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May 24, 2010 |
| Far From Heaven |
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Posted by Jim Lichtman | What do you think?
From the category: If you live long enough…
The New York Times reports (May 21) that the appearance of the Dalai Lama at Radio City Music Hall “has inspired a certain chant on the Avenue of the Americas…
‘Tickets for the Dalai Lama, TICKETS…’”
New York’s famed theater has long been considered the gold standard for world class events (if you count the Grammys and Tonys; and don’t count the MTV Awards and Daytime Emmys.) So, when His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama, Tibet’s spiritual and exiled leader, scheduled a special 4-day seminar last week, it would not be surprising to find followers flocking to fill the 5,933 seat theater, right? Little did anyone realize that interest in the Dalai Lama’s spiritual teachings would inspire a different kind of interest – ticket scalpers.
“[Scalper] Richie,” the Times reports, “was standing a bit down the avenue, smoking Newports and haggling over prices with a Tibetan immigrant.
“‘I’m selling world peace here, and this guy’s nickel-and-diming me,’ Richie yelled, prompting a laugh from a Tibetan importer from Jackson Heights, Queens.”
Last week, New York State’s “legalized-scalping law” expired, meaning that it is illegal to resell tickets for more than $2.00 above face value, and to sell those tickets within 1,500 feet of the event site. Apparently, scalpers for the Dalai Lama event didn’t get the memo and were out in force even though ticket buyers were not all that prevalent.
“It’s a bomb,” one scalper said. “Last year at the Hammerstein Ballroom, we were getting $150 a seat.” However, all may not be lost. “Today’s a bomb,” the man continued, “but Sunday,” when the Dalai Lama gives a talk targeting the lay public “could be off the wall.”
And what does His Holiness have to say about all this commerce?
From his book, Ethics for the New Millennium, he writes, “So far as the application of economic policy is concerned, the same considerations apply here as to every human activity. A sense of universal responsibility is crucial. I must admit, however, that I find it a bit difficult to make practical suggestions about the application of spiritual values in the field of commerce. This is because competition has such an important role to play. For this reason, the relationship between empathy and profit is necessarily a fragile one.”
Fragile, indeed.
“It’s difficult to bargain with Dalai Lama fans,” Richie said. “They’re always looking for cheap seats. Go across street,” Richie said to one non-English speaking patron. “See guy leaning against pole? Ask him, cheap tickets. I no have.”
“I saw tickets advertised on Craigslist for up to $500 apiece,” Michelle Bongiorno said, “but that’s totally contrary to his teachings. There’s an integrity I try to follow. If it’s meant to be, I’ll buy a ticket, but I want to pay the fair value, even if that means I don’t get a ticket. It’s more important to me to live his teachings than to hear his teachings.”
And what was the topic of Sunday’s talk: “Awakening the Heart of Selflessness.”
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Comments by Julian, California, May 25, 2010
Ah yes, the Dalai Lama holds a meeting and our old companion, Profit Motive, sells the seats. Well, the major world religions have been doing it for a few thousand years, so there's nothing new under the sun.
Our local temples of Catholic Spanish greed for gold (Presidio and Mission) remind me of that daily. The Pope has been scalping tickets for release of transgressions and entrance into Heaven for generations. The Hindus, Buddhists, Mormons, and fundamentalist Christian performance artists, and all the rest have their own way of scalping tickets for attendance to their temple shows while they build their empires of feigned salvation.
And we have our religious variants for additional salvation and happiness: our advertising, stock market, casino, sex and drug (pharma and illegal) industries; our government industries of lawyers, accountants and elected representatives; our prison, IRS, Federal Reserve and Pentagon industries; our education industries. They have a ll become scalpers on the streets of our lives. Yes, they started out with noble intent to aright wrongs and generate freedom and justice for all. However, they become famous and draw large crowds where the scalpers get to sell their admission fees. Ha! Delightful. Ethics is relegated to university term papers.
Comments by Tanya, Pennsylvania, May 24, 2010
Scalping tickets to see a spiritual leader? Irony is powerful!
Comments by Karen, California, May 24, 2010
I shook my head and just said to myself…we are a lazy, greedy society, unfortunate, but true. I agree, I’d rather “live” his teachings then get in all that mess.
Comments by Cynthia, California, May 24, 2010
Very good. I like the "fragile" wording.
Comments by Richard, California, May 24, 2010
Not easy trying to encourage selflessness in the Capital of Self. I remember hearing about another sage who was always suggesting that people should be kind, loving and charitable, giving away all they can to those who need more. Later, a lot of scalpers of a different cloth are making mega money selling that guy's message. He said he'd be right back, but that was quite a while ago.
Comments by Clark, California, May 23, 2010
That hits the nail on the head -- scalping to sell a message of selflessness!
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