Ben Cummins of Baltimore purchased two Nintendo Wii game consoles during pre-Christmas shopping: one to give his 7-year-old daughter, Lauren, the other to trade for two tickets to Tuesday's Miley Cyrus/Hannah Montana concert at 1st Mariner Arena.
Cummins, who last week had yet to tell Lauren that he was trying to secure tickets for her and her mom, wasn't picky about seating for the eagerly anticipated concert. "I'm just trying to get them in the building," he said. Yet since he advertised the console-for-concert trade on Craigslist on Dec. 20, he's had no takers.
That's probably because Cummins is in a saturated market for Hannah Montana concert ticket bartering, being one of three local Wii owners who offered to give up the console for tickets on Craigslist. Others offered to exchange gold or silver, two round-trip AirTran tickets, two seats to the Duke-Maryland basketball game and tickets to the Washington Redskins-Dallas Cowboys game.
Hannah Montana fever is gripping Charm City as it has much of the nation. Parents of teens, tweens and preschoolers who don't have tickets are scrambling to get them, some willing to fork over thousands of dollars. Those fortunate to have secured a seat are the talk of their schools; they're eagerly awaiting the arrival of teen sensation Miley Cyrus, star of the popular Disney Channel Original Series, Hannah Montana, in a concert that sold out nationwide in minutes.
The Best of Both Worlds concert culminates the skyrocketing stardom of 15-year-old Miley, the daughter of country music star Billy Ray Cyrus.
Her popularity all but assured hoopla for her concerts, where tickets have gone for as much as $2,500 each, outselling the likes of Bruce Springsteen and the Eagles. The tour began in October in St. Louis and is slated to run until Jan. 31, for a total of 69 dates. The show also features the popular teen group the Jonas Brothers as the opening act.
That quest for tickets, meanwhile, continues. 1st Mariner Arena general manager Frank Remesch said that those who keep searching for face-value tickets until the last minute might be in luck.
He said that historically seats often open after the setup crew decides to change the concert's configuration for sighting purposes. That means seating areas that had been cordoned off could become available. Such seats, he said, would be sold at face value.