Funflation: Concert ticket prices have soared, but music fans don’t seem to care
Featured In, Interviews Andrew Mall Featured In, Interviews Andrew Mall

Funflation: Concert ticket prices have soared, but music fans don’t seem to care

CNBC (2025). 2025 promises to be another big year for live music events. That may also mean concertgoers will be shelling out more for their favorite shows. After rising steadily post-pandemic, admission to movies, theaters and concerts jumped 20% since 2021, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ consumer price index data. And yet, consumers have demonstrated a high tolerance for the increasing price tag, also known as “funflation.”

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“Dynamic pricing” was a top contender for word of the year. Here’s why it got consumers so worked up in 2024
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“Dynamic pricing” was a top contender for word of the year. Here’s why it got consumers so worked up in 2024

CNBC (2024). “Dynamic pricing” made Oxford University Press’ shortlist for the word of the year in 2024. Although the practice has been around for years, a recent surge in demand for sought-after concert tickets, such as Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour, brought dynamic pricing back into the spotlight.

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Could Fyre Festival happen again? Billy McFarland thinks so, but experts have their doubts
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Could Fyre Festival happen again? Billy McFarland thinks so, but experts have their doubts

Northeastern Global News (2024). The disgraced founder behind the original Fyre Festival is out of prison and announced his plans to run a second iteration of the failed music festival in April 2025. His intentions to bring back the festival, which led to him doing jail time for wire fraud charges, was shocking to people in the music world.

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Unpacking the magic of music festivals
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Unpacking the magic of music festivals

1A/NPR (2024). Some of music’s most legendary moments didn’t happen in our nation’s storied venues or theaters, but outside, in front of the roaring crowds at music festivals. And festivals have brought the fire for decades. Jimi Hendrix famously performed the Star Spangled Banner in front of 200,000 people at Woodstock in 1969. Half a century later, music festivals big and small attract millions of Americans each year. What keeps people coming back and how do organizers keep so many music fans safe?

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Music Festival Chaos: Inside the Deadly Risks at Concerts
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Music Festival Chaos: Inside the Deadly Risks at Concerts

Newsweek (2024). Music festivals like AstroWorld, Route 91 in Las Vegas, and Woodstock '99 have turned from parties to tragedies over the years, raising serious concerns about safety and security. These deadly stampedes, shootings, and riots, leave festival goers continuing to question if there are enough safety measures in place to protect attendees.

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Young Thug—and his rap lyrics—are on trial. Northeastern experts say the case raises legal and ethical concerns
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Young Thug—and his rap lyrics—are on trial. Northeastern experts say the case raises legal and ethical concerns

Northeastern Global News (2024). The trial of Jeffery Lamar Williams, better known as Young Thug, has made headlines not just because the defendant is a celebrity rapper. It is already the longest trial in Georgia history, with no end in sight. But Northeastern University law and music experts say the case also raises legal and ethical concerns based on the prosecution’s use of the state’s RICO Act, as well as its strategy of using the defendant’s rap lyrics to implicate him in an alleged crime.

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How can you stay safe during a music festival?
Featured In, Interviews Andrew Mall Featured In, Interviews Andrew Mall

How can you stay safe during a music festival?

Northeastern Global News (2024). Safety has always been an issue when it comes to music performances, according to Andrew Mall, an associate music professor at Northeastern University. Whether it be an outdoor concert, a traveling event like Lilith Fair in the ’90s, or the destination festivals of today, organizers have had to contend with issues like crowd crush, equipment collapse, fires, interpersonal violence and shootings.

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Musi, a new, free music streaming app, begs the question: Can anything compete with Spotify?
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Musi, a new, free music streaming app, begs the question: Can anything compete with Spotify?

Northeastern Global News (2024). A new music streaming service –– Musi –– is turning heads with its free, silent ad-based platform that runs on audio from millions and millions of YouTube videos. Musi isn’t like major streamers like Spotify or Apple Music, but its entry into the streaming wars begs the question: Can anything compete with the likes of Spotify, or is the music streaming landscape set in stone?

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Taylor Swift keeps releasing different vinyl editions of “The Tortured Poets Department.” Is this wasteful?
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Taylor Swift keeps releasing different vinyl editions of “The Tortured Poets Department.” Is this wasteful?

Northeastern Global News (2024). Billie Eilish recently called out artists who make multiple variants of the same vinyl like Swift does. But Swift is not the first artist to do this, said Andrew Mall, an associate music professor at Northeastern University. Swift is part of a larger trend of those “gamifying” vinyl collecting, where consumers will buy every variant of a record — whether they offer a different cover, record color, or bonus tracks — in order to complete their collection.

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Songs by Taylor Swift, Drake and more are starting to disappear from TikTok. Here’s why

Associated Press (2024). TikTok may look (or sound) a little different when you scroll through the app going forward. Earlier this week, Universal Music Group — which represents big-name artists like Taylor Swift, Bad Bunny and Drake — said that it would no longer allow its music on TikTok following the Wednesday expiration of a licensing deal between the two companies. Avid TikTokers are already seeing the effects. Here’s a rundown of where things stand.

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