Sick of looking up concerts online only to find they’re (supposedly) “sold out”?

After one YouTuber visited Ticketmaster on an ill-fated quest to find seats for a Twenty One Pilots gig, he decided to document the Sisyphean task of finding regularly priced tickets online for, well, pretty much any upcoming show featuring a mainstream artist.

Revisiting this failed attempt to see Twenty One Pilots, the Now and Because YouTube channel takes viewers through the arduous process of what modern music fans have to endure when they find that a show on Ticketmaster is “sold out.”

After seeing the show had “not many [seats] left,” the video’s frustrated narrator gives an optimistic click on Ticketmaster’s “Find Seats for Me” button.

“No tickets!” he exclaims. “I thought there was ‘not many left’? I guess there’s none at all. Hmm, that’s interesting.”

He then proceeds to exit the site and poke around Google for other sources of tickets.

Surprise, surprise: StubHub has the hook-up—and not just for a few tickets from individual fans who couldn’t make the show.

“Wait, what the fuck?” the vlogger says. “There’s literally tickets in every section available? Hundreds of fucking tickets on this stupid fucking site? Why are there so many tickets on this site?”

But Now and Because’s video wouldn’t be a defensible experiment without scientifically reproducible results, so our intrepid guide tries to find tickets to The Cure:

“They have two dates [at Bayfront Park]. They sold out instantly. Gee whiz, I wonder why. Is it because a lot of The Cure’s fans went and bought the tickets instantly? No, it’s because a bunch of crappy sites bought all the tickets instantly and resold them for ten times the value!”

The sentiment is apparently shared, as Now and Because’s video quickly rose to the top of Reddit’s Videos community, collecting over 5,000 comments.

As many users noted, some musicians are taking a stand against these online ticket resellers.

If nothing else, Now and Because’s video serves as a reminder to the world that there is still one reason to like Kid Rock.