Naw. It's just young wrestling fans.
You need to step out the smark bubble for a second. Who do you think spends the time to post a Cagematch review? Look at the PPVs you listed. NXT and ROH are very popular with a limited demographic, but the average person who likes/liked wrestling knows nothing about those "all-time great" shows and moments.Just to provide some data...Cagematch ranked All Out 2021 and WrestleMania X-7 dead even at 9.57. A unique demographic of individuals, but these two are right now considered the best American shows of all-time, both with about 400 official reviews. Yesterday, All Out 2021 was rated ahead of that show by .02.
And before D$ comes in with obnoxious slander that reads like Alexa Bliss Avatars on Twitter...the Top 5 American Events of All-Time ("PPV") are Mania X7, All Out 2021, Money in the Bank 2011 (btw - look at the similarities between these two events - both shows were in Chicago, CM Punk had the biggest buzz match of the year going into both sho, Daniel Bryan was the talk of pro wrestling coming out of both sho, Christian was in a world title match on both shows, The Big Show was in a featured match on both shows), Takeover New Orleans (Gargano/Ciampa I, maybe the best multi-man best ladder match of All-Time, awesome Aleister Black-Andrade title match), and ROH Glory by Honor (Danielson v. KENTA).
If you don't understand the importance of All Out 2021...idk what to tell you, the event is in rare company in the United States.
The same people that would put WWE events at the top of the list. Notice no Heatwave 98, Spring Stampede 94, When World's Collide PPV...which would be the SMARK PPVs du jour here in America.You need to step out the smark bubble for a second. Who do you think spends the time to post a Cagematch review? Look at the PPVs you listed. NXT and ROH are very popular with a limited demographic, but the average person who likes/liked wrestling knows nothing about those "all-time great" shows and moments.
AEW is booked by a WON forum poster for people who read the WON. I like the show and they will be viable within that demo. But it is a limited product, and to say that a show that pulled 200K viewers (all smarks) is the best wrestling PPV in history just because three undersized bearded indy legends debuted is absurd.
I live with two hardcore fans who aren't smarks. They're my kids. They made me turn off the Lucha Bros/Bucks because "they're too small" and "they aren't tough." They wanted Peacock clips of guys like Reigns, Kane and Goldberg. Vince understands that mindset.Your mindset of the average wrestling fan today is nonsense.
You and I will absolutely disagree here...I make this argument to many of my wrestling fans. I'm just telling you the same thing Vince tells you...he's not making a professional wrestling company. He hasn't for a very long time and has done everything to tell you that. Actions = words. Nick Khan has told you in numerous interviews at this point...they are a content creation company.I live with two hardcore fans who aren't smarks. They're my kids. When I went to Raw yesterday (6500 paid), the majority of the people in the crowd were families. And it was a diverse group. Same with the house show we went to last month in Fort Myers (5600 paid). When I went to Dynamite a couple months ago (3700), everyone looked like me and you. Message board posters in their late 20s-30s. And that's good-- Tony Khan is giving that demo what they want and building a viable promotion. I hope that some of the corrections he's making (no scripted promos, blood) eventually make their way back to WWE.
But the "professional wrestling" thing is a crock. I think it's dumb that Vince says "sports entertainment," but look at the actual products. Professional wrestling has always been about believable fake fighters with personality. Most of the traditional "professional wrestlers" in history were big, strong dudes with legit athletic backgrounds. These are the exact type of guys Vince wants to recruit to NXT.
Is Orange Cassidy more "sports entertainment" or "professional wrestling?" Is Gable Steveson-- arguably the most talented American HW ever--a "professional wrestling" acquisition or a "sports entertainment" acquisition?
Again, I like AEW. Dynamite is usually better than RAW and their tag matches are a blast. I don't see mainstream appeal at the moment. There is a ceiling. The product is fan service for smarks like us. And that's OK.
Its already mainstream and the growth in such a short time has been exponential...what do you think is going to happen a year from now, two years from now? You still going to call it a niche promotion when it catches RAW within the year?
As for Gable Stevenson...you act as if AEW doesn't also scout these types or have former athletes (Kenny Omega was a top junior hockey player for example, Lance Archer was a big time QB). Jade Cargill a former women's basketball player, Anthony Ogogo a former boxer...but AEW has a mix of pro wrestlers and legit athletes. It is what makes the promotion good.
WWE has one of the most legit MMA fighters in wrestling on their roster - Matt Riddle - and he rides a scooter around acting like a 14 year old. They've got legit former NFL players like Baron Corbin doing idk wtf. Legit strong men with high end college football backgrounds like Big E tossing pancakes.
It reminds me of a place you and I used to know well, the WEZ. The growth is exponential early because you get consumers who are dissatisfied and want things the other company/website isn't providing. But it peters out quick because it's a limited market. The difference between WWE and Scout is that Vince is more competent than Moni.
AEW doesn't have nearly enough of those guys. Punk, Cole and Bryan are the best in breed for what they already have. A major improvement, but not something new. Cargill is a legit talent and the person I would target if I were Vince.
Ironically, those are three of the only gimmicks they've gotten right lately. Riddle is enormously over while being credible in the ring. Corbin's broke gimmick is genius. Big E had Fort Myers going crazy with his personality and dancing. That is what pro wrestling has traditionally been-- believable ***-kickers with larger-than-life characters.
That's like saying that wrestling was at its peak with Gorgeous George when there were 2 channels.20 years ago, RAW was hitting all-time HIGHS in viewership. Just this year, RAW has been hitting all-time LOWS.
That streaming service was a legit failure (unfortunate, because I liked the product - but it never came close to hitting projections), and in turn he had to sell to NBC and now the failures of that streaming service have been kicked down the road for someone else to deal with.
That's like saying that wrestling was at its peak with Gorgeous George when there were 2 channels.
RAW and Smackdown are still beating the nightly competition, which is why the WWE landed those monster rights deals.
They were ahead of the curve on streaming and sold the library for a cool Billion. If that's a failure, I hope I fail twice as bad.
I saw the New Day wrestle for about 40 minutes in Miami last night. The side stuff is added entertainment. I'm sure my kids will love it. Do you think the Bucks should stop ****ing around on their YouTube show?
Please see the article I posted a page or so ago that analyzes RAW and Smackdown's ratings. Dynamite is also beating the nightly competition. Using Gorgeous George's era as a comparison is being dishonest. Wrestling was far more regional back then and Dave Meltzer does a fantastic job every year contextualizing drawing figures for regional/territorial stars during WON Hall of Fame season. 20 years ago, wrestling was national...the same channels still exist and the audience is the audience. Can you explain an alternative take for where the other 8 million people are that used to tune in weekly are? They are gone like Thanos just snapped his finger and they are likely never coming back...and that's WWE's fault.
They were ahead on streaming, but it was a failure. I actually loved the product...unfortunately it didn't succeed. Similar to the XFL...Vince had some great ideas there and the NFL ultimately ripped the good ideas off...but it was a failure. Yeah, after two tries, Vince made a cool $15 million on the XFL, and I'm sure you would like to fail that bad as well...but its still a failure. They didn't sell library, that is being dishonest, they sold rights to their live event content and they basically bundled/rolled the library in with it...if you've seen some Nick Khan interviews, he specifically called the Network a failure and thought the WWE had no business doing it...basically told'em they aren't Netflix and now outsourced their streaming elsewhere. They banked a cool billion dollars...Netflix has a valuation somewhere in the ballpark of 225 billion. Hulu is worth like 15 billion. It was a failure...that is why they got rid of it. For a bit of a nuanced perspective, BHT chimes in on this as well...
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Final evaluation of the WWE Network - Wrestlenomics
Peacock becomes the exclusive U.S. home for WWE Network content, beginning April 4. So let's reflect. Did it work out?wrestlenomics.com
What you said in your first paragraph is exactly what I said...arguing otherwise with nothing to say otherwise is just you talking nonsense. If it was successful, they'd still have it. Really as simple as that. They cut bait, recouped a little cash, but sold their rights to Peacock for future events for that flat fee. Businessman touting any deal they make? Of course. But it was a failure. 1 Billion for FUTURE RIGHTS...again, read the article, with how much WWE cannibalized other aspects of their company including previous rights related deals, its a punt at best. They sold the future rights for less than the NHL got from just Turner Sports in a secondary deal for the NHL, for context.That's not what Khan said at all. He said it was time for WWE to get out of the streaming business because they aren't a tech company and it wasn't worth it to keep up technologically with the big streaming players. Then he bragged about signing a ONE BILLION dollar deal for professional wrestling and making record profits during a pandemic.
Again, look at the people you are relying on for business discussions: Meltzer and Thurston. These are hardcore fans who don't like the WWE direction. They have fair wrestling criticisms and I follow both, but their business insights from cluttered basements have been consistently wrong while the WWE continues to outperform the stock market and break financial records.
Ultimately, neither company puts money in my pocket. The product is what matters. From a substance perspective, the best discussion was on Cheap Heat. WWE is making a show for the world and AEW is making a show for hardcore fans. Drake versus JCole. From the WWE standpoint, they need to avoid unforced errors and put on the best WWE product they can. The hardcores will still watch them even if they complain about it.
What you said in your first paragraph is exactly what I said...arguing otherwise with nothing to say otherwise is just you talking nonsense. If it was successful, they'd still have it. Really as simple as that.
Meltzer and Thurston are the most educated people in the wrestling media on this topic.
They are making a show to create content - it is why the quality of the programming does not matter, nor does their continued declining ratings year over year - for businesses (Networks and Platforms) that are looking for first run content on their platform/network.
Your obsession about AEW being a show for hardcores baffles me considering how large the audience is already after - once again - nearly their entire existence has been during a pandemic when ratings were DOWN.