Shows how up to date with TNA's house show model that you are these days, TNA hasn't done the backstage pass at house shows since the middle of October and in relation to that they put half of the main event, the semi main, the Knockouts match, half of the tag team match(or the x-division match), and half of the opening match in the preshow meet & greet (so you're lookin at Aries, Storm, Tara, ODB, Chavo & Hernandez, and Christopher Daniels. And even if you are looking at midcard/opening card talent it's not a lie, you are still meeting the talent in the company. Just not the ones you wanted so you can either go and enjoy the time or you can be a drag and piss and moan about it, at the end of the day it's all on you.. An arena or talent line up doesn't guarantee talent are going to be apart of the M&G, and they would be crazy to give away their top talent every show. Tristar accounts for a massive over inflation of autographs on the top talent, imagine 300 people at 2 items each over the course of 3 shows a week.CubsFanKEC1982 wrote: TNA carny deal = advertising meet and greet with the company's stars and then getting Garrett Bischoff, Sarita, Rosita, Eric Young and ODB for $50.
Then, once one enters, they're bilked out of $15 first for whomever the figure deal is. After those are sold, the backstage pass shill is done for another $50 where fans can usually meet the talent that signed figures plus the upper portion of the card.
As for getting money's worth, don't even get me started on how idiotic TNA has been of late in trying to enforce the only TNA merch rule. That's carny right there to force fans that paid to get in and paid to meet talent to buy the TNA program because they won't allow them to sign a WWE photo.
Bait-and-switch tactics. That's what TNA's house show model was built upon and that's what it continues to be. It's the old carny... Well, technically, we didn't tell you a lite, but we didn't tell the truth either and it's sketchy at best.
WWE offers usually a photo signed by one talent. They don't have to do it and actually didn't up until a few years back. It is a courtesy WWE provides for the fans since they don't have to subject their talents to carpal tunnel syndrome and only draw 500 fans in a 5,000 seat building.
Funny you mention the TNA merch deal because I got Chavo (1 card & 1 promo), Tara (6 cards), D'lo (4 cards), and Anderson (3 cards & 1 promo) on plenty of WWE stuff, but given the lawsuit goin on between the companies TNA is covering it's bases in case WWE wants to go after them on some petty charge. I guess it's just my charm that got me that stuff signed without even one person saying a word to me about it, or maybe it was presentation that you disguise it between TNA merch. Even if TNA were enforcing the rule strictly to sell their stuff over WWE merch what the hell is wrong with that? Capitalism buddy, it's what makes this country successful (even semi-successful in times like these).
For someone that seems to do a lot of his graphing in freebie opportunities you sure as hell complain a hell of a lot about TNA. Not complaining about using airports or hotels, but it sounds like this all comes down to you not getting what you want the way you want it.
We all know it, you can run TNA better than the minds currently running it. The great and all knowing cubsfan has a masters in business.
If someone doesn't have enough to pay their bills then maybe they oughta to be saving that $200 for something more important than a wrestling event if they aren't sure that things will pan out the way they want it to. Priorities are key here, are you willing to spend the money for a mixed bag knowing that you may not get what you hoped for, or do you wait for another opportunity and be better off in the end with the money instead of autographs of talent that you may not want?CubsFanKEC1982 wrote: I've heard of numerous people that don't know any better and probably don't have enough to make their bills who dropped down $50 apiece for a family of four, misled to believe they were gonna get their kids a meeting with Jeff Hardy, Kurt Angle, etc., only to be disappointed to the point of causing a scene when the six wrestlers they sent out did the around the ring circuit.
TNA offers the opportunity to meet the talent, WWE doesn't and a photo for $20 of a talent that you don't get to meet may be the way you would rather go, by all means go to the WWE show and drop your $20. TNA's grab bag offers an added sense of surprise to the show.