ผลต่างระหว่างรุ่นของ "Tripscan top"

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== tripscan top ==
 
== tripscan top ==
And on Kalmaegi’s heels, another tropical storm Fung-Wong – or Uwan locally – is expected to intensify and could become a dangerous Category 3 or 4 over the weekend, according to the Joint Typhoon Warning Center, threatening more flooding and damage to the northern portions of the Philippines’ Luzon Island.
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High production costs, flat ticket prices
[[https://trips50.cc/ трип скан]]
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Data from the Broadway League show the industry had its highest-grossing season in a decade this year, with over 14 million people attending shows.
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[[https://trips62.cc/ tripscan]]
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However, none of the 18 musicals that opened last season, made a profit as of late September, according to the New York Times. Laks said the prevailing wisdom for the industry is that only one in 10 shows will make their money back.
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[[https://trips62.cc/ tripskan]]
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For example, producing “Boop” — the colorful show centered around Betty Boop in modern New York City — cost around $26 million. The musical ran for about four months this year and, according to the Times, failed to recoup its investment.
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[[https://trips62.cc/ trip scan]]
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“It’s just so difficult for (producers) to get their money back. These shows are now upwards of $25 million. Ten years ago, you could have a musical on Broadway that was probably in the $13 million range,” said Jim Kierstead, a Broadway producer whose over two dozen credits include “Kinky Boots” and “Waitress.”
  
Here’s what to know:
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While producers have seen their budgets grow, ticket prices haven’t kept pace, according to Laks. The average ticket price is currently $126, while the average ticket price for the 2015-2016 Broadway season was about $103, or about $140, when adjusted for inflation.
  
CNN Weather
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But the solution isn’t as simple as raising ticket prices.
Homes turned to rubble
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The scale of the disaster in the hardest-hit Cebu province and surrounding areas has taken many residents and local officials by surprise.
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Drone footage showed catastrophic flooding that turned streets into rivers, submerged homes and overturned cars as Typhoon Kalmaegi, known locally as Tino, dumped more than a month’s worth of rain in only 24 hours in some areas.
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“There’s only so high you can raise them because you’re really pricing people out of the market,” said Kierstead. “It’s just a bad conundrum across the board.
 
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Drone video shows a trail of destruction in Talisay City, central Philippines, following the passage of Typhoon Kalmaegi. Reuters
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In Talisay city, rows of homes have been flattened and communities along the Mananga River buried in mud and debris. In Cebu city, cars swept away by floods have piled into streets and houses. And rescue workers could be seen wading through waist-deep water to free trapped residents from roofs and submerged homes.
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รุ่นปัจจุบัน เมื่อ 11:23, 27 ธันวาคม 2568

tripscan top

High production costs, flat ticket prices Data from the Broadway League show the industry had its highest-grossing season in a decade this year, with over 14 million people attending shows. [tripscan] However, none of the 18 musicals that opened last season, made a profit as of late September, according to the New York Times. Laks said the prevailing wisdom for the industry is that only one in 10 shows will make their money back. [tripskan] For example, producing “Boop” — the colorful show centered around Betty Boop in modern New York City — cost around $26 million. The musical ran for about four months this year and, according to the Times, failed to recoup its investment. [trip scan] “It’s just so difficult for (producers) to get their money back. These shows are now upwards of $25 million. Ten years ago, you could have a musical on Broadway that was probably in the $13 million range,” said Jim Kierstead, a Broadway producer whose over two dozen credits include “Kinky Boots” and “Waitress.”

While producers have seen their budgets grow, ticket prices haven’t kept pace, according to Laks. The average ticket price is currently $126, while the average ticket price for the 2015-2016 Broadway season was about $103, or about $140, when adjusted for inflation.

But the solution isn’t as simple as raising ticket prices.

“There’s only so high you can raise them because you’re really pricing people out of the market,” said Kierstead. “It’s just a bad conundrum across the board.”

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