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Jazz cancelled my family's season tickets after 36 years.

by the way, a look-up of the phone number (801) 563-4100 shows that it does belong to the Larry Miller Group offices in Sandy, Utah

a google search for Tobie Warner, Utah comes up with a door-to-door cosmetics sales company...
here's a couple links for the skeptical*
https://tobie-warner.grantsville.ut.amfibi.com/us/c/16492581-tobie-warner
https://stores.uscolist.com/tobie-warner-store-1549024.html

Anyone gonna call the number and ask for Tobie?







* which ought to be all of you!
:D

I always think of Kunta Kinte when I hear the name Tobie/Toby.
 
I understand that you're implying that every seat in front of my grandpa was held in their respective family for decades until someone died. We both know that's not the case. There are many reasons people stop buying season tickets. Every team in the league (Except for Cleveland) has a shrinking season ticket base for a reason. 36-year subscriptions are easily within the 99th percentile.

It sucks that your grandpa passed, but they were his tickets. Not yours, not your uncles, not your families. Sorry, I think they should be available for someone else.
 
Sorry for your loss and 100% bush league classless move by the Utah Jazz. Shame on them. I would expose this through the paper, Gephardt, or whatever, even if you don't want to buy the tickets. This is low.
 
It sucks that your grandpa passed, but they were his tickets. Not yours, not your uncles, not your families. Sorry, I think they should be available for someone else.
Maybe I feel so differently about this than those of you who are being letter of the law because I lost my mom not too long ago. Those things that are iconic of her now mean so much to me and my family... they mean even more than they did when she was alive. I've experienced many other deaths, but never one that left such a huge hole in my heart. It would create such unnecessary pain for someone to take one of those things that allow me to still feel close to her. I think it's incredibly cold to handle things in the way the Jazz initially did, and I hope it only happened because of one of those oversights that can so easily occur when bureaucracy gets involved. It would be so easy to extend a little bit of compassion instead. I hope it really was Greg who reached out in the earlier message, and I will be very happy if I eventually learn that he has set things right.

And BTW, in my case there was an institution (a local city government) who did something nice in remembrance of my mother that they did not have to do. I will be forever grateful to them.
 
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