Coldplay are set to make their return to Australia at the end of the year, playing a string of stadium shows down the East Coast. The shows are expected to sell out because Coldplay are a hugely successful sales juggernaut.

But one Australian band actually rivals the formidable UK act in terms of ticket sales. As News Corp reports, The Wiggles recently managed to move a ridiculous 70,000 seats in under 24 hours for their upcoming December arena tour.

The Wiggles may be playing considerably smaller rooms than Coldplay, but they managed to shift just as many tickets. The band previously sold thousands of tickets to the more than 250 shows scheduled for their new regional tour.

The beloved children’s group — who at one time were Australia’s highest earning musical entity, surpassing even the revenue of hard rockers AC/DC — are expected to sell almost 250,000 tickets to their Australian shows in 2016.

The band’s Dance, Dance! The Wiggles Big Show Tour managed to move 70,000 tickets in less than a day, compared with Coldplay, who managed to sell out three 40,000-capacity East Coast stadiums in about an hour.

“The opening of ticket sales for The Wiggles 2016 arena tour has been tremendous, and it compares to that of an international concert artist. They really are a phenomena,” Tim Worton, Group Director of Arenas for AEG Ogden, told News Corp.

According to industry experts, The Wiggles’s immense success is thanks in part to the fact that their audience is replenished with new under-5 ears every few years and new parents, who themselves grew up with The Wiggles.

“Compared to the regional and suburban tour they are on now, The Wiggles Big Tour is bigger and longer shows, a lot of dancers doing everything from ballet and jazz to Irish dancing, a lot of inflatable big sets,” Wiggles manager Paul Field said.

“It’s also very affordable compared to other arena concerts, tickets are less than $40, and we don’t get discounts on the hiring of the venue or any of the production costs just because we are playing to kids.”

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