MIChessGuy
(Almost) Too Old for Roller Coasters
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2008
- Messages
- 1,375
I showed up at Islands of Adventure this morning with the 2-day/2-park ticket that I purchased last April using a Ticketmaster discount code (now expired, btw). I had seen various posts here to the effect that these tickets might have expired on December 31. The turnstile ticket scanner could not scan the ticket; then the team member tried and failed to scan the ticket herself. Finally, she helpfully informed me that my fingerprint was not scanning either. I have always had trouble with the fingerprint thing, so I knew that was coming, but I had hoped the ticket would be kosher.
Anyhoo, at this point I expected to hear a speech along the lines of, "Please take the ticket to Customer Service, tell them when you bought it," etc. etc. Nope. She asked me to sign the ticket, which seemed kinda pointless, but I signed it, and that was it. I was then admitted to the park. Later in the day, when I hopped over to Universal Studios, I went through a similar rigmarole and was likewise let in regardless.
I am still not sure exactly what was going on with the ticket. Was the scanner just having a problem that day with Ticketmaster-generated barcodes? Was the ticket actually expired, but the scanner couldn't tell? Why were they so uninterested in challenging an apparently invalid ticket? Pretty strange. And like all prior visits, all around me I saw people struggling to get their fingerprints read correctly, being told to take their finger off, put their finger back on, press harder, no that's too much, don't press that hard, blah blah. The whole thing looked like some kind of 21st century Abbott and Costello routine.
And there you have it.
Anyhoo, at this point I expected to hear a speech along the lines of, "Please take the ticket to Customer Service, tell them when you bought it," etc. etc. Nope. She asked me to sign the ticket, which seemed kinda pointless, but I signed it, and that was it. I was then admitted to the park. Later in the day, when I hopped over to Universal Studios, I went through a similar rigmarole and was likewise let in regardless.
I am still not sure exactly what was going on with the ticket. Was the scanner just having a problem that day with Ticketmaster-generated barcodes? Was the ticket actually expired, but the scanner couldn't tell? Why were they so uninterested in challenging an apparently invalid ticket? Pretty strange. And like all prior visits, all around me I saw people struggling to get their fingerprints read correctly, being told to take their finger off, put their finger back on, press harder, no that's too much, don't press that hard, blah blah. The whole thing looked like some kind of 21st century Abbott and Costello routine.
And there you have it.
