Tickets for independent shows are really easy to come by because they hardly ever sell out. Not enough people care about wrestling enough to buy tickets to a show they've never seen before and may not like.
But imagine if the tickets were free, like the Impact Zone, and instead, the promotion played radio ads out the sound system between matches, which would be edited out for DVDs. They charged the advertisers an amount proportional to the attendance (they do keep track of the number of people coming to see the show; it's not that much labor to do so), so a 75% sold out crowd will cause the ads to break even on the cost of the arena, leading concession, merchandise, and DVD sales to pay the rest.
Sure, they'd be making less per person, but they're almost guaranteed to fill at least 90% of the seats, especially in a new town they've never been in before.
Whaddaya think?
But imagine if the tickets were free, like the Impact Zone, and instead, the promotion played radio ads out the sound system between matches, which would be edited out for DVDs. They charged the advertisers an amount proportional to the attendance (they do keep track of the number of people coming to see the show; it's not that much labor to do so), so a 75% sold out crowd will cause the ads to break even on the cost of the arena, leading concession, merchandise, and DVD sales to pay the rest.
Sure, they'd be making less per person, but they're almost guaranteed to fill at least 90% of the seats, especially in a new town they've never been in before.
Whaddaya think?