bean breath
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Nah, this will always be our banner
Nah, this will always be our banner
Again, WWF thought that would happen when they killed WCW. They thought "all these people watch wrestling, so they'll obviously switch over to us as the new #1!" But that didn't happen. That audience just vanished. And WWF was good at the time so it's not like they just didn't want to switch to a worse product.
The death of WWE is the death of pro wrestling in North America.
When Pro Wrestling dies, it will be like the scene from the end of Shawshank for me
I'll finally be free...after decades.... Beginning in 1994 with my first PPV purchase (Survivor Series 94)
*walks across a beach in Mexico to find Zach working on a boat*
"Hope."
It will not be in North America.Well that was different... it was the #2 being absorbed by the #1, but not bringing its audience with it.
I'm saying if the current #1 theoretically implodes... there would be a new #1 by default!
seriously
there isn't an alternative. there never will be.
if WWE dies, a lot of feeder systems die as well.
I disagree.
Those days are done. The internet has given life to these other entities where a big tv deal is not the be all end all like it used to be.
The WWE is the one feeding from others.
All the dead of the WWE will mean is that things will go back to a territory like situation much like it is outside of the WWE right now with ROH as the center in the US, NJPW in the east, RevPro or whatever in the UK.
There will be a freer movement of talent so it will rarely get stale
I disagree.
Those days are done. The internet has given life to these other entities where a big tv deal is not the be all end all like it used to be.
The WWE is the one feeding from others.
All the dead of the WWE will mean is that things will go back to a territory like situation much like it is outside of the WWE right now with ROH as the center in the US, NJPW in the east, RevPro or whatever in the UK.
There will be a freer movement of talent so it will rarely get stale
I disagree.
Those days are done. The internet has given life to these other entities where a big tv deal is not the be all end all like it used to be.
The WWE is the one feeding from others.
All the dead of the WWE will mean is that things will go back to a territory like situation much like it is outside of the WWE right now with ROH as the center in the US, NJPW in the east, RevPro or whatever in the UK.
There will be a freer movement of talent so it will rarely get stale
I disagree.
Those days are done. The internet has given life to these other entities where a big tv deal is not the be all end all like it used to be.
The WWE is the one feeding from others.
All the dead of the WWE will mean is that things will go back to a territory like situation much like it is outside of the WWE right now with ROH as the center in the US, NJPW in the east, RevPro or whatever in the UK.
There will be a freer movement of talent so it will rarely get stale
But think about the positive effect on society.I don't think you guys realize the damage that no wrestling (whatever you think of the WWE) on TV would do.
I'd rather have it all burn to the ground and have something come along to replace it than continue the Vince McMahon zombie march
I hope you're right.
But there are a ton of people who watch WWE who would sooner classify themselves as "WWE fans" than "wrestling fans". Which is not to say some from the former group can't join the latter group, but it's not a safe assumption to say they all will.
I hope you're right.
But there are a ton of people who watch WWE who would sooner classify themselves as "WWE fans" than "wrestling fans". Which is not to say some from the former group can't join the latter group, but it's not a safe assumption to say they all will.
Lucha Underground will be gone in a few years too.
Don't take a drink from Zach thereWhen Pro Wrestling dies, it will be like the scene from the end of Shawshank for me
I'll finally be free...after decades.... Beginning in 1994 with my first PPV purchase (Survivor Series 94)
*walks across a beach in Mexico to find Zach working on a boat*
"Hope."
Also, the death of WWE is way, way farther off than most would realize. As it stands today, they are literally 20 times bigger than NJPW from a business perspective (revenue). So they could fall down so, so, so far from where they are at and still be able to operate at the same clip as a moderately sized wrestling company. It's easy to underestimate just how big of a business they are. They have a very, very long way to fall. They'll sooner just downsize than fold.
But think about the positive effect on society.
No more Zach's to Zach it upYeah, even if the business were to hypothetically burn to the ground at any point soon, as much as I love it, I also admit I love the thought of no more Vinces, Stephanies, HHHs, Vampiros, or Hogans: people who manipulate and harass others at will
No more New Jacks or Del Rios who threaten everyone, or JBLs who only target those weaker or smaller
No more Moolahs who pimp out, or DeMotts who bully, and abuse young people who look up to them, people who they're supposed to train
I read it in full. I don't know if it's compelling, and it the unintended consequence of #5Years on the rest of the industry could be catastrophic.
Again, WWF thought that would happen when they killed WCW. They thought "all these people watch wrestling, so they'll obviously switch over to us as the new #1!" But that didn't happen. That audience just vanished. And WWF was good at the time so it's not like they just didn't want to switch to a worse product.
I think TV as a whole is gonna completely die out over the next couple of decades anyway and be entirely replaced by streaming hubs like Netflix and other kinds of models that haven't gotten traction yet, so one way or another WWE is gonna end up being online only just like everything else because TV is already an outdated medium.
I don't think this 5years thing is gonna happen for that reason, there will always be money to be made as an online subscription wrestling service. The only question is whether WWE becomes smaller and ends up competing with other ones or whether it remains the biggest one for many years.
I definitely agree, but I do think it's all predicated on the power dynamic in North America remaining stagnant. All bets are off if Netflix or Amazon jump into the game. But that's a gigantic "if".
On the other hand you will get new fans, because performers will not be afraid to say things on social media, or interact with their fans. That shadow of making sure not to burn a bridge with Vince will not be there anymore.
LMAO at a shitass company like Sinclair pushing ROH to be worth anything in the U.S.
No more Zach's to Zach it up
Part 1
Part 2
But I think Amazon or Netflix would sooner try and jump in by partnering with WWE than by fighting against them.
It's like that article last week that speculated that Facebook would bid on WWE rights in 2019. It makes more sense for Amazon to throw $100-$150 million a year at WWE than for them to spend that money trying to start their own thing.
Unless that's what you're getting at. In which case, I obviously agree.
But I think Amazon or Netflix would sooner try and jump in by partnering with WWE than by fighting against them.
It's like that article last week that speculated that Facebook would bid on WWE rights in 2019. It makes more sense for Amazon to throw $100-$150 million a year at WWE than for them to spend that money trying to start their own thing.
Unless that's what you're getting at. In which case, I obviously agree.
This Cordy Baking a Pie guy seems super defensive 🤔🤔🤔
This Cordy Baking a Pie guy seems super defensive ������
Read the whole thing. I was onboard with Team #5Years before, but it was more me *hoping* that this shitty company would fuck off and die, but now I actually believe it. I'm in baby, all the way.
Ken O'Mastered!
I think Amazon, Facebook and Twitter are way more interested in exclusive streaming rights for sports than Netflix is. Netflix is all about diversity of content ala HBO circa late 80s. Facebook and Twitter want it because it drives up engagement on their platform since so much viewing happens as a secondary thing via social.
Amazon would only want it just to further dominate in that space