ERG89 wrote: » Where would you rather see him if you had to: In a wrestling ring or doing stand-up
sky88 wrote: im hoping hes gone from wrestling completely
Lithium93_ wrote: He's off doing some of his "comedy" shtick.
Agent Coulson wrote: » Is Ziggler officially done with the WWE or on gardening leave waiting for his contract to end? Any chance of him turning up in AEW.
gerrybbadd wrote: » Of course he did. What else was he going to say?
NITRO95 wrote: There has been a tonne of positive press re AEW because they have deserved it. There hasn't been much negative because well they haven't ran any shows yet and they haven't given any real reasons to conplain. Their roster is well built, they have been much more open than WWE are, they have produced solid if unspectacular content in Road to Double or Nothing and BTE and they are attempting to be inclusive to groups that can sometimes be forgotten.
leggo wrote: » There’s a line. In the movie industry, for example, yes press get passes to watch the final presentation and get access to interview the stars as promo. They are then given complete freedom to report on the movie and there would be uproar if there was blowback and passes are reneged because they gave bad reviews. You may remember a similar situation in MMA, if you follow it, of Ariel Helwani having his credentials removed by UFC for reporting a story that they wanted to announce themselves (but doing so completely ethically through his sources). They backed down after public pressure.You wouldn’t see journalists going on movie sets and taking selfies with the stars, that’d be a major blow to their credibility. In fact, in football, there was some criticism of journalists last year who went to Gareth Southgate’s invitation to play darts with the English players during the World Cup: the idea being if he built a good relationship with the media, it’d lessen the pressure on the players. There is no line in wrestling. When Dave Meltzer has moves named after him, is noted friends with stars and allows his show to be used as a patsy to push storylines as fact, nobody is following any ethical line. I see why companies and organisations offer this kinda stuff, it makes total sense. But journalists are expected to resist those temptations in order of retaining ethical balance. However because people don’t understand, or care, why those ethics are there, you then get people asking “Well what’s the problem?” But, for example, the video game media industry died as a result of co-opting because basically the companies got to everyone notable before they could stand up. So now it’s incredibly difficult to find one credible source which will just tell you if a game is worth spending money on.
cian68 wrote: » Only quickly scanned the thread so sorry if this has been covered but aren't comp tickets/press passes completely normal when covering sports/movies/music? Seems unfair to say all wrestling journalists who got access at All In were co opted.
The White Wolf wrote: » Aren't you the one involved in WWE Parties? Something which would mean, I assume, you have to link in with the company from a marketing point of view at the very least - seems a bit rich that you would accuse another professional of being compromised in his analysis of a company.
Autecher wrote: » Pics or GTFO :P Unless you are referring to this?https://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showpost.php?p=109897935&postcount=3275
764dak wrote: » Invader 1 said it was self-defence.
CastorTroy wrote: » I was just watching the WWE Shop ad during NXT and think they need to change the shot of Becky. Maybe it's because it's black and white, but it looks like her top is pretty transparent or tight. Of course there were comments on that night about her being cold. Of course no problem here but doesn't look too PG.
leggo wrote: » Did you follow wrestling media after ALLIN? Every American wrestling media head with a half decent following was tweeting pictures of them backstage with wrestlers and gushing about the show. This isn’t a secret. If you’re getting favours and comps then giving positive coverage in return, that’s being co-opted. Dave Meltzer will regularly run angles involving The Elite and reports storyline as fact (remember Kenny Omega was ‘leaving’ NJPW a few months before he won the IWGP Championship? The same belt in the same company known for planning YEARS in advance? Then gave Dave the exclusive that he was, in fact, staying?) They’ve been open about wanting to ‘integrate’ the media since starting the AEW project. I’m making the point that they’re likely not being directly paid, just played. I don’t even judge them that harshly for it, it is what it is, they probably don’t have that much to lose by giving up their integrity so why not cash that in for the ultimate fan experience if that’s what their goal is? More power to them, a lot would do the same. If I was a struggling music journalist and you offered me the chance to give that up to go on the tour bus of one of the world’s biggest bands, I’d definitely have a strong think about it! It’s just that at some stage you have to have sense and view the situation for what it is, so you can make your own mind up instead of buying stock in a project that could yet be a total false dawn.
NITRO95 wrote: » You know this to be a fact do you? I'd love to see names of these journalists that have been co-opted by AEW
leggo wrote: » This is a big thing: a lot of the 'journalists' have been co-opted by AEW. I'm not sure if they're even getting paid, I'd say press passes are enough.
ERG89 wrote: » Enjoyed Rebellion more than any WWE PPV in a some time. You could see the talent enjoy the bit of freedom; even if not everything clicks. No commentators or talent being all bitchy, they're wrestlers who play characters on a wrestling show. Miyahara vs Jake Lee was a better watch in terms of match quality mind. I'm glad WWE's ratings suck as hopefully it will be the kick in the hole they've needed a very long time. It's 2019, the old format playbook is beyond stale now. Who wants to see jokes about men shaving their backs, the 5,000 contract signing in history or bad women's wrestling.
RollieFingers wrote: » Don't know if it's so much that people want WWE to fail, but as pointed out it's one big cycle nearly, there's not much going on in WWE where you think that is going to be must watch, I can't miss it, Raw especially just seems like the same stuff every week. I think it's more wanting a genuine alternative, which there are loads around these days - Impact, NJPW, MLW, Rev-Pro, ROH all putting out good content on a regular basis, and easily accessible too. Hopefully AEW follows suit. And in fairness NXT is still very good too.