So Piet says that the FF isn't a good place for a comedy show and I get it. But no big arena is a good place for a comedy show. As for ticket sales, Hart has been here a lot and I think his star has faded somewhat. I know personally I like his older material to his new stuff. I think sometimes once a comic makes it big they spend less time developing funny stuff.
The venue is still dazzling, the staff remains large and friendly. But those inviting social gathering places in the concourse frequently killed the comedy, where silence at times is golden — and crucial.
I sat in Section 117, pretty close to the floor, and again and again loud chatter and laughter from people hanging in the hallway intruded on Hart's setups and punchlines. It was extremely distracting, and at times, irritating.
Also noticeable Thursday: Despite the distinction of being the second show ever at Fiserv Forum, ticket sales were significantly softer for Hart compared with his last Milwaukee appearances.
Three years ago, he sold 15,000 tickets for six shows at the Riverside Theater. On Thursday, several upper-bowl sections where seats had been sold were curtained off. Those ticketholders were relocated to the lower bowl, but still there were several largely empty rows all around the arena.
Fiserv Forum had its first noticeable customer-service blunder Thursday. I had a ticket for a seat in section 222 — a section I later learned was one of the ones curtained off. But no one told me that as I showed security my ticket, and there weren't any signs about it anywhere, or any staff members in the upper concourse telling ticketholders about the change. Instead, I stumbled upon a long line of people leading to a lone table where only two employees were handing out new tickets.
At the first Fiserv Forum show with the Killers last week, one key issue was the unreliable WiFi connection inside the arena's seating bowl. There was no way to see if that had been improved Thursday: There were "no phones allowed" signs everywhere, tons of "cellphone security" personnel walked between the aisles like prison guards, and Wells repeatedly mentioned the no-phone policy during his routine, warning that people would be ejected. Curiously, the video screens above the in-the-round stage promoted the social media handles for the opening comics — although I'm not sure how people were going to start following them on Twitter and Instagram if they couldn't have their phones out.
I'm against picketing but I don't know how to show it.