nm wrote: » The residents are to blame, selfish, tunnel vision, no regard for 160,000 other people or the damage they're doing to stop a few people walking on "their" street
Steven71 wrote: » To be fair though once I bought the tickets, like many others would just "assume". Tickets are in my hand, why would I think there is no actual gig? Make sense? I understand what you are getting at though.
munstermagic11 wrote: » And I thnk it's very understandable that you and others would think this. But it was the promoters who failed to inform people. They knew about the Croker/residents issue, and must have known that objections would be raised. And, as proven by the DCC decision, that it was unlikely to result in less than the 5 concerts going ahead.
hynesie08 wrote: » I don't mean to come across harsh, but I would be shocked if someone had the capabilities to book a flight, hotel, transport etc and didn't at least type Garth brooks Dublin into google and at least factored it into their decision.
DrPhilG wrote: » You may hope that the person you bought them from is an honest and kind hearted person. Otherwise you're buggered. How much did you pay?
Steven71 wrote: » Exactly, maybe with this mess it won't happen again.....
nm wrote: » Never in my life would googling the actions of a few local lunatics around the stadium come into my train of thought when buying tickets. The idea that 350 people moaning could stop 160,000 and several millions of euros coming to use a stadium is absurd. No one would anticipate to check something like that by default. It's a hugely unusual situation.
HardLuckWoman wrote: » Court injunction. They didnt have to wait for DCC decision. They wanted to hang croke park and the gaa. And drag down 400000 drunken fools. Like we're all drink and cause havoc. Stop pretending you're sympathic to the fans here and head on over to the after hours thread.
ghostdancer wrote: » well to be fair, the "agreement" doesn't really mean anything. it's an An Bord Pleanala decision for there to be 3 special events per year. the GAA and any "agreement" with the residents is basically just some courtesy which isn't legally binding.
Steven71 wrote: » From what I can understand though, surely this should have been sorted before tickets were released? I'm actually blaming promoters and Croke Park as they must have known about the restrictions.
HardLuckWoman wrote: » The local mafias threathed legal action as soon as tickets went on sale. Why didnt they just go for it. It would have left Aiken plenty of time to sort things. They dragged it out just as much.
Steven71 wrote: » Lol, I've seen "subject to license" on my outdoor concert tickets, just automatically thought all that would have been sorted BEFORE the tickets went on sale.
hynesie08 wrote: » A court injunction against what though? How can you get something stopped that legally doesn't exist! They'd be laughed outta court if they tried that.
Jamsiek wrote: » They did nothing wrong
salmocab wrote: » When did Aiken apply for the license?
Aiken wrote: In the case of the Garth Brooks event Aiken Promotions submitted the licence application on 17 April 2014
homerjk wrote: » Why do people keep ignoring the fact that it is Gareth Brooks who is stopping 400,000 drunken fools. The council only stopped 160,000. So Gareth is the one f**king over the other 240,000. Am I missing something here?
HardLuckWoman wrote: » I dont know. Ask the croke park mafia residents. They were threatening crap for months. They did not have to wait for DCC decision to seek an injunction, apparently. Mentioned in some article last week. They dragged dragged it out just as much.
nm wrote: » It's only 5 nights.
nm wrote: » Do you have it in you to admit that if you were one of the 70k travelling from overseas for this, or one of the 160,000 with a ticket for it, how the actions of these residents might be considered just a little selfish? Aikens may have done wrong but they didn't stop the gig. It's only 5 nights. It's 160,000 people put out and having to cancel their plans.
mikom wrote: » On top of 3 nights for "One Direction" plus the clatter of GAA matches.