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Live Nation Entertainment

Engaged Employer

By Far the Worst Place to Work - Assistant to the General Manager Live Nation Entertainment Employee Review

1.0
Nov 7, 2021
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Pet friendly. Cute dogs in office on occasion. Discounts on concerts.

Cons

-Overworked, underpaid and understaffed. Forced part time employees to work full time hours and fulfill full time responsibilities with zero benefits. -Lack of communication. Constant spread of misinformation made getting anything done correctly near impossible. -Ignored safety protocols during office hours and concert events. Announced that they prioritize safety, but is truly a facade. Very alarming, especially during Covid times. -Highly disorganized office space (and frankly, quite disgusting). -Work culture is vulgar and cliquish. Very gossipy, rude and unwelcoming. High tension environment. -HR isn’t present and extremely unhelpful.

Explore other reviews about Live Nation Entertainment

5.0
Jun 16, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Flexible work and managers let you take time off

Cons

physically demanding and hard w customer service

5.0
Jun 13, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

1. Genuinely fun environment. You're working live shows at a major 16,000-capacity venue, so no two events feel the same. 2. Strong sense of teamwork; the ops crew is small and coordinated, so you actually rely on and trust the people around you. 3. Real, transferable experience: crowd management, security screening, event setup/breakdown, and real-time coordination during incidents. 4. Good exposure to how a venue actually runs, including coordination with partner staff like Legends Global. 5. Flexible seasonal structure worked well for me (if you want event-industry experience without a year-round commitment) and you can talk to management about going to other venues during off-season.

Cons

1. Seasonal and event-driven, so hours are inconsistent and concentrated around the concert season. 2. Outdoor amphitheater work is weather-dependent; shifts happen rain or shine (at my venue: Mann Center), and conditions can sometimes be tough. 3. Physically demanding with long nights, late breakdowns, and a lot of time on your feet, you've gotta really enjoy and appreciate shows. 4. Limited long-term advancement within a seasonal role.

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