SteveGrenard
Philosopher
- Joined
- Oct 6, 2002
- Messages
- 5,528
Question:I'll accept that nobody IS required to return it in advance of the taping date but this doesn't mean they don't. Does the distribution to the ticket holders include a return address? Does it include a return envelope even, possibly a pre-paid postage one?
Reply: No return reply envelope. Nothing like that. Specific instructions require it be handed in at the door. You can't get in, as someone else said, without it. They do not require or ask for them in advance and you can't return them in advance. If you happen to do so you won't have it at the door and won't get in
unless you make a big deal out of it somehow. The instriction is explicit: bring the guest letter and agreement with you and hand them in at the door.
Question: Which makes your assumptions above, coupled with Claus's comments, all the more unlikely.
Reply: I agree that up to two hours elapses from the time the first one is handed in and the taping begins. I also never said it was not impossible to research some of these names during this time frame.
Question:Why do they send them out in advance? Somewhat dodgy.
Reply: Its quite the opposite of dodgy. It allows all who mght attend to see the agreement in advance, at their leisure, consult a lawyer (LOL) if they want to and decide whether they want to sign and go or not. Not dodgy at all, but the epitomy of extreme courtesy.
Its very amusing to see these arguments ... one arguing you dont see it until the front door of the studio (wrong) and the other saying it is dodgy to send it out in advance so people can read it. All 4 agreements (ticket holder and 3 guests) go to the ticketholder who then distributes them to the three guests.
In advance. Not dodgy.
I agree, that not all ticketholders bring unrelated or even related guests and that the stats of unknowns may be reduced for some groups, in fact even to 0% when no guests are brought.
However, on average they get a full house, and a full house translates to 200 people, 50 of whom (25%) are ticketholders and 150 of whom (75%) are unidentified guests of the ticketholder until 2 hrs or less before taping starts. I have yet to see a new gallery venue with many or any empty seats. Of course the empty seats can be edited out of the shot. Right?
I dont think there is any way to know if the person JE reads is a previouly identified ticketholder or one of the unknown invited guests except when such a guest brings this up in follow-up and they often do. It happens ..... but there is no way to base a statistical analysis of how often based on what we see of this.
Reply: No return reply envelope. Nothing like that. Specific instructions require it be handed in at the door. You can't get in, as someone else said, without it. They do not require or ask for them in advance and you can't return them in advance. If you happen to do so you won't have it at the door and won't get in
unless you make a big deal out of it somehow. The instriction is explicit: bring the guest letter and agreement with you and hand them in at the door.
Question: Which makes your assumptions above, coupled with Claus's comments, all the more unlikely.
Reply: I agree that up to two hours elapses from the time the first one is handed in and the taping begins. I also never said it was not impossible to research some of these names during this time frame.
Question:Why do they send them out in advance? Somewhat dodgy.
Reply: Its quite the opposite of dodgy. It allows all who mght attend to see the agreement in advance, at their leisure, consult a lawyer (LOL) if they want to and decide whether they want to sign and go or not. Not dodgy at all, but the epitomy of extreme courtesy.
Its very amusing to see these arguments ... one arguing you dont see it until the front door of the studio (wrong) and the other saying it is dodgy to send it out in advance so people can read it. All 4 agreements (ticket holder and 3 guests) go to the ticketholder who then distributes them to the three guests.
In advance. Not dodgy.
I agree, that not all ticketholders bring unrelated or even related guests and that the stats of unknowns may be reduced for some groups, in fact even to 0% when no guests are brought.
However, on average they get a full house, and a full house translates to 200 people, 50 of whom (25%) are ticketholders and 150 of whom (75%) are unidentified guests of the ticketholder until 2 hrs or less before taping starts. I have yet to see a new gallery venue with many or any empty seats. Of course the empty seats can be edited out of the shot. Right?
I dont think there is any way to know if the person JE reads is a previouly identified ticketholder or one of the unknown invited guests except when such a guest brings this up in follow-up and they often do. It happens ..... but there is no way to base a statistical analysis of how often based on what we see of this.