WhatsGoodTy
Ya feel me
Wasn't trying to be negative, but I'm saying the flame is dying down. It lights up once in awhile, but it's not common.
Wasn't trying to be negative, but I'm saying the flame is dying down. It lights up once in awhile, but it's not common.TNA is the worst run wrestling company of all time. They had a head start with that roster they had in 05-06 and still managed to fukk it up.
I hate ROH, they're storylines are trash that's why I said someone else would do it... wrestling is simply a scripted male drama. If Vince could get away with getting rid of the ring he would have done it a long time ago. We all admit the storylines suck, someone can and will present stories better, develop characters better, and give fire matches. And all they need is cheap distribution which technology has implemented with Google/Amazon/Hulu/Netflix.
It may sound crazy but this is exactly how big companies like WWE fall. They get disrupted. No one can do what they do right now with traditional television platforms which is why new platforms have created this major opportunity. If you dont think guys like Jericho, Hogan, etc. who have done a lot of TV can't see this and aren't thinking of competing with WWE I don't know what to tell you. I guarantee everything I'm typing will happen. Someone will disrupt the McMahons in the next decade.
Props to Homeboy Runny-Ray:
There was a moment when I thought AJ Styles, Samoa Joe and Chris Daniels were going to take over the industry. I thought that they would emerge as the Eddie/Benoit/Mysterio of the next decade.
Whoever takes TNA's spot as the #2 in the industry must draw upon youthful energy. The fans would come back to weekly wrestling shows.
Gotta disagree with you, Bammer.
It's too simple to say that the wrestling "isn't for us." Heck, look at the audiences on old AWA/NWA/WCW/WWF tv and you'll see kids and adults.
GO back and watch some of those 80's wrestling shows on youtube. Pay attention to the narratives. While they were catered toward kids the storylines, promos and angles were deliberate.
During the 90's, Stone Cold and the Rock became mainstream figures. The NWO? Kids and college students were rocking their t-shirts.
You could hear "suck it" on the school yards! Kids used to talk about finishers.
More importantly, though, they also saw well-planned character arcs that created audience loyalty.
You cant really use an outdated and failed business model as a point of reference. The territory days are dead and gone, and it was a much different time, socially and economically. Besides, the wrestling industry was far more guarded and protected then. Now everyone knows that what they're seeing is entertainment only, so the suspension of disbelief is almost non-existent today. Not to sound like a dyck because Im a wrestling fan (albeit casual), but the audience from those days was largely uneducated, white trash. Not exactly an appealing base.

this entire paragraph is wrong.
people didn't know that wrestling was just entertainment back then?
what failed/outdated business model?
the audience those days was largely uneducated white trash? how did you come to this conclusion?
the wwe has caked, yet still has sucked the life out of the wrestling industry. a casual fan wont be able to see that. you admitted that youre just a casual fan tho. that's wassup.
Sure, most people probably had an idea that what they were seeing was entertainment, but that idea wasnt confirmed by the business itself, where fans freely talked inside lingo like booking, characters, angles, etc and overall knew the inner workings of the business. Havent you ever heard of kayfabe? The business was strongly protected, and presented as having real outcomes until the late 90s. Now everyone KNOWS FOR SURE, that what they are seeing is purely entertainment without consequence. How is this an argument?
To those ends, the model of a territory owner, who puts his shows on independent stations, and gears his product towards adults is failed one. In order for a company to be a serious one, he or she has to secure a national standing. Thats a completely different ball game in today's world and economy. Dog, its not 1988 no more, and its not going to be anytime soon. The past is the past.
truthI prefer to post on positive topics, but I can't ignore this thread.
This is an opinion piece from a Brotha who goes all the way back to the 80's. I've seen the best and worst of professional wrestling. I've loved the AWA (but I don't remember much of it) and distinctly recall the NWA, WCW, ECW and WWF/WWE.
WWE is at their creative nadir and it is primarily due to a failed vision. They no longer see value in anything other than their three main brands: Wrestlemania, John Cena, and the McMahon family.
Those brands are inviolable and the WWE will do everything they can to sell these products to their fans. Every decision is predicated on maintaining those brands. That means that they are willing to ignore, sacrifice and undermine the value of everything else:
They don't value championships.
They don't value booking logic, professional wrestling history, or creating compelling, wrestling-based storylines
They don't value tag teams or undercards.
So what we have left are the brands. For example, WWE brings in lapsed viewers by utilizing nostalgia and the promise of Hall of Famers during Wrestlemania.
The Wrestlemania brand is worth more than the actual matches. Fans flock to it because we expect big things from the event. However, Wrestlemania is just a brand name, like Doritos.
It doesn't mean that it's any good, and all of us remember a time back when it was better.
What happens when we run out of "legends"? What happens when John Cena turns 40? Or when Undertaker retires? What happens after Stone Cold "wrestles his last match"? Hulk Hogan? How many times can they keep wheeling out a greying and balding Shawn Michaels?
Vince McMahon lost his edge (no pun intended) when he went corporate. He no longer takes chances and he does not value the in-ring product. Look at how they botched Daniel Bryan's storyline.
It sold itself. Even if Vince relegated DB to a short term run, Vince should have layered it with other stories to build toward the Royal Rumble.
Superstars build new stars, and new stars are supposed to provide new angles and storylines.
Now, we're back to a 2007 remix/rematch: John Cena vs. Randy Orton. Think on that.
When Wrestlemania buy-rates begin to dip, we'll know whether a national professional wrestling enterprise is still viable. For now, the WWE is making money, and that is all that matters.
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I just watch wrestling for a few laughs, and every now and then I'll see a dope match that will spark my attention.
wrestling will never die, kids become fans through their parents/friends and the cycle just keeps on going
I'll never understand how grown ass man can invest so much energy and anger into it.
just watch and enjoy. complaining if your guy didn't win is naturally but some people on here seem legitimately pissed of by it
who gives a shyt