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YIKES!
I went to two Blink 182 shows a few months back in LA. I paid $150 for "VIP experience" each show. The VIP package included a poster signed by the band, a tee shirt, and access to Soundcheck/Q&A.
The day of the first concert we walked up to the venue and saw this huge line and we were thinking "Hahaha we're VIPs we get to pass all these people!", then we found out that WAS the "VIP" line... LOL. I did not feel "very important". There were 500 "VIPs" each night.
BUT, the soundchecks were amazing, the band was taking requests/talking to the crowd. The Q/As were awesome, even got my question answered. And a few weeks later I got the tee-shirt/autographed posters in the mail. $150 well spent each night IMO. (Just wish the posters were different each night, as I had duplicates =/)
Travis Barker is great with fans.
Sounds like a good way to lose fans.
I've never really paid for a meet and greet with musicians. There was a deal last year for one of my favorite bands where if you spent $30 at the merch stand, they'd give you a wrist band for a post show meet & greet. It was a nice deal, the band was friendly (always are), line was short, they'd sign whatever you want, talk to you a bit take pics, etc, but there was a time limit due to the fact that others were waiting in line. They nixed the formal meet and greets after a few weeks. Turns out they were more comfortable hanging out with fans by their tour bus or at a bar post show.
The short answer to your question is that it depends on the popularity of the band.
Ah, one I have to share that I didn't personally experience: For the U2 360 Tour a few years back, the section on either side of the catwalk was called the Red Zone. These tickets were generally only available by bidding through Live Nation. Aside from the basic Red Zone option, there was a "backstage" version. Now Live Nation made no mention of meeting or seeing the band backstage, but that sort of seemed to be the assumption. Winning ticket bids were regularly into four figure territory. As far as I know, no one who purchased this so much as saw the band backstage.
This story came out a few weeks back. I guess the good news is that you only spent $150 instead of $2500.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/01/03/britney-spears-fans-2500-m...
I paid for my mother many years ago to do a meet and greet with Tina Turner. She was a delight, was only meant to be a couple of minutes but she spent almost 25 minutes with us, took photos, signed many items and was so friendly.
I only paid once, the $100 for Steppenwolf, and that is ONLY because it went to a charity. That's the way bands should do it (also, I'm a hardcore John Kay fan...and he's not the best signer, partly because he's legally blind). So, I did that, saw the soundcheck, and got a few things signed.
I'll write about the entire experience in a future blog. Be on the lookout!
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