Stephanie Vaquer isn’t staying quiet after a fan tried to call her out online — she’s telling her side of what really happened.

Following the March 30, 2026 episode of WWE Raw, a video surfaced on social media showing Stephanie Vaquer at an Uber pickup area alongside Roxanne Perez. The fan who recorded the clip claimed Vaquer refused to take photos or sign autographs, blasting her publicly in a tweet. The fan didn’t hold back in his post, accusing Vaquer of being rude and singling her out compared to other wrestlers.

“@Steph_Vaquer thank for stopping for your fans. Your the Fakest ever your not the Primera your the last. I just asked you for a photo ant a autograph. All the rest of the female wrestlers did it with no problem accept you. You was the mean one of all.. Check out of my list…”

The clip quickly gained traction — but Vaquer wasted no time responding, pushing back hard against the narrative and explaining what actually went down. She started by making it clear that interacting with fans is something she normally prioritizes: “I always stop and I’m very kind to my fans.”

La Primera then revealed that the situation came on a particularly difficult day for her personally — something the fan chose to ignore. According to Vaquer, the issue wasn’t simply being asked for a photo — it escalated when the fan refused to respect her boundaries.

“Yesterday was my birthday and I was honestly having a really bad day. Even so, I politely asked for understanding, and many people respected that. But you followed me for a long time, saying hurtful things and making me feel uncomfortable.”

She added that despite clearly saying no multiple times, the fan continued recording and pursuing her. And in her closing statement, Vaquer called out the behavior directly — questioning how someone acting that way could claim to be a supporter.

“I told you no multiple times, and you kept following me and recording. And now you’re posting this on social media. It’s sad to see people like you call themselves fans….”

The exchange flips the narrative around the video, turning what started as a fan complaint into a broader conversation about boundaries between wrestlers and the public. With moments like this increasingly playing out online, Vaquer’s response draws a clear line — access doesn’t mean entitlement, and even public figures have limits.

Do you think fans sometimes cross the line in situations like this, or should wrestlers always be expected to interact no matter what? Share your thoughts below.

Subhojeet Mukherjee has covered pro wrestling for over 20 years, delivering trusted news and backstage updates to fans around the world.

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