't that big.View attachment 64872I was not far off, a decent BBAU live eviction ticket back in the glory days was about $100 in todays money.
so less than 10 bucks in todays money?The most expensive gold seats included a 1 day entry to Dreamworld in addition to attending a live eviction. General admission to Dreamworld at the time was $66 (adults). If you subtract that cost, then the eviction seat would have only cost $4. That is presuming the locals don't have an annual pass.
Dreamworld handled Big Brother show ticketing for some if not all of the original ten era. While I can't speak for other years, in 2008 tickets had to be collected in person at Dreamworld, so I suspect some of the ticket cost would have gone towards paying someone to staff the ticket collection location.Do other shows generally charge the audience or was Big Brother the exception with it being in a theme park?
Perhaps a small fee to help cover the cost of additional staff/security, at the end of the day they should be concerned with butts in seats not making money. If anything bring in a sponsor.I reckon just give tickets out for free, incentivise any kind of in-person engagement around the new series
To think the hype around BB back then was so massive they needed to warn people against trespassing/offensive signage.Dreamworld handled Big Brother show ticketing for some if not all of the original ten era. While I can't speak for other years, in 2008 tickets had to be collected in person at Dreamworld, so I suspect some of the ticket cost would have gone towards paying someone to staff the ticket collection location.
Looks like the process was the same in 2007 based on this random Flickr photo of someone's physical ticket:
2014 used ticketbooth for ticketing, which I believe emails you the actual ticket that you can print or show digitally (at least that's how it worked for a non-BB event). Not sure about 2012-2013.
Could even charge a donation from live eviction attendees and allow the winning housemate to direct raised funds to a charity of their choice.Perhaps a small fee to help cover the cost of additional staff/security, at the end of the day they should be concerned with butts in seats not making money. If anything bring in a sponsor.
Yes just too lazy to post about itAny updates on house location