Dear Everybody,

PLEASE for the love of god stop posting your events only on Facebook.

Thanks,
Me

@alisynthesis This is a hole in my online space post-Facebook: is there a good alternative online to what FB offers for events on group pages?

That may, unfortunately, be best-of-breed right now.

@mark If you have events that need to be posted, I would absolutely recommend doing it on your own website. There's just no good reason to trust a major corporation to have your best interest in mind.

There's not another social platform that replicates what Facebook has done there, and I honestly think that's a good thing. Moving from Facebook to the next big platform is just a recipe for another Facebook.

My two cents! 🙂

@alisynthesis That makes sense, but almost no theater I know in town has their own website. if they don't just have a Facebook wall, they have a static site set up one time that gets updated quarterly with new photos of performances because that's all they know how to do.

The forces that made Facebook huge haven't changed: users don't want to maintain websites. They don't want to learn HTML, they don't want to learn how to publish, they definitely don't want to learn Internet security and want to outsource "We didn't get hacked for the sin of telling people when our performances were using a computer on the same LAN as our theater director's personal desktop" to someone else.

This is a non-trivial problem to solve. 😞

@mark @alisynthesis Nobody remembers to check a website unless it aggregates multiple events. There are quite a few free calendars, this is the way to go since the point of in-person public events is to create new community. It's a bit of work to post to each of these with their different templates but I do it for every concert at the Peacock Lounge in SF.

For theater in particular, there is
https://www.broadwayworld.com/submitnews.cfm

For music, free calendars:
https://www.songkick.com/concerts/42377347-elliott-levin-at-peacock-lounge

https://ra.co/events/2084029
https://dothebay.com/events/2025/2/13/elliott-levin-ensemble-so-ar-tanukispidercat-chlorine-aroma-tickets
https://discover.events.com/us/california/san-francisco/e/music/peacock-lounge-438792648
https://groups.io/g/Brutalsfx/message/165
https://eastbayexpress.com/events-calendar/#

https://www.bayimproviser.com/EventView.aspx?e=21634

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@resipiscent @alisynthesis I wonder if anyone's working on this in the Fediverse space?

A Fediverse calendar that let you aggregate events by interest or geographic region feels like not-a-bad-fit for the protocol.

@mark @alisynthesis There's also https://gath.io/ I tried creating events there for awhile but it was cumbersome, nobody wanted to respond/engage with it. It feels a little intrusive in that it presumed I wanted to treat the event as a poll with poll results. I don't. I want a calendar with more events than my own. There are Signal threads for local underground shows that work well because they're just a list of flyers (until people try to chatter about politics, but each user can just block those folks). Less is more... in fact the most useful, oldest, underground concert calendar in the SF Bay Area is the work of one person:
https://jon.luini.com/thelist/date.html
Gathio

An easier, quicker, and much less privacy-invading way to make and share events

@mark @alisynthesis Pre-sale tickets has been its own puzzle, Eventbrite seemed to run the table until Dice.fm came along, I just bought tickets for a show at Cafe Oto in London, enough independent venues use it that it's become useful as a calendar to discover new artists and spaces. Dice lets a venue offer memberships, members get free/discounted tickets. It's specific to art and music, is built to embed video/audio, all around a better UI than Eventbrite.
https://dice.fm/event/92ml3o-mayuko-hino-lucas-granpa-abela-rubber-cement-7th-feb-the-lab-san-francisco-tickets