You just have to learn to be quick with the program. Some of the talent knows where their page is, some don't. They're also trying to get as many as possible done in a short time. If you're taking it to future shows, use the little sticky flags and flag and label any talent that could possibly be there. It works great for the WWE Encyclopedia, too.youeatrocks wrote:About the TNA meet&greets...
I did one in OKC last year that Ric Flair was scheduled to wrestle at and he came to the meet and greet. I was glad he did cause I drove about 4 1/2 hours. They went through the HUGE line of people that had the ringside meet and greet access. You didn't get a chance at all to talk to the wrestlers, and they didn't even want to flip to their page in the $20 program you bought and eventually flipped to the empty section to sign. When I finally got to Flair, after some of the wrestlers had looked at it, he picked up an old lineup card from WCW and gazed over it and smiled but turned to his picture and gave a nice auto.
I've done several TNA house shows and the Bound For Glory fanfest. The house shows are good, but the BFG fanfest was the best bang I've ever gotten for my convention buck, and that's covering nearly ten years of wrestling conventions up and down the east coast.
-J\/\/