Reebrock wrote: » When Heenan was motivated, he was brilliant. His last few years in WCW were sad, he had fallen so far.
leggo wrote: » I'd say the NXT Tag Titles have more prestige than Raw or SmackDown. The SmackDown belts have been booked more sensibly since they were introduced, but didn't get a Mania match whereas Raw did, and big teams seem to be going to Raw. So same as usual: the SmackDown belts are better but Raw gets preferential treatment. In NJPW, the tag belts are the one downside of the promotion. For a guy who spent his career as a tag specialist, Gedo seems shockingly lost when booking for those divisions (the NEVER 6-man belts are a joke, I can't even tell you who holds them right now). Oddly, the tag division is probably the one area TNA/GFW outshines both WWE and NJPW. Such a shame as there are super talented teams out there today.
Agent Coulson wrote: » I'd love to see Rusev over on RAW right in the mix with Brock, Joe & Strowman instead of being jobbed out to Cena every couple of months.
gerrybbadd wrote: » I like to write, and often write content for online SEO purposes. I've always wanted to write a book or novel, and am seriously thinking of writing a piece of fiction, from a wrestler's point of few. The main character in my outline will be homosexual, but very much in the closet. I'd be weaving in threads of truth too, from road stories widely told from the business. How does this sound?
PTH2009 wrote: » These Chris Jericho returns are getting a little bit tiring at this stage Only so many times he can written off and then come back good as new There's rumours he will be back til October and then return again around Rumble time 2018
DM_7 wrote: » Meanwhile, fans are calling for people to get more time off......
DEFTLEFTHAND wrote: » "The Promoter signs the cheques, and if the Promoter wants you to put your crippled grandmother over in two straight Falls you should say Yes Sir."
jaykhunter wrote: » I agree with this, wrestlers are getting paid to play a character on someone else's event/TV show. Sometimes the promoter doesn't do what's best for business, but it is his business. That said, what makes the most money would likely be a compromise between the two. As fans, it's our 'job' to tell the promoter who's worth their time & money.
Itssoeasy wrote: » And it's an old school thing in wrestling, that if you're leaving the company/territory you dropped any championships you had on way out. I've come around to Vinces point of view more over the years.
Itssoeasy wrote: » And it's an old school thing in wrestling, that if you're leaving the company/territory you dropped any championships you had on way out.
leggo wrote: » In terms of a wrestling promotion/fan relationship, it's a straight up transaction. Fans are there to pay money or not pay money and that's it, we have no further duty. It's like saying it's our 'job' to keep Tesco honest with our wallet. We don't think of it that way and the only reason we do in wrestling is because some companies have done marketing around making the fans a central part (in a short-term effort to try and inspire loyalty and, thus, repeat business) which has kinda backfired now fans actually think they're a part of the show. Whenever I hear wrestling promotions, even WWE with their 'WWE Universe' stuff, play this chord I want to scream "Bull****!" at the television because it's simply not something businesses factor in in their day-to-day operations. And, truthfully, fans shouldn't set the agenda either and it's a sign of a weak company that allows them to. I watch shows like Game of Thrones, The Sopranos etc because I know that whatever I think of that could happen, the writers are going to come up with better to keep me hooked. There's no reason wrestling should be different. They should be setting the agenda and we should be following with our wallets. If we can write the show for them, why should we pay them our money? And now the problem is that wrestling has empowered fans so much that they expect to be part of the show, and react aggressively when they feel they're not being listened to. It's a tough situation and, aside from really creative, compelling booking (which...is originality even possible anymore with fans having seen so much now?), I'm not sure how you get out of.
connemara man wrote: » You can't compare a TV show like the sopranos or even fair city and its story telling with something like wrestling though. They have the advantage of months of script writing, pre production, and post production. Wrestling is interactive theater for want of a better term. Live reactions to who is in stage and what they are doing. If the story doesn't get the fans involved from a vocal point of view merchandise doesn't get sold. As someone who watches on TV if a crowd is dead I have less involvement in the segment. And I'm more likely to change the channel or skip the segment the next day. The audience is key in setting the atmosphere of each episode so they need to be heard especially in WWE where there are rolling storylines. Whereas the Indies I'd assume would be more week to week so it's a different kettle of fish
leggo wrote: » That's so, but who is supposed to be working who? The wrestlers in the ring are there to put on a performance and get the response the audience wants. They're the action that causes a reaction. It shouldn't work where the audience act and the wrestlers react, again in that case why are the fans paying for the performance that they're writing? Yet this is the way we are because of short-term marketing plans that have now led fans to believe they have a 'job' in the show. We don't. We're there to be the audience and pay for a performance, to be taken on a journey and told a story. Put it this way: the theatre is also a live performance for an audience that can be interactive if needed, but you don't see fans changing the script there do you? I don't blame fans for this btw. They believe this because they've bought into that bad marketing, yet now we are where we are.
leggo wrote: » Exactly, but in Macbeth you root for the protragonist and hate the antagonist. You don't tell Shakespeare who is who. The fans should feel empowered and like they're pulling the strings (e.g. Believing that cheering Hulk Hogan inspires him to Hulk Up and rise from the dead), but that's where the nature of 'the work' comes in, we're being coerced into going along with a story that was pre-written hours/days/months ago. Don't get me wrong, I'm not going full Cornette and harkening back to a day that's come and gone. But I'm saying that fans feeling empowered and like they're genuinely in control, to the point that they actually do influence decisions, is a sign of weak/lazy booking and marketing and it's caused wrestling to evolve into a confusing place where the people paying are also, indirectly, the people writing the show. That's not evolution, that's a colossal balls up from a theatric standpoint.
PTH2009 wrote: » Rey Mysterio back to WWE a good move or has his time past ??? He would fit into the cruiserweight division, he's still better than the current lucha type guys like Kalisto, Sin Cara and he will sell a lot of merch If WWE decide too do a lucha tournament who could come in a commentary/mentor role