As I mentioned yesterday, I just got back from a vacation to the Midwest. While there, I visited family and friends, but the big reason for the trip in the first place was "Major League Night" at The Milwaukee Brewers' Miller Park, featuring a bobblehead of Bob Uecker's iconic boozy broadcaster, Harry Doyle. But I noticed something interesting and disappointing at the game.

The bobbleheads were only given out to 4,000 fans who bought seats in specific sections, and those seats sold out months ago. You'd expect a full stadium, right?

Wrong.

I noticed that the section that I was sitting in, one of the bobblehead sections, was nearly a third empty.

Did people not show up? Did they decide to sit elsewhere? I got the answer after the game.

There were a number of bobblehead scalpers selling the statues out of the backs of their cars to eager fans who weren't able to score the special tickets.

And, if you search eBay for "Talking Harry Doyle Bobblehead", you'll get dozens of hits for items selling at twice the price of the tickets.

Sure, it's the free market and all, but I also have to think of the people who missed out on not only tickets to the game, but also a cool keepsake because scalpers and opportunists bought out whole rows of seats just to turn around and sell the dolls. Would I have been able to get tickets and the bobble if I hadn't bought them the day they went on sale? Probably not.

Are a few greedy people ruining it for everyone else, or is this just smart people taking advantage of the free market? Let us know what you think in the comments section!

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