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TAMPA BAY VENUE OWNER TAKES FIGHT VS. LIVE NATION, TICKETMASTER TO CONGRESS

For nearly two decades, Crowbar has been one of the beating hearts of Tampa Bay’s live music scene — a gritty, independent venue where countless local bands and touring acts found their audience before moving on to bigger stages.

Now, its owner, Tom DeGeorge, is taking his fight from Ybor City all the way to Capitol Hill.

DeGeorge testified this week before members of Congress during a bipartisan spotlight forum examining what critics call the Live Nation-Ticketmaster monopoly and its stranglehold over the live entertainment industry. The hearing focused on accusations that the entertainment giant has used its massive control over venues, promotions, artist management and ticketing to crush competition while driving up prices for fans.

The Tampa venue owner didn’t hold back.

According to reports from the hearing, DeGeorge described how independent venues like Crowbar are slowly being squeezed out by corporations capable of losing money on shows because they profit from virtually every other corner of the business — from ticket fees to parking to concessions.

“Live Nation can overbid, lose money on shows, and absorb it all because they make billions through Ticketmaster and every other part of this industry that they have their hands in,” DeGeorge testified. “There is no level playing field with the monopoly.”

The timing of his testimony is especially emotional for Tampa’s music community. After 20 years in Ybor City, Crowbar is preparing to close its doors later this summer — a loss many local music fans see as symbolic of what is happening to independent venues nationwide.

DeGeorge also warned lawmakers that the problem extends far beyond ticket fees. He argued that Live Nation’s dominance over tours, venues and promotions creates an ecosystem where artists, managers and even venues fear retaliation if they speak out publicly.

At the hearing, DeGeorge proposed what he called a “50% tour cap,” requiring major tours to open at least half their dates to independent promoters and venues instead of funneling business almost exclusively through Live Nation-controlled channels. He also supported calls for the breakup of Live Nation and Ticketmaster altogether.

The congressional forum comes just weeks after a federal jury found that Live Nation and Ticketmaster had illegally monopolized parts of the live entertainment industry, intensifying national scrutiny over the company’s practices.

For Tampa Bay music fans, DeGeorge’s appearance in Washington represented more than just a policy debate. It was the voice of the independent music scene fighting for survival.

And for many who spent years packed inside Crowbar’s sweaty concert room discovering their next favorite band, it may also have been a final stand for the kind of small, authentic venues that helped build live music culture long before corporate giants took center stage.

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