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Emperor Smeat 04-02-2020 09:21 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
AEW Dynamite averaged 685,000 viewers Wednesday night on TNT, down 16.4 percent from last week: the third-lowest viewership total the show has ever done.

Meanwhile, NXT averaged 590,000 viewers on USA Network, down 11.8 percent. It was the fourth-lowest total for the show since moving to USA Network.

The total combined audience of 1.275 million viewers is the lowest to watch on Wednesday since the Wednesday Night War began. The previous low was 1.339 million when both shows went against game seven of the 2019 World Series on October 30.

Looking at the key 18-49 demo, AEW averaged a 0.25 rating last night, down 26.5 percent. That tied the December 18 episode for the lowest Dynamite has done in that demo. With news programming dominating the ratings, Dynamite ranked 37th on cable in that category Wednesday night.

For the third straight week, NXT failed to crack the top 50 in the 18-49 rankings, finishing at 74th with a 0.15 rating. That's down 25 percent from last week and matched January 1 for the lowest number the show has done in the demo.

Factoring out the news programming, AEW would have finished eighth on the night. That's still lower than Dynamite usually does, but is further proof of how much people were watching the news channels on Wednesday.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Sports Illustrated asked Brent Colborne, ESPN’s Senior Director of Programming, if WrestleMania could potentially air live on ESPN in the future: “It’s a great question. We’re always open to discussing a lot of different ideas with various leagues, but right now the focus for what we’re doing with WWE is on the short-term. We felt like this was a really good content opportunity for us to show these three encores, and a really good promotional opportunity for WWE to help utilize our reach and our brand to create more excitement for WrestleMania this upcoming weekend.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Kushida will be in action on this week's episode of 205 Live.

WWE has announced that Kushida vs. Danny Burch will air on 205 Live tomorrow night. Jack Gallagher vs. Tyler Breeze is also set for the episode.

Three weeks ago, Kushida was part of the Team NXT vs. 205 Live originals 10-man elimination tag match on 205 Live. He was revealed as the final member of Team NXT on that show, replacing Lio Rush. Team NXT won the match after dissension between Gallagher and his teammates. Kushida and Isaiah "Swerve" Scott were the two members of Team NXT left standing at the end.

KUSHIDA's NXT run has been very disappointing soo far compared to what he was doing in NJPW.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
MLW's event that was supposed to take place in Texas this May has been pushed back five months.

It was announced today that MLW's tapings that were scheduled for the NYTEX Sports Centre in North Richland Hills, Texas on Saturday, May 2 have been rescheduled to Saturday, October 3. Tickets that had been purchased for the show will be honored on the new date.

MLW wrote that league officials "are continually monitoring the on-going coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic. The status to delay additional events will be decided in the weeks ahead.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
All Japan Pro Wrestling’s Champion Carnival tournament will not go on as scheduled.

It was announced today that the tournament will not be taking place in April due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. It was scheduled to start on April 6 at Korakuen Hall, with the finals taking place on May 5 at the same arena.

The president of AJPW, Tsuyoki Fukuda, said in the press conference announcing the cancellation that he will "make every possible effort" to run the tournament this year.

Before the cancellation, a number of changes were already being made due to the fast moving nature of the pandemic. Davey Boy Smith Jr., Lucas Steel, and Joel Redman were all previously announced for the tournament. However, they were pulled following travel restrictions imposed by the Japanese government.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Jim Cornette announced on his most recent podcast that Kevin Sullivan will be joining him on the Friday 4/8 episode of The Jim Cornette Experience.

Sullivan will be sitting down and, for the first time, will be discussing his relationship with the late Nancy Benoit as well as why he declined to take part in Vice TV's Dark Side of the Ring documentary on the Benoit family tragedy.

In the documentary, it was claimed that Sullivan had physically abused his ex-wife, something the documentary noted he completely denied while also declining the chance to be interviewed.

The podcast will drop on all podcast platforms on 4/8.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
FS1's broadcast of the 2020 WWE Royal Rumble event on Tuesday 3/28 garnered 421,000 viewers.

As noted a few days ago, that event helped WWE Backstage that night reach 134,000 viewers, one of the best numbers for that series in some time.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Edward "Teddy Hart" Annis' court date on charges of strangulation resulting in wounding/bodily harm in Richmond, Virginia have been pushed back to Wednesday 6/10 at 2:15 PM according to court records.

Hart was arrested on Thursday afternoon 3/26, his third arrest in six weeks in the State of Virginia. The victim in the case was named publicly as Manic, who Hart had been dating off and on for several months. Prior to Hart being arrested yesterday, Virginia-based independent wrestler Ace Montana posted a video on his Facebook page where he exits a house, telling someone (believed to be Manic) to lock the door behind him. After exiting the house, he confronts Hart, warning him that the police have been called and that "she would be pressing charges" while threatening Hart that he needed to leave. In the video, Hart denied ever touching Manic before heeding Montana's orders and leaving the immediate premises ...

Manic has since come out publicly to state that she does not wish to file charges against Hart and that she feels the entire situation has been blown out of proportion.

Under Virginia law, strangulation is considered a class six felony. Should Annis be convicted, he could be looking at 1-5 years imprisonment and a fine of $2,500.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Per ABC 6, Jacob Kasper, two-time All American at Duke has received a tryout from WWE and he plans to pursue it after the Coronavirus pandemic settles down. ESPN ran a story about Jacob in May of 2018. Gerald Brisco scouted and recruited Kasper and dubbed him as possibly the next John Cena.

Quote:

Originally Posted by WrestlingInc
John Cena, the face of WWE for more than a decade, appeared on the latest episode of Corey Graves' After The Bell podcast where he discussed some of his favorite matches and his opinion on the state of WWE. He said the current era of programming needs one defining figure, but doesn't know if that figure can be produced.

"It needs what I'm not sure it can produce, and that's...just the state of where everything is now, which is weird because it kind of always corrects itself so we're in a day and age where it needs a frontman or woman," Cena said. "It needs one, maybe two, definable characters to absolutely be the reason, and that's what will be able to define what the era is because it takes on those personality traits of its top star. Like I said it before I don't know if, all things considered, the crowd is so mixed, that if the company puts its faith behind an individual, the knee-jerk reaction of the audience, even if they liked the guy last week, is to say 'f--k you, you're not going to tell me who I like.' So the audience is also tipping the scales of this not being able to happen. Universal popularity will never happen because someone will see it and get on to it and be like, 'he seems to be getting popular, let's stop this right now,' or, 'she seems to be getting popular let's change this right now,' and I've seen it happen with guys who are really darlings of that underground crew make it, and as soon as they make it, the rug is pulled out from under them.

"It's difficult because it's like a 'Super Friends', because the audience is so segmented, some people will embrace that underground dude. Some people will embrace the top person. Some people will embrace the midcard. Some people will embrace the cruiserweights, and then there's the split between like, 'I like SmackDown, I like RAW, I like NXT.' It's just really difficult to get one definable figure to stand at the front and be like, 'okay let's go.' I mean, I don't know, so I don't know. That's where the business is, and usually if it pushes too far in one way, the pendulum finds a way to come back, but I really don't know because the program is so socially active, and your social emotions are not what they are in the arena. I know that first hand, dude. When you're at the edge of your seat, and you're lost in a championship fight and something happens and you think maybe a title is going to switch and it doesn't, you stand and you catch yourself going, 'nah,' and you tweet like, 'that was BS,' or whatever. Your keyboard emotions aren't necessarily the same as watching it live."


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 04-03-2020 05:56 PM

The Sheets (Observer Newsletter Edition):

Quote:

The most unique WrestleMania in history airs over two nights in front of no fans at the WWE Performance Center, a show that was actually taped on 3/25 and 3/26.

At press time, which matches are on what show have not been determined and while Becky Lynch vs. Shayna Baszler and Kevin Owens vs. Seth Rollins have had interviews talking about being on the first night, we’re told after everything was to be edited, all the decisions would be made.

I’m not sure what the purpose of doing the show now is. They are giving up $15 million to $17 million when it comes to ticket sales and merchandise sales. Because of the time frame, the increase in network subscriptions, the biggest value of the show, won’t be there at anywhere near the level of past years. So they are giving up the WrestleMania bump which means year-over-year network numbers will be even worse than projected ...

Unless it’s greed for showing power over outside influences, because greed usually associates with money and obviously from a strict money standpoint, this was the worst decision possible. The theory that with less competition and no sports that more people will watch it is probably not the case, because wrestling viewing has been down, not up, even with more people home. But that idea would only work if it was a free show, and not a paid show.

From a fan enjoyment standpoint it was a bad decision as well. About the only explanation for it was stubbornness and an attempt to prove that they can overcome the real world and tell some stories on future documentaries on how bold they were and how they put smiles on faces when the world needed to be cheered up.
Quote:

There were a few casualties, including one of the two main events. Roman Reigns pulled out of the show under unique circumstances ...

Since people have asked about Brock Lesnar, who has had multiple issues with Diverticulitis, doctors have told us that diverticulitis (which Vince McMahon has also had) in the past would not pose any more significant risk than anything else. McMahon is a risk because of his age.

Reigns came to Orlando for his match with Bill Goldberg for the Universal title. The details are sketchy, but it was told to us that The Miz sowed up sick, and ended up being flagged from performing. The Usos, who were to face him, and Reigns talked about it and whether they talked him into it, or he came to the conclusion on his own, he flagged himself. And the company also let him take the heat for it, rather than taking the responsibility publicly, even if they didn’t actually make the call.

And they continued to advertise him anyway. Both Smackdown and Raw, and the WWE web site, continued to push Goldberg vs. Reigns. This is after Goldberg vs. Braun Strowman was already taped ...

The story broke after the second day of WrestleMania tapings were completed and Reigns confirmed it three days later.

He clearly wasn’t happy, as it wasn’t so much an announcement he had missed the show as much as being upset at the criticism for pulling himself from the show ...

And while taking a temperature and not allowing people in the building who have any signs of a cold or flu is certainly what you have to do and everyone is doing it, there are asymptomatic carriers and the crew was not tested for the virus itself, because those tests aren’t easy to come by and the results don’t come back immediately anyway.

Bryan did do the show. His wife, Brianna, on her podcast, had mixed emotions. As a performer, she knows the significance of WrestleMania. As a wife, she knows her husband’s past history
Quote:

Nobody in WWE has tested positive for coronavirus.
Quote:

Andrade suffered what was called a not that serious rib injury, but serious enough that he couldn’t do WrestleMania, while performing in a tag team match on 3/23. He was promoted throughout the show on 3/30 as being in a six-man tag match, and then as the match stared, Zelina Vega said he had a serious rib injury and announced Austin Theory as his replacement. Theory is also his replacement in the tag title match at WrestleMania.

Right now it is unclear whether Theory will remain on the stable. The usual rule is that people on television on NXT can’t be brought up on a whim, but this situation was such that all those rules are thrown out. Theory was picked by Paul Heyman to be the replacement.
Quote:

WWE has made two surprising deals when it comes to the distribution of WrestleMania, which will air as a PPV for the first time on both FoxSports.com, FOX NOW and Fite.TV ...

In WWE promotion, while they do mention the WWE Network, they no longer mention WrestleMania being free for new subscribers, which had been a key selling point in past years. They also pushed cable and satellite PPV, which they had previously almost mocked viewers for buying, and hadn’t pushed in years ...

The fact that FITE is part of the deal indicates that this is more WWE opening the show up to others as opposed to FOX buying an exclusive, since the show also remains on regular PPV. The other key is how many people would buy the shows from FOX or FITE for streaming at these prices when you can stream from the WWE Network for $9.99 per month and get both shows at the price ...

The number would be weak to begin with, and much weaker this coming week. To me, all this does is tell the people they are trying to sell streaming rights to that the value of those rights is far weaker than they would perceive or have any data on if they just didn’t do it this week.

WrestleMania last year did about 65,000 buys on U.S. PPV through television, which would likely be in places without high-speed Internet, or some people who are well off enough that they’d rather spend more money to watch on television and push a button than learn how to hook the network up to their television ...

This could also be a test market for either data to sell the PPV package to a streaming service, but the low numbers this is sure to get at those prices for streaming isn’t going to help any value arguments. One would think, unless some people are so stupid as to not realize they can get the same thing streaming for less money, that the FOX numbers here will be disappointing, and not help WWE when it comes to negotiations for next year. Even if, by chance, they wouldn’t be as bad as logic would say under normal circumstances, the current economy makes this the worst week to try this out.

But this also could be step one in next year’s Mania being only PPV, both television and streaming, and no longer on the network, and establishing this as the new value price point for the biggest show of the year. This also could be another explanation of the departure of Michelle Wilson and George Barrios, who were big proponents of taking all PPVs out of that marketplace and making them part of the network package. From a business standpoint, that has been effective for the smaller shows, but has greatly hurt the amount of revenue generated each year by WrestleMania.

This also would seem to indicate an ESPN+ deal isn’t close. With the huge money issues ESPN and Disney have suddenly faced, this would appear to be the worst time possible to ink a new big money sports deal. Industry sources have said that Peacock already turned down the deal with the idea they want to go with higher prestige programming as their cornerstone ...

The flooding the market with television programming is part of a new philosophy. Vince is of the opinion that WrestleMania will sell more PPVs this year based on more companies distributing the event.

Earlier this year, FOX itself wanted the WrestleMania kickoff show and McMahon turned it down. Then the world changed, as did his decision making. After the ratings came in for WrestleMania 30 on ESPN, the feeling was that they had reached a new group of eyeballs they had never reached before. The company’s goals for 2020 were to increase its reach among the sports fans. From there, it’s been all about new eyeballs watching the product this week in as many places as possible. The problem is the obvious overexposure issues of providing so much programming. For one week leading to WrestleMania, this is not a bad thing. To continue after WrestleMania will speed the declines of Raw and Smackdown, which are the moneymakers.
Quote:

The 3/30 Raw go-home show for WrestleMania did 1,924,000 viewers and 757,000 in 18-49, the lowest in modern history for a live show, but that’s just the reality of the situation.

It was the third lowest number in show history, beating only a taped show on 12/23 that did 1,835,000 and a taped show on Christmas Eve of 2018 that did 1,775,000.

The third hour, which did 1,646,000 viewers, was the lowest hour in modern Raw history, breaking the mark set by hour three of the 12/23 show that did 1,686,000 viewers.

The 23.0 percent first-to-third hour drop was the fifth largest in history ...

As compared to the same week last year, the show was down 27.4 percent overall and 37.2 percent in 18-49 ...

The key things is that the current format is running its course when it comes to keeping viewers, but this is just a situation of the times we are in.

The high point of the show was the first segment with the Undertaker interview that did 2,233,000 viewers. The low point was the main event with the Paul Heyman & Brock Lesnar interview at 1,574,000 viewers and a 0.9 rating, the lowest quarter rating in history. And considering Heyman & Lesnar are usually the high point of the show, that tells you how unavoidable this is
Quote:

Ric Flair was interviewed by Mark Henry and talked about an idea of a movie being made on his life, saying he’s talked to Dwayne Johnson, Hiram Garcia and Dany Garcia of Seven Bucks Entertainment and WWE about it
Quote:

Brandon Thurston did research on the coronavirus and its affect on WWE. Because WWE is so reliant on fixed revenue from television, his estimates were that in a normal year this year, WWE would have taken in $1.218 billion and had $163 million in operating income. He said that if house shows are canceled for the rest of the year, that he projects company revenue as $927 million and operating income at $121 million. The non-television house shows lose money, so them being canceled doesn’t hurt profitability, but lack of PPV shows does. In addition the reality shows may not be able to go into production for new seasons for a while. It’s also notable that Saudi Arabia is not allowing live events right now and as long as that continues, WWE won’t be running that big money show there either. WWE is under contract for two shows, but I wouldn’t even want to speculate how that works given how late WWE gets paid for shows they’ve already done
Quote:

New Japan Pro Wrestling canceled five more dates, house shows from 4/12 to 4/18 and at this point the first event back on the schedule is 4/19 at Korakuen Hall.

The fact that no lineups have been announced for any show tells you they aren’t counting on anything happening.

A number of promotions in Japan are still running. Ice Ribbon’s 3/29 show scheduled for Osaka was canceled and they ran an empty arena show at the dojo in Saitama. 2AW ran before less than 100 fans. Stardom’s 3/28 show in Shizuoka ended up being canceled the night before and some of the talent, including Hana Kimura, publicly questioned traveling and doing the show. They’re next show scheduled is 4/11 in Yokohama. Big Japan, Sendai Girls and Basara all ran this weekend.

Korakuen Hall is still open for shows, but just not allowing spectators ...

Pure J, Marvelous and Tokyo Joshi Pro also canceled weekend shows.

There is definite fear in Japan of going into a full lockdown, which would force cancellations of all shows, as while they are only small shows, Japan is the one place left where shows happen almost every day in front of fans.

For foreign talent, the Japanese government announced on 4/2 that any foreigner who leaves Japan starting on 4/3 will not be able to return any time soon ... This would go the same for foreign wrestles who live in Japan, although many of them are not in Japan now since there is no work there.
Quote:

The hammer hit hard with drops by both AEW and NXT for empty arena shows on 4/1.

AEW, after two strong weeks of numbers, fell to 685,000 viewers and a 0.25 in 18-49. They went from last week being the No. 2 non-news show on cable for the day in 18-49, to No. 8, trailing shows on MTV, Good Network, VH-1, Lifetime, TLC and TBS. The decline was 16.4 percent in ratings an 26.5 percent in 18-49. The decline is likely based on what happened the previous week, whether it’s life circumstances, the atmosphere last week or the silliness of the final segment. Whatever it is, the people arguing the final segment was a positive don’t have a good argument this week.

NXT dropped less, doing a 590,000 viewers and a 0.15 in 18-49, a drop of 4.7 percent overall and 25.0 percent in 18-49.

Next week is a week that NXT should win if ever, with two Takeover matches including Tommaso Ciampa vs. Johnny Gargano in what is billed as the final match of their feud, and the match that was to be the biggest NXT match of the year on its biggest Takeover of the year.

AEW fell to No. 37 in 18-49 and NXT was No. 74.
Quote:

For 3/25, AEW did 1.42 viewers per home, once again the highest of any pro wrestling show ...

In the quarters, AEW opened with 908,000 viewers and 467,000 in 18-49 for Cody vs. Jimmy Havoc. NXT opened with 750,000 viewers and 285,000 in 18-49 for Austin Theory vs. Tyler Breeze.

In the second quarter, AEW lost 46,000 viewers but gained 9,000 in 18-49 for a Jake Roberts promo, a Cody promo, a Darby Allin video and the beginning of Allin vs. Kip Sabian. NXT lost 76,000 viewers and 21,000 in 18-49 for the ending of Breeze vs. Theory and Killian Dain vs. Tehuti Miles.

In the third quarter, AEW lost 61,000 viewers and 24,000 in 18-49 for Allin vs. Sabian, a Jake Hager video and Hager vs. Chico Adams. NXT lost 26,000 viewers and 27,000 in 18-49 for Tony Nese vs. Cameron Grimes.

In the fourth quarter, AEW lost 12,000 viewers and 18,000 in 18-49 for the Moxley/Hager brawl, a Moxley promo, Brodie Lee video and Lee vs. QT Marshall. NXT lost 20,000 viewers but stayed even in 18-49 for Io Shirai vs. Aliyah and the three-way angle with Keith Lee, Dominik Dijakovic and Damien Priest. It should be noted that the Moxley/Hager brawl itself topped 500,000 in 18-49 and was the high point of the show in the key demo.

In the fifth quarter, AEW lost 26,000 viewers and 23,000 in 18-49 for several packages revolving around The Elite vs. Inner Circle, Nick Jackson being filmed training and Sammy Guevara’s entrance. NXT gained 51,000 viewers and 19,000 in 18-49 for the Adam Cole promo plus Oney Lorcan & Danny Burch vs. Shane Thorne & Brendan Vink. This was the closest quarter on the show, with AEW having a 763,000 to 679,000 edge overall although it was 411,000 to 256,000 in 18-49.

In the sixth quarter, AEW gained 41,000 viewers and 20,000 in 18-49 for the beginning of Kenny Omega vs. Sammy Guevara. NXT lost 19,000 viewers and 17,000 in 18-49 for Candice LeRae vs. Kayden Carter.

In the seventh quarter, AEW lost 19,000 viewers and 14,000 in 18-49 for the ending of Omega vs. Guevara. NXT gained 4,000 viewers and 27,000 in 18-49 for Matt Riddle vs. Roderick Strong.

In the final quarter, which was Chris Jericho & Matt Hardy on AEW and HHH, Tommaso Ciampa and Johnny Gargano for NXT, it saw AEW gain 51,000 viewers and 50,000 in 18-49, and NXT lost 15,000 viewers and 16,000 in 18-49. The final quarter saw AEW at 836,000 viewers and 463,000 in 18-49 and NXT with 649,000 viewers and 247,000 in 18-49.
Quote:

On the television front, and this is weird because of classification and kind of misleading because of Raw, but AEW’s first two shows after the world changed were the two highest rated sports shows of that period in the 18-49 demo. The key to that is that USA lists Raw (which would be first) and NXT (which wouldn’t rate anyway) as entertainment and not sports, which is why it’s never on sports listings. However TNT, ESPN and FOX list their wrestling as sports and not entertainment, but FOX is network and not cable. Smackdown has been the highest rated sports show overall. For the week ending 3/22, AEW was no. 1 on cable overall, beating NASCAR on FS 1 by 932,000 to 903,000 but in 18-49, AEW did 455,000 to 297,000 over NASCAR. WrestleMania 30 did 405,000 in 18-49 for second place for that week. But TNT was thrilled with the first two weeks numbers since 18-49 is the number they focus on and over 400,000 is a home run. There have been network shows including replays of old 30 for 30s on ABC, U.S. Figure Skating Championships on NBC and replays of old NCAA basketball finals on CBS that have drawn more viewers (but not higher ratings because of the difference in homes available),but AEW has beaten all those shows, even with the huge network advantage in 18-49. So among sports programming overall, Smackdown was No. 1 and AEW was No. 2 in the key demo, and No. 3 for the first week of world changing was the WrestleMania show and then the Figure Skating did 375,000 on NBC, which is in 30 million more homes (giving it a 35 percent advantage) while AEW has done 453,000 and 444,000 over its two weeks. For the week ending 3/29, Smackdown was No. 1 across the board in the sports listings on network. A NASCAR race in Texas on FS 1 was No. 1 overall in sports with 823,000 viewers, but it was 241,000 in 18-49 so AEW nearly doubled it in the key demo, even though at 816,000, it was No. 2 for the week. The 444,000 in 18-49 for AEW beat No. 2 WrestleMania 32 on ESPN at 326,000, which was ESPN’s highest rated event of the week
Quote:

Tracy Smothers, 57, is finishing up a round of chemotherapy in his battle with Stage III Lymphoma which has also led to his losing 45 percent of his heart functioning. Kassius Ohno, who considers Smothers one of his mentors, set up a Go Fund Me for him

Emperor Smeat 04-07-2020 09:34 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
The Raw after WrestleMania last night did 2.10 million viewers, a number that just has to be accepted for what it is.

The good news is the first-to-third hour drop, which had been near record levels the past two weeks, was 17 percent. That's still significant, but it was greatly alleviated by the Drew McIntyre vs. Big Show match which ended the show with strong gains ...

The viewers were up nine percent from last week's record low, but there should have been a substantial increase coming off WrestleMania. It was down 29 percent from the 2.94 million viewers last year for the Raw after WrestleMania, but a huge drop from last year was a lock as well.

The show was also up 19 percent from last week in the 18-49 demo.

The three hours were:

8 p.m. 2.31 million viewers
9 p.m. 2.06 million viewers
10 p.m. 1.93 million viewers

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
McIntyre told ESPN that he locked his WWE title belt in a room until his win aired: “Things are not official until they happen. So just like everybody else, I sat on the couch and watched both days of WrestleMania. I enjoyed the show. It took my mind off of things. Watching myself was very crazy, being on the couch -- watching it just like everyone else, wondering what was going to happen. I kind of pushed out of my head what had happened. I was reacting to it like I was in the match. My wife had to move away from me, because I was darting from side to side with every F-5, with every Claymore. Finally, when I had won the title, I saw the emotion and remembered how real it was to me. In that moment, it was real again as I was watching it. I went upstairs, I opened the door and I took the title out, now that it was official. I had another moment with my wife in the house, and with my family on Zoom. I had my whole family on there."

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
WWE touted that they set a WrestleMania week record with more than 967 million video views across their digital and social platforms (including the WWE Network, WWE.com, YouTube, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and Snapchat), That’s an increase of 20 percent from last year. WWE also hyped that 46 million hours of content was consumed during WrestleMania week, which was up 28 percent from 2019.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Becky Lynch has now been Raw Women’s Champion for a full year. WALTER’s NXT United Kingdom Championship reign also reached its 365th day on Sunday.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
WWE announced this afternoon that they will report their first quarter earnings for 2020 on 4/23. In a change from their usual handling of the earnings, the regular conference call discussing the report will take place at 5 PM EST that day instead of the usual 11 AM.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
More Stardom shows have been canceled.

Stardom announced that all shows through May 6 have have been called off as a result of the ongoing coronavirus outbreak. In addition, Pro-Wrestling NOAH and Big Japan have either canceled or rescheduled some of its upcoming shows.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
BeIn Sport is now airing what is being advertised as the Best of MLW every night at 10 PM EST.

Basically, the episodes are older episodes of MLW FUSION TV, airing in repeat form to help the network with programming gaps due to the current coronavirus pandemic.

So, if you are looking to revisit old episodes or seeking to catch past MLW content that you may have missed in the past, set for DVRs accordingly.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
MLW released the following interview with Court Bauer ...

MLW.com: What’s your strategy for producing programming on the horizon if the pandemic goes on for some time?

Court: ... As for strategy… we have a plan and it ties into something the fans have been demanding since we relaunched in 2017. We have at a minimum 50 episodes being mapped out. We could comfortably go into mid 2021 without promoting a live event ...

We are building business models for a return as early as June, one that anticipates a return in 15 months and a few in-between that range. We need to be ready for several scenarios. There’s no playbook for what we’re going through, so we just have to be nimble, prudent and realistic about this.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
MLW did get in one final taping on March 13th for the show in Tijuana, which they have not begun airing yet, so they’ll have weeks of new programming. The company is hopeful of five, if not six episodes out of the Tijuana tapings. There was one match that went long and could end up being a show unto itself.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
The forthcoming Undertaker limited series on the WWE Network was filmed from 2017 through 2020, documenting The Undertaker from Wrestlemania 33 weekend in Orlando through current day. It was noted in the preview that aired on the WWE Network that it was the film time Undertaker has allowed his career to be documented. A number of his WrestleMania opponents and Vince McMahon have been interviewed for the series.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Dark Side of the Ring focuses on the Brawl for All tonight at 10 pm Eastern on Vice TV and available on Crave in Canada. The episode that does focus a lot on the feud between Jim Cornette and Vince Russo with Russo positioned as the brainchild of the Brawl for All after hearing John Layfield mouthing off in the locker room and wanting to see him knocked out for real. The piece begs for some reaction from Layfield, who was obviously not part of this nor will anyone with WWE ties going to be on this series this season. Others they spoke with included Jim Ross, who was head of talent relations at the time and had to call these fights, Darren Drozdov, Bart Gunn, The Godfather, and Eric ‘Butterbean’ Esch. We will be reviewing this episode later this week on Rewind-A-SmackDown.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
The NWA is hosting a watch-along tonight at 6:05 pm Eastern of old Houston Wrestling. Below is the description of the footage they will stream tonight:

This special presentation of Paul Boesch’s Houston Wrestling features legends of the National Wrestling Alliance like Andre The Giant, NWA Worlds Champion Harley Race who is holding the Ten Pounds of Gold, Superstar Billy Graham, Mil Mascaras, Bruiser Brody, Gino Hernandez and so many more. This video also features classic commercials from the era featuring Dusty Rhodes and others. Plus in action – Gino Hernandez & Superstar Billy Graham.

For those interested, link for the episode: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rA_n-CpjUek

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Rhea Ripley will be off WWE television for the foreseeable future as her work visa has expired and she has returned to Australia.

Mike Johnson at PWInsider reports that Ripley returned to Australia on Monday and must now get her visa renewed. It is unknown when she will be able to return to the United States, especially given how things are in the world with the coronavirus pandemic.

It is unknown if Ripley's expiring visa played a role in her losing the NXT Women's Championship to Charlotte Flair at WrestleMania 36.

Fightful Select reported that WWE is planning on taping mass content this week, beginning on Friday with SmackDown. The company had already taped Monday's episode of WWE Raw and Wednesday's episode of NXT. The tentative plan is for the company to tape three episodes of SmackDown, three episodes of Raw, and multiple episodes of NXT through next week. Ripley will not be part of these tapings and will have to quarantine following international travel.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Ric Flair has made his choice for who he believes is the top guy in WWE right now.

Though his match with Edge at WrestleMania 36 came under criticism, Randy Orton did some of the best work of his career in the build-up to the match with Edge. Orton delivered personal and authentic promos while doing many of the little things that other wrestlers always notice from him. And Orton's former running mate in Evolution took notice of Orton's work.

“Nobody is higher on Randy Orton than I am,” Flair told Alex McCarthy of TalkSPORT. “I think, right now, he is doing some of the best work he has ever done and I think Edge is too. Randy has done and accomplished so much and he’s been there a long time – people don’t realise this. But every time he says something, it’s the truth. And his level of ability right now and his health are both great. He’s at the top of his game, which, in my opinion, makes him the number one guy. The thing about Randy is, he’s so good that I think just because he’s been there for so long you think ‘gosh, can he get any better?’ and he just continues [to get better] if given the opportunity to shine. But I hope he retires soon so I can get my third ring [laughs]. But he’s a great talent, really, really good and an important part of WWE’s TV."

If Orton is at the top of Flair's list as far as male performers go, who does he believe the top female performer is? His answer probably doesn't surprise you.

“Well, you know me, people are going to say I’m biased, but she’s the female Orton. Younger, less time in the business, but she’s picked it up. The art of being able to make somebody look good and make the match the priority rather than what you are capable of doing or not doing is what separates the good from the great. She’s been in that conversation as the greatest ever since, I think, Dallas. I think the conversation becomes more solidified as the greatest ever every time she goes out there and you have an opportunity to compare her skills with somebody else. I know she was excited and looked forward to the match with Rhea, she certainly didn’t look at it as a step down. She looked at it as an opportunity to wrestle somebody else with a lot of skills and a great work ethic," said Flair.

Charlotte has nearly caught Orton in terms of WWE Title reigns. Orton is a 13-time WWE/World Heavyweight Champion while Charlotte collected her 12th WWE/NXT Divas/Women's Title at WrestleMania 36 when she defeated Rhea Ripley.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Edge officially returned to the ring at WWE Royal Rumble 2019, marking his first match in nearly nine years after he was forced to retire due to a neck injury ...

Rumblings of Edge potentially being cleared to return began at SummerSlam 2019 when he delivered a Spear to Elias. For the next several months, Edge denied that he had been cleared despite rumors online throughout the fall and winter. After his return, reports came out that AEW had reached out to Edge about signing him. Edge reportedly told WWE that AEW offered him $3 million per year.

On WWE 24, Edge confirmed that he did speak with "another company" before signing on to return in WWE. He didn't mention by AEW by name or go into detail about his discussions with the promotion.

"SummerSlam happened and another company within the industry contacted me and said they were interested and wanted to know if I could wrestle. At this point, I didn't know if I could. Before I did anything, I decided I needed to find out," he said. "Some discussions were had. The one thing I told them through all of this was, 'When you give me your offer, I need to go talk to Vince.' He's done right by me my entire career. He gave me my chance. He trusted me to be able to pull off a lot of things, be a pillar for his shows, be a general. That goes a long way for me. I reached out to Vince and said, 'I need to talk to you this weekend. It needs to be face to face, not through texts or phone calls.' I went, sat down with him, and told him everything. It wasn't trying to get a bidding war going or anything like that. WWE didn't even know if this was possible. I didn't know if this was possible. He said, 'Well, this needs to happen here.'"

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Charlie Adorno, who is the fan that has attended every WrestleMania since 1985 spoke with Justin Barrasso at SI.com about the end of his own streak. Adorno told SI that he did speak with people at the company, who wanted him to attend if there was any way they could allow a select number into the WWE PC:

"A couple of people internally wanted me to come. They even said that if some fans were allowed in, I’d be at the top of the list. So, there was definitely talk about the possibility, but with all of the strict guidelines, they were already at capacity for the amount of people they could have in the building. It wasn’t meant to be. If it was possible, I would have been there."

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
ECW Press announced that the Andre the Giant biography, "The Eighth Wonder of the World," will be released on 4/14. Bertrand Hebert and Pat Laprade wrote this book. I can't recommend this book highly enough because it is by far the most in-depth feature ever done on Andre, far more than any television special and also far more factual, basically it's the best source on what is and isn't real about Andre. It's great as well for fans of 70s and 80s wrestling because it goes heavy into the politics and power players, since Andre worked almost everywhere.


TPWW Frontpage:

Droford 04-07-2020 09:40 PM

Rheas Visa issue would have been nice to know last week lol

Emperor Smeat 04-08-2020 07:31 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
I'm double checking on this but one person high up just denied that to me. Again, I'm not saying Mike is wrong, in this company the left and right hand rarely know what the other is doing. But the person I checked with would know the creative reason given which was Charlotte to NXT for ratings help.

Another person high up said inaccurate and she's in Orlando right now. Clearly if she isn't (although supposedly that was just checked), people who need to know don't know.

From Dave Meltzer on PWI's report of Rhea Ripley's visa expiring.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Heading into next week's title match, Jake Hager is officially ranked as the top challenger in AEW's men's division.

Hager moved up to first in this week's AEW rankings, overtaking Chris Jericho as the top challenger in the men's division. Hager challenging Jon Moxley for the AEW World Championship in a no holds barred match will air on next Wednesday's episode of Dynamite.

Aside from Hager moving up, there were no other changes in this week's AEW rankings:
Men's division --

Champion: Jon Moxley (8-0 singles record in 2020, 13-2-1 overall record)
  • Jake Hager (4-0 singles record in 2020, 5-0 overall record)
  • Chris Jericho (0-1 singles record in 2020, 11-3-1 overall record)
  • Cody (5-1 singles record in 2020, 12-6-1 overall record)
  • Kenny Omega (3-0 singles record in 2020, 19-6 overall record)
  • Darby Allin (4-2 singles record in 2020, 9-9-1 overall record)
Women's division --

Champion: Nyla Rose (4-1 singles record in 2020, 9-4 overall record)
  • Hikaru Shida (6-1 singles record in 2020, 11-5 overall record)
  • Kris Statlander (2-3 singles record in 2020, 6-6 overall record)
  • Yuka Sakazaki (1-1 singles record in 2020, 1-4 overall record)
  • Britt Baker (2-2 singles record in 2020, 10-6 overall record)
  • Riho (3-3 singles record in 2020, 11-6 overall record)

Tag team division --

Champions: Kenny Omega & Hangman Page (6-0 tag team record in 2020, 19-6 overall record for Omega, 13-9 overall record for Page)
  • The Dark Order (5-0 tag team record in 2020, 9-3 overall record for Evil Uno, 9-4 overall record for Stu Grayson)
  • The Young Bucks (2-2 tag team record in 2020, 12-9 overall record for Nick Jackson, 12-9 overall record for Matt Jackson)
  • SCU (2-3 tag team record in 2020, 16-7 overall record for Scorpio Sky, 16-6 overall record for Frankie Kazarian)
  • The Lucha Bros (1-2 tag team record in 2020, 10-9 overall record for Pentagon Jr., 11-9 overall record for Fenix)
  • Best Friends (3-3 tag team record in 2020, 9-14 overall record for Trent Barreta, 8-11 overall record for Chuck Taylor)

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Following the ‘Brawl For All’ episode of Dark Side of the Ring on VICE, former WWE writer John Piermarini praised Jason Eisener and Evan Husney for piecing together the episode. Piermarini also tweeted that Vince McMahon wanted to do another Brawl For All with some of the names in NXT in its original format but had to be talked out of it. Piermarini worked for WWE from 2009-2010. POST Wrestling reached out to Piermarini and he said that it happened so long ago that he can’t recount exactly how it came about and that he didn’t remember that McMahon wanted to do another Brawl For All until he [Piermarini] saw the Dark Side of the Ring episode.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
According to a report from Fightful, the tentative plan for WWE’s filming schedule is to film multiple episodes of RAW, SmackDown and NXT starting this Friday and going through the following Thursday ...

To follow up on that, POST Wrestling has learned that NXT is expected to tape a lot of shows this weekend at Full Sail and up to six episodes of NXT TV will be taped over two days this weekend. The SmackDown shows are expected to be taped first, followed by RAW shoots from the Performance Center. Below is a note from the 4/7/20 POST News Update:

“*Fightful Select has reported that WWE is preparing another big set of tapings beginning this Friday to cover several weeks of television for Raw, SmackDown, and NXT. We have been told at POST Wrestling through multiple sources that the tapings begin Friday at the Performance Center. One source added that NXT is expected to be taped at Full Sail University during this stretch of tapings.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Justin Barrasso of Sports Illustrated interviewed Paul “Triple H” Levesque ahead of the 4/8/20 episode of NXT. Levesque shared his thoughts about AEW besting NXT in the ratings for the past 14 weeks and had the following to say about the topic:

“I’m a believer in the long-term game. You create the right product, and over time, people will find it. I think back to Monday nights years ago, and it looks different now, but there were periods of time when WWE was putting on much better shows and the content was much better, but we were still getting beat. We were not winning ‘the war,’ but we stayed true to who we were. If it’s a flash and it’s exciting at first but you can’t maintain it, then it loses that pizzazz. It’s long-term duration, for me. That’s how you win. I’ve been saying it since the beginning—I’m not concerned about those numbers week-to-week. It’s about trying to put out the best show you can every week.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
AEW Co-Executive Vice President Cody Rhodes appeared on Busted Open Radio and Bully Ray asked Cody about some of the Vince McMahon-like tendencies that the Brodie Lee character has shown on AEW Dynamite. Cody said that isn’t a spoof of McMahon but he can see some of the parallels between Lee and McMahon that can lead to the conclusion that the character is a spoof of Vince.

“So I can never tell you the original plan and I don’t even know if there was an original plan and I will say, very unlikely on AEW, you’ll ever hear the name of Vince McMahon said and if you do hear me say it in interviews and in general, I always speak very highly of Vince, because, well A, he’s Vince McMahon and B, I was a WWE guy to start. I didn’t come from anywhere else. I came through their feeder system and they were the house that built me so, when it comes to some of the parallels, I don’t wanna be vague or coy with your question. When it comes to some of the parallels between Brodie’s style of leadership, there are unique parallels but I don’t think it’s particularly a spoof on Vince McMahon and maybe it’s because we’ll see how it develops in the next few weeks. I think Brodie just has a very power boss, very animal kingdom, kind of social Darwinism-type approach to the Dark Order, and I think that’s all in line with perhaps some of Vince’s quirks but, it’s not an outright spoof on the legendary Mr. McMahon. Not outright.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Gail Kim, Lita and Christy Hemme’s KAYfABE project did not reach its goal of $400,000. It had over 400 backers and tallied up $62,000.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Mark Henry appeared on the #WORDWITHSCOOP’ Instagram Live via Heavy.com. Henry said that there were conversations about him possibly ending The Undertaker’s WrestleMania streak at WrestleMania 22.

“It was close, and there was some conversation about me being the one to break the streak, and if they would’ve asked me, I would’ve been like hell no! I don’t want to carry that weight [laughs]…”

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
DARK SIDE OF THE RING Season 2, lifts the veil on wrestling’s most controversial stories, and premiered on Tuesday, March 24th with a two-hour special episode on the tragic story of wrestling icon Chris Benoit. The fourth episode will tackle Jimmy Snuka and the Death of Nancy Argentino April 14 at 10:00pm ET/PT. The series, produced by VICE Studios, will air weekly on Tuesdays at 10:00pm ET/PT.

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/g7xehMFZbtM" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>


TPWW Frontpage:

Mr. Nerfect 04-08-2020 07:55 PM

Oof. Sucks for Gail, Lita and Christy. You can probably raise that much for a dog's operation.

Jake Hager #1 in AEW? Fucking yikes.

I can absolutely, positively guarantee you that Charlotte Flair winning the NXT Women's Title was not done for ratings. She hasn't affected ratings before, why would she now? When Meltzer says this, he is flat-out making it up because he's buddies with the AEW guys, so he thinks every move they make is about crushing AEW into dust. It can't simply be about giving Charlotte something different to do, to fit schedules, be because of visas, or simply be a long-term booking idea. It's got to be about them ratings. It's an absolute crock. If they wanted ratings for NXT, they'd have had John Cena do something with Tommaso Ciampa for Mania or something. Goldberg would have been dropping the NXT Title to Keith Lee. It wouldn't be Charlotte Flair leading the charge, lol.

Emperor Smeat 04-09-2020 09:28 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
With a show highlighted by the long-promoted final match between Tommaso Ciampa and Johnny Gargano, NXT picked up a slight win in total viewers over AEW Dynamite this week.

NXT averaged 693,000 viewers on the USA Network, up 17 percent over last week and the best number NXT has done since the start of the closed set shows. NXT scored a 0.19 rating in the 18-49 demo, up 27 percent from last week. That rating failed to crack the top 50 for the day on cable, finishing at 51st.

AEW Dynamite on TNT finished just behind with 692,000 viewers, almost even with last week. In 18-49, Dynamite was up one percent to a 0.26 rating and finished 32nd for the night on cable ...

Detailed demos are not available for NXT since it finished outside of the top 50, but AEW was strongest in men 18-49, where it averaged a 0.35 rating, which was 14th on cable in that category.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
The MGM Grand Garden Arena that is set to host AEW’s Double Or Nothing pay-per-view on May 23rd has suspended all operations for the time being. The Double Or Nothing event is still listed on their website for May 23rd.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
As expected, next month's Money in the Bank pay-per-view won't be taking place at its originally scheduled venue.

The Royal Farms Arena in Baltimore, Maryland confirmed today that -- due to the coronavirus pandemic -- they won't be hosting Money in the Bank: "The WWE Money in the Bank event originally scheduled for Sunday, May 10 in Baltimore has been cancelled. Refunds are available at all points of purchase."

Earlier this week, WWE.com hyped up Money in the Bank without mentioning the location for the PPV

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
WWE is adjourning its annual stockholders' meeting due to the coronavirus pandemic: "World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc. (NYSE: WWE) today announced that it intends to convene and then immediately adjourn, its Annual Meeting of Stockholders due to the rapidly evolving public health concerns relating to the COVID-19 pandemic and governmental actions related thereto, including the State of Connecticut’s Executive Order No. 7H dated March 20, 2020. The Annual Meeting is scheduled to occur at 10:00 a.m. Eastern Time on Thursday April 16, 2020. The Annual Meeting will be convened and then immediately adjourned to a time and place that will be announced at the meeting and by press release. The record date will remain February 20, 2020. Stockholders should comply with applicable restrictions and not attend the Annual Meeting on April 16."

WWE's stocks probably going to take a big hit as a result since the biggest things that were expected to be discussed was the Network's subs number, lack of a PPV deal with a streaming provider after Vince hyped up one being done very soon, and details on the new India TV deal that supposedly is worth less than expected.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
The coronavirus pandemic continues to affect WWE's upcoming schedule as the company locally announced a postponement to its upcoming SmackDown UK tour as well as a set of NXT UK tapings ...

Additionally, they canceled their two-day NXT UK tapings in Bournemouth, England, for May 1st and 2nd with no return date booked. The tapings were the follow-up to the also canceled NXT UK TakeOver Dublin event.

The brand's annual appearance and tapings at the UK Download Festival in mid-June have also been canceled. That would make their next set of tapings on Friday, July 24th and Saturday, July 25th in Glasgow, Scotland.

Their last set of tapings were held on the first weekend of March.

WWE pretty much ran out of new episodes for NXT UK and are just airing "Best Of" episodes till this summer.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
WWE has edited out the AC/DC and Metallica songs used from the Wrestlemania 36 VOD on the WWE Network.

On WWE's After the Bell, Edge noted that due to when his match with Randy Orton for Wrestlemania 36 was taped, they ended up throwing out all of their planning and the entire nearly-40 minute match was done completely on the fly.

To answer the many questions we have gotten about who Produced the Charlotte Flair vs. Rhea Ripley Wrestlemania 36 match, we are told that former NWA Champion Adam Pearce was the Producer of what was the best in-ring encounter at Wrestlemania, putting it together with Flair and Ripley.

The Big Show-Drew McIntyre confrontation that aired on Raw last night was designed to show how strong McIntyre was, overcoming the monstrous Big Show despite being physically spent from fighting and beating Brock Lesnar just "20 Minutes before" Show maneuvered McIntyre into a match. The idea to show McIntyre beating both Lesnar and Show in succession, taking out two of the biggest beasts in the company in one fell swoop. The segment was indeed taped several minutes after the company finished taping McIntyre vs. Lesnar.

The decision to move Apollo Crews to Raw was made last week. His match with Aleister Black was taped last Friday, separate from the rest of the Raw taping for last night's broadcast.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
According to Law 360, Ric Flair’s bid to trademark “The Nature Boy” was rejected. The Trademark Trail and Appeal Board stated that the nickname is too similar to the clothing line “Nature Boys” and both are attempting to sell merchandise using the name.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Paige did a live stream on her Twitch channel with Peyton Royce, Natalya, Renee Young, Nia Jax and Billie Kay. During their chat, Nia Jax talked about coming to the defense of Alexa Bliss when Alexa was working with an opponent that went unnamed and continued to get hurt. Nia said that Alexa did not want to complain to the higher-ups so Nia spoke up on behalf of Alexa to stop her from consistently getting injured.

“I remember back when — I’m not gonna mention any names but, Lexi, other than Lexi’s name,” Nia laughed. “But when Lexi was working an angle and she was continuously getting hurt in a certain angle with somebody, and I remember her not saying anything, specifically because she wanted to be a team player. She was so nervous, she wanted to be a team player. She didn’t wanna be somebody who like, ‘Oh, I can’t do this’ but, me personally, from the outside looking in, I was so angry. I was like, ‘No, she can not do this anymore.’ I personally would not allow her to get back in the ring to get hurt again. I had to go to the higher-ups and I had to put down a stern foot and say, ‘Listen, Lexi is five-foot-nothing, 100 pounds getting thrown around like a little rag doll and injured every night.’ I was like, ‘Put me in. I’m a 6’0, 300 pound b*tch. I can handle it.’ So I understand there’s a certain thing of being quiet and taking it and being like, ‘No, I wanna be a team player’ and then there’s the other side where it’s like, ‘Sh*t dude, I can’t allow to see one of my good friends — not only my good friend but my co-worker who I want to be here in five years so I can continue to work her, like getting hurt.’ Like I need to stand up and be there for her and make sure that her life is gonna be okay when she’s done here.”

Link: https://twitter.com/flairsnia/status...969789952?s=20

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Jake Roberts appeared on a recent edition of The Wrestling INC Daily Podcast and Jake revealed that he is currently in Atlanta quarantining in a Marriott hotel and has been there for quite some time. Roberts was previously living with Diamond Dallas Page and due to the Coronavirus outbreak, Dallas told Jake that if he left the property, he couldn’t come back. Jake ultimately decided to leave the property to go appear for AEW.

“I’m stuck in a hotel. Of all damn places to be stuck, I’m stuck in a damn hotel. I’m on the 16th floor at the Marriott in Atlanta and the restaurant’s shut down so I’m having food brought to me and…

I’m quarantined. I’m quarantined in here. I was living with Dallas [DDP]. Whenever all this started, Dallas was one of the first people to say, ‘Hey man, I’m locking down and if you leave, you can’t come back.’ Well, AEW wanted me to come out so, what’d I do? I went and did [it] but then I couldn’t go back to Dallas’ house because he had a baby in the house and nobody needs to get sick, especially not a baby, and he took the hard line and said, ‘Dude if you leave, you can’t come back.’ I’m like, ‘Well, I gotta do this Dallas. It’s for AEW and I wanna help these guys.’ So, now I’m paying for it brother.”

In regard to the COVID-19 pandemic, Roberts believes that the pro wrestling industry should go on hold. He commended AEW for taping a bunch of content to fill TV time over the next couple of weeks and/or months but still believes that the business needs to be put on hold until further notice.

“Yes, I think it should happen. I really do man. We gotta buckle down, and if you look on the television and still see live wrestling then that tells me people aren’t buckling down. As much as I hate it, we gotta do what’s smart and I’m not a doctor or anything but that’s all I hear on television. We got to go home. Just go home and stay there until this sh*t’s gone and it sounds to me like AEW is doing that too. The last taping they did, I know they taped a lot of matches so they [did] several weeks of shows and it seems that’s what they were kind of doing too. Trying to get guys to go home and taking care of business, keeping everybody safe.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Taz was the latest guest to join Aubrey Edwards and Tony Schiavone on the AEW Unrestricted podcast ...

Taz also spoke about his WWE debut at the 2000 Royal Rumble pay-per-view against Kurt Angle. Taz stated that he knew he was doomed in WWE when he heard the reaction from the crowd because from his point of view, WWE was not fond of guys who already made their name outside of the company and by him getting that reaction, it solidified that he made a name outside of WWE.

“When I wrestled Kurt [Angle] at the Garden, when I came out, like when I heard that pop, I knew I was f*cked. I knew I was doomed. I knew it. I knew it because it was massive and again, it was before the big craze of the internet and all that sh*t and people didn’t know I was gonna be there. It was a legit surprise and a legit pop in the world’s most famous arena, and the reason I know I was doomed is because that pop did not come from WWE. I was a made guy before I got to WWE, and WWE at that time — they never would admit it then and they won’t admit it now; they don’t want made guys. They wanna make guys. So that’s what happened. So as I’m walking out with the towel on my head looking bad as a motherf*cker, I’m saying to myself, ‘Oh my God, shut up. Don’t cheer, don’t pop. Just boo me, do something. Don’t do nothing.’ Even though it was an awesome feeling, I knew I was…”

Probably can pinpoint to his ECW champ vs. WWF champ match against Triple H where WWE no longer considered him as a potential big star.


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 04-10-2020 06:32 PM

The Sheets (Observer Newsletter Edition):

Quote:

There were an endless number of stories coming out of the first-ever taped two-day WrestleMania presentation on 4/4 and 4/5 at the Performance Center in Orlando.

Perhaps the biggest and most-discussed was whether the show should have taken place at this time. There are two ways of looking at it. The first is the health and risk aspect, and basically the show was no more or less dangerous in theory than the television tapings that WWE and AEW have been doing regularly. The second is business. It looks bad now, but if WWE isn’t able to have shows in arena by around September, then it might as well be done now. If it’s earlier, then they gave up tens of millions of dollars by being stubborn. Unlike with UFC, where the money comes from just doing the show, with WWE, for WrestleMania, the money comes from the live gate, the merchandise, the network subscription increases and to a smaller extent, whatever is left of PPV ...

But the most important number will come in a few weeks when the company either does, or doesn’t announce the network subscriber number on the day after WrestleMania, usually the high point of the year. The paid number the day after last year was 1,767,000 worldwide. Nobody expects the number to be that high this year for all the obvious reasons ...

If the number is significantly lower, it’s was a bad idea because at that point the reason to run didn’t come through and essentially they squandered the biggest thing they have, the name WrestleMania, based on timing. Right now the only people who know are those internally and the fact they have release numbers that are the numbers usually the con businesses use, social media engagement numbers which have no correlation to actual revenue, but not the important number, was notable ...


Another story were the three unique matches. Undertaker vs. A.J. Styles was basically a long outdoor movie fight scene in a graveyard setting. It was tremendous for what it was, although all three of the matches were very polarizing with people loving and hating them. Michael Hayes was the guy in charge of this feature and it was so good people were calling for Undertaker to do these mini-movies every year since he may not be able to deliver great in-ring matches, but this could become the new Undertaker feature at WrestleMania ... However, doing things like this could run its course. Paul Levesque was also said to be very key in this being put together, and one person said he was the key person in that regard and it was largely the NXT crew shooting it, or the technical term, the WWE Performance Center Content Innovation Lab, headed by Jeremy Borash, who was along with Matt Hardy the key to the Final Deletion and similar shows in TNA, James Long, Cornell Gunter, Ryan Katz, Andrew Karr, Mark Donica and others. Many of the same group were in charge of the Johnny Gargano vs. Tommaso Ciampa shoot that was down that same week and aired on 4/8.

Because of the finish where Styles was buried alive, and WWE’s perverse set of rules in that you can be electrocuted to death and be fine the next week, or things like that, but buried alive is actually adhered to, Styles will be out of action. It likely won’t be for long since he’s considered so valuable and they don’t have much depth on the heel side of Raw right now and have a babyface champion.
Quote:

As far as actual early numbers, as notable, they’re not good. At press time, the WWE Network had more viewers for day one, even though Sunday is the familiar day. The Sunday pregame show, with Liv Morgan vs. Natalya, did the better of the two on the WWE Network and on television.

Even though day one was better overall, it still got a mixed reaction and maybe people having seen a three plus hour show weren’t ready to see one another day.

Google searches were even more pronounced. WrestleMania would be expected to do three to four million Google searches. It should be about that number for each show.

The Saturday show did 1 million, way under expectations. Sunday did 270,000 (including Monday), which is so low as to be beyond shocking, and only 50,000 of that was for WrestleMania, as the breakdown was 100,000 for Flair, 50,000 for McIntyre, Cena and 20,000 for Mandy Rose. It was as if the public saw Saturday as the show, but even 1 million is the level of a B UFC PPV show and WrestleMania is usually better than Jon Jones level and this did half of Jones. Sunday was below the level of a Demetrious Johnson level PPV show.

The preshow on FS 1 for Saturday did a 0.1 rating and 106,000 viewers and 44,000 (0.03 rating; 29,000 men; 15,000 women) in 18-49. The peak was 129,000 in the second quarter, while the only match, Cesaro vs. Drew Gulak, did 125,000 viewers. Excluding news shows, the show was No. 97 on cable during its one hour. FS 1 averages 120,000 in the time slot this year while last year had 824,000 viewers in the time slot since it was UFC prelims.

The Sunday pre-show did a 0.1 rating and 112,000 viewers, with 56,000 (0.04 rating; 43,000 men; 13,000 women) in 18-49. The peak was 132,000 viewers for Liv Morgan vs. Natalya. FS 1 averages 117,000 in the time slot and last year did 250,000. Excluding news shows, the show was No. 92 on cable during its hour.

For a comparison, the preshow last year on USA did a 0.5 rating and 749,000 viewers and an 0.26 rating in 18-49. It was going to do less on FS 1 than USA, and the Sunday show went head-to-head with ESPN airing the Ronda Rousey vs. Charlotte Flair vs. Becky Lynch match from last year’s Mania, which had already been on Raw six days earlier.
Quote:

The next story involves the changes in the show. Even though Roman Reigns left for health concerns on 3/26, over the next week he was still advertised for his title shot at Bill Goldberg on the ensuing Smackdown and Raw show. When Levesque was asked about it, he talked about the creative way they were going to tell the story. As it turned out, that never existed. It was the weirdest thing. On the Smackdown show the night before the match, they were running down the card and mentioned Goldberg vs. Strowman in passing. Reigns was never mentioned again on television or either night of the PPV, even if he was all over the video packages and the advertising mainstream for the show ...

The Reigns situation is pretty much unknown. Essentially it is said to be up to Reigns when he returns and that nobody knows. If he was worried about his health, and with three kids, he should be, it’s not as if the situation changes and after WrestleMania the dangers are no longer there. Some have noted it isn’t wise for him, and others who have any immune system issues, to be working until this is over, whatever that means because it’s not a snap your fingers and on this day it’s over.

Reigns appeared to be the only wrestler who pulled himself off the show, although everyone was told they didn’t have to come. The only others who would be noticeable immediately that weren’t there were Mauro Ranallo, Nigel McGuinness and Beth Phoenix, the NXT announcing team. Phoenix may have still been off to sell the Randy Orton injuries. It would have been a fitting finish to have her involved in a small way at the finish, maybe in trying to first talk Edge out of doing the concerto finish and then either he does it, or she changes his mind and he does it. But that’s a small deal. Ranallo and McGuinness have been off NXT since Californians have been urged to stay inside. Ranallo wasn’t in Orlando for the taping of the 4/8 NXT show, but he did solo voiceovers on the show, believed to be from a home studio .
Quote:

As far the show itself ... there were matches that were stopped and re-shot after moves were missed.
Quote:

They did want Hogan for this year’s WrestleMania but the two sides couldn’t come to financial terms. This would not be to wrestle, but for an appearance
Quote:

Regarding the Flair title win, the decision was made so Flair would be a champion on NXT with the idea a main roster star is what NXT needs to close the ratings gap. Flair is scheduled to work both Raw and NXT for now. Given there are no house shows, it’s not like doing so gives her an unbearable schedule. She should help the NXT women’s division.

That said, the result itself, let alone winning clean via submission with the figure eight, makes no sense. Flair really gained nothing for the win. The NXT title doesn’t enhance her. Some would say it’s a step back, but I wouldn’t say that. Beating Flair would have greatly enhanced Ripley, and would have made for a better series of returns in NXT, and made NXT fans happy and having reason to hate Flair, who could be a big heel in NXT, with an obsession of beating Ripley and getting thwarted. Instead, it cut off Ripley’s legs as she was rising, plus, to protect her, nearly any finish other than that was done would have been better. It was that classic somebody gets hot, and they even took advantage of it, and now wanted to make clear she’s really not at the level of the real stars.
Quote:

By putting what was supposed to be the main event of the biggest NXT Takeover of the year, the Johnny Gargano vs. Tommaso Ciampa final, NXT beat AEW 693,000 to 692,000 in total viewers, but AEW still won 0.26 to 0.19 in the 18-49 demo.

I would have expected a slight NXT win in total viewers, but more than it was, and AEW still winning in the key numbers because the gap to close was too large. Numbers are going to be down at this point so I wouldn’t read much into this. One would expect that with AEW pushing a Jon Moxley vs. Jake Hager title match hard for next week, while NXT wasn’t pushing anything, that AEW should probably win handily in total viewers next week, unless something this week was greatly negative for AEW or greatly positive for NXT.

AEW was No. 32 for the night in the demo on a night dominated by news shows. AEW did lose to Black Ink Crew 8B on VH-1, Forged in Fire on the History Channel, Sistas Series on BET, Married at First on Lifetime, My 600 Pound life on TLC and Guys Grocery Games on The Food Network, making it seventh in entertainment. NXT was 11th in entertainment in 18-49 and 51st overall.

The one hour Gargano-Ciampa presentation helped NXT increase 17 percent overall and 22 percent in 18-49 over this past week. Because it didn’t crack the top 50, we don’t have any other details.

AEW was up one percent in viewers and one percent in 18-49.

In the key demos, AEW had the 58,000 to 44,000 edge in Males 18-34, NXT had a 36,000 to 31,000 edge in Women 18-34, AEW had a 166,000 to 114,000 edge in Males 35-49 and AEW had a 76,000 to 48,000 edge in Women 35-49.

The totals in 18-49 were 331,000 for AEW and 242,000 for NXT.
Quote:

A few notes regarding the 4/1 Wednesday night ratings. While the empty arena format is the main reason both shows were down, the AEW movie lead-in was down 30 percent from the prior week. At the time both prior shows ended, USA had 1,012,000 viewers and TNT had 647,000. As soon as wrestling started, in the first minute, USA lost 215,000 viewers and TNT gained 106,000 viewers. Still, AEW was first for the week with 1.39 viewers per home ...

Overall, even though the viewership difference overall was 685,000 to 590,000 and both did much lower than usual in the most important 18-49, it was 328,000 for AEW and 199,000 for NXT. So compared to every other week to date, wrestling did the worst ever in the key demo, even against Trump speeches and World Series games ...

AEW dominated every quarter in 18-49, however in overall, due to over 50 viewers, NXT won the main event quarter, doing 608,000 viewers for the Keith Lee North American title defense against Dominik Dijakovic and Damien Priest, while AEW did 607,000 for Cody & Darby Allin vs. Sammy Guevara & Shawn Spears. However, even that quarter was a huge edge in 18-49 with AEW at 308,000 to NXT’s 203,000 ...

AEW’s first quarter drew 703,000 viewers and 341,000 in 18-49 for Kenny Omega vs. Trent, while NXT drew 668,000 viewers and 244,000 in 18-49 for Velveteen Dream vs. Bobby Fish.

In the second quarter, AEW lost 29,000 viewers and 23,000 in 18-49 for the end of Omega vs. Trent and a replay of the Chris Jericho/Matt Hardy angle. NXT lost 68,000 viewers and 23,000 in 18-49 for the end of Dream vs. Fish, the post-match and the Dexter Lumis vs. Jake Atlas match.

In the third quarter, AEW gained 25,000 viewers and 4,000 in 18-49 for Hikaru Shida vs. Anna Jayy. NXT lost 50,000 viewers and 36,000 in 18-49 for a replay of the Tommaso Ciampa vs. Johnny Gargano brawl and Shotzi Blackheart vs. Deonna Purrazzo.

In the fourth quarter, AEW gained 26,000 viewers and 19,000 in 18-49 for the video package with Jon Moxley and Jake Hager and Lance Archer vs. Marko Stunt. NXT lost 10,000 viewers and 19,000 in 18-49 for Blackheart vs. Xia Li, Blackheart vs. Aliyah and Blackheart vs Kayden Carter. This may have been the least watched segment in 18-49, with just 166,000 viewers, since NXT has been on the air.

In the fifth quarter, AEW lost 18,000 viewers but gained 1,000 in 18-49 for the Brodie Lee backstage segment and Dustin Rhodes & QT Marshall vs. 8 & 9. NXT gained 52,000 viewers and 31,000 in 18-49 for Blackheart vs Dakota Kai.

In the sixth quarter, AEW lost 13,000 viewers and 14,000 in 18-49 for the Chris Jericho/Vanguard 1 segment and Nick & Matt Jackson preparing for a return. NXT lost 39,000 and 15,000 in 18-49 for Kushida vs. Joaquin Wilde.

In the seventh quarter, AEW lost 22,000 viewers and 3,000 in 18-49 for the first part of Cody & Allin vs. Guevara & Spears. NXT gained 57,000 viewers and 14,000 in 18-49 for another Ciampa/Gargano package plus the beginning of Lee vs. Dijakovic vs. Priest.

In the eighth quarter, ending both main events, AEW lost 65,000 viewers and 17,000 in 18-49 for its main event while NXT lost 2,000 viewers but gained 7,000 in 18-49 for the ending of its main event.
Quote:

The kidnapping spots on NXT are to lead to the introduction of Jorge Bolly, or whatever name El Hijo del Fantasma will go by. It’s the Simbianese Liberation Army storyline where the captives sympathize with their captors and Raul Mendoza and Joaquin Wilde become his Patty Hearsts
Quote:

AEW finished a marathon set of tapings on 4/2 in Decatur, GA, at Q.T. Marshall’s school. The tapings were done with a skeleton crew. Unlike WWE and UFC, talent from certain parts of the country were not going to be brought in, most notably California and New York City. In addition, all talent was told that they didn’t have to come and they would be paid in full.

The tapings were for Dynamite and Dark through as long as 5/20. Depending on the situation, it is possible they could do another taping in early or mid-May, but if not, they have enough covered and there won’t be any tapings for several weeks.

AEW used mostly talent that lives in the Southeast and a few from Texas, but will have footage of talent not there for television. Jon Moxley, who is based in Las Vegas, had his 4/15 title match with Jake Hager taped at the prior set of tapings. Jim Ross will be used as the commentator for this specific match, doing voiceovers from home, as it will be from Daily’s Place in Jacksonville while the rest of the show next week will be from Decatur, GA. Aubrey Edwards, who is based in Seattle, stayed in the area since this started as Tony Khan also told talent that they could avoid flying back-and-forth if they wanted to stay in Jacksonville or in the area and the company would pay for their lodging through this set of tapings.

The TNT tournament is taped up until the finals. Tony Schiavone and Chris Jericho will be the announcing team for all the remaining shows from Georgia.

The next major event, the 5/23 Double or Nothing show, remains up in the air. There are three choices, all obvious, based on what will be allowed in Las Vegas. The show is booked for the MGM Grand and was about 1,500 ticket shy of being sold out a month ago, but it’s doubtful many if any tickets have moved in recent weeks ...

The AEW Southern California crew, notably The Young Bucks, SCU, Peter Avalon and Brandon Cutler, along with Simon Lotto and Steven Andrews taped matches for Being the Elite this past week. The bouts were basic matches, actually quite good wrestling-wise but toned down in the risk department, Excalibur doing voiceover work completely tongue-in-cheek. The location was a ring set up on a tennis and basketball court that was in Rancho Cucamonga, CA. Excalibur called it the AEW Compound and would talk of a capacity crowd with nobody else there ...
Quote:

Impact is taping this week at Skyway Studios in Nashville even though Nashville is shut down.

It is believed that wrestling is able to tape during shutdowns, and at least in Tennessee this is the case, because the Tennessee shutdown exempts media and the claim is this is a closed studio doing a television media event ...

For Impact, as opposed to the other two companies, there is more of a need because their contract with television in India is based on providing a certain number of shows, which include weekly television and 12 other events. The India deal is believed to be the largest revenue stream the company has.

The attempt is to tape for as long as two months, including the Rebellion show that has been pushed. That show was to take place on 4/19 in New York, which isn’t happening ...

A big problem is that the PPV was to be build around a Tessa Blanchard vs. Michael Elgin vs. Eddie Edwards title match, and the word going around which is confirmed is that Blanchard, the Impact men’s world champion, who is based in California, is not leaving the state at this time ...

The plan a few weeks ago was to tape the shows in Houston at Booker T’s gym, which is notable but because Impact has fallen so far, it is AEW, and not Impact, on the WWE’s enemy list. The plan was also to tape not this week there and it was changed because they felt the need to get it done now due to the risk of not being able to get it done if they waited until the normal timetable.
Quote:

For Dark Side of the Ring ...

While the first episode on Chris Benoit was very well received, the second on New Jack from those who know the story was not. There were complaints that they glorified him far too much particularly the way he was fawned over on the post-show. They ran with a lot of stories that were fiction, particularly in the post-show. There were a lot of things not discussed, such as the fact Smoky Mountain Wrestling, where he got his first break, saw attendance decline significantly during the period he was pushed so the idea of inciting fans racially backfired. That didn’t happen in ECW and he was very popular with that fan base for short spots, where he’d come in, with music playing, do a short brawl and often dive from high places. Vic Grimes claimed at the funeral of Roland Alexander that everything he and New Jack did was them working together and that they were friends, contrary to how New Jack described things.
Quote:

Konnan said that Rey Horus signing here [ROH] doesn’t affect his status with AAA, but if Horus goes to New Japan through his deal with ROH, at that point he wouldn’t be able to work anymore with AAA, because CMLL would go to New Japan and New Japan would go to ROH and nix it
Quote:

Due to the virus, the situation in Japan has changed once again. Before, nobody wanted to sell to WWE and now with most companies in tough financial straits, it’s become a buyers market and it is believed companies that otherwise wouldn’t sell would be willing to do so and WWE could have a local infrastructure and start being a force in that market. The general belief is that with MMA no longer a big deal except for a few shows a year, that the only thing that can threaten New Japan, past a current act of God, wouldn’t be another company in the market, but WWE in the market with roots which always could have happened but now the odds are significantly better to make such a deal

Emperor Smeat 04-14-2020 09:17 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
There was both good and bad news for Raw last night when it comes to the ratings.

The bad news is that the 1.91 million viewer average would be the lowest in modern history for a live episode, falling just under the 1.92 million for the Raw go-home show for WrestleMania.

The good news is that the audience largely stayed for all three hours with just an eight percent first-to-third hour drop. This means some combination of two factors, that the show itself and the Drew McIntyre vs. Andrade main event kept those who at least tuned in at first interested, and/or that the low first hour, under two million viewers, is down to the hardcores that will stay no matter what.

It's likely more the former, given many shows have done worse than hour three, but the starting point was so low to make it the least-watched Raw except for Christmas week taped shows in 2018 and 2019.

Raw finished in the No. 3, No. 5 and No. 7 spots in 18-49 ...

For total viewers, the show was down nine percent from last week, but in 18-49, the decline was 20 percent.

It was down 25 percent overall and 38 percent in 18-49 from the same week last year, but that was also a special draft episode, and the circumstances are completely different ...

The three hours were:

8 p.m. 1.99 million viewers
9 p.m. 1.91 million viewers
10 p.m. 1.83 million viewers

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
We have been told by a number of readers that they woke up this morning to find they had received refunds from Ticketmaster.com for Wrestlemania 36.

If you are waiting for a refund, you should you check your credit or debit card accounts

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
The status of the NXT Tag Team titles will be addressed this week.

WWE announced last night that William Regal is appearing on Wednesday morning's episode of WWE's The Bump and will address the NXT Tag Team title picture: "What news will @RealKingRegal have for us this week? The #WWENXT GM stops by #WWETheBump to address the @WWENXT Tag Team Championship picture, this Wednesday at 10am ET!"

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
WWE’s Ask WWE Network Twitter account noted that episodes of NXT now aren’t being made available on-demand in the United Kingdom until seven days after they originally air in the country ...

For those who have asked about changes in getting to see NXT on the WWE Network in certain countries, there are cities where the first-run is delayed based on local television contracts that the local station put in to protect their television rights.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Jim Ross is often called the greatest pro wrestling announcer in history, with many not batting an eye before putting him right on to the Mount Rushmore of wrestling announcers. Now, Jim Ross is revealing his own personal Mount Rushmore of wrestling announcers.

Speaking on the Top Rope Nation Podcast, Jim took some time to heap praise on those that paved the way for him and some that he was lucky to work with over the course of a career that spans across multiple decades.

"Gordon Solie, Bob Caudill, Lance Russell, Gorilla Monsoon would be four off the top of my head that I would put on there,” Ross revealed. “If you included color guys, color commentators, that would certainly include Bobby Heenan, who may be the best all-around performer I've ever worked with, as far as being an outstanding wrestler, a great heel, a manager, a host, a color guy. He excelled in everything he did. And nobody in that era was better or that area was better than Bobby, in my view. So Bobby Heenan would be on that list, Paul Heyman would be one, Jerry Lawler would be one. Lawler, Heyman, Cornette (was a) great color guy....When you ask the announcers, I just assumed it was like my role as a play by play guy. So those four I mentioned I think would be there quite easily. There's a very subjective list like everything else, but there's my favorites."

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
A number of readers sent word that material the WWE Network made free for all to stream (after signing up with an email account) has now returned to being exclusive content for paid Network subscribers.

WWE announced on 3/23 that were making certain content free to stream for a limited period of time due to the coronavirus pandemic, including every WrestleMania, Royal Rumble, SummerSlam, Survivor Series, NXT TakeOver and NXT UK TakeOver events, WWE 24, Ruthless Aggression and The Monday Night War documentary series and more.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Sports Illustrated has a sobering view of the level of sophistication for major league sports to return to play even in empty arena settings. It’s mind-boggling to read this and the preventive measures necessary while WWE is going to have people traveling weekly to shows. In the feature, epidemiologist Zach Binney predicts there will be sports events involving fans until there is a vaccine that could be 12-18 months away. Regarding empty arena games, SI spoke to numerous experts and before anything could be started, every person involved would need to be isolated for two weeks and be tested multiple times during that period. In WWE’s case, they are no living at the PC in isolation but instead, going home either by car or by plane and expected to do so every seven days. They are also assessing sports that have much less body-to-body contact that professional wrestling necessitates. Below is a portion of the article:

Quote:

Conversations with experts painted a picture of what exactly it would take to make these sports vacuums a reality. Before any of this can begin, every person who would have access to the facilities will need to be isolated separately for two weeks to ensure that no infection could enter. That’s players and coaches, athletic trainers and interpreters, reporters and broadcasters, plus housekeeping and security personnel. No one can come in or out. Food will have to be delivered. Hotel and stadium employees will have to be paid enough to compensate for their time away from their families. Everyone on site will have to be tested multiple times during this initial period.

All right, so the 14-day period is over and everyone has tested negative at least twice. Now they are allowed to begin spending time around one another—but not too much time. If one person gets it, he or she will begin spreading it immediately, so everyone will have to continue practicing social distancing. That probably means using a new ball for each play. It probably means seating players in stands rather than on benches or in dugouts. It certainly means banning high-fives.

All personnel must continue to be tested daily. We will be unlikely to have enough rapid testing by then, so they will probably have to settle for the tests that take several hours to produce results. That means the testing will probably run a day behind.

Link: https://www.si.com/mlb/2020/04/10/sp...ming-back-soon

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Amy Weber, who worked for WWE after participating in the first Diva Search in 2004, posted a video explaining why she left the company. She was complimentary of talents such as Big Show, Eddy Guerrero, and JBL. She said most of the women in the locker room were nice to her, but she didn’t come up in wrestling and said it probably rubbed some people the wrong way.

She left in the company in February 2005 and explained that it occurred after a series of events following an injury while practicing with Joy Giovanni. Weber said she suffered an injury to her tailbone and was instructed by the doctor to get two Ibuprofen pills and ice from the men’s locker room and some ice. Later, while on a flight to Alaska, she was sleeping across three seats and was awoken when Randy Orton charged at the seats knocking her onto the floor. She went back to sleep and awoken a second time when a drink had been poured onto her. She saw Edge with the same colored drink and accused him of pouring it, which he denied to her. Weber landed in Alaska and informed Shane McMahon she was done with the company.

Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6kWUpBZtr4c

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
NWA will be bringing fans extra content this week in lieu of the previously scheduled 2020 Crockett Cup event.

On Tuesday, April 14, NWA will air the build for the 2019 Crockett Cup, which was headlined by Marty Scurll vs. Nick Aldis. The show will debut in NWA's usual 6:05 p.m. ET spot on YouTube. Then, on Sunday, April 19, at 7 p.m. ET, NWA will re-air the 2019 Crockett Cup. The 2020 Crockett Cup was scheduled to air live on pay-per-view on Sunday, but was canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic. The rematch between Scurll and Aldis was the headlining bout for this year's edition of the show.

Furthermore, NWA will air new content on April 21 at 6:05 p.m. ET as a brand new special featuring Kamille will debut. The special will feature Kamilla's wrestling debut.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
On Monday night, it was revealed by Orange County Mayor Jerry Demings that WWE falls into the category of ‘essential businesses’ within the state of Florida. Orange County has been hit with a lot of criticism and is deflecting by stating this was a decision made by the state and not the county. On their official Twitter feed, Orange County is directing critics of the classification to contact the office of Governor Ron DeSantis ...

I have reached out to several promotions regarding this classification within Florida and if they are considering running in the state and below are the statements we received at POST Wrestling on Tuesday from Ring of Honor and MLW:

Joe Koff of ROH:

"I think it’s great for WWE that they are able to operate how they see fit, or how they may even need to for their business. It doesn’t necessarily change our approach to the pandemic though. The safety of all of our performers, staff, vendors, and fans are the most important thing to us right now and we are continuing to improve our infrastructure and find ways to connect with them during this time. Are we eager to get back? Absolutely. For now, we will be monitoring day by day."

From Court Bauer at MLW:

"No. I will not put my athletes, crew and staff along with their families at risk of contracting the virus."

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Donald Trump wants his sports back.

During his press conference on Tuesday, Donald Trump discussed re-opening the economy and putting together a group of advisors, all from the sports world, to help him in doing so. Trump named WWE Chairman "The Great" Vince McMahon and UFC President Dana White as part of the advisory team.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
On Monday, WWE was publicly deemed an "essential business" by Florida Governor Ron DeSantis. The new executive order allows WWE, and any professional sports and media production with a national audience, to hold events as long as the location is closed to the general public.

"Obviously, WWE, there's no crowd so it's a very small number of people," he said. "We look at it on a case-by-case basis. We haven't had a huge amount of requests. A lot of this will be 'what do we look like in May?' rather than doing stuff now. The one thing I do support is, we do need to support content, especially sports and events. We're not going to have crowds there, I get that. If NASCAR does a race and can televise it, I think that's a good thing. I'd like to see [Tiger] Woods and [Phil] Mickelson golf. That's social distance. I think people are starved for content. We haven't had new content since the middle of March. If people are told to say closer to the house, it sure does help to have fresh things to do. People are chomping at the bit. I think people, to be able to have some light at the end of the tunnel and see things get back on a better course, I think from a psychological perspective, it's a good thing."

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
There may not be a new WWE 2K game this year.

Former WWE SmackDown vs. Raw video game series writer Justin Leeper posted a video on YouTube claiming he's heard from reliable sources that WWE 2K21 has been canceled. Leeper continued, 2K is publishing a different kind of WWE game from a different developer that's not Visual Concepts. Leeper went on to say that WWE 2K22 won't be released on next generation consoles.

Leeper previously reported that the budget for WWE 2K21 would be slashed and developers had quit after the release of WWE 2K20, which underperformed in sales and was heavily criticized by fans due to glitches. Yuke's and 2K split months before the game was set to release, which reportedly contributed to the problems in WWE 2K20.

Fightful reached out to 2K for comment, but were not given a response. Alex McCarthy of TalkSPORT reached out to 2K about the report and was given the following response.

“We don’t comment on rumors and speculation.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by 411Mania
WrestleVotes reports that the mood at the WWE Performance Center ahead of tonight’s live RAW is that of uncertainty, with some of the talent feeling as if they shouldn’t be there.

“Source states mood at the PC today is that of uncertainty. Many know they shouldn’t be there, but realize this is their job.

And as unfortunate as it may sound, they can all pull out 1 by 1, and the show will still go on. WWE will always have a big enough roster to continue.”


TPWW Frontpage:

DaveWadding 04-15-2020 01:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Smeat
WrestleVotes reports that the mood at the WWE Performance Center ahead of tonight’s live RAW is that of uncertainty, with some of the talent feeling as if they shouldn’t be there.

“Source states mood at the PC today is that of uncertainty. Many know they shouldn’t be there, but realize this is their job.

And as unfortunate as it may sound, they can all pull out 1 by 1, and the show will still go on. WWE will always have a big enough roster to continue.”

THE SHOW MUST GO ON DAMMIT. RAW TONIGHT IS DANNY BURCH WRESTLING HIMSELF FOR 3 HOURS. WHO IS DANNY BURCH, ANYWAYS? YOU WANT A STEAK WRAP, PAL?

Evil Vito 04-15-2020 12:42 PM

Vince said in a conference call today that there will be substantial talent and staff cuts very soon.

xrodmuc316 04-15-2020 12:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Conspiracy Victim Vito (Post 5337221)
Vince said in a conference call today that there will be substantial talent and staff cuts very soon.

I'm ok with furloughs, but if Vince cuts wrestlers then that bullshit about them being a family and being important to provide entertainment to their fans needs to stop. Vince cares about $ and nothing else.

drave 04-15-2020 01:11 PM

Typically, any work environment that runs that "We're like family" is toxic AF and should be an "interview" red flag.

xrodmuc316 04-15-2020 01:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by drave (Post 5337239)
Typically, any work environment that runs that "We're like family" is toxic AF and should be an "interview" red flag.

100% right

Emperor Smeat 04-15-2020 08:26 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Representatives from seven Japanese promotions joined together today to take part in a government meeting regarding how the coronavirus pandemic has affected the professional wrestling industry in Japan.

The meeting included representatives from NJPW, Stardom, AJPW, DDT, Pro Wrestling NOAH, Tokyo Joshi Pro Wrestling, and World Women’s Wrestling Diana. They met with Hiroshi Hase, the former pro wrestling star who now serves as Japan's Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology.

Here's the list of those who attended the meeting:
  • Hiroshi Hase (lower house minister, Liberal Democratic Party)
  • Sports Board, Ministry of Economy Trade and Industry Representative (unnamed)
  • Takaaki Kidani (Company director, Bushiroad Group)
  • Hiroshi Tanahashi (New Japan Pro-Wrestling)
  • Naoki Sugabayashi (Chairman, New Japan Pro-Wrestling)
  • Suwama (All Japan Pro-Wrestling)
  • Takenori Fukuda (Representative Director, All Japan Pro-Wrestling)
  • HARASHIMA (DDT Pro-Wrestling)
  • Akira Takahashi (Operating Executive, DDT Pro-Wrestling)
  • Naomichi Marufuji (Executive Vice President, NOAH Global Entertainment)
  • Masashi Ishiguro (Head of Public Relations, NOAH Global Entertainment)
  • Mayu Iwatani (STARDOM)
  • Katsuhiko Harada (Representative Director, Bushiroad Fight)
  • Yuka Sakazaki (Tokyo Joshi Pro-Wrestling)
  • Tetsuya Kouda (Representative, Tokyo Joshi Pro-Wrestling)
  • Kyoko Inoue (World Women’s Wrestling Diana)
  • Taishi Fuwa (World Women’s Wrestling Diana)

NJPW wrote that the representatives met with Hase "with the goal of presenting a request for coronavirus testing kits for wrestlers and staff in the industry, as well as support to cover pay for wrestlers as events have canceled under Japan’s current state of emergency in reaction to the virus."

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
There are a few changes to AEW's roster rankings this week.

Cody has moved ahead of Chris Jericho and is now ranked second in the men's division. In the main event of last Wednesday's Dynamite, Cody defeated Shawn Spears to advance to the semifinals of the TNT Championship tournament.

Britt Baker has fallen one spot in the women's division. She was ranked fourth prior to losing to Hikaru Shida on Dynamite last week.

Best Friends have moved up two spots in the tag team division. They defeated Kenny Omega & Michael Nakazawa last week.

Here are this week's full rankings:
Men's division --

Champion: Jon Moxley (8-0 singles record in 2020, 13-2-1 overall record)
  • Jake Hager (4-0 singles record in 2020, 5-0 overall record)
  • Cody (6-1 singles record in 2020, 13-6-1 overall record
  • Chris Jericho (0-1 singles record in 2020, 11-3-1 overall record)
  • Kenny Omega (3-0 singles record in 2020, 19-7 overall record)
  • Darby Allin (4-2 singles record in 2020, 9-9-1 overall record)

Women's division --

Champion: Nyla Rose (4-1 singles record in 2020, 9-4 overall record)
  • Hikaru Shida (7-1 singles record in 2020, 12-5 overall record)
  • Kris Statlander (2-3 singles record in 2020, 6-6 overall record)
  • Yuka Sakazaki (1-1 singles record in 2020, 1-4 overall record)
  • Riho (3-3 singles record in 2020, 11-6 overall record)
  • Britt Baker (2-3 singles record in 2020, 10-7 overall record)

Tag team division --

Champions: Kenny Omega & Hangman Page (6-0 tag team record in 2020, 19-7 overall record for Omega, 13-9 overall record for Page)
  • The Dark Order (5-0 tag team record in 2020, 9-3 overall record for Evil Uno, 9-4 overall record for Stu Grayson)
  • The Young Bucks (2-2 tag team record in 2020, 12-9 overall record for Nick Jackson, 12-9 overall record for Matt Jackson)
  • Best Friends (4-3 tag team record in 2020, 10-14 overall record for Trent Barreta, 9-11 overall record for Chuck Taylor)
  • SCU (2-3 tag team record in 2020, 16-7 overall record for Scorpio Sky, 16-6 overall record for Frankie Kazarian)
  • The Lucha Bros (1-2 tag team record in 2020, 10-9 overall record for Pentagon Jr., 11-9 overall record for Fenix)

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lucha Blog
AAA is starting empty arena shows this Saturday at 8pm with plans of running them for the next four weeks. Will stream on YouTube and Facebook (oddly no Twitch.)

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
WWE has announced that they have officially postponed their annual meeting of shareholders, which was set to take place tomorrow. Expect other WWE announcements as the day continues.

Originally they announced they would hold a meeting but then immediately adjourn and announce a new date for it due to coronavirus issues.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
WWE announced the following:

WWE and Ad Council partner to launch national PSAs to raise awareness during COVID-19 pandemic

As an extension of Ad Council’s ongoing efforts to ensure the American public is receiving critical and vetted information during the COVID-19 pandemic, the national nonprofit has partnered with WWE to launch a new suite of PSAs featuring WWE Champion Drew McIntyre, NXT Women’s Champion Charlotte Flair and WWE Superstar Kofi Kingston that stress the importance of practicing good hygiene during these unprecedented times.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Will Ospreay sat down with Chris Van Vliet for an exclusive interview ...

While on the topic of a potential working relationship between AEW and New Japan, Ospreay feels that it won’t happen because of NJPW’s partnership with Ring of Honor and thinks that AEW and New Japan don’t necessarily need each other.

“I don’t know. I think the main reason is we’re kind of in bed with Ring of Honor right now and I think New Japan has a very big loyalty to the guys and once again, people need to remember New Japan at one point we’re going to file for bankruptcy, and they stayed loyal to the guys and they were able to bring it back up and then when Ring of Honor wasn’t doing its best and was on the down, New Japan was one… even there were times where I thought it was questionable maybe. Like I don’t really know, but New Japan have still been like, ‘Oh no. We’ll help out every now and again. We’ll still use some of your guys so like, put them on the show. Hopefully it’ll increase their value a little bit.’ Guys like Jeff Cobb for example. But I don’t know. I just think it’s… the way I always see it is do we really need each other? I think from fans’ perspective, there are a lot of dream matches. We could probably book like a nine-match dream card right now just sitting here, but I think it’s more or less of the — AEW, and I’m saying it like, I love everything [that] AEW’s doing. I think it’s fantastic. It’s fine, it’s doing everything great. New Japan is doing everything great. We don’t really need each other. There’s nothing that can benefit either group. I don’t really know. Maybe we could argue that New Japan on TNT would probably help out a little bit but I just think… there’s something there and for me personally, I want it to happen but I’m not like, ‘Ahh! It must happen.’”

Ospreay and Van Vliet dove into Ospreay’s Twitter back and forth with Seth Rollins from 2019. Ospreay said that according to people that he knows that are close to Seth Rollins, Paul Heyman was the one who told Rollins to apologize for the tweet about making more money than Ospreay.

“I mean, I heard rumors — once again, these are only rumors but I’ve heard rumors that Paul Heyman told him to apologize. Paul Heyman’s a big supporter of mine and once again, Paul Heyman is Paul Heyman. I heard that he told Seth to apologize. I don’t know if that’s true or not but like, there’s kind of rumors going around backstage and I’ve got guys who are friends with Seth Rollins in New Japan who have told me this and I’m like, I don’t know if that’s true but it sounds about right.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
ESPN has a feature story up on their site and Boxing promoter Bob Arum is the focus of the piece. With the recent news that the state of Florida has deemed WWE an “essential business” so they can continue to run live shows, Arum said he’ll be in contact with WWE about potentially running events at the Performance Center and has discussed the idea with Todd Duboef who’s the president of Top Rank.

“It’s very, very interesting, and we’re going to be in touch with them. There’s a possibility to use their facility to maybe do events without a crowd. We’re very close with Vince [McMahon] and the WWE. So let’s see, but we’re still not talking before June.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
According to a report from WrestlingINC, MJF, The Young Bucks, PAC, Big Swole, Fenix, Pentagon Jr., Nyla Rose and “Hangman” Adam Page were not a part of the recent AEW TV tapings, thus will not be appearing on Dynamite over the next several weeks.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
The 2010 TNA Lockdown pay-per-view was covered by Eric Bischoff and Conrad Thompson on the latest 83 Weeks podcast. Bischoff shared his thoughts about the six-sided ring and what he thought of it when he first came into the company. Bischoff stated that the idea behind keeping the ring at the time was to attract viewers who were surfing through channels, hoping that the six-sided ring caught their eye.

“Because it was f*cking stupid… it was stupid. Here was the logic that I heard and I’m not gonna name names, alright? But here’s the logic that I heard: ‘Yeah! But when people are flipping through the channels, they’re gonna see that six-sided ring and stop and go, ‘Hey, what’s that? Maybe we should watch it.’ That was the entire psychology and strategy behind the six-sided ring. You’re hoping to build an audience because people are clicking — first of all, people don’t click through channels anymore. You punch in your number, you scroll up and down. I mean, even in 2010, it was an absurd rationale and psychology if you will, or strategy to come up with a six-sided ring for no other reason than to capture an audience that may be surfing channels or as it was put, clicking through channels and stop because they were going to see something that looked odd to them. Think about that. That’s pretty f*cking stupid, right?”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Christian joined Booker T and Brad Gilmore on the Hall Of Fame podcast and during the Q&A portion of the show, Christian was asked if Edge’s WWE 24 documentary made him consider a return to the ring. Christian was clear about his concussion issues in the past and added that he’s medically disqualified and doesn’t know how he’d even go about getting cleared.

“I mean, it’s one of those things, right? It’s a completely different injury. You know, I’m pretty content with all that I’ve accomplished in WWE. I pretty much accomplished everything I wanted to do except main event WrestleMania and let’s be honest, how many people actually get a chance to do that? I’m 46 years old, and I had some concussion issues. It’s just a matter of… I don’t see it happening. I’m medically disqualified. I’m just not sure how I would ever get cleared.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
WrestleMania 37 could be in trouble.

According to the Los Angeles Times, an internal Los Angeles Fire Department email went around that discussed placing restrictions on large gatherings in the state for up to a year.
Kurt Angle Released By WWE
Related Article Kurt Angle Released By WWE

Mayor Eric Garcetti indicated in a conference call that “large gatherings such as concerts and sporting events may not be approved in the city for at least 1 year" according to the email.

Garcetti spokesman Alex Comisar confirmed the mayor’s comments to the Times, saying, “The mayor was generally referencing studies of current and historical data and best practices for safely reopening our economy."

There is no timeline for Los Angeles to resume hosting large scale events. WrestleMania 37 is scheduled to take place on March 28, 2021 at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California. Construction has continued on SoFi Stadium, though work has been altered due to the coronavirus pandemic.

It is unknown at this time if WrestleMania 37 will be affected.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Before going on a hiatus for the foreseeable future, AEW taped months of content in Florida and Georgia. The tapings took place on a closed set at Daily's Place (Florida) and the Nightmare Factory (Georgia) before AEW suspended live operations.

"When we first started, Brandi was adamant that we have a medical team. I rarely swing by the trainer's room but we also have a physio team. All the perks of a high-end wrestling company. She picked out Doc Sampson, who is famous for saving Jerry Lawler's life after his heart attack. He does not take shit from anybody. He set in a really rigorous amount of guidelines and everyone was able to follow them. You're quarantined in a hotel so we can keep the numbers under ten at the actual arena and then you're sanitizing a car steering wheel, the ropes are being sanitized, you're getting your temperature checked, you're getting quarantine questions a page long. You had to limit the people who are older individuals or people with immune illnesses of some kind, they can't be present because we don't want to put them in any risk, so we're doing interviews remotely. It's been an extreme challenge, but I wanted to be able to answer all challenges. Certain people really stepped up. Tony Khan, more than anybody," he said.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Next week’s episode of Dark Side of the Ring on VICE will focus in on the assassination of Dino Bravo and below is the trailer for the forthcoming episode:

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/7XrdYDyTOpo" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 04-16-2020 08:55 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
For the second straight week, NXT beat out AEW Dynamite in terms of total viewers but lost in the 18-49 demo.

NXT averaged 692,000 viewers on the USA Network on Wednesday night, which was down 1,000 viewers from last week. The show fell to 58th in the 18-49 demo on cable with a 0.17 rating, down 10.5 percent. It's the fourth straight week the show has missed the top 50 in the 18-49 rankings for the night.

Over on TNT, Dynamite averaged 683,000 viewers, down one percent from the previous week. Dynamite also fell in 18-49 to a 0.25 rating, which was down three percent from last week. The show finished 29th overall on cable in that demo.

Factoring out the news programming that dominated the rankings, AEW would've finished 10th in the 18-49 demo and NXT would have finished 17th.

The total Wednesday audience of 1.375 million viewers was down one percent from last week and was the second lowest overall total since both shows started airing in October.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
This week’s viewership ties Dynamite’s second-lowest since their launch with the lowest being 663,000 from Thanksgiving Eve last November ...

AEW did a 0.25 in the 18-49 compared to NXT’s 0.17. AEW was down slightly in the demo from last week. There were moderate fluctuations for AEW among the key demos with females 18-49 down 11% while adults 18-34 increased 15% and men 12-34 were up 21%.

Because NXT did not finish among the top fifty cable programs, we do not have a breakdown of their main demographics.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
WWE announced the adjournment of their annual stockholders meeting and below is the official press release concerning the news:

STAMFORD, Conn.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– WWE today announced the adjournment of its annual meeting until May 14, 2020. Such date was chosen in order to conform with the Delaware General Corporation law relating to adjournments, however, as that date remains within the effective period of Governor Lamont’s stay at home/stay safe executive order for the State of Connecticut, it is extremely likely that the May meeting will again be adjourned to a later date. The Company will keep its stockholders apprised of all updates relating to the annual meeting as they become available.

WWE also declared their quarterly dividend.

STAMFORD, Conn.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– WWE (NYSE: WWE) announced that its Board of Directors today declared the Company’s regular quarterly dividend of $0.12 per share for all Class A and B shares of common stock. The record date for the dividend will be June 15, 2020 and the payment date will be June 25, 2020.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Vince McMahon tweeted:

Saddened to learn of the passing of my friend and WWE’s first employee, WWE Hall of Famer Howard Finkel. The grandest moments in sports-entertainment history were made all the grander thanks to Howard’s iconic voice. pic.twitter.com/aAMY2XaHsm
— Vince McMahon (@VinceMcMahon) April 16, 2020

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Shane “Hurricane” Helms joined Bully Ray and David LaGreca on Busted Open Radio just one day after he was furloughed from WWE. Helms did clarify that the company told him there may be an opportunity to return once the pandemic slows down but he’s waiting until it actually happens. Helms also revealed that he was the one who pitched the idea of the ‘Winner Take All’ stipulation for the main event of WrestleMania 35 between Charlotte Flair, Becky Lynch and Ronda Rousey.

“I believe there is and they told me there was [a possibility] so, we’ll just have to see until it actually happens. That’s my hope and I did some good things with them while I was there. The whole ‘Winner Take All’ at WrestleMania when the women main-evented, that was my idea. So I had some good stuff that I was doing there, but we’ll see. I’m personally concerned that this whole thing lasts a lot longer than what we’re being led to believe, as far as the whole ticket-paying audience being allowed back in buildings, stuff like that.”

Another producer that was furloughed from the company was Billy Kidman. Helms revealed what exactly Kidman’s role was in the company and how important Billy was to the smoothness of the WWE product for their live TV shows.

“So we got a guy that times the shows. Now basically, segments are given a certain amount of times. Like segment one is gonna open the show. It’s gonna have a certain amount of time. You got a crossover segment which is gonna happen at the end of the first hour going into the second hour. So anyway, say you and I have a match. Me against Bubba Ray. It’s gonna be segment four or five. Maybe segment four is gonna be five minutes and segment five is gonna be seven minutes, and that’s what we know we’re gonna have to do. Billy Kidman is kinda one of the ones who helps assign those minutes along with creative. He has to factor in commercial breaks, but then what happens is, sometimes segment one goes long. We had that recently. I believe it was the Randy Orton and Edge segment when Edge first came back. Went super heavy, really good, so if you go heavy as long as it’s good, nobody really goes crazy. But now, what Billy Kidman would have to do is he would have to make up that time elsewhere. Another segment that went heavy recently — I can’t remember what it was but it went eight minutes in, and so now he’s got to find time to make up for that eight minute slot in the show so he’s constantly sitting there calculating what he can do. ‘This match in seg 12 might be seven minutes. Well now it’s gonna have six. We gotta make up some time.’ Stuff like that. He’s constantly over there figuring it out, and it’s a pressure cooker and Billy was fantastic at it. Brisco did it for years, Gerald Brisco and now the guy that Kidman was training, Jason Ayers, he’s really good at it too. But that’s one of the most difficult jobs there so I was super surprised that Kidman was on the list.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Muscle and Fitness released their sit-down interview with Roman Reigns that was conducted prior to WrestleMania 36. Reigns would reveal that he and his wife are going to be welcoming two new children into the world soon.

“Three kids with two in the oven. So I’m looking to be a papa bear of five. Breaking news. We haven’t really shared that.”

That rules out Reigns returning any time soon and probably not until maybe by next year's Mania at the earliest going by current info regarding the coronavirus and potential vaccine.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Following the news of the many names within WWE that were released from the company or furloughed, Seth Rollins gave his thoughts on the situation on Instagram Live and his response was not well received on social media when he shared his displeasure about the comments that were directed to WWE about their handling of yesterday’s events.

“It’s just a difficult day for all of us. My heart is broken for the guys and girls who I’m really close with that had it the worst today, and that goes for talent that you guys love on-screen but also everyone off-screen who may not get the social media fanfare that some of the talent is getting. But one thing I am seeing that is a little upsetting to me is all the negativity and hostility towards WWE. This is a difficult day for everyone, for all of us and I think if ever there was a moment for us to unify, for us to kind of band together and try to do the best we can to keep this business alive the best we know how, this is that moment, and I think pointing fingers or saying, ‘You should’ve done this, you should’ve done that’ is… I don’t know. It just doesn’t feel like the time or the place for it. I think this is a day for compassion and for empathy and for understanding and to try to support each other. You know, to pick each other up and that’s for everybody. That’s not just for the guys and girls that [were] let go but, for all of us who are fortunate enough at this moment to still be able to have a position where we can collect a paycheck and we can support those who love us and those around us. I think that we have to take it upon ourselves to work harder to make sure that there’s a place for all those who again, had it the worst today, to come back to. I think as a planet, we can rally around the idea that this is only temporary, and that those who have lost their positions and who are struggling to figure out what to do next.”

Guess Rollins didn't want Strowman taking the crown this year for most tone deaf comments by a WWE wrestler.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
AEW Co-Executive Vice President Cody Rhodes wrote a detailed message about Zack Ryder on Instagram and shared how proud he is of Zack and that he believes in him.

“I’d like to take a moment to say how proud I am to be a friend of @zryder85 – In a world of weekend warriors and “play wrestlers”, this dude exudes passion and drive for pro-wrestling like no other. Through 14 years to see him CONSISTENTLY try to better himself (whether that be his in-ring work, or watching him physically mold himself and his body into such a specimen DRUG FREE with hard work and will). I have a little rule, and that’s that if you’ve ever “gotten over” in wrestling…you can always do so again. That rule being fully applicable to Matt now. At 34 years young, his best wrestling days are ahead of him. Cheers to a great start and 14 years of unrelenting blood, sweat, and tears. Future endeavors are limitless when you actually endeavor. I chose this picture because it was one of my last days at WWE, watching 80,000+ people applaud as Matt won gold was an eruption not only live in the arena but in the locker room as well. Hearing Dolph coordinate for his father to come over the rails(meanwhile I was ass deep into a broken ladder and stuck but had the best seat in the house) and seeing father/son embrace, I thought I’d be jealous or bitter, but I was truly happy and proud for one of my peers. Congratulations my friend, and good luck!”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Dolph Ziggler purchased over $200 in merchandise to support independent wrestler Christian Kobain.

Link: https://twitter.com/RealKobain/statu...940028933?s=20

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Former WWE writer Kazeem Famuyide welcomed Lio Rush onto his ‘Say Less With Kaz’ podcast prior to the announcement of Rush’s release from WWE. During their conversation, Lio recalled one of his strangest interactions with WWE Chairman Vince McMahon and it occurred when Bobby Lashley was starting to do the butt pose on WWE TV.

“Aw man, I think this was one of the first times where I had an actual long conversation with Vince, and it was by far the weirdest conversation I’ve ever had my life, and he described all of the poses, he described everything that he wanted from the biceps, to the chest curls, to just everything that I had no idea about. Me and Bobby [Lashley] had no idea what these poses were and then he said, ‘At the end of Bobby doing the side chest, the lat spread, I want him to bend over, face the crowd and you comment on his gluteus maximus,’ and I’m like, ‘Wha…’ My mind was gonna explode. I was like, ‘What is happening right now?’ And you hear about these stories about Vince on these podcasts, about these meetings and Vince reenacting what exactly he wants done. I will never forget me and Bobby just looking at each other being so confused and like, ‘What do you mean you want him to comment?’ And I’ll never forget — Vince stood up, got from behind his desk, stood in front of me and Bobby, bent over and tapped his ass and said, ‘That’s what I want you to do.’”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Matt Cardona, the former Zack Ryder currently has the top selling shirt on Pro Wrestling Tees.

Link: https://twitter.com/TheMattCardona/s...112546308?s=20

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Karl Anderson tweeted out a teaser about him possibly returning to Japan and he also changed his Twitter handle to @MachineGunKA.

Link: https://twitter.com/MachineGunKA/sta...044973573?s=20

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Today was a rough day for WWE staff for a number of reasons. One, obviously was the passing of Howard Finkel, but there was also the fallout of yesterday's cutbacks as staff came over the shock of the day. Today, they were acclimating themselves to the new normal of so much of the company being on furlough or let go. One person felt at least 40% of the company was gone today vs. yesterday and I've had four different people mention having some form of "survivor's guilt" over friends and co-workers being gone while they remained. It was a rough day, especially since those remaining have far more on their plate than usual going forward and now have less manpower to get the work done. Cuts were across the board in every division. We are told that the live events division was especially hit hard since there aren't any events currently and the digital area of the company also suffered deep cuts as well. Those who were furloughed were told the company hoped to have them back by July and that the company would cover their benefits during this time. There are, obviously, a lot of people wondering if and when they will return to WWE.

The released WWE main roster talents would have the traditional 90-day no compete, which would make them available for other promotions around 7/15.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
WWE employees who were furloughed this week could be coming back in a few months.

According to a report from Wrestling Inc., employees who were furloughed did get an information packet that explained why they were furloughed in the first place. The packet reportedly said those people were furloughed due to the "current level of work available as a result of COVID-19." The pandemic was referred to "an unforeseen circumstance, akin to a natural disaster."

Although people were furloughed on April 15, they will remain on WWE's payroll until April 18 when the furlough officially begins. According to the report, the current end date is July 1, but that date is subject to be changed "given the current situation and ongoing uncertainties." The packet does not have a definitive end date but noted that the furlough period is expected to last less than six months.

WWE added that it plans to keep all the employees that were going affected by this decision. Despite this, layoffs could still happen. In addition, WWE will also be covering health insurance contributions during the furlough period for employees enrolled in the WWE health plan and those employees will still retain their seniority within the company. Wrestling Inc. also reported that WWE said furloughed employees will not be receiving a paycheck, however they may be eligible for unemployment benefits as well as the Federal Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Kyle O'Reilly's absence from NXT explained.

According to Dave Meltzer of the Wrestling Observer, Kyle O'Reilly missed Wednesday's NXT as he's diabetic and is a higher risk for the coronavirus ...

O'Reilly hasn't wrestled since the March 11 episode NXT, which was the last episode of WWE television with a live audience. It is unknown if he will appear live at the Performance Center during the pandemic.


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 04-17-2020 06:36 PM

The Sheets (Observer Newsletter Edition):

Quote:

An absolutely crazy week saw Vince McMahon fold the XFL, have the Governor of Florida overrule local officials to be able to run multiple shows a week in the state, get, along with Dana White, to be mentioned by President Trump as one of the people he’d talk with about reopening the economy, and then made massive talent and office cuts with the expectation of a long economic downturn.

With its $500 million of reserve cash available, broken down as $90.45 million in straight cash on hand, $160.03 million in short term investments that can be used, and another $250 million available instantly in debt capacity, McMahon was the first promoter in combat sports to make cuts, while other companies have avoided doing so even though all others are losing money, although UFC will be back to making money as soon as they start running shows again.
Quote:

On 4/9, Linda McMahon announced that her Super PAC looking to re-elect Donald Trump would spend $11 million in Orlando, and $7.5 million in Tampa.

Later that day Gov, DeSantis issued an order that gave not just WWE, but any sport that was going to be broadcast on national television, freedom to run in Florida as an essential business, as long as there were no spectators in attendance. This came just days after the Association of Ringside Professionals had said that no shows should take place due to a number of risks. When asked how WWE possibly fit into the description of an essential service, DeSantis said that such events were crucial to the Florida economy.

Of course that makes no sense at all. Empty arena sports have virtually no economic impact on the economy. Aside from rent money for the venue, which is not that significant, the usual economic impact, taxes on ticket money and souvenirs, and impact on restaurants in the area or hotels for travelers that you do get from major sports events are no longer applicable for shows with no fans in attendance. Florida does get tax money from tickets to boxing and MMA events, but they don’t even get that from pro wrestling, and there is no ticket money to tax for anyone right now ...

The order didn’t include even any compliances to social distancing as the mental health care workers had, or limit the size of gatherings. Basically they are free to as they please so long as the event is broadcast on national television.

DeSantis became a media laughing stock when this came out, largely due to categorizing WWE events as essential services, and then it became more ugly when reporters tied the Linda McMahon money spent coming the day of the order. Of course, DeSantis denied one had nothing to do with the other.
Quote:

It is certainly expected that Tampa will get WrestleMania in 2022, and they also wanted to make sure the state was okay for major league baseball in the event the league goes through with the proposal to do months if not the entire season in Florida and Arizona.
Quote:

Sean Sapp got ahold of a memo to talent from last week from Paul Levesque, which stated, “We have just been notified that (name not reported but talent was told the name) was diagnosed with COVID-19 . WWE doctors spoke with (the infected individual) this morning and reported last had contact with anyone at WWE on March 26 at the Performance Center. As you know (he infected individual) is not an in-ring performer and we believe this matter is low-risk to you per the following chronology" ...

The memo continued that “Those of you who were potentially exposed would be cleared for travel by the evening of Thursday, April 9 at the latest, since the last possible exposure to any WWE talent personnel should have been at least 14 days prior.”

The WWE then released a statement which had a notable contradiction. The Levesque memo lists that people who could have been exposed if they had showed no symptoms should be fine to travel to television. The person infected was a member of the broadcast team and was at times in close quarters with several people on the roster during the filming of WrestleMania ...

While not stated, the person in question has not returned to on-air work at press time ...

At first the belief was that if somebody did test positive in WWE, that everyone in wrestling in the U.S. would shut down because of the reaction to continuing. If it was in AEW, the belief is they would shut down but WWE would continue. As it turned out, it was in WWE, nobody batted an eye, and WWE is now taping three days per week.
Quote:

WWE made massive cuts across every division, not just limited to on-air performers. In particular, the live event division was gutted since there will likely be no live events for some time to come. But writers and office workers were cutback heavily, and in many cases age was a factor, notably the surprise cutting of referee Mike Chioda, who had been in that role for 31 years, the longest lasting referee in the company since its national expansion, who is 53 in a company that wants younger faces on the screen ...

For NXT, all the released names aren’t known. And unlike the main roster, the belief is that there are more to come. We’re told everyone who isn’t featured heavily on NXT television is sweating on this. The NXT talent cut will only be on 30 day non-competes.

The only confirmed names at press time are Deonna Purrazzo, Aleksander Jaksic, M.J. Jenkins, Dan Matha, ring announcer Jon Loquasto and interviewer Kat Marino aka Alyssa Marino.
Quote:

WWE is expected to take him about $73 million per month if they take in $0 in house show tickets (which will be the case), merchandise (which will generate some money), licensing (which will generate some money), digital (which will generate some money), advertising, and any other stream besides television revenue and network subscriptions. Even if every category brings in no money for the remainder of 2020, WWE will gross about $900 million, the largest number in company history.

We heard from two people with ownership interest in major sports this past week. One noted that their franchise, which would have been profitable, isn’t going to be, who could sympathize with McMahon as a publicly traded company. But he noted the timing of doing the cuts looks the worst. It was noted that as an owner of a non-public company, even though it is not profitable, he can make calls and at this point has no let anyone go. That isn’t to say he won’t, because the nature of a sports franchise is there will be talent turnover. It was noted that before New Japan and AEW became actual threats, WWE would make cuts, not this severe, but cuts, every year or two. It was also noted that the salary cuts of the talent and producer, which looks to be about $8.4 million per year, will not hurt the company from a product standpoint as most were not even used much aside from Gallows & Anderson, and to a degree Rusev, none were key players at any time recently ...

Essentially the choice was short-term stock price and an attempt to have record-breaking profits over workers. And the reality is, under normal circumstances, that’s just business. And for some companies, it still is ...

The cuts were made in all facets of business in an attempt to save $4 million per month. Between the wrestlers cuts and the agents, the monthly savings look to be north of $700,000. But there were cuts in all departments, and the executives and board members all took salary cuts as well. Lots of expenses were cut and expenses to build a new company headquarters in Stamford were delayed for at least six months. Part of the reason to build a new headquarters was to house more employees as the company was planning to expand with all the new revenue coming in. Due to the economic changes, nobody is expanding and thus they don’t need the new building and it probably won’t be the time to make those expansions and new additions for some time.

The new headquarters was to house an increasing number of people, but with the job head count down, they don’t need a larger headquarters.

At press time, the cuts led to a stock rise to $39.67 per share, giving the company a $3.067 billion market value. After the cuts were made, it was the first time in several weeks the value of the company has broken the $3 billion threshold.

The company has its quarterly conference call on 4/23. The belief by many is the cuts were made this week to guard against a drop in some form based on information that won’t be taken positive when the financials come out.
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AEW officially announced that its next show, Double or Nothing, will take place as a PPV on 5/23 at 8 p.m. Eastern, but would not take place at the MGM Grand Garden Arena.

This was expected since Nevada had shut down entertainment events through the end of May. That also includes the scheduled 5/27 TV show in the same arena.

No new location was announced, but given Florida being opened up, they can now go pretty much anywhere in the state and run. They would also be doing another set of television tapings if not going back to weekly depending on the state of things at the time.

Tony Khan said that he wasn’t sure the return would be in Florida, as he said by that time there will be few options and said that with television taken care of until the PPV, they don’t have to figure things out immediately.

We don’t know how the situation will be in mid-May regarding travel and disease control, and whether they would be able to bring in a full crew or use a more limited crew like they did the last set of television tapings. They had only used 29 percent of their roster for the last set of tapings, concentrating on the guys from Florida and Georgia, a few from Texas and others who stayed down. For a PPV show, I’d think they would try and bring all the top guys in. Whether that would include people like Jim Ross or some of the older talent is likely a decision that won’t be made until closer to the date.

Running a PPV off television with a limited crew and doing an empty arena show at a PPV price point is tough. The one positive is that they can shoot angles as far as interviews and vignettes with the talent not on television. There is a contract with the PPV providers for quarterly shows, and they do want the tradition of Memorial Day Saturday (but that tradition was to include being in Las Vegas). But it still feels that it’s going to be a tough sell and hard to put on a PPV caliber show with no fans with PPV pricing ...

The question is if it would be better to move off this date and maybe do August, September and November, or even September, October and November, as perhaps by then there would be shows with crowds. But the problem is the uncertainty aspect. But I wouldn’t want to lock a date today and would rather wait until there’s a better sign of the future.
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The 4/8 AEW vs. NXT battle, which ended up with the shows 400 people apart in NXT’s favor in total viewers, although AEW still won 18-49 solidly, did teach us a few lessons regarding overdoing gimmicks and long empty arena matches ...

The 4/8 difference was so small that it was due to NXT’s better lead-in as NCIS before NXT is doing around 1 million viewers ...

If you’re looking for the overall Gargano vs. Ciampa performance, it opened with solid growth with the audience going from 636,000 to 696,000. Without a doubt the match itself was the reason NXT was up overall 19.5 percent from the week before for the show at a time when generally everything is in a decline.

However the match itself taught us another lesson.

It declined in every quarter and only won one of the four quarters, which would be from about the 10-25 minute mark, and also came with AEW doing hype for Jon Moxley vs. Jake Hager, a Matt Hardy interview and a Brodie Lee quick squash.

It lost 56,000 viewers from the first to the fourth quarter, but only 4,000 in 18-34 and 5,000 in 35-49. So while not showing growth, as it should have, at best it was a slight negative in 18-49 but obviously it must have been a bigger negative older and younger, likely older since half the NXT audience is usually over the age of 53.

The issue here is again, going so long. It was also the second straight week that the AEW main event lost viewers at the end because of being a 20 minute plus match, which was not a regular thing previously, and it was with Cody, who aside from Chris Jericho, has been the company’s biggest ratings mover.

Even a women’s ladder match with title implications on NXT lost viewers. Ladder matches due to their uniqueness usually do well on television, but another aspect of both the ladder match and the Gargano-Ciampa is that NXT is a hardcore show and the oldest skewing show. So it’s an older audience, but probably an audience that did watch WrestleMania. They had just seen a never-ending street fight and had just seen a ladder match a few days earlier ...

In particular, at 9:29 (the peak, so people were into the match for more than 20 minutes) there was a big NXT drop, and a second one at 9:51. They never came close again to the 9:29 level so about 20 minutes was the sweet spot for that match.

The other question which was how people would take the Kenny Omega & Michael Nakazawa vs. Best Friends DDT style match, since that match went over two quarters we can see that it was a growth match and in fact, the ending nearly hit the high point of the show for AEW ...

As far as a peaks, the only time AEW broke 800,000 was late in the Kenny Omega & Michael Nakazawa vs. Best Friends, which was also the match that got the most criticism. The main event peaked at nearly 800,000 a few minutes into the Cody vs. Shawn Spears match. But that match lost a lot of steam during the commercial breaks and never fully got it back. Gargano-Ciampa, on the other station, nearly hit 800,000 at 9:29, but fell hard and was below 700,000 the entire last quarter.
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In the first quarter, AEW had 741,000 viewers, 100,000 in 18-34 and 253,000 in 35-49 with a Jake Roberts interview, a Lance Archer squash and the beginning of Hikaru Shida vs. Britt Baker. NXT had 842,000 viewers, 99,000 in 18-34 and 182,000 in 35-49 with the women’s ladder match with Chelsea Green, Io Shirai, Dakota Kai, Tegan Nox, Candice LeRae and Mia Yim ...

In the second quarter, AEW lost 40,000 viewers overall, 14,000 in 18-34 and 18,000 in 35-49 with Baker vs. Shida and a backstage skit with Kenny Omega, Michael Nakazawa, Best Friends and Orange Cassidy. NXT lost 100,000 viewers, 18,000 in 18-34 but stayed even in 35-49 with the ending of the ladder match.

In the third quarter, AEW went ahead 665,000 to 664,000, so really a dead heat. AEW lost 36,000 viewers, but gained 13,000 in 18-34 and lost 1,000 in 35-49 with the top five rankings and promotional work for the Jon Moxley vs. Jake Hager match next week. NXT lost 78,000 viewers, including 6,000 in 18-34 and 18,000 in 35-49 with Finn Balor vs. Alexander Wolfe and a Balor promo.

In the fourth quarter, AEW gained 36,000 viewers, but lost 3,000 in 18-49 and gained 5,000 in 35-49. That had a package for the Cody vs. Shawn Spears match and the beginning of Kenny Omega & Michael Nakazawa vs. Trent & Chuck Taylor. NXT lost 28,000 viewers, including 14,000 in 18-34 and 5,000 in 35-49 with Rinku & Saurav vs. Matt Martel & Chase Parker.

In the fifth quarter, AEW gained 37,000 viewers including 6,000 in 18-34 and 25,000 in 35-49 with Omega & Nakazawa vs. Best Friends. NXT gained 60,000 viewers including 25,000 in 18-34 and lost 7,000 in 35-49 for Charlotte Flair and Rhea Ripley promos and the beginning of Tommaso Ciampa vs. Johnny Gargano.

In the sixth quarter AEW lost 74,000 viewers including 20,000 in 18-34 and 18,000 in 35-49 with more build for Moxley vs. Hager, a Matt Hardy interview and a Brodie Lee squash. NXT lost 22,000 viewers including 7,000 in 18-34 but gained 6,000 in 35-49 for more of Gargano vs Ciampa.

In the seventh quarter, AEW gained 16,000 viewers but lost 8,000 n 18-34 and 9,000 in 35-49 for the first half of Cody vs. Spears. NXT continued with Gargano vs. Ciampa and lost 25,000 viewers, including losing 4,000 in 18-34 and losing 3,000 in 35-49.

The final quarter saw AEW lost 30,000 viewers, 4,000 in 18-34 and 5,000 in 35-49 for the ending of Cody vs. Spears NXT lost 9,000 viewers but gained 7,000 in 18-34 and lost 8,000 in 35-49 for the ending of Gargano vs. Ciampa.

AEW won five of eight quarters in total viewers and all eight in the key demo. In 18-34, the last 30 minutes saw NXT win in 18-34 but lost in 35-49.

Actual final quarter numbers were 650,000 for AEW with 70,000 in 18-34 and 232,000 in 35-49. NXT had 640,000 viewers with 82,000 in 18-34 and 147,000 in 35-49
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NXT beat AEW in total viewers by a 692,000 to 683,000 margin on 4/15, while in 18-49, NXT was No. 27 at 0.25 and NXT was No. 58 at 0.17.

As compared to last week, NXT was down 0.1 percent in viewers and 10.5 percent in 18-49. AEW was down 1.3 percent in viewers and 3.8 percent in 18-49.

Unlike last week where that should have been expected, AEW had built up the Jon Moxley vs. Jake Hager title match for a few weeks so both NXT’s staying the same with less of note built up while AEW’s lack of gain were both surprises.

Next week, since NXT promoted more for next week, plus their lead-in edge, probably favors them for total viewers but the difference in 18-49 is still pretty substantial.

AEW is hurt more because part of its edge was the rabid live arena fans and that isn’t going to be the case. In addition, NXT has its full roster available and AEW won’t for a while. NXT is live and AEW isn’t, but I don’t think that’s as much of a factor since AEW spoilers haven’t gotten out anywhere since, like WWE, both were taped on a closed set.
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Yet another company having problems right now is Ticketmaster, as well as Stubhub, regarding refunds for tickets purchase. Ticketmaster has changed its policy from customers being able to get refunds if an event is postponed, rescheduled or canceled, now it only lists canceled, although it is more following the policy of the promoter. If WWE or AEW agrees to refund, Ticketmaster will do so, but you will likely lose the service charge. But it will not do so if the promoter of an event reschedules and doesn’t offer refunds. People have noted to us that most of the smaller promotions, including WrestleCon which took a huge financial hit, have refunded money for WrestleMania weekend. Evolve hadn’t fully done so as of last word, but they also told customers of that issue. and promised to do so. Many had complained WrestleMania tickets themselves haven’t been refunded yet while every other promotion but Evolve had done so, but they were starting to be refunded on 4/14. Stubhub said that due to the large number of canceled events, that handling all the refunds at this point it isn’t yet manageable. More than 20,000 live entertainment events have been canceled
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Kerry Morton, 19, the son of Ricky Morton, is getting into pro wrestling. He was an actor in local musical theaters but also won the Tennessee state high school championship at 138 pounds and trained under his father, Tom Prichard, Robert Gibson, Chase Owens (who was also a state champion high school wrestler) and Bobby Eaton. He was ready to put himself on the map when independent wrestling got shut down. He said he’s also trying to learn to be a producer in wrestling
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Besides the contracted talent, ROH has been paying non-contracted talent, whether it be wrestlers booked on a per show basis, ring crew, camera men, referees, etc. that were originally booked for the shows canceled thus far and through May what they would have been paid had those shows taken place.
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Mike Jackson, the famed Georgia Championship Wrestling enhancement guy from the 70s and 80s, appeared on the 4/14 television show losing to Johnny Swinger. The story was that Swinger was going to face a Young Buck named M. Jackson, and kept talking like nobody believed he could pull that off. He cut his promo about the Young Bucks, but then the screen read Mike Jackson. This was taped in Atlanta, where he was a regular on TV, best known for being the small guy who made the then-green Road Warriors look both gigantic and impressive in 1983 when they were breaking in, but that was so long ago it’s doubtful many in the crowd would have known ... Once the people saw him do some athletic things, of course they got behind him He did the Undertaker rope walk around most of the ring, got up and down great, hit a tope. Really he was amazing for his age before Swinger pinned him using the ropes. I believe it was his first time on national television since 1991.
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DVR viewership of Raw has been declining of late. The last regular show with a crowd did 425,000. The first two empty arena shows did 353,000 (on a show that would be expected to do significantly more) and 319,000

Coming off the rumors of Peacock not being interested in purchasing rights to the WWE PPV shows, NBC Universal had a deck of slides to promote Peacock talking about the rich history of the various NBC U channels and the huge libraries of content they have. The USA Network was well represented throughout and there was early plans talked of to build off the USA Network’s original IP. There was not a single mention of WWE, which those who saw it told us came across as a staggering omission
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Samoa Joe is still not cleared from his latest concussion
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A lot of NXT guys have been losing on Raw but there are still rules in place. Theory was moved from NXT to Raw because somebody was needed in the spot and he did well enough that he’s now there as a regular. Belair was a long-term plan to come up after Mania. Guys like Tehuti Miles or Cal Bloom on Smackdown are not on NXT television so it’s okay to use them as enhancement. Guys like Tozawa or Lorcan are considered 205 Live guys who also appear on NXT, so they are okay as well. The basic theory as espoused is that NXT is considered the front line of defense against AEW. They can work out a plan for talent needed on the main roster but NXT has to be positioned as something other than developmental or a Raw/Smackdown feeder system right now

Smeat note:
  • Taking a break next week from doing sheets reports lasting until Friday since that is when the next Newsletter gets released.

Emperor Smeat 04-24-2020 04:00 PM

The Sheets (Observer Newsletter Edition)

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Just one week after WWE announced going live at the Performance Center every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, Vince McMahon changed his mind again ...

The continuing of tapings became an issue on 4/21 at the Orange County, FL (where both the Performance Center and Full Sail University are located in) when an employee of the company made a public comment on the subject and asked for the tapings to be shut down.

“My employer, World Wrestling Entertainment, AKA WWE, is forcing me to work the TV tapings for its weekly shows despite stay at home orders. I am unable to speak out as I need this job, and I know I will be fired if I approach my higher-ups. Despite sanitary precautions, we cannot maintain social distancing and I have to touch other people. I request the government to shut down these tapings and enforce the stay at home order so my colleagues and I may follow the social distancing rules without fear of repercussion of losing our jobs."

It should be noted that, like with AEW, people have been told they don’t have to work these tapings if they are uncomfortable. That said, the massive cuts also send a message. It is also notable that 29 percent of the talent on the AEW roster worked the most recent set of tapings. In WWE, other than Reigns, Kyle O’Reilly and the NXT announcing team, there is no word of anyone not working ...

It also doesn’t help the perception from the talent when Lio Rush publicly stated that he was not going to work while the pandemic was going on and then just a short time later, he was fired. He was likely to be on the list anyway, since he was one of the talents who had publicly complained about money and those who had any point made comments perceived as negative were on the list of those let go. However, it does look bad from the outside.

Jon Alba, a reporter for Sports 360 in the Tampa/Orlando area noted that “While there isn’t really a way to verify if the comment above was 100 percent a WWE employee given the nature of the complaint, it should be noted that there have been several within the company who have expressed concern, many privately, over the tapings continuing.”

I can verify there were talents in the company who expressed concern, and others who recognize the risks and are concerned, but have said from a WWE standpoint they don’t think there is any kind of a solution that is good, including shutting down because of so many issues with that decision economically. But across the board, nobody can come up with any kind of a logical reason to be using Jerry Lawler at this time, given his age, previous heart attack, family history of heart problems and not adhering to any social distancing with him. At one point, when Lawler, the Street Profits, Byron Saxton and Tom Phillips were all together at the announce set, it was clear the social distancing precautions were not going to change how they did that aspect of the television show. There have also been Instagram posts from backstage showing social distancing was not being adhered to ...

There is a belief that the state allowing WWE to continue running, as an essential business, also had to do with getting the 2022 WrestleMania in Tampa’s Raymond James Stadium, as was originally planned for this year.
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There were a number of new WWE cuts this past week, with perhaps the biggest name being Kassius Ohno (Chris Spradlin).

Perhaps the most surprising name of those cut was Kerwin Silfies, who had been the lead Director of WWE television programming dating back to around 1984.

Silfies wasn’t with the WWE the entire period. Conrad Thompson mentioned Silfies name as being put on furlough as one of the surprising departures while on his podcast with Jim Ross. Silfies had left the company at one point and was brought back. Marty Miller has been the company’s main television director but Silfies still did shows ...

Two other significant releases were Sabatino Piscitelli, better known as Tino Sabbatelli, and Taynara Conti ...

In the decision on cuts, it was clear that those who had fought management on contract issues were cut, notably her, Mike Bennett and Luke Gallows & Karl Anderson (who were never unprofessional but turned down a number of big money offers until the money got so big they couldn’t turn it town). No doubt, even though the company agreed to the deal for five years (as they did with Bennett, who had made noises of wanting to leave) the size of their salary likely worked against them.

Among other releases this past week included Josiah Williams, an on-air digital host who appeared a few times on NXT television ... Most of those cut were stars being trained and groomed to be local stars for NXT outposts in foreign markets. Expanding into new regions is no longer high on the current goals. But it is notable with all the emphasis on making Middle Eastern stars due to the Saudi Arabia deal that they cut three Middle Eastern wrestlers, which seems to tell a story about priorities changing ...

Also cut was Andrea Listenberger, a member of the creative team whose main role the past few months was developing the Mandy Rose/Otis storyline, which was probably the best long-term storyline the company had.
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Regarding the WWE Network, it’s too early to tell about the pandemic but the build to this year’s WrestleMania, with all the complaints, was about the same as last year, stronger early but weaker in the final week before Mania ...

Regarding the hoped for deal, which could have been to sell the network itself to a larger streaming provider or just sell the PPVs, as noted, no deal was reached in time for WrestleMania, which was the goal ...

The changes in tiers in the WWE Network and a free tier, originally to start already this year, is now targeted for the fourth quarter. My gut says there were no plans to rush the changes because it makes no sense to start something and then sell the content to another distributor, so the different tiers, the usage of the various independent libraries they’ve been teasing for years and such probably won’t happen until either late this year or after if they can sell streaming content to a higher paying provider.

They noted when things get back to normal, or as close to normal as it gets, perhaps the situation will change. But the indication was that all talks right now are dead, since major media partners right now aren’t looking at adding a new major expense on a deal that at best won’t pay off financially for a long time.

Numbers are down from last year due to a steady decline over the past two years, but first quarter growth was up very slightly.

From December 31, 2019 to March 31, 2020, the WWE Network went from 996,000 U.S. subscribers to 1,082,500, and from 393,000 foreign subscribers to 412,100, meaning overall 1,389,000 to 1,494,600.

The growth of 87,000 in the U.S. and 19,000 outside the U.S. compares with growth of 56,000 in the U.S. during the same months last year and 13,000 outside the U.S., or 106,000 to 69,000.

Still, because they started from a lower point, subscribers on March 31, 2019 were down 7.6 percent from the same day last year in the U.S., and 3.1 percent outside the U.S. In addition, there were a lot more free subscribers, with 149,000 on 3/31 this year and only 46,000 last year ...

However, from March 31 until the day after WrestleMania, that changed again. The WWE Network added 170,000 paid subscribers, but also had 187,000 new subscribers ordering for free during those days.

This year, those numbers were 127,000 new subscribers paid, and 327,000 free ...

On the day after WrestleMania, and usual high point of the year, there was an increase of 239,000 new paid subscribers from New Year’s Eve to the day after WrestleMania. This year that number ended up being 233,000, almost identical but a very slight overall decline.

On the day after WrestleMania, there were 1,622,000 paid subscribers and 476,000 free subscribers for 2,098,000.

That number last year was 1,767,000 paid and 233,000 free for 2,000,000. In 2018, it was 1,808,000 paid and 316,000 free for 2,124,000.

Overall network revenue alone was down 7.8 percent in the first quarter of this year as compared to last year, while in the U.S the drop was 9.0 percent.
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Regarding Saudi Arabia, McMahon noted there is an uncertainly regarding a second show this year.

“They want to run another huge event,” he said. “We usually have two. They have the same constraints. We are not too sure we’ll get the okay to perform in November or December. They want us to. “

McMahon noted that if there is only one show this year, that both sides have agreed that it will tack on another event at the end of the current contract so while revenue will be down this year, it’ll be made up for in the future so the company won’t be out any money on the deal.

He said they were still working on Middle East TV rights, which were the last major rights negotiations not completed.
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A few more notes on Howard Finkel, who passed away on 4/16 at the age of 69.

Tommy Dreamer, who visited Finkel in his assisted living center where he had been, said the Jerry Lawler report that Finkel suffered a stroke a few years ago at the time when nobody, even friends of his, could get any information on him, was inaccurate.

In an interview on the Busted Open radio show, he said, “A lot of people said Howard had a stroke. Howard did not have a stroke. Howard had a rare genetic brain disease. His brain was shrinking and I hate that because the whole `Out Think the Fink’ and he was slowly losing his mind. He had stroke-like systems but he kept falling because of his brain. I didn't post pictures of us on social media. I took them all the time I would visit him, but Howard had such pride. He didn't want the people to know that he was sick. He didn't want people to feel sorry for him. He was literally just sitting there watching the Mets game until it was time to watch wrestling."
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Smackdown on 4/17 did a 1.39 rating and 2,187,000 (1.30 viewer per home) viewers and a 0.6 in the 18-49 demo. The demo number was down 6.9 percent from last week, the rating was down 0.7 percent from last week and the total audience was down 5.6 percent.

The 18-49 rating, which staying the same at 0.6, was an actual viewer drop from 823,000 last week to 766,000 this week.

It was the lowest rating, demo rating and total audience for Smackdown on FOX, but no surprise since last week’s show had the benefit the first show after WrestleMania and wrestling numbers for the most part are down ...

Last year on the same week, FOX averaged 3,043,000 viewers and a 0.6 in the demo, so they are even in the demo and down 28.1 percent in viewers.
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So there was a weird situation on 4/20. Logan, who was cut a few days earlier, was booked in a few segments on Raw. The plan wasn’t to keep her employed, but the idea was that since they are still paying her for 90 more days, if there was a reason to use her, they would. Since the idea was that she was going to be back for a short while, her name was scripted into a few promos. And then the decision was made not to use her on the show, but they didn’t change the promos. I’ve got no idea if what was planned, which I believe was a segment where she’d be linked up with the Viking Raiders, has been dropped or may take place in the future. But even if she is on Raw next week, that doesn’t mean her firing was rescinded

They are also doing an angle working the Drake Maverick firing into a storyline. Maverick cut a nearly tearful promo about losing his job and the idea is that he needed to prove to himself and WWE that he was good enough and the cruiserweight tournament was his last chance. Then he lost to Jake Atlas in the first tournament match. Since it’s round-robin, the keys are if he wins his next two he can advance, but he has to win his next match to do so. No matter what the storyline, he did need to lose the first match. It’s almost impossible to believe if they are doing a storyline where he has to win to save his job, that in the end, he doesn’t save his job. During this period that would be cruel. It’s also weird to shoot an angle that calls attention to the fact they fired a bunch of guys weeks into a pandemic. And the kicker to all this is that as of Wednesday, Maverick was still listed as being gone when the 90 days are up. Like with all the talent, they may use them because they are paying them for the next 90 days if they haven’t already made their downside money
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Right now the Charlotte Flair vs. Io Shirai NXT women’s title match is not scheduled for Money in the Bank
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For 4/22, AEW was No. 24 in 18-49, doing 731,000 viewers and an 0.25 in the key demo. NXT was No. 50 in 18-49, doing 665,000 viewers and a 0.18 in the demo.

AEW’s total audience was up 7.0 percent from the prior week, but in the key demo, it was only up from 323,000 to 325,000, or basically identical.

NXT was down 3.9 percent overall but in 18-49, they were up from 224,000 last week to 234,000 this week.

Breaking 18-49 down, AEW had a 49,000 to 27,000 lead in Males 18-34, while NXT lead a 41,000 to 40,000 lead in Women 18-34. What is notable and unusual is that with 18-34, only 39.7 percent of the NXT viewers were men while for AEW, the number was 55.1 percent. Both are much lower than usual indicating 18-34 males watching other programming ...

AEW did a 0.12 in 12-17 (up 9.1 percent from last week), 0.13 in 18-34 (down 13.3 percent), 0.37 in 35-49 (up 5.7 percent) and 0.30 in 50+ (up 7.1 percent). The audience was 60.9 percent male in 18-49 and 51.2 percent male in 12-17, so guys were down but women were much higher than usual by percentage.

Because NXT was out of the top 50, we don’t have comparisons from last week, but the show did a 0.07 in 12-17, 0.10 in 18-34, 0.26 in 35-49 and 0.34 in 50+. The show did 59.4 percent male in 18-49 and 30.7 males in 12-17, so there has a reason that with women 12-34 the4 show was up and men 12-34 the NXT show was a disaster based on usual patterns.
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Here are some more details on the 4/15 shows.

NXT peaked in the first quarter coming off NCIS with 730,000 viewers for Finn Balor vs. Fabian Aichner. AEW peaked in the sixth quarter with 729,000 viewers for Jon Moxley vs. Jake Hager.

Moxley vs. Hager start-to-finish lost 47,000 viewers, but gained early overall, peaked in 18-49 from 9:30 to 9:45 and overall gained 23,000 in 18-49, however it dropped in the final quarter so it clearly went too long, while the tag title match in NXT gained in the final quarter, as it hadn’t gone nearly as long.

AEW had a 323,000 to 224,000 edge in the 18-49 demo. AEW averaged 1.32 viewers per home, down from usual.

NXT won five of eight quarters overall, the first four, partially from their edge in the lead-in, but their greatest lead was quarter two when AEW dropped badly. Most quarters were close and NXT also won the main event quarter overall ...

* AEW opened with 703,000 viewers and 315,000 in 18-49 for a Jake Roberts promo and Lance Archer vs. Colt Cabana. NXT had 730,000 viewers and 253,000 in 18-49 for Balor vs. Aichner.

In quarter two, AEW lost 65,000 viewers and 11,000 in 18-49 for the end of Archer vs. Cabana, a Britt Baker vignette, hype videos for Moxley vs. Hager and Baker vs. Cassandra Golden. NXT lost 30,000 viewers and 3,000 in 18-49 for the end of Balor vs. Aichner, a Velveteen Dream promo and an interview and video package with Charlotte Flair.

In quarter three, AEW gained 23,000 viewers but lost 15,000 in 18-49 for the Inner Circle vignette and Sammy Guevara vs. Suge D. NXT lost 22,000 viewers and 13,000 in 18-49 for Aliyah vs. Xia Li and the beginning of Akira Tozawa vs. Isaiah Scott. While not a match and not an in-ring, this would be the first quarter since the start of AEW where Jericho has been featured and AEW lost the quarter in total viewers 678,000 to 661,000.

In quarter four, AEW lost 8,000 viewers and 2,000 in 18-49 with the end of Guevara vs. Suge D, a Guevara promo and beginning of Kip Sabian vs. Chuck Taylor. NXT lost 22,000 viewers and 14,000 in 18-49 for the end of Tozawa vs. Scott, A Tozawa interview and another Dream interview.

In quarter five, AEW gained 54,000 viewers and 41,000 in 18-49 for the res of Sabian vs. Taylor. NXT gained 23,000 viewers but lost 35,000 in 18-49 for Tegan Nox vs. Raquel Gonzalez and a Keith Lee vignette.

In quarter six, AEW gained 22,000 viewers and 24,000 in 18-49 for Shawn Spears vs. Justin Law and mostly Moxley vs. Hager. NXT gained 24,000 viewers and 29,000 in 18-49 for Dexter Lumis vs. Tehuti Miles, an Adam Cole promo and the Dream/Balor angle.

In quarter seven, AEW lost 19,000 viewers but gained 9,000 in 18-49 (peak of 18-49) for the second quarter of Moxley vs. Hager. NXT lost 29,000 viewers and 9,000 in 18-49 for he beginning of Matt Riddle & Timothy Thatcher vs. Roderick Strong & Bobby Fish for the tag titles.

In quarter eight, there was a big turnaround as AEW lost 50,000 viewers and 10,000 in 18-49 for the end of Moxley vs. Hager. NXT gained 41,000 viewers and 35,000 in 18-49 for the end of Riddle & Thatcher vs. Strong & Fish.
Quote:

Konnan did an interview this past week and listed Primo, Epico and Lio Rush as wrestlers he would be interested in bringing to AAA from the recent list of WWE cuts
Quote:

If you see the name Zach Sammartino of Dartmouth in the NFL draft this week, he is related to Bruno Sammartino. The 6-foot-4 315 pound offensive lineman was first team Ivy League and comes from Pittsburgh. Bruno Sammartino was his great uncle

Emperor Smeat 04-28-2020 09:48 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Not unexpectedly, since it's been the pattern, Raw once again set its all-time non-holiday low last night doing 1.82 million viewers, down from 1.84 million last week.

The all-time record low was 1.78 million set on Christmas Eve of 2018.

The bad news is the big third hour drop returned, as the contract signing with Drew McIntyre and Seth Rollins and a long United States title match with Andrade vs. Apollo Crews did 1.62 million viewers in hour three, the lowest number for an hour in 25 years.

Also bad news is that the 18-49 number dropped from 0.56 last week to 0.51. Raw was down 16 percent from the same show last year, but that show did at the time record-low level numbers going against the NBA playoffs. Even so, the 18-49 drop from last year was 29 percent ...

The three hours were:

8 p.m. 1.95 million viewers
9 p.m. 1.89 million viewers
10 p.m. 1.62 million viewers

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
As of 4/23, in what may be the first of many such filings, WWE officially made their first move to oppose Cody Runnel's registration of trademarks for "Slamboree" and "The Match Beyond." trademarks.

WWE requested an extension to answer and were granted that through 7/22 to file an official opposition or to request another extension for those trademarks.

Slamboree was a PPV created by Dusty Rhodes while working for World Championship Wrestling. The Match Beyond was a term created for the Wargrames match when it debuted in July 1987 for Jim Crockett Promotions. Rhodes was in charge of creative for JCP at the time. Turner Broadcasting purchased JCP, creating WCW. They sold WCW to the WWF (now WWE) in March 2001 with WWE acquiring their intellctual property.

Cody has noted he filed trademarks on some of his father's creations that were sitting there, unused with The Match Beyond and Slamboree among them.

Cody filed a trademark on his former WWE ring name "Cody Rhodes" last week, just 24 hours after WWE's trademark on the name expired.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Vice TV's Dark Side of the Ring will begin airing "extended" episodes of the series' current season this week ...

The 5/5 Herb Abrams episode has been titled "Cocaine &amp; Cowboy Boots - The Abrams Story" and features the following official synopsis - "One man's fanatical attempt to build a wrestling empire to rival Vince McMahon's goes tragically haywire as his ego and cocaine addiction kills his dream -- and him along with it."

The Road Warriors episode has been officially titled "The Last Ride of the Road Warriors" and notes it will tell "The inside story of how wrestling's ultimate tag-team partnership is undone when one half of the powerhouse duo slides into alcohol and substance abuse."

The Owen Hart episode that is slated to close the series' second season has been titled "The Final Days of Owen Hart." The official synopsis notes that his widow, Martha Hart will appear notin, "In 1999, Owen Hart fell 80 feet to his death in a stunt that went tragically wrong. Bravely reliving his final day, his widow Martha reveals the mistakes that took his life."

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Luke Gallows, via his Wrestlemerica promotion, filed for the trademark on 'Sex Ferguson' on April 22. Gallows used the Sex Ferguson gimmick on Colt Cabana's Wrestling Road Diaries and did a PG version of the character in Southpaw Regional Wrestling as Tex Ferguson.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Stephanie McMahon is among the new additions to Ad Council’s board of directors. She tweeted about the news: “Honored to be joining the @AdCouncil Board of Directors and serve alongside an incredible group of business leaders who endeavor to serve the American public with meaningful campaigns around important social causes.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
While speaking with NJPW’s website, IWGP Heavyweight and IWGP Intercontinental Champion Tetsuya Naito discussed only wanting to defend one title at a time: “If every defence I have is going to be for both titles, then what’s the point of having two titles? Why not unify them at that point? Maybe that’s a conversation that we have, but for the time being there are two titles, so why not use them both? I think it should be fine to defend one title belt at a time.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Sports Illustrated interviewed Bronson Rechsteiner, the son of Rick Steiner, and asked if he would ever consider a career in pro wrestling: “I’m open to it. But I know wrestling will always be there for me. It’s always been my dream to carry the family’s legacy in professional sports, and I’m staying focused on taking football as far as I can.” Rechsteiner recently signed with the Baltimore Ravens as an undrafted free agent.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
WWE's 6/27 return date at Madison Square Garden in New York City has been postponed. There is, as of yet, no new, rescheduled date.

Saturday 6/27 was initially announced as a replacement date for ticketholders of the originally postponed 3/22 MSG event as it had already been planned as WWE's return date to the World's Most Famous Arena.

The legendary NYC venue was shuttered on 3/12 as part of New York State and New York City each declaring a state of emergency to help combat the coronavirus, banning gatherings and events of 500 or more attendees.

A statement released by MSG at the time noted, “We support Governor Cuomo’s decision and starting tomorrow night, our New York venues will only host events that adhere to the Governor’s very clear parameters. This is a fluid situation and we will be back with further details when available."

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Courtesy of Yahoo! Finance, class-action lawsuits have be filed against WWE by way of shareholders and below is a recap of the lawsuit:

According to the filed complaint, during the class period, World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc. made materially false and/or misleading statements and/or failed to disclose that: Defendants perpetrated a fraudulent scheme which: (i) deceived the investing public regarding WWE’s business and prospects; (ii) artificially inflated the price of WWE Class A common stock; (iii) permitted certain senior executives of WWE to sell more than $282 million worth of their personally held shares at fraud inflated prices; and (iv) caused the public to purchase WWE Class A common stock at artificially inflated prices ...

According to the filed complaint, (1) there was an oversupply in the hydraulic fracturing services market; (2) the Company’s pricing power was weak; (3) Liberty’s services were not increasing and its competition was not decreasing; and (4) as a result, Defendants’ statements about the Company’s business, operations, and prospects were materially false and misleading and/or lacked a reasonable basis at all relevant times.

Link: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/class...155000817.html

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
On the first episode of Ring of Honor’s ‘ROHStrong’ podcast, co-booker Marty Scurll joined the show. Marty was candid about many topics concerning Ring of Honor including the possibility of them working with All Elite Wrestling.

“Yeah, I don’t see why not. It would have to be a matter of timing and a matter of, I spoke about [it] previously, just where it would benefit both companies but like I said, I have an amazing relationship with The Bucks especially. I still talk to them on a regular basis. I have a pretty good relationship with Tony Khan and I think both parties are definitely willing to work with each other. It’s just a matter of timing I guess. Like when it would be suitable to do so. So it’s definitely something I wouldn’t rule out for sure. I’m not saying anything will happen. I’m just saying I wouldn’t rule it out. There’s no reason why we wouldn’t. The timing needs to be correct. It needs to be a fitting situation for us to work together. I’d personally like to see it happen at some point.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
On the latest edition of New Day’s ‘Feel The Power’ podcast, Tyler Breeze joined the show and Breeze talked about the match that he and Fandango had against The Usos at the 2017 Backlash pay-per-view. In that match, Breeze changed characters and went from a janitor to an elderly woman. Initially, it was supposed to be a serious match for the SmackDown Tag Team Titles and Breeze told the story of how the match was converted into a comedic match.

“So we start putting together this normal match, then all of sudden they’re like, ‘Hey, you’re getting called into the office.’ I’m like, ‘Okay.’ So we go in and all of a sudden, I’m told, ‘You dress up like other things right?’ I said, ‘Yeah, sometimes,’ and he goes, ‘Yeah, but like a girl, lady and whatever…’ I said, ‘Yeah, I could dress up like whatever,’ and he goes, ‘Do that tonight,’ and I was like, ‘Well how am I supposed to dress up like a couple things while I’m wrestling?’ And he’s like, ‘Well, figure it out’ and I went, ‘Okay’ and so Usos — everybody’s got this bewildered look on their face. We got like 15 minutes for this match on a pay-per-view, tag titles, so like what’s happening here? I don’t know how to make this work. So, Usos always laugh because they used to love working with us because they used to know I just come in and be like, ‘Hey guys. This, this, this, this, this’ and they just call me agent Breeze because I put the match together and they were like, ‘Cool, works for us’ and I’d go, ‘Awesome.’ So, they start laughing as we walk back to the locker room and I’m just sitting on the floor, and I have nothing in my head, and they’re just laughing at me and I go, ‘What’s so funny?’ And they said, ‘We just never seen you like this. Like you have no ideas,’ and I said, ‘How am I supposed to get changed in the middle of a ring? How am I supposed to change from outfit to outfit?’ So then, somebody said something about — I was like, ‘Okay, we gotta figure out what to do here.’ So I was like, ‘Well, I think I could do the janitor like an old lady. I think that should be enough.’ So I’m like, ‘Well, if I dress up like an old lady underneath, then I could roll under the ring and get the janitor stuff off and then be the old lady coming out.’ I said, ‘That’s really the only way I can do this.’”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
AEW World Champion Jon Moxley's recent appearance on WWE Backstage may have caused some problems for his wife Renee Young.

Young, who is a host on the show, which airs on FS1, was surprised when Moxley made a very brief and unexpected cameo on the show in late March. During an interview with PWInsider's Mike Johnson, Moxley was asked about his cameo and if Young got heat for it. Moxley simply answered yes and wouldn't go into any further detail on the record.

"Short answer is yes," Moxley said.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Wild card rules during the quarantine.<br><br>Moxley cameo on Backstage. <a href="https://t.co/TybLOKp1vQ">pic.twitter.com/TybLOKp1vQ</a></p>&mdash; I'm Chris Kazama, ESPN. (@TheChrisKazama) <a href="https://twitter.com/TheChrisKazama/status/1243369152410275841?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 27, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 04-29-2020 07:39 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
WWE is set to air its first-ever virtual roundtable on YouTube tomorrow morning.

It was announced today that WWE's virtual roundtable series will kick off with an episode featuring the company's Scottish champions. It will premiere on YouTube at 10 a.m. Eastern time this Thursday (April 30).

WWE Champion Drew McIntyre, Women's Tag Team Champion Nikki Cross, NXT UK Women's Champion Kay Lee Ray, and NXT UK Tag Team Champions Gallus (Mark Coffey & Wolfgang) are taking part in the roundtable. They will "discuss what it means to represent Scotland in both WWE and NXT UK, their personal and often entwined journeys to championship glory and what their concurrent reigns could mean for the future of Scotland and the United Kingdom as a whole."

The virtual roundtable will be hosted by NXT UK's Andy Shepherd.

Link: https://twitter.com/WWEUK/status/1255497014009384965

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
This weekend's season premiere of Showtime's "Billions" will include an appearance by the Raw Women's Champion.

During this morning's edition of WWE's The Bump, it was confirmed that Lynch will have a role in the drama series' season five premiere. The episode will air on Showtime at 9 p.m. Eastern time on Sunday (May 3).

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Major League Wrestling ("MLW") today announced a new distribution partnership with iNDEMAND to distribute a slate of special events starting this May on pay-per-view via iNDEMAND.

"iNDEMAND is a giant in the sports programming space and the perfect partner as the league continues to build its audience and distribution," said MLW CEO Court Bauer.

Major League Wrestling will present three marquee events in the month of May, including:

May 7th: MLW Battle Riot II. More info
May 14th: MLW Saturday Night Super Fight. More info
May 21st: MLW Opera Cup 2019. More info

All events have a start time of 8:00 pm ET. Additional replays will be available all month.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Television viewership has invariably taken its toll on both WWE and AEW over the past seven weeks of empty arena shows. Raw is hovering at historic lows with this past Monday’s show featuring a third hour that was the least-watched hour in Raw’s modern history.

In studying the live viewership data available for Raw, SmackDown, NXT, and AEW Dynamite, it’s been SmackDown that has held up best until the past two weeks. Over the past seven episodes of SmackDown, the show is only down 5.4% but that has been amplified over the last two weeks where SmackDown has hit its two lowest viewership figures since launching on Fox. If this trend continues, the show will catch up to the loss shown with the other programs.

Over the seven weeks before the empty arena shows, Raw averaged 2,281,000 viewers (2,262,000 if you factor out the night after Royal Rumble) from January 29th until March 9th (which was the final episode in front of fans).

Since the empty arena Raws began on March 16th, they have averaged 1,991,000 viewers, a decline of 13%. The first week inside an empty arena had the novelty factor and was strengthened by the re-airing of the men’s Royal Rumble match and averaged 2.335 million viewers. The decline began the week after and has hovered at the two million viewers, although Raw has fallen under that number the past two episodes.

For SmackDown, they averaged 2,462,000 viewers on Fox from January 31st through March 6th in front of an audience. Over seven empty arena shows, the average is 2,330,000 and falling 5.4%. The past two weeks have shown a great fall with 2.187 and 2.005 million viewers respectively. If they stay at this level of viewership, their percentage drop will fall in line with Raw.

NXT and AEW had the unique circumstance of holding live shows right as the NBA season was being shut down on Wednesday, March 11th along with the news of Rudy Gobert testing positive and U.S. President Donald Trump holding a speech regarding travel restrictions. That night, AEW was hit harder while NXT stayed relatively normal to its typical audience average.

I threw out the March 11th figures for the comparison of both shows.

NXT averaged 745,000 viewers from January 29th until March 4th over six episodes (if you include the March 11th episode their average would only be down by 3,000 viewers). In the six episodes since, they have averaged 642,000 viewers and declined 14%.

AEW averaged 873,000 viewers over their six episodes from January 29th until March 4th. From March 18th until April 22nd, the show has fallen 13% with 758,000 viewers per episode. For the first two empty arena shows, AEW was not hurt at all with its first show doing 932,000 on March 18th and 819,000 on March 25th. The larger drop occurred the next week where it was down to 685,000 viewers.

From this data, it would indicate that wrestling fans have tuned out at a rate of approximately 13%. SmackDown has held up better, but the last two weeks would suggest they will be at the same level of decline as the other shows providing that the 2 million viewership mark is their new normal.

It was reported in the recent issue of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter that DVR viewership is down across the board, as well. Dave Meltzer notes that Raw and SmackDown’s audience typically grew 20% with DVR viewership and has fallen to 16% over the first four weeks since the shutdown. NXT has fallen from 31% to 26% and AEW has dropped from 38% to 32%.

John Pollock had a very interesting article on the impact empty arena shows have had on wrestling tv ratings.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Due to the coronavirus pandemic, WWE has been working with a limited roster over the last month and a half. Pete Dunne, one-half of the NXT Tag Team Champions with Matt Riddle, has been noticeably absent from NXT television as he's remained in the UK.

While times are tough and not being able to wrestle isn't easy, Dunne has found a positive to the current situation.

“I think it’s a much-needed break in a way,” Dunne told Alex McCarthy of TalkSPORT. “I think for years and years we talked about maybe, is there a way that wrestling could have a kind-of off-season. I think this is a good trial for that for some of us. To be able to be back in England with my family and being able to train a bit differently to how I would if I was on the road and wrestling all the time. I’m just trying to put a positive spin on something that’s hugely negative [coronavirus/lockdown]. But if I was going to [have an off-season], then spending time with the family, training hard, recouping and then coming back better.”

With Dunne being absent from television, Timothy Thatcher stepped up as Riddle's tag team partner last Wednesday on NXT, helping Riddle defeated The Undisputed Era.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Ricochet & Cedric Alexander may have only been teaming up on Raw for just a few weeks, but it appears that they already have a name.

Throughout this week, both wrestlers started tagging themselves on Twitter as #2FlyCrew, seemingly indicating that will be their team name, at least for now.

Link: https://twitter.com/KingRicochet/sta...85738428358656 , https://twitter.com/CedricAlexander/...69350483738624


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 04-30-2020 10:00 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Wednesday night ratings are in and AEW Dynamite averaged 693,000 viewers for last night's show on TNT, down 5.2 percent from last week.

The good news is that the show averaged a 0.27 rating in the 18-49 demo, which was up eight percent from last week. It's the show's best number in that category since March 25. Dynamite finished 16th for the night on cable in the demo, its best showing since the move to closed set shows.

The numbers weren't so good for NXT, which fell out of the top 50 for the fifth time in the last six weeks, averaging a 0.16 rating in 18-49, down 11 percent from last week.

In total viewers, NXT averaged 637,000 viewers on USA Network, down 4.2 percent. That was the lowest number for NXT since April 1.

Total viewership for both Wednesday night shows combined was 1.33 million, the second lowest total since their cable TV debuts in October. In fact, AEW's premiere episode on TNT did more viewers than that on its own, an indication of how far things have fallen with the closed set shows.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
The history of MLW will be spotlighted in an anthology series set to debut in May.

It was announced today that MLW Anthology will premiere on beIN Sports in conjunction with MLW Fusion on Saturday, May 16. The series will "spotlight the biggest rivalries, iconic athletes and championship classics spanning the history of MLW dating back to 2002."

“This is a project we had planned for further down the road but we wanted to surprise fans with some fun and joy during this challenging period,” MLW's Court Bauer said in a press release.

MLW announced last week that they had started the process of digitizing their MLW Underground TV series from 2003-2004. After its initial run from 2002-2004, MLW was revived as a promotion in 2017.

Quote:

Originally Posted by WrestlingInc
WWE is filing to oppose some of the trademarks registered by The Revolt's Cash Wheeler and Dax Harwood, formerly known as Dash Wilder and Scott Dawson of The Revival.

The Revolt filed to trademark "No Flips, Just Fists" back on Tuesday, February 18 of this year, for merchandise and general pro wrestling/entertainment use. WWE filed to oppose the trademarks earlier today, just two days after the name was eligible for opposition.

WWE previously filed to trademark "No Flips Just Fists" on Monday, February 24. That is the same as The Revolt's term filed for on February 18, just without the comma.

WWE was granted the standard 90-day extension to prepare their opposition. They now have until Wednesday, August 26 to file that opposition.

WWE filed to be the opposer for another name that The Revolt filed to trademark back on Tuesday, January 7 - "#FTRKO" for merchandise use. WWE filed to oppose that trademark today, just two days after it was published for opposition. They were granted the 90-day extension, and have until August 26 to file that opposition to "#FTRKO" as well.

Finally, WWE filed to oppose the trademark for "Say Yeah" today. The Revolt filed to trademark that name back on Tuesday, February 18, for merchandise and general wrestling/entertainment use. WWE filed to oppose that name today, also just two days after it was filed for opposition. Like the other two trademark filings, they were granted the standard 90-day extension to file that opposition, and have until August 26.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
This Tuesday, 5/5, WWE's will feature the following specials on FS1:

7 PM - Ric Flair's Best WWE Matches - including the 1992 Royal Rumble and Evolution vs. The Rock N' Sock Connection.

8 PM - Edge's Best Wrestlemania Matches - Edge vs. John Cena vs. Big Show, Edge vs. Undertaker

9 PM - Brock Lesnar's Most Dominant Matches.

10 PM - Roman Reigns' Best Wrestlemania Matches - Reigns vs. Undertaker, Reigns vs. Triple H.

11 PM - WWE Backstage

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
On a recent edition of Busted Open Radio, Heath Slater chatted with Bully Ray and David LaGreca. Slater was asked about The Nexus group and how they seemingly fell apart after losing to Team Cena at the 2010 SummerSlam pay-per-view. Slater believes that the group should’ve won at that event and knew at the beginning of the night, they were supposed to win and within a matter of hours, they found out they were losing.

“And then, going through Nexus, my goodness I wish we just could’ve had our hands and a grip on it a little more because it died way too soon and we all know this. Everyone knows it. SummerSlam, we should’ve took over, period. We should’ve won. I mean, me, [Justin] Gabriel and Wade [Barrett] were the last three and then pretty much Daniel [Bryan] and Cena took us all out, and it was just one of those things where as soon as that happened, I mean we shifted from fourth to second gear in a matter of one night, and then it was like, ‘Damn. We worked all this way and this hard for us and the company for this to happen? We couldn’t wait a few more months until Mania so you could have a mega-group and surely just destroy us or whatever?’ But yeah, it surely should not have ended at SummerSlam.

I mean, I knew we were going over and next thing I knew [we] weren’t. So it’s one of those things I’m sure people walked in and out of there, changed Vince’s mind and all that fun stuff. No man, I didn’t [try to change Vince’s mind]. None of us knew. We were winning, and then a matter of, sh*t, a couple matches before, we were not. We were going over… and I still don’t know the whole story, and you’re never gonna know the whole story because they always tell you, ‘Oh I don’t know. Oh that’s what he came up with.’ You can never get the right answer. You can only get the ‘around the bush’ answers so… I don’t know man.”

Jericho and Edge mentioned in the past that Cena was the person responsible for the abrupt changes made to the match's original plans and the finish that was done instead.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Per SEC filings made on April 29th, WWE Executive Producer Kevin Dunn sold 33,000 shares of his WWE stock which accumulates to almost $1,532,850 worth of Class A stock. WWE Executive Vice President Bradley Blum sold 16,358 shares at $45.32 per share which is almost $741,835 worth of stock.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
As announced by Pro Wrestling NOAH, the current GHC Heavyweight Champion Go Shiozaki underwent surgery for acute appendicitis. Shiozaki was discharged from the hospital following the surgery but to decrease the risk of him getting sick due to the current state of his immune system post-surgery, he’ll miss his TV matches on May 3rd, May 9th and May 10th.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Aubrey Edwards was the focus of the latest AEW Unrestricted podcast with Tony Schiavone. Aubrey revealed that she is working on an AEW rule book and that rule book will be published on the company’s official website. Also, Aubrey voiced her thoughts about the criticism she receives on social media about “taking away from the wrestlers” during matches.

“There’s always going to be people who vocalize what they don’t like. There’s always that really vocal minority. The ones that are behind the keyboards that are like, ‘Oh, I don’t like this.’ It’s fine. You’re allowed to like or not like certain things. Everyone’s different. There’s enough wrestling out there for you, whatever. But the thing that’s really interesting is just how many — it’s a very common occurrence where people just say I take too much attention away from the wrestlers, I’m too distracting. My favorite comment online once was that someone couldn’t watch the match because my lipstick was too distracting. Yeah, I’m like, ‘You’re not paying attention to wrestling. Like what the hell are you doing buddy?’ I think the social media team gets at least one email a week about me and how I’m a distraction and people can’t watch All Elite Wrestling because I’m on the TV.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
AEW Co-Executive Vice President Cody Rhodes joined the Dan Le Betard Show to promote AEW Dynamite. While on the topic of his father Dusty Rhodes, Cody said that WWE has been trying for quite some time to obtain some of the memorabilia that the Runnels family has by way of Dusty.

“We have everything. WWE has been trying to break into our little vault for years, trying to get some of the good stuff. We have a lot of really great stuff from Championship Wrestling from Florida, a lot of Gordon Solie, personal items and really good stuff from dad’s hay day.”

Cody also spoke about the Stardust gimmick and how in the early stages, he pieced the character together with Dusty Rhodes. Cody said he initially wanted a hairless cat to go along with the gimmick.

“When I was doing the Stardust character, I really wanted to have a hairless cat, so my poor dad, he’s trying to produce this promo and I’ve got this hairless cat in there and the makeup and the glitter and he’s watching his son. Just absurd pieces of business.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
IMPACT World Tag Team Champion Josh Alexander revealed that he played the role of “Droz” in the cinematic scenes of Dark Side of Ring.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
During the Firefly Fun House match between John Cena and Bray Wyatt at WrestleMania 36, Mr. McBossman (a puppet with Vince McMahon's likeness) said the line, "This is such good shit."

That quote became famous in the wrestling world after an interview with Jon Moxley where he recalled Vince McMahon saying certain ideas were "good shit, pal" during Moxley's run as Dean Ambrose in WWE. The line put a smile on many faces during WrestleMania 36, including Jon Moxley's.

"I kind of popped for it, honestly," Moxley told the New York Post. "I thought it was pretty funny. But it’s like, I think I might have popularized that or made it into a pop culture thing, but everybody knows that’s what he says. He’s been saying that for decades. People who were probably doing Vince McMahon impressions have been saying ‘that’s good s–t’ before I even got into wrestling."

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
The mystery of Vince McMahon's illegitimate son was solved with a whimper as many were left disappointed when the big reveal turned out to be Hornswoggle. Of course, nothing was at it seemed as Fit Finlay ended up being the father of the little lad.

On the February 18, 2008 edition of WWE Raw, McMahon faced Hornswoggle in a cage match and caught up on disciplinary action he had missed all those years. McMahon and JBL brutally beat Hornswoggle, leading to storyline internal injuries, including bleeding of the brain and spinal trauma.

But it could have been worse.

Former WWE writer Brian Gewirtz was rummaging through his closet when he stumbled upon a pitch by another unnamed writer who thought McMahon could have killed Hornswoggle if things got bad enough.

“Hornswoggle Dilemma: Have Vince say to HS that we’re going for a ride as Vince stuffs HS into a pillow case. Have a camera standing on a bridge and the audience sees Vince throw HS out the window of his limousine and over the bridge railing. HS plummets to his death. I know it’s morbidly and highly unlikely ever to be used, but I think it’s something that a fed up Mr. McMahon could resort to after trying for so long to get rid of him.”


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 05-01-2020 05:29 PM

The Sheets (Observer Newsletter Edition):

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer Newsletter
The word out of Oklahoma is that Gov. Kevin Stitt is trying to bring in pro wrestling, MMA and boxing as well as a way to generate revenue. The only way to generate revenue from those events is with live attendance and people traveling to shows. The idea seems to be from a political perspective is that there will be far less scrutiny bringing sports that the media won’t care about, and moreso, that have no unions so there won’t be the same level of pressure from the outside on safety standards. The idea is that the states that ope up arenas to fans first will be able to get everyone running to run shows there before the rest of the country opens up. Of course there is a flip side to this as well, because the earlier things are opened up, he riskier they are. And the rush to avoid listening to what doctors and scientists are saying is quest of short-term revenue and dice rolling on the health of not just those involved, but those they would later come in contact with is something to watch from afar.

Quote:

Smackdown on 4/24 did its lowest numbers on FOX to date in almost every key category with a 1.24 rating and 2,005,000 viewers (1.34 viewers per home, which was normal levels), a drop of 10.8 percent in homes watching, an 8.3 percent drop in viewers and a 13.7 percent drop in 18-49.

The 18-49 number was an 0.5 rating and 661,000 total viewers.

What makes that number more concerning than the typical weekly ratings drops is that this show had been promoted for a few weeks around the HHH 25th anniversary special, and that the second hour, with the celebration, which included Shawn Michaels and Vince McMahon, was the first time Smackdown on FOX ever fell below 2 million viewers.

Smackdown went from finishing first most weeks in 18-49 this season to finishing in last place in the key demo. The only show it beat in Males 18-49, the demo it previously owned, was Dateline. It was also last, as it usually is, in women 18-49 and 50+ ...

Still, last year, on the same Friday, with rerun programming FOX did 2,103,000 viewers and 0.4 in the demo, so they are still okay in that comparison, but then again, it’s with programming that costs very little.
Quote:

Just to explain how WWE talent gets paid. When you sign a deal, it is for a guaranteed money figure. Let’s just use Braun Strowman as an example. His guarantee per year is believed to be $1.2 million. But talent is also paid based on percentages from house shows, PPVs, bonuses for the big shows on the network (mostly to the headliners of PPVs, big network shows aren’t bonused for NXT talent) and a percentage of merchandise sales. Generally speaking, for top talent, the latter figure will be higher than the guarantee. For talent not being used, or talent that may have signed over the last year plus when they started increasing guarantees to keep people from leaving to AEW, the guarantee number could be higher. Talent is paid every two weeks. The talent has the choice to get paid based on downside guarantee, meaning, if you’re Strowman, you can get $46,000 every paycheck. If your other figure ends up more, so let’s just say by regular standards he’d have made $1.8 million instead of $1.2 million, at the end of the contract year he would get $600,000. Or you can get paid based on what you would normally make on the old deal. So in his case, the check would vary based on the size of the markets and the merchandise sales. If, for some reason, his total would be less than $1.2 million, at the end of the year, he would get a check for what was due. When talent chooses which one they take, it’s not set for life in the sense they are allowed to change their minds. For people who opted for getting the check based on gate and merchandise every week, this hurt them because there are no live gates, although I’m sure there are per appearance numbers for the tapings. In the sense guys do get paid for the tapings even though the live gate is $0. Keep in mind this is somewhat archaic because this system was created when live gates, PPV revenue and merchandise were the primary revenue streams. Today, the main revenue stream is television money and the talent isn’t getting paid a percentage of that. The second major stream is WWE Network money and no residuals from being on those shows other than those on the PPV are paid on that either. Main roster talent is bonused based when appearing on PPV shows in a manner consistent with what those shows did in the pre-network era. However, guarantees are much higher across the board due to the TV revenue, although they have not increased anywhere close to the percentage TV revenue has increased. Right now it makes no sense to get anything but being paid on your base so one would think everyone would be switching to this. Where The Revival story comes from is those guys were being paid based on the gates and merchandise and because their downside wasn’t that high, had exceeded it when they were taken off the road. Since they had exceeded it, that meant no money at all until the contracts expired. Others in that same boat would be getting something, since they’d be paid if they were used at the TVs and based on merchandise sales each paycheck, but that would be way down now. Aside from the biggest merchandise sellers, and keep in mind merch numbers are going to be cut way way down with no house shows, or if lower guaranteed guys get good spots on PPV shows, we are moving to where most guys are going to be getting exactly their contract amounts. The negative is if somebody does get hot, unless they can get a contract restructured because they are a bigger star (and that is not unheard of, but you’d be surprised at how low guarantees of some super hot talent was when they skyrocketed have been in the past), they are going to be paid based on that contract instead of how in the past they’d be way above based on headlining house shows, PPV shows and increasing merch numbers. And if you look at total merchandise sales between arenas and web site, the drop is $11.4 million to $9.2 million in the first quarter. But with no house shows, that second quarter drop will be from $13.7 million to maybe $6 million, or more than in half
Quote:

The reason Zayn wasn’t on Smackdown this past week with Nakamura & Cesaro is that he made the choice not to come which everyone was told they had that option to do. He was originally part of the show
Quote:

The most-watched shows on the WWE Network this week are: 1. 25 Years of HHH: The Game Changing Matches; 2. Ride Along with Mandy Rose, Otis, and Street Profits; 3. Stone Cold’s Hell Raising Moments;’ 4. Rey Mysterio’s Best 619s; 5. WrestleMania Day Two; 6. A conversation with HHH and Lemmy; 7. WrestleMania Day One. It’s notable that NXT is no longer even on the list, let alone NXT U.K. and 205 Live
Quote:

Florida has become the new haven for the risk takers in sports who are considered essential services in that state ...

For AEW, the 5/6 show will go live. The show that will air on 5/13 will be taped the next day most likely, but it’ll be taped either on 5/6 or 5/7 either way. They will return on 5/20 and then the crew will stay in Jacksonville from 5/20 to 5/27, doing the 5/20 Dynamite, the 5/23 PPV show and the 5/27 Dynamite show. After that, we’ll see what happens. The people who live in Tampa, Orlando and Atlanta, which is a decent amount of people, will likely go home between tapings but the fly-ins are expected to stay from 5/20 to 5/27 in Jacksonville.

For the last tapings, anyone who didn’t want to be there had that option, plus people in hard-hit places were not brought in, as well as older people. For 5/6, they asked people in hard-hit places like New York and the state of Washington in particular to quarantine for two weeks, which most started doing last week. A much larger talent pool will be used going forward to build the PPV show. Those who don’t want to be there don’t have to be, and the talent based outside the U.S. won’t be able to be on these shows, most notably most of the Japanese women (Hikaru Shida and I believe Riho live in Florida) and other international stars like Bea Priestley, Jamie Hayter, Pac and Pentagon Jr.
Quote:

Jim Ross will be returning for the 5/6 show. This one is risky for sure, similar to Jerry Lawler on Raw as both are about the same age (Ross is two years younger) and both have had histories of significant health problems. I think it’s early for this but Ross is essentially going to relocate to Jacksonville at least through 5/27 rather than travel back-and-forth. I just don’t see it as worth the risk. Actually the commentary with Tony Schiavone and Chris Jericho has been hilarious, particularly this week’s show that had all kinds of subtle comedy. Jericho probably won’t be on commentary next week since he’s wrestling and shouldn’t be on the PPV since he should have a match there even though aside from Cody vs. Lance Archer, nothing has really been strongly teased for the PPV

For 5/6, it’s Kenny Omega & Matt Hardy vs. Jericho &amp; Sammy Guevara in a street fight, Jon Moxley vs. Frankie Kazarian in a non-title match and Cody vs. Joey Janela. MJF returns next week. The Young Bucks will be involved by remote but are not at this point scheduled to go to Jacksonville
Quote:

Even though Penelope Ford was wearing a different outfit in the Orange Cassidy vs. Jimmy Havoc match and the Dustin Rhodes vs. Kip Sabian match on last week’s show, they were actually taped the same day. What happened is that originally the matches were laid out top where they were considered to be airing on two different shows, and she knew that, so that’s probably why she changed between matches. Tony Khan moved different matches to different shows from the original format. The idea was taping for eight shows if worst came to worst and they weren’t allowed to tape again, and it was laid out as four shows minimum because of the tournament. When she was wearing a different outfit on the same show after all, nobody stressed over it as Tony Khan felt it’s not implausible she would change between matches since there was enough time in between that she was not on camera. The same thing happened ths week as Brandi Rhodes in the Cody vs. Darby Allin match was wearing one outfit, got speared, and came back later in the match selling the injury. Then she was wearing a different outfit during Lance Archer vs. Dustin Rhodes and not selling. What essentially happened at the last taping they taped with the idea of doing a minimum four weeks, a maximum eight weeks, and ended up doing five weeks. The two matches even though she had different outfits on were taped on the same day as well
Quote:

Notes from the 4/29 TV show. Cody beat Darby Allin in 20:11 in a semifinal in the TNT tournament. Very good match. Jericho mentioned how Cody beat Austin Watson when both were amateur wrestlers. Austin Watson is Xavier Woods, who was a very good high school wrestler at the same time as Cody. Cody went to Lassiter High and Wood went to Sprayberry High (same school as Buff Bagwell) which are both located in Marietta, GA.
Quote:

For 4/29, AEW did 693,000 viewers and a 0.27 in 18-49 while NXT did 637,000 viewers and a 0.16 in 18-49.

AEW was down 5.2 percent into total viewers, but up 7.7 percent in 18-49 viewers with 350,000.

NXT was down 4.2 percent in total viewers, and down 12.0 percent in 18-49 viewers with 206,000.

There isn’t much else to pull from these numbers. In the key demos, AEW dominated, with Male 18-34 having a 56,000 to 32,000 edge; Women 18-34 having a 50,000 to 19,000 edge; Males 35-49 having a 155,000 to 96,000 edge and Women 35-49 having a 89,000 to 59,000 edge.

AEW was 16th in 18-49. During its time period, it trailed shows on MTV, Bravo, VH1, Fox News, The Food Network, The History Channel and Home &amp; Garden TV. NXT was 51st in the demo.

Because NXT wasn’t top 50 we don’t have demo comparisons.
Quote:

For the 4/22 Wednesday night shows, AEW won handily in 18-49 every quarter but NXT did win the first quarter in total viewers coming off their higher lead-in, but lost every other quarter in both ...

AEW opened with 720,000 viewers and 325,000 in 18-49 with a Cody interview plus the beginning of Sammy Guevara vs. Darby Allin. NXT opened with 728,000 viewers and 253,000 in 18-49 with the Velveteen Dream angle where the Undisputed Era attacked and Keith Lee made the save, plus Tegan Nox &amp; Shotzi Blackheart vs. Dakota Kai & Raquel Gonzalez.

In the second quarter, AEW lost 3,000 viewers but gained 10,000 in 18-49 for Guevara vs. Allin and a Matt Hardy interview. NXT lost 54,000 viewers and 16,000 in 18-49 for the Drake Maverick promo and Maverick vs. Jake Atlas.

In the third quarter, AEW lost 15,000 viewers and 29,000 in 18-49 for Kenny Omega vs. Alan Angels. NXT lost 7,000 viewers and gained 7,000 in 18-49 for a Keith Lee vs. Damien Priest package and the beginning of Kushida vs. Tony Nese.

In the fourth quarter, AEW gained 50,000 viewers and 13,000 in 18-49 the Scorpio Sky video package, a Cody promo and the beginning of Orange Cassidy vs. Jimmy Havoc. NXT gained 18,000 viewers and 24,000 in 18-49 with Kushida vs Tony Nese and a Matt Riddle &amp; Timothy Thatcher interview.

In the fifth quarter AEW gained 26,000 viewers and 20,000 in 18-49 for Cassidy vs. Havoc, an MJF promo and Wardlow vs. Lee Johnson. It was AEW’s best segment of the show and the peak was the Cassidy match. NXT gained 8,000 viewers but lost 1,000 in 18-49 for The Gargano family dinner and Mia Yim vs. Jessi Kamea.

In the sixth quarter, AEW lost 43,000 viewers and 21,000 in 18-49 for the Brodie Lee recruiting Preston Vance and for Lee vs. Justin Law. NXT gained 14,000 viewers and 21,000 in 18-49 for the Charlotte Flair/Yim confrontation, Chelsea Green bikini photo shoot, a Jack Gallagher package and the beginning of Gallagher vs. El Hijo del Fantasma.

In the seventh quarter, AEW lost 32,000 viewers but gained 10,000 in 18-49 for The Bubbly Bunch video and the build to Dustin Rhodes vs. Kip Sabian. NXT lost 8,000 viewers and lost 8,000 in 18-49 for Fantasma vs. Gallagher and the kidnapping attempt during the Fantasma interview.

In the eighth quarter, AEW gained 36,000 viewers and 7,000 in 81-49 for Goldust vs. Gallagher with Goldust’s career at stake, ending at 739,000 viewers and 335,000 in 18-49. NXT lost 2,000 viewers and 3,000 in 18-49 for Dream & Keith Lee (replaced by Dexter Lumis) vs. Roderick Strong & Adam Cole, ending at 653,000 viewers and 228,000 in 18-49.
Quote:

Due to the Corona Virus, the Santino Brothers wrestling school in Bell Gardens, CA has closed due to having to pay rent monthly for a school where there is no way for them to make any income. Among the recent students of the school were Ronda Rousey, Jessamyn Duke, Jake Atlas, Brody King, Douglas James, Heather Monroe (Big Swole in AEW), Eli Everfly and it was also the school Brian Kendrick trained classes at.
Quote:

Some YouTube numbers for different streaming shows have shown AAA’s Lucha Capital in the lead of non-WWE shows, with 258,000 and 264,000 views for the first two shows. The 200th episode of BTE was 243,000. Dark has been 217,000 and 232,000 the last two shows. NWA did 85,000 for Kamille’s first match and 61,000 for the prior week’s Crockett Cup 2019 replay. The Seth Rollins-Drew McIntyre contract signing did 1.1 million views

Emperor Smeat 05-05-2020 09:54 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Last night's Raw set an all-time record low for viewers with an average of 1.68 million, down seven percent from the prior week's record non-holiday low and showing the effects of the empty arena shows is siphoning away viewers at a larger rate each week rather than stabilizing, similar to that of SmackDown on Friday.

This broke the all-time low of 1.78 million set on Christmas Eve of 2018, as well as the non-holiday record of 1.82 million set last week ...

The first hour was the second lowest first hour in history, while hours two and three were the lowest hours two and three. The third hour was the least-watched hour in Raw history ...

The three hours were:

8 p.m. 1.81 million viewers
9 p.m. 1.69 million viewers
10 p.m. 1.55 million viewers

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
In the 18-49 demographic, it was down 10% from last week generating a 0.46. To put that in perspective, prior to the empty arena shows, their previous low in the demo for 2020 occurred on January 13th where they did a 0.61 against the LSU vs. Clemson college championship game.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Non-medical WWE-themed face masks are now available for pre-order, with 100 percent of the net proceeds being donated to charity.

The face masks were put on sale by WWE Shop today. WWE Shop wrote that the face masks are "comfortable, breathable, and compatible with the CDC's guidance for non-medical face coverings."

Through October 31, all of the net proceeds for the face mask sales will be donated to Americares. The non-profit organization is delivering needed medical supplies to health care workers amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Link: https://shop.wwe.com/face-masks-and-neck-gaiters/

Quote:

Originally Posted by WrestlingInc
As noted, AEW Dynamite topped WWE NXT in viewership once again this past week. Dynamite averaged 693,000 viewers on TNT, topping the 637,000 viewers garnered by NXT on the USA Network by 9%. AEW ranked #16 in the Cable Top 150, while NXT ranked #51 ...

The NXT main event between Damian Priest and NXT North American Champion Keith Lee actually topped the AEW main event between Lance Archer and Dustin Rhodes, according to Dave Meltzer on Wrestling Observer Radio. These were the only two quarters of the show that NXT won, and they were the final two quarters of the show ...

NXT was beaten badly in every quarter-hour segment for the 18-49 key demographic. There was a bigger gap than usual this week as NXT lost a lot of the overall quarter-hour segments, and every one of the quarters in the 18-49 demo.

AEW's quarter-hour segment featuring the Bubbly Bunch segment and the No DQ match with The Best Friends vs. Kip Sabian and Jimmy Havoc was the strongest quarter in the key 18-49 demographic. The end of the match lost viewers but gained in the 18-49 demographic, which is key.

AEW has dominated the so-called Wednesday Night War and has a streak of quarter-hour wins. There are some people in AEW who believe Orange Cassidy is drawing fans and helping the show out as he appeals to casual viewers who find him funny. There has been a lot of skepticism surrounding Cassidy among fans online, but he's usually over with casual fans and live crowds. It might be early to declare Cassidy a ratings draw, but week after week he's featured in strong quarter-hour segments. Cassidy's match with Havoc on the April 22 edition of Dynamite was the highest-rated segment on the whole show.

NXT had a big gain for the segment between #1 contender Io Shirai and NXT Women's Champion Charlotte Flair, which also featured Dexter Lumis vs. Shane Thorne. While the brief Flair and Shirai segment did good, the non-title match between Flair and Mia Yim did not. Flair vs. Yim was the low-point of the show with just 170,000 viewers in the 18-49 demographic, which was described as dreadful. This quarter-hour segment averaged a total of 589,000 viewers for the low-point in the 18-49 demo, and the second-lowest point of the show overall.

It was noted that one of the main reasons WWE put the NXT Women's Title on Flair was so she could help boost the ratings, and there are people within WWE who are waiting to see if Flair is going to help like they wanted her to. It was noted that last week's title match with Shirai may perform, but the Flair experiment did not work with Yim last week.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
WWE seems to be going to great lengths to keep from mentioning Roman Reigns on television.

Dave Meltzer of the Wrestling Observer previously reported that WWE announcers were told to not mention Reigns after it was announced that Reigns had pulled out of his WrestleMania 36 match against Goldberg. Any mention of Reigns by announcers has been limited at best, but WWE went to a different level on Raw when they scrubbed Reigns from the replay of the top Money in the Bank moments.

Seth Rollins' cash-in at WrestleMania 31 was listed as the top moment and the replay showed Rollins hitting The Stomp on Brock Lesnar, a blank screen, and then Rollins celebrating with the title. Rollins pinned Reigns in the match, though fans wouldn't know it based on the clip.

It's also been noted that Reigns has been edited out of recent Make-A-Wish video packages.

It is unclear why WWE has attempted to keep Reigns and any mention of him quiet following his WrestleMania 36 decision.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
In an interview with Sports Illustrated, Tama Tonga spoke about the differences between how NJPW and WWE and AEW have approached the pandemic: “There is a different sense of unity in Japan. Here in America, the show must go on. Money needs to come in, so the wrestlers are still wrestling. New Japan stopped holding shows. That’s not just for the safety of the fans, but it’s also for the health of the wrestlers. It’s a different culture in Japan, a lot different from ‘the show must go on’ mindset. The majority of our income comes from live shows, which has been cut out, but the company has held onto the staff and reassured us that no one will be let go. The company is more of a family in Japan.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
ACH appeared on the latest episode of Submission Squad Presents: Dollar Menu Midcarders. He discussed his departure from WWE: "I was having the time of my life there. I really was. I enjoyed my time there. I really did. But then when they released that shirt, is when I got angry. I made a lot of comments that I’m not gonna take back, because that’s just how I feel. Now, could I have said them a lot better? Absolutely. I said a lot of things out of anger. If I would’ve said those things a little bit more intelligently, and calmly, and came from a real place and not an angry place … I think it would’ve been ok.”

ACH also said: "It wasn't even a wrestling matter. 'ACH is upset because he wasn't booked right.' This was some serious sh*t. I honestly wish I did things differently. I had people trying to tell me to use 'mental issues,' not as an excuse, but say it was the thing. 'You're depressed right, that's why you're out lashing out.' I was angry. I'm not gonna be like, 'Sorry, mental illness.' That's a serious issue. I'm not gonna say things like that to smooth things over. I had a meltdown in front of the entire world. I broke down in front of the entire world. I said so much stuff and if I was to go back and take it all back...it really sticks to me. I went from working my dream job, providing for myself. I was finally at a space in my life that I worked for to where I was starting to feel comfortable. I've sacrificed a lot of pro wrestling, and I don't expect anything back, but I made a lot of sacrifices. I'm ashamed of myself. I'm embarrassed. This is something that I'll never be able to shake. I know I embarrassed a lot of people. Most importantly, I embarrassed myself. I'm just not used to this type of negativity and attention. Waking up angry for no reason, mad at the world. Truth be told, it's all my fault. I'll take the blame for this. I could have put the phone down and deleted my Twitter app."

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
MLW announced that they’ve agreed to a deal with DirectTV for three past events to air on pay-per-view this month. Saturday Night SuperFight will air on May 7, Battle Riot II will air on May 14, and Opera Cup 2019 will air on May 21. It was also announced last week that those shows would be airing as PPVs on those dates through Indemand.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Yesterday, findings were released from an audit into the Mississippi Department of Human Services after arrests were made this past February in one of the largest embezzlement scandals ever in the history of that office, a scandal that saw direct connections the DiBiase wrestling family. Former WWE developmental talent Brett DiBiase was among those indicted several months ago as part of the scandal, which saw the former director of the state welfare agency and five others charged in one of the biggest embezzlement scandals in the history of the office.

As PWInsider.com reported at the time, it was alleged that Brett DiBiase was given funds to go to a drug treatment facility in Malibu that was earmarked for Mississippi's welfare programs. According to documents, DiBiase was allegedly given the money as payment for classes that he didn't teach for drug abuse.

The Associated Press later ran a follow-up story on the DiBiase family connection based on a revelation that WWE Hall of Famer Ted DiBiase's non-profit religious organization Heart of David Ministries had reportedly received more than $2.1 million in welfare from the state of Mississippi after his son Brett began working for the State. The organization had received just $5,000 in grants in 2013, but pulled in $271,000 in welfare money, the same year Brett was hired as a senior official at the Mississippi Department of Human Services. DiBiase’s group received as much as $900,000 one year.

Heart of David Ministries spent all $2,126,739 it received from May 2017 through earlier this budget year. DiBiase Sr. was paid $84,517 as president of the organization. Heart of David MInistrires pledged in a 2018 contract to “establish a network of partnerships, services and resources throughout Mississippi communities for faith-based and self activities" but there is no word on how the money was actually used. At the same time it was receiving money from the State of Mississippi, 98% of welfare requests were being turned down by the State. The Ministry is no longer receiving any aid from the State, according to the AP.

The AP article revealed that the Mississippi Community Education Center also paid Brett DiBiase’s brother, former WWE star Ted DiBiase Jr., to provide training to human services employees in late 2018 and early 2019. According to the AP article, a woman who answered the door at the home of Ted DiBiase Sr. in Clinton, MS called the Clarion Ledger (the newspaper which initially broke the news) past reporting “fictitious.” but declined to comment.

Yesterday's findings from the investigation reads as follows ...

The audit’s formal finding is that over $94 million of that grant money has been “questioned,” meaning auditors either saw clear misspending or could not verify the money had been lawfully spent. Examples of questioned spending included:

• MCEC and FRC used TANF money to hire lobbyists with TANF money, which is unallowable, often with no paperwork describing the work the lobbyists were hired to do.

• MCEC awarded contracts to and hired former DHS Director John Davis’s family members, sometimes paying them up front in lump sums.

• MCEC and FRC paid large sums to wrestlers Ted Dibiase, Ted Dibiase, Jr., and Brett Dibiase for work that was not performed, for unreasonable travel costs, or with little proof the programs helped the needy.

• MCEC and FRC used TANF money to fund religious concerts with no proof they benefitted the needy.

• MCEC made multiple donations with TANF money—like donations to the American Heart Association, the Mississippi Highway Patrol, booster clubs, pageants, universities—and provided no proof the donations were used to help the needy. FRC also made unallowable donations.

Among the grantees, MCEC was particularly dependent on TANF funding and engaged in extensive misspending. From 2016 to 2019, MCEC was given over $60 million in grants from DHS, while raising just under $1.6 million from other sources. Examples of questioned spending at MCEC included:

• MCEC paid Victory Sports Foundation TANF money for fitness programs for Mississippi legislators and other elected officials/staffers at no charge.

• MCEC purchased three vehicles with grant funds, each for over $50,000, for Nancy New (Director of MCEC), Zach New, and Jess New. MCEC also paid salaries, cell phone bills, and other costs for a variety of members of the New family.

• MCEC made many unallowable sports-related expenditures—like sponsoring a college baseball tournament—for services that could not be proven to benefit the needy. Some sports-related spending was for services that were not actually performed.

• MCEC transferred over $6 million to a private school and organization owned by Nancy New and also purchased curricula and supplies with TANF funds for the school.

• MCEC paid a speeding ticket for Nancy New with TANF funds.

• MCEC issued a $3,000 check to the bookkeeper of MCEC with a handwritten note saying the payment was actually for John Davis.

• MCEC paid a variety of consultants, including Jess New, for no clear deliverables or where there was no proof the spending met TANF requirements.

• Zach New took a loan out against his MCEC retirement plan and repaid the loan with TANF money.

• MCEC paid for extensive unallowable advertising, like using TANF money to advertise at the NCAA basketball tournament and a college football bowl game. TANF money was also used to purchase tickets to a college football game.

• MCEC paid excessive rent well above market value to a holding company owned by Zach and Nancy New. Sometimes the rent paid for spaces that were not used for TANF-related purposes.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
The season premiere of Showtime's Billions, which featured Becky Lynch, brought in 610,000 overnight viewers on Sunday 5/3.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
‘Metro’ chatted with Drew McIntyre for an exclusive interview. McIntyre told the publication that he has been giving Heath Slater advice on his next steps following his release from WWE.

“Heath’s already got a game plan he’s forming. I’m giving him advice on what to do. He’s gonna really get to show the world what he’s capable of. There’s no reason why he’s not gonna take over the world, be brought back to WWE and get that opportunity.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
All Elite Wrestling ring announcer Dasha Kuret, formerly Dasha Fuentes will be a part of Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson’s ‘Titan Games’ series on NBC.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Otis explains the origin of the Caterpillar move that he's using in WWE.

During an interview with Digital Spy, Otis revealed that he first used the Caterpillar, which is essentially the worm dance move, when he was a child at a dance party. Otis said no girl wanted to dance with him and he made the move in an effort to draw attention towards him.

"It was at a dance party at Elementary School. No girls would dance with me so I had to get the crowd over with my moves. I started shaking my hips and getting going and I waited till everybody was watching – you know, it was a big circle dance, everybody's looking in there and checking you out. And that's when I dropped. Bam! It's a little bit stiffer on the floor than in the ring. And I got love from doing that move, so I just kept doing it. So now every wedding I get sore ribs the day after," Otis said.

Otis also spoke about the time he spoke with Scotty 2 Hotty, who used the worm when he was in WWE, about using the Caterpillar.

"I told (Scotty) this move means a lot to me and I know you're the king of The Worm but I want to continue this and we'll call it The Caterpillar," Otis said.


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 05-06-2020 07:16 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
While down slightly from last week, Dark Side of the Ring's Herb Abrams episode still drew the third-highest viewership in series history.

The Abrams documentary averaged 246,000 viewers on Vice TV last night, down from the 255,000 that last week's David Schultz episode drew. This season's two-hour premiere on Chris Benoit is the only Dark Side of the Ring documentary that has done better viewership than those two episodes.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Next week's episode of WWE Backstage will feature CM Punk's sixth appearance as an analyst.

It was announced on last night's Backstage that Punk will be part of the panel for next Tuesday's episode of the show. It will be Punk's second appearance since the show switched to being done remotely due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Punk's most recent appearance on Backstage was on the April 14 edition of the show.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Cash Wheeler and Dax Hardwood, formerly Dash and Dawson of The Revival, spoke about their departure from the WWE in the latest episode of Talk is Jericho.

They went into detail about their release, with Cash saying they had asked around January of 2019. He said they asked for their release following a match with the Lucha House Party, saying that they were unhappy with the direction tag team wrestling was going with the company. He mentioned specifically the time where Braun Strowman “steamrolled the entire tag team division” and also the time when Strowman won the Raw Tag Team titles with a ten-year old.

Dax felt that those in the company thought they were bluffing when they asked for their release. Jericho asked if WWE promising a more focused tag team division was just a way to keep them on board. Dax agreed with that, saying that he felt deep down they would never focus on teams, pointing out that two singles wrestlers put together as a team had a better chance of getting a push than a consistent team.

The topic then shifted to the final meeting between them and Vince McMahon. Cash said it was difficult to meet with Vince due to the transition to FOX, but one day they were working on putting together a match in the ring when they were called to Vince’s office for a meeting. Cash said that the designs that ended up being leaked were “100% real” and were presented by Vince McMahon himself. Dax noted that most of the time, “the boys” are kayfabed about everything, and was sure whoever had leaked the pictures were part of the creative team.

Cash said he laughed out loud upon seeing the designs in front of everyone at the meeting, which included Vince McMahon and Bruce Prichard. It was explained to them that this would be a way to showcase a different side to the team, showcasing their charisma. Cash said that he told them that these “were not good” but would do the characters until their contract expired. Cash noted that this was on a Friday, and by the following Wednesday they were told they were being taken off the road. He also said that the money they were being offered was higher than the $750,000 that was being reported.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Dax Hardwood reveals that he received a text from Bret Hart on the day of their release: “The day we were granted our release, that day I got a text message from Bret Hart, and he told me how proud he was. He asked me to send it to Daniel [Cash Wheeler] which I did. He told me how proud he was of us and how proud he was we stood up for ourselves and stood up for what we believed in because it would’ve been so easy to just sit back and collect the money, and when he sent me that text, I knew beyond any shadow of any kind of doubt that we had done the right thing because the guy who is the king of standing up for himself, I mean he punched Vince in the face. The guy who is the epitome of standing up for what he believes in took five minutes out of his day to text me and tell me how proud he was of us for doing that and that’s when I was like, ‘Oh hell yeah, we’re on the right path now.’”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
This year's Best of the Super Juniors tournament is the latest professional wrestling event to be affected by the coronavirus pandemic.

NJPW announced tonight that all 19 shows that were scheduled for this year's Best of the Super Juniors tour have been canceled. NJPW wrote that the decision was made in response to the pandemic and in light of the extension of state of emergency measures in Japan.

The Best of the Super Junior tour was set to kick off at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo on May 12 and conclude at Tokyo's Ota City General Gymnasium on June 6. Refund information for the canceled shows will be announced soon.

In their statement about the cancellation of the tour, NJPW noted that they will make announcements regarding events that are scheduled for after June 6 upon careful monitoring of the developing situation with the pandemic. NJPW also wrote that they're "continuing to explore the possibility of presenting matches without fans in attendance if staff and wrestler health and safety can be protected to the highest possible standard."

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
PWInsider.com has confirmed the following viewership for WWE's Best of Wrestlemania specials this week last night on FS1:

7 PM - Ric Flair's Best WWE Matches - 157,000 overnight viewers.

8 PM - Edge's Best Wrestlemania Matches - 213,000 overnight viewers.

9 PM - Brock Lesnar's Most Dominant Matches - 255,000 overnight viewers.

10 PM - Roman Reigns' Best Wrestlemania Matches - 198,000 overnight viewers.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
WWE Backstage was not listed among the top 150 cable programs on Tuesday night.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Q - Regarding the recent WWE releases, why were most of the releases were male Superstars? Is it because of the Women's Evolution?

A - From what I heard, the main factors for the releases were what the talents cost and did the company think that they could get that value out of the contract. I think it means that the women they have on the roster they see value in, at least at this time.

From PWI's weekly Q&A articles.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Tony Khan was on Wednesday’s AEW Unrestricted podcast and discussed the process of running their empty arena shows beginning March 18th, one week after the shutdown period began in the U.S.:

-His favorite empty arena shows have been the first one on March 18th and last week’s episode with the TNT semi-finals

-A friend of is a writer for Jimmy Fallon and saw how they incorporated the writing staff and crew to serve as audience members to react to Fallon and utilized that for the AEW shows with wrestlers in the crowd compared to other wrestling shows that are “cold”

-They had just over ¼ of the roster to tape ahead in Georgia and wanted to tape ahead to be safe

-Khan positioned the TNT Championship as a title on par with the AEW title and was an idea he had and has worked on for a while with Cody for a second title

-The only agents they had were involved in their own matches, so they were limited in that aspect of match layouts ...

-An interesting line was Khan stating they have not let anyone go during this time period and “it’s not the right time for re-organizing or re-structuring for us”

-Aubrey Edwards was the referee for 20 matches within a period of 24 hours and spent 19 days in Jacksonville and Georgia at a hotel

-Chris Jericho offered to do commentary the night before after Khan went over all the ideas he had for the episodes, they didn’t have someone in place to do commentary and it was going to be split between Colt Cabana and Shawn Spears, who would also be wrestling matches

-They continued taping matches after the April 1st show ended and the following day, some matches have not seen the light of day ...

-Khan estimated they would drop 10% in viewership with the empty arena shows, he did not want to rely on airing past pay-per-views ...

-Television is their revenue stream right now and had sold 12,000 tickets for the show in Newark at the Prudential Center, they have lost “millions and millions of dollars in live events”

-He said there will come a day when they do have to let people go “but now is not the time” and said in the big picture they are in good shape and characterized themselves as the second healthiest company in the industry

-They are going to keep people isolated and practice social distancing for these upcoming shows, they will be testing people (he didn’t elaborate on the type of testing)

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Fans haven't been allowed in the arena for wrestling since March 11 when AEW and NXT ran their last live shows with an audience. Beginning with the March 13 episode of WWE SmackDown, both AEW and WWE have held shows inside an empty arena ...

Speaking on AEW Unrestricted, AEW President Tony Khan looked back on the sudden change following Dynamite in Salt Lake City ...

AEW ran live shows during the initial stages of the coronavirus pandemic as states remained open, but Florida and Georgia issued stay-at-home orders in April that didn't allow for any gatherings related to sporting events.

"I first had an inkling that things were going to be shutdown going into the third show, which is when we taped all these shows. States were starting to shut down and I never considered us or tried to force us to be 'an essential business.' I never tried to stay open against restrictions. When we heard Florida and Georgia were going to shut down, we would shut down too and we needed to tape as much content as we could before the shutdown," said Khan.

On April 9, Florida deemed WWE "essential business" under the guise "employees at a professional sports and media production with a national audience -- including any athletes, entertainers, production team, executive team, media team and any others necessary to facilitate including services supporting such production -- only if the location is closed to the general public."

Technically, AEW could have resumed live shows as well following the order, but the company had already taped weeks of television in Georgia and decided not to take advantage of the memo in Florida.

Khan said things changed rapidly in Georgia as they thought they would have a couple of days to tape everything, but the stay-at-home order came down just before the April 1 show, forcing the company to tape as much content as possible before the order went into effect at midnight on April 3.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Brian Hughes, who is the chief administrative officer in the city of Jacksonville was on The Luke Thomas Show on Wednesday. Hughes stated that all events running in the city, including pro wrestling, will need to have testing for COVID-19. Hughes added that the city has a surplus of testing with ample hospital space and resources. This would affect UFC & AEW, which are both testing for COVID-19 but would not extend to WWE, which is not running in Jacksonville.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
MLW has announced a distribution deal with Fight Globe, who will be dealing with the distribution of MLW’s content in Europe, Asia, Latin America, the Middle East, Africa, Canada, and Mexico.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Vice TV has released the trailer for next week’s episode of Dark Side of the Ring ‘The Last Ride of the Road Warriors’

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/D3coG60Z1Zg" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 05-07-2020 10:14 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
At a time when most other pro wrestling shows are down in the ratings, AEW Dynamite and NXT both saw increases last night.

Last night's live episode of Dynamite from Daily's Place in Jacksonville averaged 732,000 viewers on TNT, up 5.6 percent from last week. In the 18-49 demo, the show finished 12th for the night in the cable TV rankings and drew a 0.28 rating, Dynamite's biggest number in that category since March 25. That was up 3.7 percent from last week.

On USA Network, NXT was also up for a loaded up show featuring two title matches and the NXT in-ring debut of Karrion Kross. The episode averaged 663,000 viewers, up 4.1 percent from last week. In 18-49, NXT climbed back into the top 50, finishing 33rd with a 0.18 rating, up 12.5 percent from last Wednesday ...

There have been eight closed set broadcasts for both shows so far, so it's a good time to look at the trends as compared to before the coronavirus pandemic forced the promotions to not allow fans at events.

The eight Dynamite episodes prior to March 18 averaged 859,250 viewers. Since that date, the subsequent eight shows have averaged 745,875 viewers, a drop of 13.2 percent

For NXT, the same eight weeks of shows pre-pandemic averaged 741,750 viewers. Since then, they've averaged 643,875 viewers. The drop was the exact same 13.2 percent.

Looking at the other wrestling shows over that time frame, since there have also been eight weeks of Raw and SmackDown:

Raw averaged 2.290 million viewers for the eight weeks prior to closed set episodes and 1.948 million viewers since then, a drop of 14.9 percent.

SmackDown averaged 2.511 million viewers pre-pandemic and 2.249 million since then, a drop of 10.5 percent. It should be noted that SmackDown had the advantage of having appearances by John Cena and Goldberg before WrestleMania 36, which likely boosted those numbers and fell in the time frame of after the pandemic started.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
A&E and WWE Studios are partnering together for a new series focused on WWE memorabilia.

It was announced today that A&E Network has greenlit a series with the working title "The Quest for Lost WWE Treasures." It will be hosted by Stephanie McMahon and Paul "Triple H" Levesque and will take viewers "on the ultimate hunt to find some of WWE’s most iconic, lost memorabilia."

The series will feature 10 one-hour episodes ...

WWE Studios' Susan Levison and Ben Zierten and A&Es Elaine Frontain Bryant, Dolores Gavin, and Jonathan Partridge are serving as executive producers for "The Quest for Lost WWE Treasures."

It was noted that the new series joins the previously announced greenlight of five "Biography" documentaries that A&E and WWE are partnering together for. Those were announced last year and will be focused on Randy Savage, Roddy Piper, Booker T, Steve Austin, and Shawn Michaels.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
WWE will broadcast content related to March 1987's Wrestlemania III Recall this Tuesday 5/12 at 8 PM EST on FS1.

7 PM - Wrestlemania Rewind on Wrestlemania IIII. This is the WWE Network episode from 2014.

8 PM - Three hour Wrestlemania 3 Recall. The March 1987 event featured:
*WWE Champion Hulk Hogan vs. Andre the Giant.
*WWE Intercontinental Champion Randy Savage vs. Ricky Steamboat.
*Roddy Piper vs. Adrian Adonis - Hair vs. Hair Piper Retirement Match.
*The Hart Foundation & Danny Davis vs, The British Bulldogs & Tito Santana.
*Butch Reed vs,. Koko B. Ware.
*Harley Race vs. The Junktyard Dog.
*The Dream Team vs. The Rougeaus.
*The Can-Am Connection vs. Don Muraco & Bob Orton.
*Jake Roberts vs. The Honkytonk Man.
*The Killer Bees vs. The Iron Sheik & Nikolai Volkoff.
*King Kong Bundy & Little Tokyo & Lord Little Brook vs. Hillbilly Jim & Little Beaver & The Haiti Kid.

11 PM EST - WWE Backstage.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
As we reported earlier this week in the Elite section of PWInsider.com, the WWE Money in the Bank Ladder matches are pre-taped but the remainder of this Sunday's MITB PPV will be live from the WWE Performance Center. At one point, the plan was to go back and forth from the taped material to the live content over the course of the show to give the impression of the MITB match competitors "battling" through WWE HQ over the course of the night.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
The Rush’ also has an article up about WWE’s filming of Money In The Bank at their corporate headquarters. WWE was allowed to film the event because media companies provide “essential” services that are exempt from the stay-at-home order that was put in place on March 23rd by Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Combat Zone Wrestling announced they are postponing the 2020 Tournament of Death, originally slated for 6/20, for a date TBD:

Due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, CZW has no choice but to officially postpone Tournament of Death to a later date when it'll be safer for everyone involved.

Tickets will be refunded. pic.twitter.com/PR5DaKNezh
— CZW Combat Zone Wrestling (@combatzone) May 7, 2020

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Former two-time WWE Champion AJ Styles competed in the main event of night one of WrestleMania 36 in a Boneyard match with The Undertaker. Styles was “buried alive” in the bout and had not been on WWE programming since the match. This past Monday on RAW, AJ made his return in a gauntlet match to determine the final participant in this year’s men’s Money In The Bank match.

Styles recently spoke about his return during his MIXER stream. He agreed with his chatroom that more could’ve been done with his return. He added that maybe more star power was needed in the match or had the COVID-19 pandemic not been going on and pro wrestling was in the state it was in prior to the pandemic, maybe WWE could’ve held off on bringing him back and switched up his character a bit.

“The return… could’ve been more, okay. I’ve heard people talk about, ‘Well I mean… kinda just wasted it. AJ Styles was buried alive, could’ve came back as a different character in a different mood and a different look, something different about AJ Styles and he came back and he was exactly the same before he got buried.’ I’m with you. Now, I think the circumstances had a lot to do with AJ Styles coming back when he did… but, the circumstances, the match… maybe we needed some more star power in the match. Maybe that’s what that was. I don’t know, I’m not tooting my own horn here, but, I wish we could’ve waited and had times been different, that could’ve been something that we would’ve went [with].”

AJ also talked about several other topics during the stream. He recalled when he was first negotiating with WWE about joining the company. There was a possibility that he wasn’t going to be able to don the name “AJ Styles” and AJ told Paul “Triple H” Levesque that he had no issue with changing his name.

“When I signed, or was looking to sign with WWE, Triple H was like, ‘Hey man, [you] may not be able to keep ‘AJ Styles.’ We may have to give you another name.’ I said, ‘No problem with that. It’s just I have this huge tattoo on my side that says ‘AJ’. But I’m totally cool with whatever you guys wanna do. I don’t care, not a big deal to me.’”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Per Law 360, six firms are vying for lead counsel in the two WWE stockholder lawsuits, in-which the investors claimed that they lost money while WWE hid their “souring relations” with Saudi Arabia in the middle of hosting shows there. The six firms filed a motion in a New York federal court and want to consolidate two class actions that were submitted in March.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
On the premiere episode of Tama Tonga’s ‘Tama’s Island’ podcast, Karl Anderson joined the show and while conversing about Bullet Club, Anderson said that the group were almost named “The Real” before Finn Balor stepped in and declared “Bullet Club” as the group name.

“You know, Gedo actually wanted to call us ‘The Real’, because we used to always [say] in our promos, ‘We’re real shooters’ but making fun of [Tiger] Hattori. I guess we almost became The Real but then Prince Fergie [Finn Balor] ended up saying The Bullet Club and that actually stuck.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Digital Spy released another portion of their interview with Otis. In this portion of the interview, Otis told the story of when he was tackled by security at a WWE house show when he was in fifth grade for trying to reach over the guardrail and slap hands with Trish Stratus.

“It hurt, every bit of it hurt. I was a 200-pound fifth grader – I looked like a man almost. So yeah I made a sacrifice, got speared, but after that spear from the guard we got first row tickets. So it all happened for a reason. I’ve never told Trish that story in person. It’s hard for me to talk to her as a lady I’ve watched for years in the sports-entertainment world.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
The UFC returns to action this coming weekend with UFC 249, which is headlined by Tony Ferguson and Justin Gaethje battling for the vacant UFC Interim Lightweight Title.

This is the first of three straight events for the promotion in a one week span, with UFC Fight Night: Smith vs. Teixeira taking place on May 13 and UFC Fight Night: Overeem vs. Harris happening on May 16.

All three cards are taking place from the VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena in Jacksonville, Florida and all three events will see fighters, cornermen and other personnel get tested for the coronavirus.

A report from the Sports Business Journal states that according to UFC COO Lawrence Epstein, a total of 1,200 coronavirus testing kits are available for usage during the week.

“In the early days of this epidemic, the testing capacity had to be focused exclusively on first responders,” Epstein said. “Now with testing capacity expanding, many of these tests that organizations like ours are getting access to don’t impact that testing.”

AEW probably has a similar large stockpile assuming these tests are from the surplus the city of Jacksonville has and not just UFC hoarding tests from everywhere they can find.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
WWE is doing a special collaboration with the The King Of Fighters video game series.

Netmarble, the developers of The King Of Fighters All-Star mobile game, announced that it is doing a special event. Graphics on the upcoming collaboration features past and present wrestling stars such as The Rock, The Undertaker, John Cena, Seth Rollins, SmackDown Tag Team Champion Kofi Kingston and RAW Women's Champion Becky Lynch.

The event is set to go live on May 14. The game can be downloaded on Apple iOS and Android devices.

Link: https://twitter.com/HDKirin/status/1258380893137203200


TPWW Frontpage

Emperor Smeat 05-08-2020 03:55 PM

The Sheets (Observer Newsletter Edition):

Quote:

WWE’s second PPV show during the pandemic, Money in the Bank, takes place as both a live and taped show that will be released on 5/10.

The show is built around another cinematic production, with the idea of two Money in the Bank matches that start at the same time ...

The Money in the Bank match was actually taped the week of 4/13. Apollo Crews’ storyline was always planned for him to qualify but not compete in the match and with Styles returning ...

Crews was giving off heel tendencies on last week’s Raw and it’s been speculated he will be part of a stable headed by MVP that would also include Brendan Vink &amp; Shane Thorne. We’ve been given the impression that is one of several options considered for Crews but it is not necessarily the end direction ...

The build up has been weak at a time when interest in the WWE product is at an all-time low due to the pandemic.

At press time, only four other matches have been announced for the show and many of the feuds being pushed the hardest on television, such as Mandy Rose vs. Sonya Deville, are being designed for television rather than PPV matches ...

Becky Lynch and Charlotte Flair are both not booked for the show, even though Flair appeared heavily in the advertising ... IC champion Sami Zayn had not agreed to return to work at last word. The Street Profits vs. Viking Raiders for the Raw tag titles were not listed at press time and were probably being saved for television, although they almost have to add a few matches. Similarly, Andrade, the U.S. champion is not listed. Smackdown could add a Jeff Hardy vs. Sheamus match at the last minute but that was not etched in stone.

They are advertising that Lynch will confront the briefcase winner on Raw on 5/11. That would seem to tease a win from the Raw side, and with Asuka already having had a program with Lynch, would seem to make Baszler and Jax as the favorites.
Quote:

A few quick notes regarding the weekly rating declines over the past two months.

The last week before COVID-19 and the news took over from entertainment would have been the week of 2/28 to 3/4, but because Smackdown had an inflated number that week due to it being a heavily publicized return of John Cena, and AEW had an inflated number coming off the PPV show, we’ll use 2/21 to 2/26 as our last comparison week. We are comparing the declines to this past week, which would be shows 4/29 to 5/4.

Using that model here are the declines:
* Raw dropped 25.1 percent in viewers and 35.2 percent in 18-49
* Dynamite dropped 19.9 percent in viewers and 10.0 percent in 18-49
* NXT dropped 11.2 percent in viewers and 30.4 percent in 18-49
* Smackdown dropped 24.1 percent in viewers and 28.6 percent in 18-49

Now you can make things worse because if you go with the next week, which is the last actual week before news changed everything, this is the declines:
* Raw dropped 25.4 percent in viewers and 37.8 percent in 18-49
* Dynamite dropped 23.5 percent in viewers and 22.9 percent in 18-49
* NXT dropped 11.3 percent in viewers and 30.4 percent in 18-49
* Smackdown dropped 29.8 percent in viewers and 37.5 percent in 18-49

As far as what conclusions one wants to draw from this ...

NXT’s 18-49 drop was huge but overall was not, because the most loyal audience to all shows has been 50 plus, people who are set in their ways and even though that demo watches the news more, it appears that demo is the most loyal to wrestling. NXT, with the oldest overall audience (55), had big losses in the key demo but overall with its oldest audience, in total numbers felt less of a sting than any other show.

AEW, the youngest skewing (42) has held up better in 18-49. That’s probably due in part to being the only show of the promotion for the week, and also due to it being easily the strongest from a creative standpoint. Plus, with wrestlers in the crowd, they do have the better atmosphere than WWE.

Raw and Smackdown (50) are both down substantially by percentage. They also draw the most mainstream fans meaning their audience may not be as loyal overall. Ironically as the two oldest shows, their audience should be the most loyal, particularly Raw which has been on the same night now for more than 27 years.

Even with the big drops, both key shows are still far head of AEW in total viewers and 18-49. Even now, the 18-49 numbers for Raw and Smackdown are still both nearly double that of AEW.
Quote:

Raw on 5/4 followed Smackdown with scary numbers, averaging 1,682,000 viewers, the lowest number in the history of the show, breaking the mark of 1,775,000 set on the Christmas Eve 2018 show ...

The scariest stat is that if you go back exactly one year this week, you have a 39.5 percent drop in teenager viewing, 58.0 percent drop in 18-34 24.5 percent in 35-49 and 12.5 percent in 50 plus. Granted, that isn’t fair, but in these times, they are maintaining the 50 plus creatures of habit not too badly given all the issues with the dead shows.

Raw did 1,807,000 viewers in the first hour, 1,691,000 viewers in the second hour and 1,546,000 viewers in the third hour. The first hour was the second lowest first hour in history behind the Christmas Eve 2018 show. The second and third hours were the lowest for their respective hours in history with the third hour breaking the all-time hourly low of 1,619,000 set the prior week
Quote:

The 5/1 Smackdown show drew numbers that have to now be considered scary, with a 1.24 rating and 1,885,000 viewers (a very low 1.26 viewers per home), not just the lowest figure for the show since going to FOX, but 6.0 percent down from last week’s record low.

Smackdown, even with the benefit of being on a network station, for its two hours is now for the first time did less viewers on FOX than the first two hours of Raw did on USA the previous Monday (but not the following Monday), which is available in about 25 million fewer homes ...

FOX last year on the same night did 2,638,000 viewers and 0.5 in 18-49, so 18-49 was identical but viewers were down 28.5 percent.
Quote:

For AEW vs. NXT on 4/29, AEW dominated every quarter in 18-49, while for overall, AEW won the first six quarters but the last two with Keith Lee vs. Damien Priest for the North American title vs. Dustin Rhodes vs. Lance Archer went close for NXT due to the huge advantage in over 50 viewers ...

In the first quarter, AEW opened with 797,000 viewers, the high point for either company, and 354,000 in 18-49 for Cody vs. Darby Allin. NXT opened with 757,000 viewers but only 219,000 in 18-49 for Isaiah Scott vs. El Hijo del Fantasma.

In the second quarter, AEW lost 67,000 viewers but stayed even in 18-49 with Cody vs. Allin’s finish. NXT lost 116,000 viewers and 11,000 in 18-49 for an Isaiah Scott interview, Dominik Dijakovic interview, the attempted kidnapping and Candice LeRae vs. Kacy Catanzaro.

In the third quarter, AEW lost 62,000 viewers and 22,000 in 18-49 with the Scorpio Sky vignette, MJF interview and Wardlow squash win. NXT lost 36,000 viewers and 10,000 in 18-49 for a Damien Priest interview and The Newly Bro game with Fabian Aichner and Marcel Barthel attacking Matt Riddle and Timothy Thatcher.

In the fourth quarter, AEW gained 68,000 viewers and 33,000 in 18-49 for the Bubbly Bunch vignette and Best Friends vs. Kip Sabian &amp; Jimmy Havoc. NXT lost 16,000 viewers and 28,000 in 18-49 for an Adam Cole interview and Charlotte Flair vs. Mia Yim. This was the low point in 18-49 for NXT and just under the high point for AEW.

In the fifth quarter, AEW lost 45,000 viewers but gained 1,000 in 18-49 for the ending of Best Friends vs. Havoc &amp; Sabian, the Britt Baker vignette and a Shawn Spears squash. This was AEW’s high point of the night in 18-49. But while they peaked the 18-49, the segment that included Orange Cassidy (in limited amounts) and Penelope Ford lost viewers on the back end. NXT gained 48,000 viewers and 41,000 in 18-49 for the Charlotte Flair/Io Shirai confrontation and Dexter Lumis vs. Shane Thorne.

In the sixth quarter, AEW lost 27,000 viewers and 6,000 in 18-49 for a Marko Stunt promo and Brodie Lee vs. Stunt, as well as the Jon Moxley promo. NXT lost 54,000 viewers and 11,000 in 18-49 for Tony Nese vs. Drake Maverick, the Maverick interview and a Lee promo. This segment was the low point for viewers for NXT with 583,000.

In the seventh quarter, AEW lost 58,000 viewers and 23,000 in 18-49 for the beginning of Dustin Rhodes vs. Lance Archer. NXT gained 47,000 viewers and 14,000 in 18-49 for the for the end of Lee vs. Maverick and the beginning of Lee vs. Priest. NXT won the quarter 630,000 to 606,000, but lost 327,000 to 214,000 in 18-49.

In the main event quarter, AEW gained 42,000 viewers and 16,000 in 18-49 for Rhodes vs. Archer. This ended with AEW with 648,000 viewers and 343,000 in 18-49. NXT gained 22,000 viewers and 12,000 in 18-49 for Lee vs. Priest, which saw their final quarter at 652,000 viewers and 226,000 in 18-49.
Quote:

For 5/6, AEW did 732,000 viewers and a 0.28 in 18-49 while NXT did 663,000 viewers with a 0.18 in 18-49.

If there was a major take, it’s that AEW, with head-to-head opposition by NXT and on an unfamiliar night, actually had more 18-34 male viewers than unopposed Raw on a familiar night did two nights earlier by a small margin, with an 83,000 to 82,000 edge ...

The final quarter, with Jericho & Sammy Guevara vs. Omega & Hardy going against Cole vs. Dream, AEW has an 837,000 to 572,000 edge in viewers, and was more than double in 18-49 with a 399,000 to 188,000 edge.

NXT’s viewer peak was the first quarter off the lead-in but its’ peak in 18-49 was Xia Li vs. Chelsea Green, the second straight time Green has pulled good numbers in that demo. NXT’s low point was the main event, which coincided with AEW’s high point being the main event across the board. AEW’s low point across the board was quarter three with all interviews ...

AEW won seven of eight quarters, only losing the first because NXT had the big lead-in, but dominated in 18-49.

AEW opened with 714,000 viewers and 389,000 in 18-49 for Cody vs. Joey Janela. NXT opened with 732,000 viewers and 239,000 in 18-49 for Johnny Gargano vs. Dominik Dijakovic.

In the second quarter, AEW lost 7,000 viewers and 39,000 in 18-49 for the ending of Cody vs. Janela, a women’s video, a Nyla Rosa interview and Rose vs. McKenzie Paige. NXT lost 45,000 viewers and gained 24,000 in 18-49 for the end of Dijakovic vs. Gargano, an Imperium interview and Akira Tozawa vs. Jack Gallagher.

In the third quarter, AEW lost 56,000 viewers and 41,000 in 18-49 with promos, and MJF taped promo, a Shawn Spears taped promo and MJF &amp; Spears together on a promo. NXT gained 43,000 viewers and 22,000 in 18-49 for a Tozawa interview, Chelsea Green vs. Xia Li and a Velveteen Dream interview.

In the fourth quarter, AEW gained 89,000 viewers and 39,000 in 18-49 for Jon Moxley vs. Frankie Kazarian. NXT lost 84,000 viewers and 52,000 in 18-49 for Karrion Kross vs. Leon Ruff, a package on Charlotte Flair vs. Io Shirai and a Matt Riddle &amp; Timothy Thatcher interview.

In the fifth quarter, AEW lost 3,000 viewers and gained 4,000 in 18-49 for the end of Moxley vs. Kazarian, the post-match beatdown of Moxley and a Brandi Rhodes promo. NXT gained 39,000 viewers and 9,000 in 18-49 for Flair vs. Shirai and the post-match.

In the sixth quarter, AEW lost 36,000 viewers and 8,000 in 18-49 for Lance Archer vs. QT Marshall and the angle where Jake Roberts put the snake on Brandi Rhodes. NXT lost 37,000 viewers but only 2,000 in 18-49 for Shirai and Rhea Ripley post-match arguing and Kushida vs. Jake Atlas.

In the seventh quarter, AEW gained 66,000 viewers and 17,000 in 18-49 for Taz with Darby Allin and the beginning of Chris Jericho &amp; Sammy Guevara vs. Matt Hardy &amp; Kenny Omega. NXT lost 42,000 viewers and 25,000 in 18-49 for a Finn Balor interview, Cameron Grimes vs. Denzel Dejournette and a Balor interview.

In the final quarter, AEW gained 70,000 viewers and 38,000 in 18-49 for the rest of Jericho & Guevara vs. Hardy & Omega. NXT lost 34,000 viewers and 27,000 in 18-49 for Adam Cole vs. Velveteen Dream.
Quote:

Another Reigns story got a lot of talk this week. On Raw on 5/4, they were airing Money in the Bank highlights, both wins and cash-ins and one of the ones listed was the WrestleMania in 2015 in Santa Clara where Rollins cashed in during the Reigns vs. Lesnar match. Well, it was edited to where Reigns never existed in the match. What is weirder is that Reigns was the one who was pinned and they showed the shot of Rollins using the curb stomp and went black and then showed him with the belt, giving the idea he pinned Lesnar. There isn’t a rule on erasing Reigns, only that commentators aren’t to mention his name. On 5/5, FS 1 did a one hour special on Reigns and on Smackdown a few weeks ago when they were showing the embarrassing HHH clips, they did show Reigns beating him at WrestleMania. We’re told the reaction by Vince McMahon regarding Reigns and how to handle the situation “changes daily based on which way the wind is blowing,” which is why one day they show him beating HHH on Smackdown, then they edited him off Raw, then they do a Make-a-Wish thing and have no clips of him, then they do an investment conference and Vince McMahon never says his name, and then they have a one hour special on him on FS 1.
Quote:

Owens has been out of action since suffering an ankle injury during the match with Rollins at Mania. As of the weekend he didn’t know if it was a break or a bad sprain but the belief was that it’s not too serious and he would be back in action in a few weeks. That’s the main reason he hasn’t been around but also noted he was given the option not to do the tapings and right now wanted to spend time with his family. He doesn’t know the spot that he got hurt on. From what we’re told nothing hurt at WrestleMania but the day after his ankle was really swollen
Quote:

Regarding the Otis/Rose storyline, and Andrea Listenberger, the writer who was released a few weeks ago and credited with it. A lot, perhaps most of the Otis stuff is from Vince McMahon who likes the character. Others have said that Listenberger’s role was in writing the promos, but was not the driving force in the storyline, but she was said to be a good writer. Others have said that there were people on the Smackdown creative team that could have gone to bat for her when the cuts came. Rose has said that she pitched the general idea of the storyline to Vince McMahon
Quote:

New Japan Pro Wrestling, which has been of the mindset of not doing empty arena shows, is softening that stance and exploring the possibility.

New Japan announced that in a release where they announced being shut down through at least early June, meaning no Best of the Super Juniors tournament, at least as originally scheduled ...

The New Japan web site also no longer lists Dominion, which had been the company’s second biggest show of the year. It was originally scheduled for 6/14 at the Osaka Jo Hall.

There was no word at press time as to the chances, if any, that the Super Junior tournament could take place later in the year. There was no decision made on the subject but the problems regarding doing so would be getting appropriate venues and issues with quarantining foreign stars and how long those restrictions would be in place.
Quote:

The idea of live pro wrestling with fans in Chicago or the state of Illinois looks to be dead for a while. Gov. J.B. Pritzker announced this week that large events or conventions in the state won’t be allowed until there is a vaccine or a highly effective treatment is readily available, or new cases are eliminated for a significant period of time. That looks to mean that All Out, which they wanted to make a Labor Day tradition for the Sears Center, may be out this year
Quote:

At the [AEW] tapings this week, they were doing both swab tests upon arrival in Jacksonville and then isolating everyone until the show was to start. They also ordered everyone in the building unless they were on camera to be masked. All of the tests taken as of 5/5 came out negative. AEW was the first company doing actual COVID tests as WWE was only taking the temperature of everyone involved at its tapings last week. That said, the usage of Jim Ross was higher on the risk side as well as Jake Roberts, and there just felt like way too many people backstage during the street fight that weren’t necessary to be there and in that instance they were in close quarters. The stuff with more people in the stands themselves wasn’t that bad when you consider it’s 5,000 seat outdoor building and people were kept a lot more than six feet apart. That was a lot safer than shopping at a grocery store except for those at ringside, and you’re not testing people going into the grocery store. There were wrestlers and staff in the front row at ringside that could have been farther apart

Emperor Smeat 05-12-2020 08:56 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Ratings for the post-Money in the Bank episode of Raw were up 13.7 percent from last week's record low, averaging 1.919 million viewers last night.

It was the highest viewership for the show since April 6, which was the Raw after WrestleMania 36.

Starting late yesterday afternoon, the episode was heavily promoted around a major announcement from Becky Lynch. That turned out to be her announcing that she's pregnant and that women's Money in the Bank winner Asuka is now Raw Women's Champion.

Raw opened with a relatively strong 1.993 million viewers in hour one. It held up pretty well throughout the show, averaging 1.961 million for the second hour and dropping to 1.802 million for the final hour. The first-to-third hour drop of 10 percent is slightly better than the usual audience retention.

Raw averaged a 0.57 in the 18-49 demo, topping all of cable TV. In total viewers, the show finished 18th on cable but was second in non-news programming, behind Celebrity IOU on HGTV.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Becky Lynch and Seth Rollins will welcome their first child this December, according to a People Magazine interview with Lynch. If we do that math, that would mean Lynch likely worked Wrestlemania 36 while pregnant as that was taped in late March, which would be nine months before December. Lynch noted she learned she was pregnant in April, so she wasn't aware yet. Obviously, that's why she hadn't been traveling to WWE TV in Orlando ...

Lynch's farewell promo was taped yesterday at the WWE Performance Center. We are told that Asuka didn't know when she taped Money in the Bank (4/15) that she was actually winning the Raw Women's title as WWE kept all discussion private. There were a number of people who were there at the taping yesterday who legitimately had no idea Lynch was pregnant until the segment was taped.

For those of you who have asked whether Asuka knew Becky was going to make the announcement, we have no confirmation on that either way.

We are told there is absolutely no timetable for Lynch's potential return, at all. Motherhood is the priority right now, as it certainly should be.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
People spoke to Becky Lynch about her pregnancy. Lynch said she won’t be making a decision about returning to the ring any time soon: “It's just such a joyous time and then such a sad time too. I loved this and I've given my life to this. I've achieved everything that I want to achieve in this business. I don't know what the next chapter is because I only know what it's like to think for myself when I'm by myself. So I don't know what it'll look like and how my priorities shift and what I'm going to want in the future. So, everything's open."

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
The Money in the Bank Ladder Match was filmed at WWE HQ (aka Titan Tower) on Wednesday 4/15 over the course of a long day and evening in Stamford, CT ...

AJ Styles was always slated for the match, so the theory he was a last minute addition is not correct, since the match was produced before his "surprise" return in the Gauntlet to replace the "injured" Apollo Crews.

They did not actually shoot the MITB match in order and did not actually "fight their way up" the building. There was material shot in the lobby, first floor (Gym), the third floor, the second floor, the fourth floor (Vince McMahon's office), back to another part of the second floor, then another part of the fourth floor before climaxing on the roof of the building.

Rey Mysterio and Aleister Black, despite the impression they had been tossed off the roof of the building, were actually tossed into an area that wasn't lit that had a crash pad set up on top of rows of cardboard boxes, so they didn't have to bump onto the roof of the building.

Since we received quite a few emails asking about this one, yes, The Money in the Bank Conference Room is legitimately a real room in the building. That is the official name of the room and yes, the briefcase with the money that Dana Brooke took down legitimately hangs from the ceiling. It was not a prop set up just for the match.

The scene with AJ Styles and Daniel Bryan putting their chairs back in Vince McMahon's office, we are told, was 100% a reference to the fact that it's well known within the company that if you have a meeting with McMahon, you had better return your chair to where it was before you sat down.

The T-Rex skull in Vince McMahon's office was actually a gift from Triple H from several years ago. Yes, that is always in McMahon's office and at one point, was put on display at Wrestlemania AXXESS.

Kane Prichard, the son of Bruce Prichard, portrayed the janitor in the scene with Asuka.

The room with the wrestling ropes is actually part of the theming outside the elevator doors on the third floor. Each of the floors have a different, unique theme. The first floor has different screens to play off the company's tech department. The second floor has several WWE pinball machines in front of theming designed to look as if you are on a WWE stage looking towards a ring. The fourth floor with where executive offices are situated. There is no real discernable theme outside of the elevator doors on that floor.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Former WWE star Zack Ryder has released an episode of "Z True Life Story" that had been rejected by WWE:

The public has never seen this. One of the lost Z! True Long Island Story episodes......(Twitters cuts off the last 40 seconds but you get the idea) Enjoy! pic.twitter.com/SDrWf1HiDv
— Matt Cardona (@TheMattCardona) May 10, 2020

Link: https://twitter.com/TheMattCardona/s...88782988431360

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Several weeks ago, Major League Wrestling teased the idea of Mike Tyson appearing in a MLW ring.

While it would appear at a first glance that this was just MLW attempting to grab some attention for themselves, we are told that there have actually been at least one conversation with Tyson's team about potentially doing something down the line. It should be noted that ICM Partners represent both Tyson and MLW, so that is likely the bridge between the two signs.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Rob Gronkowski is back in the NFL, and carrying his WWE 24/7 Title all over the place, and Vince McMahon may be even more responsible for that than you realize.

"I think Vince would do pretty well on this show, the eccentric character that he is. You look at [Axe], and he's unassuming," Becky Lynch told Scott Fishman of TV Insider when asked about how Vince would do on the show "Billions." "Vince is such a larger-than-life character. At the same time, I watched him the other day demonstrate falling off a tower at 74-years-old without a bother, brushing his shoulders off and standing up again."

This led to Fightful Select poking around about what happened during this spot. We're told it was actually at the WrestleMania 36 rehearsals. A nervous Rob Gronkowski was preparing for his 24/7 Title spot, just a couple of weeks before he'd announce a return to the NFL. In order to show him that the spot was safe, Vince McMahon actually did the dive himself. The story was verified by a half dozen people within WWE, as well as some that have since left.

One person in the building said those there caught it and had a reaction of "did that just happen?," and that Vince McMahon said something to the nature of "not so bad, is it?" You may remember that Vince McMahon also did Shawn Michaels' zipline entrance at the WrestleMania 12 rehearsals....though that was way back 24 years ago.

After our original story ran, a WWE name contacted us and said that Gronk was "terrified" of the dive, and that he had the benefit of a dozen of the biggest NXT guys catching him. Even after Vince McMahon did the spot, it took a significant amount of time to convince Gronkowski. The low angle you saw on TV was because production had to make it look better as Gronk bent his knees and practically fell off the platform "like a toddler jumping into the pool for the first time."

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
The NWA announced that they’re launching a new show called Carnyland on their YouTube channel at 6:05 p.m. Eastern time next Tuesday. Billy Corgan said it was an idea they had at the very beginning of acquiring the NWA, but further details about it weren’t revealed.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Karl Anderson, who has been trying to trademark his name since January 2019, was initially blocked since WWE already were trying to trademark his name and once they completed their registration in August 2019, was given an initial rejection for likelihood of confusion. In response, Anderson noted the following to the USPTO:

"With respect to the cited registration, applicant notes that contractually the WWE has acknowledged that applicant is the owner of the mark but that WWE would file and register the mark in its own name. That is to say, applicant is the legal owner of both the cited registration and the instant application. A heavily-redacted copy of the agreement between the registrant and applicant can be provided, if helpful and requested by the Examining Attorney."

Anderson also tweeted the following update to the "major announcement" he had been teasing on his social media over the last week:

Listen, we had a decision to make in September of 2019..
We clearly made the wrong one.
In 68 days, at midnight @The_BigLG n I will talk about it.
All of it. @TalknShop @azucarRoc #TalkNShopAMania
— Karl Anderson (@MachineGunKA) May 11, 2020

Link: https://twitter.com/MachineGunKA/sta...32440044371969

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
There are discussions underway for additional Ring of Honor TV content to be featured across the Sinclair Broadcast Group and their affiliates. Joe Koff told PWInsider.com last week that an announcement is forthcomong.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Yahoo! Japan posted their chat with Masahiro Chono and Chono stated that because of the Coronavirus, Japanese pro wrestling has been hit harder than its ever been since the birth of the sport in Japan. Chono feels that it is too late for a union to be formed, referring to multiple companies in Japan coming together to address the state of the business during a government meeting. Chono feels that the wrestling business may collapse and may never recover and at the end of it all, the only person that may be left is Kazuchika Okada.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Fightful’s Sean Ross Sapp conducted an interview with AEW World Champion Jon Moxley. Moxley told the site about his frustration about his cancelled bout against Josh Barnett that was set for Bloodsport during WrestleMania weekend.

“That’s just one of many matches and many events like [AEW] Blood & Guts, 14,000 tickets in Newark down the drain; Philly, Boston, all down the drain. All these promotions, all these [independents]—it especially sucks for the independent guys [that] just aren’t working right now. That sucks. I mean, WrestleMania had to take place in front of nobody and that’s not ideal for all those guys and girls who wanted to have their big WrestleMania moment, they had to do it in front of nobody. So, everybody got affected by this. Pro wrestling is such a small part of the world even though it dominates my life, there’s much more important things. People are suffering through way worse financial times and stuff. It sucks for everybody.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
With all the time at home, Moxley had the opportunity to watch WrestleMania 36, which also took place in front of no crowd. Don't expect sour grapes about his old place of employment, as he said that he liked the presentation.

"I watched the whole thing," Moxley said. "Both nights. I enjoyed it. I thought it flowed nicely and a lot of people really worked their ass off and put on great performances. I enjoyed the Boneyard Match, I thought that was cool. I thought that was really cool, too, because the Undertaker is a really beloved character. He’s like a comic book character. He’s a beloved character from our childhood. Same as John Wayne or John McClane or any action movie star you can think of, so it was really cool. I think everybody really enjoyed that."

From the same interview Moxley had with Fightful's Sapp.


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 05-13-2020 07:16 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
WWE has revealed that the major announcement on tonight's NXT will be made by Triple H and Shawn Michaels.

Link: https://twitter.com/WWENXT/status/12...670192128?s=20

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Impact Wrestling has unveiled the newest member of its Knockouts division.

It was announced this morning that Tasha Steelz has signed with Impact Wrestling. After appearing for Impact in a battle royal last year, Steelz had her second match for the promotion on last night's Impact. She lost to Kylie Rae.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
NJPW released a video this morning with President & CEO Harold Meij providing a roadmap that will eventually lead to the resumption of shows. You can watch it below:

Meij first detailed why they have not conducted empty arena matches, as other promotions have since the spread of COVID-19. He listed three reasons they have yet to do this: to protect the health and safety of wrestlers and staff, venues being unavailable to use for NJPW events and NJPW’s own corporate social responsibility.

He went on to say that the first step towards resuming shows will be to hold empty arena events. However, Meij said that this will not happen until the following: when Japan lifts its country-wide state of emergency, the number of new infections decline, and when matches can take place in disinfected and safe settings. When events do resume, they will take place both in Japan and in the NJPW Los Angeles dojo.

The next step would be to welcome back fans with added measures. These steps will include extensive health checks on wrestlers and staff, thermographic temperature upon entry, and masks will be compulsory. Venues will be thoroughly disinfected and ventilated, and proper social distancing spacing will be implemented.

Meij ended the message by promising that NJPW won’t be beaten by the disease and urged every pro wrestling fan to come together and overcome this challenge.

Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MgheBtvAwGU

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Details emerged Wednesday on why XFL commissioner Oliver Luck was fired by WWE chairman and league founder Vince McMahon four days before it shut down operations, courtesy of the Sports Business Journal.

McMahon fired Luck for "gross neglect" and Luck filed a lawsuit soon thereafter to reclaim some of money lost by his surprise dismissal. Luck's contract called for a $5 million annual salary and a $2 million bonus.

In pre-trial filings, McMahon's legal team listed "gross neglect of his job during the COVID-19 pandemic", "personal use of a league-assisted cellphone", and the signing of a former NFL receiver with previous legal issues despite McMahon's previous orders to avoid doing so.

Also in the filings, McMahon claimed that Luck left the XFL's Connecticut headquarters for his home in Indiana and "disengaged" from the league's operations.

The suit read, “Put simply, at the very moment when his leadership as CEO was needed most, Luck did not devote substantially all of his business time to the XFL, as required by his contract."

Despite the XFL filing for bankruptcy, McMahon personally guaranteed Luck's contract through his Alpha Entertainment parent LLC, ensuring Luck could sue McMahon rather than go through U.S. bankruptcy court as a creditor.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
The former Erick Rowan opened a Pro Wrestling Tees store under the name Erick Redbeard, so that may be the name he will be using post-WWE. He also changed his twitter handle to that name.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
In-ring action will return to 205 Live this Friday as the company taped two weeks worth of episodes this week. The show will remain 30 minutes in length.

Bet WWE still won't put any Interim Cruiser tournament matches on 205 Live.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
In regard to the buzz about Sting potentially coming to All Elite Wrestling, PWInsider.com has been told by several sources close to Sting that he will not be the person who presents the TNT Championship to the winner of Cody vs. Lance Archer at the AEW Double or Nothing PPV, which is something we have been asked a lot about in the last 24 hours. As I noted a few days ago, Mattel has pulled Sting from future WWE action figure line releases as he is no longer available to them, likely due to the end of his contractual agreements with WWE. WWE did not respond to a request regarding his relationship with the company. Sting has been tweeting of late about AEW, which Cody has responded to. It appears to be Cody smartly trying to get some buzz for the company right now, but that doesn't mean something can't happen later.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
In response to WWE announcing he has been stripped of the Intercontinental Championship, Sami Zayn tweeted:

I disagree with this decision and no matter what anyone says, I am still undefeated and therefore still the Intercontinental Champion. -SZ https://t.co/SUFsBFeRDB
— Sami Zayn (@SamiZayn) May 13, 2020

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
NBA star Enes Kanter today stated that he has a standing offer for a WWE contract and intends to take the company up on it once his NBA career concludes:

Celtics center @EnesKanter told our NBA Insider @ShamsCharania he has been offered WWE deal and plans to accept after career.

Kanter also discussed his public approach with his native Turkey, Russell Westbrook's policy for opponents and more. pic.twitter.com/gOvZhfYGae
— Stadium (@Stadium) May 13, 2020

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
PROGRESS Wrestling in the UK issued a statement this morning, announcing they were cancelling all of their summer plans due to the COVID-19 pandemic

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
In an interesting note, last week’s episode of AEW Dynamite had 356,000 viewers in the 18-49 demo and 732,000 viewers overall. While they had fewer viewers than the Ladder Match special on Fox, they did top WWE in the demo.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
For all the shows tonight, there will be big competition with the finale of ‘Survivor: Winners at War’ airing on CBS at 8 pm Eastern.

That show and UFC's Fight Night show on ESPN's streaming service probably going to do some serious damage to NXT and AEW's numbers tonight.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Much like his enemy Brock Lesnar, Matt Riddle doesn't want the product.

On Monday's WWE Raw, Drew McIntyre announced a "brand-to-brand invitation" that would allow superstars to appear on separate brands. Charlotte Flair will be on Friday's SmackDown while King Corbin will face McIntyre on Monday's Raw.

Speaking to Pro Wrestling Sheet, Matt Riddle was asked if he would like to take advantage of the invitation and appear on Raw or SmackDown.

"Yeah, I would. You know what, I should have been watching the product last night. I had no idea. Yeah, that’s a great idea. I hope I get a call soon and they let me wrestle up there a little bit. That would be fantastic."

When asked about throwing out a challenge of his own, Riddle said, "Definitely. Even in NXT, there’s so many matches I haven’t gotten yet. Same thing on the main roster. There’s so many match-ups with people, so many talented individuals. For me, I feel like the possibilities are endless. I just want an opportunity. I think I’m going to get it. Who knows?! I didn’t even know about this [Brand to Brand Invitational]! That’s a great idea."

Riddle wasn't exactly sure how the brand-to-brand invitation works. WWE hasn't made any kind of official announcement on the rule outside of McIntyre's promo on WWE Raw.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Tessa Blanchard has blurred the lines in wrestling becoming the IMPACT World Champion and proving that women can compete with men. But in AEW and WWE, intergender wrestling is a bit more taboo. WWE has rarely had men and women interact in the ring over the past decade while AEW has done one intergender match (Kenny Omega & Riho vs. Kip Sabian & Penelope Ford), which aired on AEW Dark.

Appearing on Busted Open Radio, AEW Women's Champion Nyla Rose weighed in intergender wrestling in AEW.

"I don't look at it so much as 'the confines.' I think there's power in that. There's power in having a 'women's division.' Representation, showing we can break down barriers and carry a show. There's absolute power in that. I don't see anything wrong in having the separation. [Intergender matches] are something that have always happened, I would love to see more of that on the bigger stage, but that's not my call. Hopefully, down the line, we will see a tide shift," she said.

There has been little to no mention of intergender wrestling on AEW since the Dark match on the Chris Jericho Cruise. When AEW first started, Brandi Rhodes said intergender wouldn't be something fans would see out of the gate, but that AEW would be open-minded to the idea.


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 05-14-2020 09:48 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Going up against a live UFC card that aired on ESPN+, AEW and NXT ratings both took a hit last night.

This week's AEW Dynamite on TNT had its lowest viewership ever and the lowest rating its done in the key 18-49 demo. The show averaged 654,000 viewers, down 10.7 percent from last week. Dynamite finished 15th in the 18-49 demo with a .23 rating, down 17.9 percent from last week.

NXT on the USA Network averaged 604,000 viewers, down 8.9 percent from last week. In 18-49, the show averaged a 0.15 rating, down 16.7 percent from the previous week and matching NXT's series low. The show finished 46th in the cable TV rankings in that demo last night.

AEW won every demo except people over 50, where NXT had an advantage of 0.32 to 0.26. The strongest demo for AEW was men 18-49, where the show averaged a 0.28 rating to NXT's 0.18.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
In addition to the UFC running a Fight Night card on ESPN+, the networks had significant programming competition. On CBS, the finale of ‘Survivor’ attracted 7.9 million viewers and The Masked Singer did 7.2 million with both shows airing at 8 pm Eastern. Viewership for the UFC card is unknown as it aired exclusively on the streaming platform in the U.S.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Scorpio Sky is the fifth confirmed entrant for the Casino Ladder Match at Double or Nothing.

Sky was announced for the ladder match today, joining Darby Allin, Colt Cabana, Orange Cassidy, and Fenix as the wrestlers who have been confirmed for it thus far. The winner will receive a future shot at the AEW World Championship.

AEW revealed the rules for the Casino Ladder Match on last night's episode of Dynamite. Two wrestlers will begin the match, then a new entrant will enter every 90 seconds until all nine possible participants have entered. A chip will be hanging above the ring and can be grabbed at any time, so it's an advantage to enter the match early.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
The current NWA Worlds Heavyweight Champion Nick Aldis is in the midst of his second reign with the title. He first lost the belt in September of 2018 at The Young Bucks and Cody Rhodes’ ALL IN show. A few months after that event, Nick Aldis won back the NWA Worlds Title by defeating Cody Rhodes at the NWA 70th Anniversary show ...

With the atmosphere and the crowd reaction from those inside the Sears Centre on the night of ALL IN, Nick Aldis feels that it is the biggest moment of his 16-year career in pro wrestling. He took pride in saying that the NWA Worlds Title, which is one of the more historic titles in pro wrestling was able to be a focal point on a stacked card ...

Seven months after ALL IN and at the time, what was several months after the announcement of All Elite Wrestling and The Elite (Cody, The Young Bucks, Kenny Omega & Hangman Page’s) departure from Ring of Honor, ROH teamed up with New Japan Pro-Wrestling to present G1 Supercard from Madison Square Garden ...

The NWA Worlds Heavyweight Title was supposed to be defended on that show by Nick Aldis. Aldis said that-that moment could’ve been huge for the NWA but believes that because of what happened at ALL IN and the possibility of the NWA Title match outshining other bouts on the card, it was pulled. Aldis said it didn’t matter where he was placed on the card, he just wanted that moment for the organization he represents. He said that the aforementioned sequence of events was the beginning of the end for the initial partnership between ROH and the NWA.

“There was a Ring of Honor Title match at ALL IN and it wasn’t… not particularly memorable, right? Well I’d been told that I would defend the NWA Title at the Madison Square Garden show which would’ve been a huge feather in my cap and then it didn’t happen, and who’s to say why, but to me I always felt like there was this concern that once again, it would eclipse and outshine… and that’s sad because ultimately, it’s their show. They’re still gonna get the credit. Again, if you think about building the business around moments rather than sort of brands and bragging rights and things like that, in the grand scheme of things, it still would’ve been a huge thing for them but…

They could’ve put me on first. I wouldn’t have cared. For us, which would’ve been a huge thing for us to say for the first time since Harley Race, the Ten Pounds Of Gold is gonna be defended at Madison Square Garden, and again because look, before that show, if you didn’t wrestle for WWE, Madison Square Garden was out of the question so it was like, I wrestled at Wembley Arena which is in a lot of ways is like Madison Square Garden to us in Britain, but it’s the Garden, right? And it would’ve been a huge moment and I was disappointed and honestly, there was a part of me at that point when I said, ‘You know, I don’t feel like this relationship — they’re getting a lot from us and we’re not getting a lot from them now,’ and that’s when we kind of decided, ‘Okay, maybe it’s time for us to just go ahead and prove who we are’ and that’s when Powerrr came to be. We gotta make our own thing here.”

From a recent interview Aldis had with Post Wrestling. Felt that tidbit about last year's G1 Supercard event was interesting since he really over estimates NWA's value to ROH and the idea his match at MSG being pulled was due to ROH being petty since it would have outshined the other high profile matches on the card.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
WrestleTalk did an interview with Sugar Dunkerton recently. Dunkerton is also known as “Pineapple Pete” as described by Chris Jericho on AEW Dynamite ...

Dunkerton also spoke about his interactions with Chris Jericho. Dunkerton was surprised at how laid back and down to earth Jericho is for someone that has seemingly done it all in wrestling.

“Dude he spoke to me when he saw me which tripped me out because I was like, ‘What is happening right now?’ Like he rolls up and it’s hilarious because Jericho to me is kind of a hilarious kind of guy because this is a guy it’s like — I’ve learned a lot from those two tapings because you got guys on the indies who are barely at that point where they’re really doing anything with their career yet. They’ve done some stuff but they’re not there yet, and they act like, ‘Yo, bow down. Kiss my boots.’ This and that and everything. ‘I’m not doing that,’ this and that, but then you’ve got a guy who’s literally done everything, literally been to every big show that you could do, main-evented and all of that and he’s super down to earth, he’s super funny. It’s no weird stuff when you talk to him so…”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Brodie Lee is challenging Jon Moxley for the AEW World Championship at Double Or Nothing on May 23rd. To promote the bout, Lee appeared on Busted Open Radio with Mark Henry and David LaGreca. Lee talked about the comparisons between his on-screen character and Vince McMahon and explained that he’s just a fan of mafia movies. Brodie said he has no reason to hate the WWE or Vince McMahon.

“I mean you take it however you want. I happen to be a fan of Mafia movies, so that’s the way the character is portrayed for me. Like I said, I believe that the leadership style, the results speak for themselves. So, you people can take it any way you want, and trust me, I hear ya. I hear everybody, so… but, nothing was intentional. I have no reason to hate WWE, no reason to hate Vince McMahon, nothing like that. You take it how you want.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Chris Van Vliet spoke with Shane “Hurricane” Helms for a one-hour chat. Helms shared that throughout his career as The Hurricane, he always had a difficult time seeing out of his signature mask.

“I couldn’t see for sh*t out of that mask. If you were this close to me trying to shake my hand, I wouldn’t be able to see now. It blocks so much of my downward vision and that’s part of the reason I kind of developed that bent over Hurricane walk, because I couldn’t see for sh*t in that mask. It’s one of the reasons I took out springboards. Like I would do them sometimes on the live events but I was like, ‘I can’t see that rope.’ I can feel it and I hope it’s there but when you do a springboard, you’re not necessarily looking at the rope but through your peripherals, you can kinda see the pads and you know where it’s at. My vision was so obscured, I had to kind of tone down a lot of my stuff.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Jim Cornette and Joey Janela got into another Twitter back and forth after Cornette was informed that Janela said he and Cornette sat down in Chilli’s, had a good time and hashed out their issues. Cornette denied that-that happened but the official Chilli’s Twitter account chimed in and added that it did happen.

Link: https://twitter.com/Chilis/status/12...374608897?s=20

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Inside The Ropes pushed out their interview with Lio Rush. Lio spoke about the “backstage heat” that he was said to have in WWE. Lio said that there was a rift financially between himself and WWE because while he was on RAW, he was still making the same money that he was making in NXT.

“It was super exaggerated. I don’t understand where or how the whole backstage heat thing started. It might have happened because I was pretty vocal about a situation that happened overseas with carrying the waters and stuff like that. There were some other stories out there that were completely untrue and didn’t happen. But that’s the one story that I’ve been pretty open about. So yeah I don’t really know where the backstage heat thing ever came from. People were always cordial to me and would come up to me. Nobody ever came and said anything bad or disrespectful and vice versa. As far as the split with me and Bobby, there was some miscommunication and frustration with me and the powers that be financially. That was my biggest thing at the time. I was still making the money I’d been making in NXT at the time and merchandise was getting put out and I felt I’d contributed so much to that as far as the sayings, the mottos, the catchphrases and I just wasn’t getting compensated for that. I wasn’t on the meet and greets with Bobby, which didn’t make sense to me. But everywhere Bobby would go, I had to go because I was his manager. But Bobby was so busy, he was the Intercontinental Champion, he was on every show, every live event, traveling, had to get hotels. Yeah, all of that is great to be used but I’m not making enough money to cover these expenses. I have to do everything that Bobby’s doing but the difference is Bobby’s making this much (points high up) and I’m making this much (points down low). If I’m gonna do this, I basically need more money to survive. You know its not just me out here, I’ve got a wife, I’ve got two kids, so I have other responsibilities I have to take care of. I guess they didn’t like that a 25 year old or whatever age I was at the time, they didn’t like me being so outspoken so they just cut it.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Vice TV released the following trailer for their season finale of Dark Side of the Ring, which will look at Owen Hart ...

10 PM - SEASON FINALE - "The Final Days of Owen Hart." The official synopsis notes that his widow, Martha Hart will appear notin, "In 1999, Owen Hart fell 80 feet to his death in a stunt that went tragically wrong. Bravely reliving his final day, his widow Martha reveals the mistakes that took his life."

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/ITFhMga6_Cc" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 05-15-2020 04:44 PM

The Sheets (Observer Newsletter Edition):

Quote:

Rebecca Quin aka Becky Lynch, the biggest genuine women’s pro wrestling star in the U.S. of the modern era, shocked the wrestling world on 5/11 by announcing she was pregnant.

The announcement was made in the opening segment of Raw that night. It had already gotten out that she would make a major announcement about her future and rumors spread of her being pregnant, and that she would vacate the title to Asuka, who had captured the Money in the Bank briefcase the night before ...

Quin is expecting in December, which would indicate probably February or early March for when she first got pregnant. She said she found out about it in April ...

For the Raw after WrestleMania, which was actually taped before WrestleMania, meaning before she knew she was pregnant, Lynch did an interview that appeared to focus on a return match with Shayna Baszler, who she beat on the show with the idea it was a fluke pin out of nowhere, designed to keep the program alive.

Nia Jax returned and was pushed as a monster at about the same time. Both Jax and Baszler were focused on a match with Lynch on that show.

But on the first Raw new tapings done after WrestleMania, Baszler and Jax instead qualified for the Money in the Bank match and Lynch was not at the taping, which would indicate it being the early part of April when she told the company, and they kept it under wraps for about a month. Money in the Bank was taped on 4/15 so it’s very clear they knew before then. It had seemed weird with Money in the Bank so lacking in star power that Lynch wouldn’t be wrestling on the show.

The actual original booking plan was for Lynch to wrestle Jax in a singles match at the MITB PPV, and to retain the title. Baszler was originally booked to win MITB and be Lynch’s main rival for the title.

As far as the women’s division goes, Asuka, the best worker of the women on the brand, as champion will likely feud with both Baszler and Jax ...

This was the first time in American pro wrestling when a major league promotion world champion vacated her title due to pregnancy.
Quote:

WWE returned to PPV with a show built around a taped mini-movie Money in the Bank match on 5/10.

The Money in the Bank match was a taping done on 4/15 at the WWE headquarters in Stamford, CT, where supposedly the six men and six women would start on the bottom floor and go from floor-to-floor until ending on the roof of the building where there was a ring with a briefcase held up and ladders all around ... it was okay since the 27:10 match still led to a main show that only went two hours and 24 minutes, which was a positive.

There is no internal doctrine right now to keep shows to a shorter length, just a decisio made for this specific show. But since most took it as a positive, that could become the general rule until fans are back ...

The show did 200,000 Google searches which indicates a normal amount of interest for a non-major PPV show. With the record low ratings leading into the show, there was thought that the interest level would be way down. But it was above the weaker shows or the Saudi shows.
Quote:

Smackdown on 5/8 did a 1.33 rating and 2,025,000 viewers (a very low 1.26 viewers per home). But the rating was up 7.3 percent from last week and the total viewers were up 7.4 percent for the go-home show for Money in the Bank.

It’s, by today’s normal, a good sign because the show had hit record lows for FOX last week and this was not only a solid increase, but the first time Smackdown had increased from the prior week in five weeks and stopped a significant weekly erosion which may indicate last week was a bottoming out as opposed to a continuation of big weekly drops ...

FOX on the same week last year did 2,872,000 viewers and a 0.6 in 18-49, so it’s drop of 29.5 percent in viewers and 16.7 percent in the key demo.
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A few more notes from the 5/6 television shows. AEW’s 1.38 viewers per home was the highest of any pro wrestling show of the past week, meaning more people on average watch the show together.

For AEW, in males 18-34, the high point was Cody vs. Joey Janela and low point was the Jon Moxley beatdown by the Dark Order.

For women 18-34, the high point was Chris Jericho &amp; Sammy Guevara vs. Kenny Omega &amp; Matt Hardy. The low point was Cody vs. Janela.

For men 35-49, the high point was Cody vs. Janela. The low point was the promos with MJF, Shawn Spears, etc.

For women 35-49, the high point was Jericho &amp; Guevara vs. Omega &amp; Hardy and the low point was also that MJF, Spears, etc. quarter that was almost all interviews.

For NXT, in males 18-34, the high point was Johnny Gargano vs. Dominik Dijakovic and Akira Tozawa vs. Jack Gallagher. The low point was the Finn Balor stuff as Cameron Grimes vs. Denzel Dejournette.

For NXT, in women 18-34, the high point was Gargano vs. Dijakovic and Tozawa vs. Gallagher. The low point was the Balor stuff and Grimes vs. Dejournette.

For men 35-49, the high point was Chelsea Green vs. Xia Li and low point was Adam Cole vs. Velveteen Dream.

For women 35-49 the high point was Gargano vs. Dijakovic and Green vs. Li tied, and the low point was Cole vs. Dream.
Quote:

Both NXT and AEW suffered declines on 5/13, both to near all-time low marks.

The reasons are a few. The obvious is the empty arena format erodes numbers under the best of circumstances, although that’s no different from last week ... UFC also appears to have hurt both shows and really all of cable given AEW was down 17.4 percent in the key demo and was still in the No. 15 spot on cable for the night.

AEW did 654,000 viewers and a 0.23 (294,000 viewers) in 18-49. The show was down 10.7 percent in viewers and 17.4 percent in 18-49. NXT was No. 46 in 18-49, with 604,000 viewers and 0.15 (189,000 viewers) in 18-49. It was down 8.9 percent in viewers and down 20.6 percent in 18-49.

AEW figured to be affected more by UFC competition because it skews younger, like UFC. NXT, which had been doing a 56 year old median viewer age in recent weeks, was going to have less UFC crossover, but it took an even bigger hit in 18-49 than AEW did, which also indicates in the key UFC demo both companies got killed.

It was the lowest number for AEW to date, and third lowest for a regular NXT show to date ...

One key is that NXT pushed hard all day a major announcement by William Regal. The same strategy pushed all day by Raw two days earlier led to a very strong opening quarter, but for Raw it was an announcement by Becky Lynch which led to all kinds of speculation, including what was true. Trying to do the same promotional gimmick two days later will invariably not work, with this being the example. In this case, it was simply the announcement of the next Takeover show.

Another key the decline was UFC related is that the declines for AEW were almost all 18-49 males, as the teenage audience was the same and over 50 had only a small decline. NXT suffered the same major hit in 18-49 males but not in teenage boys at all ...

AEW was No. 8 not including news shows in 18-49 and fifth in its time slot trailing only MTV, Bravo, Home &amp; Garden and The Food Network shows. NXT was No. 13 in its time slot. AEW was second on cable among entertainment shows in Males 18-49 and second in Males 12-34. NXT was fifth among entertainment shows in Males 18-49 and sixth in Males 12-34. So UFC hurt every show in that demo because of how well the wrestling shows even with the record lows did in placing ...

AEW won all eight quarters, and in 18-49 won every quarter by a big margin.

The first quarter with NXT getting the benefit of the bigger lead-in was close. AEW opened with the Cody brawl with Lance Archer and the beginning of Jurassic Express vs. Best Friends, doing 691,000 viewers to start and 284,000 in 18-49. NXT opened with Matt Riddle &amp; Timothy Thatcher vs. Marcel Barthel &amp; Fabian Aichner for the tag titles, doing 687,000 total viewers and 208,000 in 18-49.

In the second quarter, AEW lost 38,000 viewers and 5,000 in 18-49 for Best Friends vs. Jurassic Express. NXT lost 51,000 viewers and 14,000 in 18-49 for the Riddle and Thatcher backstage brawl and Tegan Nox vs. Indi Hartwell.

In the third quarter, AEW lost 7,000 viewers but gained 10,000 in 18-49 for Britt Baker vs. Hikaru Shida vs. Kris Statlander vs. Penelope Ford and the Pineapple Pete interview. NXT lost 31,000 viewers and 13,000 in 18-49 for Tony Nese vs. Jake Atlas and the Undisputed Era video conference.

In the fourth quarter, AEW gained 27,000 viewers and 32,000 in 18-49 for Kenny Omega &amp; Matt Hardy vs. Ortiz &amp; Santana. NXT lost 38,000 viewers and 2,000 in 18-49 for the Karrion Kross &amp; Scarlett video, a Dakota Kai &amp; Raquel Gonzalez vignette, an Isaiah Scott promo and the special announcement by HHH, Shawn Michaels and Road Dogg.

In the fifth quarter, AEW lost 24,000 viewers and 9,000 in 18-49 for the end of the Omega &amp; Hardy vs. Santana &amp; Ortiz match, Taz with Darby Allin, the Nyla Rose/Shida angle and MJF vs. Lee Johnson. NXT gained 53,000 viewers and 45,000 in 18-49 for Finn Balor vs. Cameron Grimes and the post-match with Damien Priest.

In the sixth quarter, AEW lost 11,000 viewers and 18,000 in 18-49 for the MJF promo, Chris Jericho vs. Pineapple Pete and the Inner Circle promo destroying Vanguard One. NXT lost 49,000 viewers and 51,000 in 18-49 for Isaiah Scott vs. Jack Gallagher.

In the seventh quarter, AEW lost 1,000 viewers and 8,000 in 18-49 for hyping next week and Double or Nothing and the main event ring intros. NXT gained 4,000 viewers and 4,000 in 18-49 for Kayden Carter vs. Aliyah and the Johnny Gargano &amp; Candice LeRae vignette.

In the final quarter, AEW gained 7,000 viewers and 13,000 in 18-49 for Brodie Lee vs. Christopher Daniels and the post-match brawl involving the Dark Order and Jon Moxley. NXT lost 5,000 viewers and 3,000 in 18-49 for Riddle vs. Thatcher.
Quote:

SummerSlam and all the usual things that go with it look very unlikely for Boston in late August. Boston Mayor Marty Walsh said that they don’t envision a point this summer where it makes sense to have large crowds gathered in the city. He said that all parades and festivals in the city would not take place until 9/7 at the earliest ...

Regarding rumors of SummerSlam being moved to September, Vince McMahon is determined to have a live crowd for this year’s SummerSlam. Right now it is scheduled for August but if waiting until September is the only way to have the show in front of a live crowd, the thought is he would make that move but it is not a move decided on and he hasn’t outright committed to it. Vince is the person who will make the call and he changes his mind constantly, sometimes brilliant and often in almost complete denial of what is going on in the world and right now he sees the pandemic as something inconvenient because it gets in the way of his vision of what the product is supposed to be and his plans
Quote:

They officially announced as IC title tournament on Smackdown. Even though nobody can say it publicly for obvious reasons, there is a lot of unhappiness that Zayn exercised the option that they gave everyone regarding not wrestling if you don’t want to right now. I mean, the IC title doesn’t mean much and we’re long past the period of taking titles too seriously and they can do whatever they want. The tournament will start on the 5/15 Smackdown show

It should be noted that I know of several people in the company who are not comfortable at all about working right now but were not about to take WWE up on the offer for job security reasons, and this was before all the firings. There are still people not working who live in the U.S. but they are very few. It’s also notable with AEW that Tony Khan said roughly the same thing, and evidently his employees believed him at the time. The promise that you can take the time off and it won’t hurt you or your position is hard to take seriously. The only person who publicly said he wouldn’t wrestle in a pandemic was Lio Rush as he was then fired. Now, granted, my belief is he was fired because he complained about pay and went into a depression about money and how he was being used months earlier. And those guys were the first guys let go.
Quote:

This is the situation with Mysterio. They shot an angle on Raw this week where Rollins took out his eye. Mysterio’s contract is coming due and at least as of a week ago he had not signed a new deal. I don’t expect him to leave but it’s not a lock that he won’t. One of the key things to him is the future of his son. There is the idea not to do anything to upset WWE because it could negatively affect his son’s career. He also has a very high contract with WWE because they very badly didn’t want him working for New Japan, which he had just started doing. He signed before there was an AEW, but after the new TV deals were made so they knew they had all the money they’d ever need to sign people they wanted and Mysterio got a great deal, and was able to negotiate an 18 month out which the feeling was would make it perfect timing to be a free agent. But it’s not perfect timing now. The word is that WWE is not giving any raises right now, so the guys who signed in the last year or so, after AEW started, and got the big offers based on them wanting to own everyone marketable looks to be a lot more limited. One would have to think there is interest in Mysterio in AEW, especially since they booked him in the main event of All In (which WWE badly wanted him off of but he refused at the time to pull out of that commitment) ... So the Rollins thing when Rollins took out his eye is either to give him an angle with Rollins if he stays, or it’s following the Matt Hardy playbook if he leaves
Quote:

Rachael Ellering, 27, who wrestled as Rachael Evers (after Lance Storm’s real last name since Storm was her trainer) is now a free agent. I believe her release was around the same time as the other releases but the name never got out but her 30-day non-compete should be over or just about over and she put up a video that seemed to tease being a free agent. It’s been confirmed she’s no longer with the company. A few months ago she spoke to the company about having issues with the medical team and medical procedures. She was rehabbing after reconstructive knee surgery. Her complaints were not received well and a few weeks ago she was given two options, both of which essentially were that she was getting released. She chose one of them and was then released. There was a time when she was interested in leaving but this was a company decision
Quote:

The situation with Sting is this. He was originally set for being a character in Mattel’s Legend Series 7 line and then removed. When this came out on The Major Wrestling Figure podcast, Mattel wrote in response, “Due to circumstances out of our control Sting needed to be removed from Legends Series 7. We’ll look to include this figure in a future wave if he becomes available to us again.” The reason for this is that Sting no longer has a merchandising contract with WWE. This has coupled with Sting starting to tweet AEW things. That also would indicate no longer being under contract with WWE. Cody tweeted something like he heard something. As far as AEW goes, this is what I can say. I’ve asked and gotten no response to the question and if there was nothing going on the odds are I’d be told there was nothing going on
Quote:

President Harold Meij of New Japan Pro Wrestling gave a YouTube update in English on the company’s current and future plans, and said that at some point they would be doing empty arena matches.

He said that due to the success of the two-day WrestleKingdom events on 1/4 and 1/5 at the Tokyo Dome, that the company has been financially okay so far, even though saying that they have incurred significant financial losses from the decisions they’ve made to not run any events.

Meij thanked the New Japan fan base for their continued support during these challenging times, noting in particular that New Japan Word numbers have not fallen significantly in the two plus months where the company hasn’t presented any new live shows, and that online merchandise sales have been extremely successful.

He said that there was no sensible option but to not run shows at this time, but that these decisions were not taken lightly, and recognize they have disappointed fans, wrestlers and staff, and noted how painful these decisions have been ...

He also noted that the company has come up with a lot of new merchandise and their new global web site has allowed them to ship their merchandise to 33 countries worldwide.
Quote:

AEW’s Double or Nothing key matches for 5/23 in Jacksonville have been announced, with the biggest news being the involvement of Mike Tyson, who will present the TNT championship belt to the winner of the Cody vs. Lance Archer tournament final ...

Tyson is interesting because obviously it’s mainstream publicity play. Tyson attended last year’s Double or Nothing show. He was backstage and didn’t stay for the entire show. He was also a guest in September at a Jaguars game. Reports were that they got him for a good deal, but under any circumstances, Tyson doesn’t come cheap. The idea is getting mainstream publicity for the title, the winner and the company.

Tyson, when he was in his mainstream culture prime in 1998, was a key factor in turning the tables in a wrestling war that WCW was dominating. Doing an angle with Steve Austin propelled Austin to going from being a major wrestling star to someone known outside of the wrestling world. He refereed the Austin WWF title win over Shawn Michaels. He pulled in $3.5 million from that appearance which is still believed to be the biggest one-night payday anyone in pro wrestling history has ever received ...

But still, Tyson remains big in the culture, remembered as a better boxer than he really was, and he was the biggest drawing card in sports during his heyday. He also had a controversial past, growing up a hoodlum and serving time for a rape conviction. But his modern image has been remade as this fun-loving cool guy who was the baddest man and hardest hitter on the planet. A recent video of him throwing punches, still bringing the heat, went viral in recent days and has led to recent talk of him perhaps boxing once again at 53.

There is the question of adding a high cost for Tyson on a show with no live gate and a question regarding how the PPV will do ...

AEW did break even in April, actually making a very small profit. With television not being taped every week, it has reduced costs, although the reduction of costs is not enough to offset the loss of the live gates from what would have been five Wednesday night shows, but the reduction does partially offset that. The company turned a very small profit between the money from TNT for television, online merchandise money and costs being down by doing all the taping over two days in Decatur, GA. This was done with paying everyone on staff and the talent, and the production crew was paid the same as they would have for weekly shows even though the shows were done in two days rather than five days. And there were cost savings by doing two shows where everyone was flown in and out once, as opposed to paying for everyone for five trips to various locations. But they would have likely had a very big month. They were expecting good houses in Milwaukee, St. Louis, Boston, Philadelphia and Houston, particularly since St. Louis and Houston are strong traditional wrestling markets and this would have been AEW’s first time in both cities. That, along with Rochester and Newark, which were figured to be two high grossing events, Newark perhaps setting the company’s all-time record, and this period was hoped to be where they start making back the losses of the first year, but with a pandemic, that period is going to have to wait.

The show will be at Daily’s Place except for the Stadium Stampede match, which will air live from TIAA Field, with the match taking place all over the empty football stadium. The idea is similar to a famous Minoru Suzuki match at the empty Tokyo Dome a few years ago. The football field is adjacent to Daily’s Place as in the street fight with Matt Hardy &amp; Omega vs. Jericho &amp; Guevara on 5/13, they went backstage and you could see the football field, done on purpose because of what it was to build ...

The entire show is expected to be nine matches. From television this past week, the most notable tease was Wardlow vs. Luchasaurus, and they are clearly building something in that direction at some point, whether now or later.
Quote:

At last week’s Lucha Fighter press conference, announcer Jesus Zuniga said that the AAA ownership would be deciding on the big show plan on 5/30. He said that TripleMania could take place with no fans. The problem is the main revenue stream for TripleMania is the live gate. In addition, like last year, AAA was hoping to get the top AEW stars to attend and Kenny Omega is their world champion. That would seem very unlikely at this point
Quote:

The planned [UFC] show on 5/23 has been canceled. After the 5/16 show, the plan for the next show is 5/30. They are hopeful of 5/30 being in Las Vegas but that depends on if the commission approves it. If not it’ll be somewhere else. AEW tries to avoid Saturday’s with UFC shows for its PPVs but the way things have been, that is going to be more difficult since UFC shows aren’t planned out months in advance during this period. But it looked like they were head-to-head and now AEW has the night unopposed

Emperor Smeat 05-19-2020 09:31 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Raw dropped from last week's number boosted by the Becky Lynch pregnancy announcement, falling eight percent from last week and averaging 1.76 million viewers.

It was the second lowest viewer number in the modern history of the show, trailing only the episode two weeks ago that did 1.68 million viewers ...

The show was down 30 percent from the same week last year, and last year had competition from the NBA playoffs. It was down 42 percent from last year in the 18-49 demo ...

The third hour was the second least watched hour in the history of Raw television, beating only the 1.62 million mark of hour three two weeks ago.

The three hours were:

8 p.m. 1.82 million viewers
9 p.m. 1.81 million viewers
10 p.m. 1.64 million viewers
Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
With the debut of the Owen Hart episode of Dark Side of The Ring series hours away and discussion about his controversial and tragic death expected to be revived on social media afterward, his widow, Martha, has been doing interviews of late to tell her side of the story and to bring attention to the episode.

While her stance on what happened and her opinion of the company hasn't changed throughout the years, Jerry McDevitt, outside legal council of WWE, wanted to have their side represented, and did just that with statements given to CBS Sports following the release of a Hart interview they did Monday.

McDevitt, who led the WWE legal team in the case, said that how Hart talks about the lawsuit is inaccurate and that her lawyer was trying to go about things the wrong way:

"What she did whenever this happened is, she hired a lawyer in Kansas City who we caught essentially trying to fix the judicial selection process to get a judge that was more to their liking. We caught them and went all the way to the Missouri Supreme Court. The Missouri Supreme Court said, 'No, no, no. We're not going to let that happen.' They essentially appointed an independent judge to come in from outside of Kansas City to oversee the proceedings. We were basically trying to find out what happened that night. Martha was not even remotely interested in finding out what happened that night; she just wanted to used it as a vehicle to beat up a business that she didn't like that her husband was in, the wrestling business."

In her book "Broken Harts", Hart didn't speak favorably of McDevitt and said that WWE's lawyers were claiming Kansas City police weren't being impartial in an effort to get the case heard before a different judge.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Justin Barrasso of Sports Illustrated has an interview with Martha Hart. In this interview, Martha spoke about WWE’s negligence when it came to the harness they used on the night of Owen’s death. WWE attorney Jerry McDevitt responded to the article:

“The manufacturer of the quick release device, if there is anybody directly responsible for Owen’s death, it would have been the manufacturer for that device.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
The Undertaker responded to a tweet about the right wing T-shirts he’s worn on his Last Ride documentary: “Everyone knows WWE is A political !! It’s all about the flag!”

Link: https://twitter.com/undertaker/statu...880932357?s=20

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
CZW issued a statement about sexist PPV names like “Hair Pulling Catfights,” “Top Heavy & Tough,” “Hot & Sweaty,” and “All Assets Revealed” being used for specials of past content featuring women’s wrestlers: “Two years ago, CZW entered into a licensing agreement with a national media distributor to license CZW and WSU footage. That company has the right to utilize the footage without limitation. They have repackaged and renamed shows as it is their right to do so. Our athletes, regardless of gender, are just that, athletes, whom we are proud of and appreciate. We stand behind the ring action in all our footage.”

Jordynne Grace then responded to CZW’s statement: “Just so everyone is aware, there are many women already speaking to lawyers about this, as releases were not signed to authorize licensing footage for profit and distribution.”

Kimber Lee also responded to CZW: “And I’m certain I NEVER signed an agreement giving you the right to sell my intellectual property.... nor did ANY of the women you’re blatantly disrespecting. Or how you told us all you wouldn’t book us if you wouldn’t f**k us. It’s about time the harassment gets exposed.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Tony Khan clarified how the TNT Championship will be worked into AEW’s weekly top-five roster rankings: “Good question. It’ll be a similar format, but going forward we’ll have the 2 male singles champions ranked at the top above the Top 5.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
On Busted Open Radio yesterday, Ricky Starks said his contract with the NWA has expired and he’s no longer with the promotion.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Nikki and Brie Bella were guests on the Sunday Night’s Main Event podcast. While speaking to Nikki, she shared that WWE and John Cena had editorial rights to alter anything in her book and Nikki said that there were a few stories that WWE removed from the book.

“I mean, of course. Definitely writing it, did that stuff cross my mind? It did and there was never anything bad I wanted to say about John. John and I had a beautiful relationship. Did we have troubles? Yes. Will anyone ever know about them? No, and this is something at least my therapist and I know about and I get through and I have gotten through, but overall, we did have such a beautiful relationship. I mean WWE also had editing rights and took out a few stories as well, and I respect that. I understand I’m not a private person and some people like to be private, but even with the stuff that was edited with John, there was nothing crazy bad. I just wish I was able to talk more about why I ended up where I ended up. I still feel like people will always wonder that, and I think it’s because we put our relationship out there on reality TV for five to six years and so, I wanted to tell that story.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Will Cooling has an article on the Torch site looking at the finances of Progress Wrestling that are open to the public through the Companies House governmental agency in the UK. In Cooling’s research, it shows that under Progress’ real name (JJG Partners), the company paid out a dividend of £273,000 to owners Jon Briley, Glen Joseph, and Jim Smallman (the latter ended his role as a director in July 2019 and had his shares bought out. Smallman ended his role with the company by the end of the year to work exclusively with NXT UK). Cooling adds that the dividend payout was £155,000 in 2017/18. During the pandemic, the group has been running fundraisers and launched a Twitch channel to raise funds for workers.

Link: https://www.pwtorch.com/site/2020/05...-events-pause/

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Although the NXT UK brand hasn't been putting on new shows in recent weeks, the wrestlers aren't staying put and sitting at home doing nothing.

According to Gary Cassidy of Sportskeeda, the wrestlers from the UK brand have been working with WWE doing some online seminars. The seminars, which have been called "Skull Sessions," saw NXT UK superstars doing online calls with the likes of William Regal and Robby Brookside and doing match analysis sessions.

As far as when NXT UK shows return, there's no set date yet, but Cassidy reports that there is a plan for programming to resume as soon as it is deemed safe to do so. Due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, wrestling companies across the world have postponed or canceled shows.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
When Goldust first debuted in 1995, the word often used to describe him was "bizarre." Well, this is bizarre.

While discussing the 1995 Survivor Series, Jim Ross imparted some wisdom concerning the early days of the Goldust character and an envelope-pushing element that was left on the cutting room floor of WWE creative.

Marlena would make her debut at the 1996 Royal Rumble alongside her husband at the time, Goldust. Goldust for the groundbreaking for the mid-90s as he portrayed a very androgynous character. According to Jim Ross, an element of this androgyny, specifically pitched by Vince McMahon was to be a prosthetic penis worn by the Marlena character to throw the audience off even more.

“Goldust was created to be polarizing. You know, it was very polarizing and when we put and is even going to be more so, Vince was all in this, the Attitude Era coming along with the sexual characters, this androgynous guy,” Jim began. “Was he really androgynous? Was he gay? Was he straight? Was he bisexual? We had no idea. But it was a very unique presentation to the point, and I told this to Terri Runnels one time and she was appalled, probably appalled at me. I'm not sure. But Vince had an idea to have to give her a prosthetic penis to wear under her attire. Something that was never [to be] talked about. Nobody said anything. It was never focused on. It was just there. Luckily, cooler heads prevailed and that never made air and it never even happened. She wasn't aware of it. There was a thought at one time about really going... 'Well we're going to go all the way, let's go all the way.' No, let's don't If we go all the way, we're gonna step off of a cliff here. I don't want to fall off a cliff. We don't need to be falling off cliffs here. Let's get close to the edge, but not quite step over it.”

While they never went in this direction with the character, only 2 years later Goldust was walked out on a leash on TV by Luna Vachon with a ball gag in his mouth, during the thick of WWE’s Attitude Era.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Taynara Conti was waiting for an opportunity that never came in WWE.

Conti was signed by WWE in October 2016 and competed in both Mae Young Classics before making various appearances on NXT television. However, Conti never made the impact she was hoping to have, leading to her reportedly walking out on NXT in February 2020 over a disagreement. She returned shortly after, but was part of the April 15 cuts.

"I need to get better and think about my future and feel that I'm useful," Conti told Ring The Belle. "In the last couple of months, I was not feeling that anymore. I was trying to have conversations, asking for opportunities. I never asked for something big. I never asked for a TakeOver match or title shot. I was in the same spot for a long time, doing 3-4 minute matches to put someone else over and I was not able to show what I was able to do. Give me a 10 minute, 50/50 match, and I can show more about my character and what I do in the ring. A two-minute match, I can't do much. If the match is for someone else, I need to make them look good. At first, okay, that was my time to put people over. It's okay, I don't mind. But at some point, I was like, 'I have been doing the same thing for a long time. It's time to get better and show them more about me.' I would never do a promo and that was frustrating for me. 'You guys keep saying I'm good and will be a star.' All the feedback was amazing. I pitched like 100 different gimmicks. And they were like, 'No, keep doing what you're doing.' I tried to change my hair, my gimmick, and they were like, 'No, don't change, the opportunity is coming.' The opportunity never came. So, I was not happy."

She continued, "I asked them, 'What about me?' 'Well, there's people coming with more experience.' In my mind, I was like, 'If you keep signing people with more experience and you don't use me, why sign people that don't come from pro wrestling? Am I wasting my time here?' That was my feeling. I was like, 'What if I go wrestle outside and come back and have experience.' It just wasn't working. It was comfortable to have money every week, but I'm 24, I'm not scared of work. I wasn't happy anymore."

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Both AEW and NXT will be going opposite NASCAR races on Wednesday, as well as on 5/27 and 6/10. The first NASCAR race back over the weekend had 6.3 million viewers, so this could be major competition even though the NASCAR audience is traditionally older than the wrestling audience, unlike UFC which skews younger than wrestling. The race Wednesday is from Darlington at 7 p.m. Eastern.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Following the success of ‘The Last Dance’, ESPN will be airing a never-before-seen cinematic presentation of Game 6 between the Chicago Bulls and Utah Jazz from the 1998 finals this Wednesday night at 9 pm Eastern that will go against AEW Dynamite and NXT. When the game aired in 1998 on NBC, it did almost 36 million viewers.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
PWInsider.com has been told that Bret Hart was not interviewed specifically for the Owen Hart episode. He was interviewed for season one of the series and it is certainly possible material from that interview could be featured in the Owen episode.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Pro Wrestling Tees, Martha Hart, and Dark Side of the Ring have partnered together to release the first official Owen Hart T-shirts in over 20 years.

Two Owen Hart T-shirts were released on Pro Wrestling Tees tonight. The shirts are sold by Owen's wife Martha, with all profits going to the Owen Hart Foundation.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Excited to announce that we signed a deal w/ both Martha Hart &amp; <a href="https://twitter.com/VICE?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@VICE</a> to bring you BRAND NEW Owen Hart shirts along with the first <a href="https://twitter.com/DarkSideOfRing?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@DarkSideOfRing</a> shirts. All profits from Owen's tees will be donated to the Owen Hart Foundation <a href="https://twitter.com/owen_foundation?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@owen_foundation</a>. Visit <a href="https://t.co/O6bpncMD8f">https://t.co/O6bpncMD8f</a>! 🙏🏽 <a href="https://t.co/khyJjfGvD4">pic.twitter.com/khyJjfGvD4</a></p>&mdash; Ryan Barkan (@OneHourTees) <a href="https://twitter.com/OneHourTees/status/1262528357176168448?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 18, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 05-20-2020 07:42 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
On today's edition of WWE's The Bump, it was announced that there will be a special NXT Takeover: In Your House episode of the show on Sunday June 7th.

They also announced that the Ric Flair "WWE 24" subtitled "The Final Farewell" will air June 7th on demand and premiering officially on the live stream after Takeover: In Your House.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Q - Facebook has a lot of postings about Vince selling WWE to Fox sports. Is this just a wild rumor? If he did, would he be able to start another wrestling company down the road?

A - We were not able to confirm the rumor, which also mentioned ESPN sports as a co-owner (which I don’t ever see happening, it would be one or the other). But if Vince sells, I don’t see any corporation not requiring him to sign a do not compete clause. In fact, I would think they would want him to stay on, much like Dana White did with the UFC.

From PWI's weekly Q&A articles.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Ring of Honor announced the following:

Ring of Honor continues to present new, fun and entertaining content to fans, with the debut of “First Match in ROH.” The debut episode features Matt Taven from 2010 in a tag match vs. The All Night Express.

Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H_HBLLbqeNk

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
The WWE Network has added carosuels celebrating Shad Gaspard's career with the company.

They also have sections for The IIconics, Randy Savage (as today is the ninth anniversary of his passing) and In Your House as well.

Quote:

On 5/15, WWE applied for several trademarks for "DEF REBEL".
Based on the filing, seems to be something musical related.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
David Bixenspan spoke with Martha Hart for the Daily Beast prior to the airing of Tuesday’s episode of Dark Side of the Ring. Bixenspan has done thorough reporting on this story including obtaining a copy of the police report from the Kansas City Police Department. In speaking with Hart, she responded to Jerry McDevitt’s comments earlier this week specifically stating that Martha “not even remotely interested in finding out what happened that night; she just wanted to use it as a vehicle to beat up a business that she didn’t like that her husband was in, the wrestling business.” Hart’s response to the Daily Beast was:

In response to Jerry McDevitt’s recent comments I want to make it very clear, if there was one person on this planet who wanted to get to the bottom of what happened to my husband Owen it was me!,” she wrote. “The defense on the other hand was doing everything in their power to muddy the waters (as they try to continue to do) in an effort to detract from the case because they didn’t have one. I read every single affidavit taken, sat through endless face-to-face depositions, and spent over a year of my life dissecting every solitary fact of this case. To insinuate for one second that I of all people did not care about the truth behind Owen’s death, but instead was more interested in a ridiculous vendetta against the wrestling business, is beyond the pale.

Jerry McDevitt’s comments are absolutely absurd, reckless, and pathetic. I am not surprised that the WWE would trot out Mr. McDevitt to do damage control. After all, the events surrounding Owen’s death and the aftermath that followed are extremely disturbing and do not reflect well on their company.

In several interviews including the one with Bixenspan, Martha mentions Bret’s support when she filed the wrongful death lawsuit but added he was hoping to secure the rights to his WWF footage and wanted that included in the settlement agreement, which did not occur. Bret issued a brief statement to Tony Maglio of The Wrap indicating there was more to it than seeking footage but did not wish to engage in a public war of words:

While I am not interested in engaging in any more media mudslinging between Martha and myself especially in light of a global pandemic, I will say that our fallout is multifaceted. To say that it only involved being able to access and use my WWE footage and photos for future projects would merely be an oversimplification and inaccurate. I will not comment any further on the matter.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
The Undertaker (Mark Calaway) spent two hours speaking with Bill Simmons for his podcast on The Ringer promoting the documentary. During the discussion, the Survivor Series 1997 came up with his take on the entire issue between Bret Hart and Shawn Michaels and how he could have been used as the go-between the avoid the screw job:

I was pissed. I was pissed about the whole thing because I was like, I could have possibly been used to get what we needed. Take Shawn out of this, let me do it and then I’ll do business on the other side and I think Bret probably would have went for that. I mean there was such disdain at that time between the two of them and Bret was leaving but I was just like, if you had come to me with this too, and it’s his company and he did what he thought what was best, but I was like ‘I think I could’ve helped this whole thing out’. I’m going to do business, but it happened, and I was really pissed. The next day, we were supposed to show up by Noon for a TV day and I think I rolled it around 5 the next day because I didn’t know because I was so pissed about the whole thing and the way it went down. I had to really gather myself because I was, my intentions when I got there was like ‘I’m going off on somebody about this’.

Calaway spoke about his numerous surgeries including the need to address an issue with the right knee currently. On his hip surgeries, he said the reason his career continued was because of something called the Birmingham Hip Resurfacing System, which he had in 2011 for the left hip and 2017 on the right hip. If he had the traditional hip replacement surgery where they cut out the femur off and insert a metal prosthesis and that would have ended his career. He noted that after facing the prospect of the regular hip replacement in 2011, he concluded his career was over and cut off his hair before learning of the Birmingham Hip Resurfacing option that extended his career and returned at WrestleMania 28 in April 2012 for the Hell in a Cell match with Triple H.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Stardom announced Wednesday that Arisa Hoshiki is retiring due to head and neck issues. Hoshiki, 24, was the promotion’s Wonder of Stardom champion, which they stated was vacated as a result of this news. Hoshiki was part of Stardom’s original roster when it launched in 2011. She took a hiatus before in 2012 and competed in Shoot Boxing with two fights in 2014 against Maki Goto and Akari Nakamura. In 2018, she returned to Stardom as part of the STARS group. In April 2019, she won the annual Cinderella tournament defeating Saki Kashima, Natsuko Tora, and Konami in the open-night tournament. This led to her winning the Wonder of Stardom title on May 16, 2019, from Momo Watanabe.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Randy Savage (Randy Poffo) passed away on this date in 2011 at the age of 58. Savage was driving with his wife and suffered a heart attack while behind the wheel in Seminole, Florida. It was a major mainstream story when he died due to his cultural connection from the exposure with the WWF throughout the ’80s on NBC and being one of the industry’s most recognizable characters during a major popular peak.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
In Canada, Crave is currently offering a free 30-day free trial that includes all the episodes from both seasons of Dark Side of the Ring.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Figghtful
Tuesday's season finale of Dark Side of the Ring focused on the final days of Owen Hart and brought to light some added information.

In the documentary, Martha Hart showed viewers the clip that was supposed to hold Owen for the stunt, revealing that it took just six pounds of pressure for the clip to release before giving an example of how easy it was to release the clip ...

David Bixenspan acquired an investigative file from the Kansas City Police Department, which features a 1999 interview with rigger Bobby Talbert, who was hired by WWE to set-up the stunt. In the interview, Talbert reveals that Max Mini was supposed to be attached to Owen, but they later decided against performing that stunt. Talbert stated he had done a similar stunt for WCW where two people were attached together and lowered from the rafters and to the ring.

According to Martha in her book, Talbert claimed the stunt they asked Owen to perform was similar to Sting's stunt. But Ellis Edwards, who was the stunt coordinator for WCW, disputed that claim.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
The Undertaker's storied WrestleMania career peaked at WrestleMania 25 against Shawn Michaels when the two men had arguably the greatest WrestleMania match of all-time.

Both The Undertaker and Shawn Michaels have had classic matches throughout their WWE tenure, but WrestleMania 25 is at the top of the top for most fans. Including The Undertaker.

"In-ring, probably the four matches -- the two I had with Shawn and the two I had with Triple H. What we do more than anything else is tell stories. Wrestling is about telling stories. It's a violent, physical way of doing it, but that's the essence of what we do, done right. I'll put the first WrestleMania match with Shawn up against any and say 'show me something that's better than that as far as storytelling and execution.' Follow that up with Shawn's last match. That's some pressure. That's somebody that I feel, personally, and I think most people do, as one of the greatest in-ring, out-of-ring performers ever," Undertaker told Ariel Helwani on Helwani's MMA Show when asked about his favorite WWE matches.

Link: https://twitter.com/davidbix/status/1263157748893650944

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
It's unlike that Owen Hart will ever go into the WWE Hall of Fame as long as his wife Martha Hart is alive. Martha has been adamant about not wanting WWE to honor Owen as she holds them responsible for his death in 1999.

In interviews leading up to the season finale of Dark Side of the Ring, which focused on the life and death of Owen Hart, Martha called the WWE Hall of Fame, "a fake entity" and "an event they hold to make money."

On Dark Side of the Ring, Owen's 28-year-old son Oje stood by his mom's side when it comes to his dad going into the WWE Hall of Fame.

"I would never let WWE put his name on a piece of silver and say that 'they got that,"' said Oje. "We have built a foundation that helps put people in homes, that helps single moms like my mom was, that lets kids go to school. This was all done in his namesake. This has all got Owen Hart written all over it. This is how communities, people, society remembers him. That's how we want it to be done. Yeah, he was a wrestler, but he was bigger than that. That was just part of who he was."

Oje is referring to the Owen Hart Foundation, which was set up in Owen's name to assist communities.

Oje has not spoken much, if it all, over the years about his father's passing or given his stance on Owen's legacy in WWE. During his 2018 Hall of Fame speech, Mark Henry referenced Oje in a plea to Martha to let Owen into the WWE Hall of Fame.

“Martha. This is not from the company. This is not from other wrestlers. This is from his other brother. He needs to be here. I’d love to be able to look down one day and see Oje able to be among us. It’s his birthright," said Henry in his speech.

It doesn't sound like Oje wants the privilege of standing next to Mark Henry in a Hall of Fame that doesn't physically exist.


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 05-21-2020 09:43 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Going against live sports competition on cable TV for the first time since the start of closed set shows didn't hurt the ratings for AEW Dynamite on TNT last night.

Last night's Double or Nothing go-home episode of Dynamite averaged 701,000 viewers, up seven percent from last week. That's despite NASCAR on FS1 averaging 2.087 million viewers airing directly opposite Dynamite.

The news wasn't as good for NXT on the USA Network. Last night's NXT was down two percent from last week, averaging 592,000 viewers. The combined viewership of 1.293 million viewers for Dynamite and NXT was the third lowest since the start of the Wednesday Night Wars.

In the 18-49 demo, AEW finished the highest they have on the cable TV rankings since the start of the coronavirus pandemic. Dynamite drew a 0.26 rating in the demo, up 13 percent from last week. The show finished seventh on cable TV in that demo.

NXT fell out of the top 50 rankings in the demo with a 0.13 rating, down 13 percent. This was the lowest number NXT has done in that demo since debuting on the USA Network, although the overall viewership was only the fifth lowest. Last night's NXT finished 53rd in the cable rankings for that category.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
NXT fell 2% with 592,000 viewers on the USA Network and outside of the top fifty cable programs, which means we don’t have a breakdown of all the key demos. The show did a 0.13 in the 18-49 demo, which was below this week’s episode of Dark Side of the Ring covering Owen Hart on Vice TV.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
AEW VP and challenger for the inaugural TNT Championship Cody Rhodes spoke to the media for 45 minutes Thursday afternoon, talking up Saturday's Double or Nothing show and other questions about the company.

You can listen to the free audio by clicking below.

Of note, Rhodes wasn't asked about any of the injuries suffered on last night's Dynamite. However, he did discuss a few items of note over the 45-minute stretch:
  • He said 90% of what fans will see at Double or Nothing is what was creatively planned prior to the pandemic.
  • Per Tony Khan, Cody said the TNT champion won't be in top 5 rankings for the World title. They don't know how the new title is going to work, so they aren't committing to it being a midcard title or anything like that. He claimed to have not even seen the belt yet.
  • He said their plan is to stay in Jacksonville, FL, for the time being as traveling to different locations right now can add to the risk. He is very excited to work again in front of fans, however.
  • Their COVID-19 testing is done away from Daily's Place and wrestlers and staff are tested in separate areas. Even with a positive test, that wouldn't shut down production.
  • He said they met Mike Tyson last year in Las Vegas and having someone with an element of prestige to present the belt was the final touch for Saturday's show.
  • He said over the next two weeks, he expects some reschedule dates announcements for previously postponed shows. He's remaining optimistic despite what some experts think about arena shows.

The stuff about their mindset for positive coronavirus test results is a bit worrying especially considering some of the people that were brought in for the newest tapings. Audio link: https://media001.f4wonline.com/free/cody52120.mp3

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Siliana Gaspard, Shad Gaspard's wife, issued the following statement via her social media:

Aryeh, myself and the Gaspard and Chittick families would like to take this time to thank everyone for their prayers and support, as we mourn the terrible loss of our beloved Shad.

Shad was our whole world and we were his. There are not enough words to describe what he means to all of us. He was our heart, our soul, our protector, our warrior. He was a bright force of nature, who brught joy to many through his joyous and gracious nature. .

The outpouring of love from Shad’s friends, colleagues and fans has meant more to us than you can even imagine. .

We’d like to once again thank the lifeguards, coast guard, divers, fire and police departments for their efforts.

Shad was and will always be our real life super hero.

I love you more, my love ??

-Proudly,

Siliana Gaspard

Link: https://www.instagram.com/p/CAdFYTgDv6a/

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
5/21 THIS DAY IN HISTORY: SINCLAIR BROADCAST GROUP PURCHASES RING OF HONOR ...

2011 - Sinclair Broadcasting announced that they had purchased Ring of Honor from Cary Silkin during a meeting with the ROH locker room prior to ROH's Supercard of Honor in Chicago, IL.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Today, on Maria Menounos' daytime show Better Together w/ Maria Menounos Brie and Nikki Bella, former WWE superstars and co-leads of TOTAL BELLS on E!, opened up John Cena's editorial hand in their new memoir, the real reason Nikki left him, and why Brie is still healing from her turbulent upbringing.

NIKKI REVEALS WHAT JOHN CENA CUT FROM THE MEMOIR!

"With John though, there wasn't even anything bad written...It was more beautiful things that were taken out.

LATER, she continued: "There was one sex story that I understood. It was great for him! I was kinda like, don't you want high fives on that!?...We were wild, and he was strong...so it was a great story" ...

NIKKI LEFT JOHN CENA SO HE WOULDN'T REGRET HAVING KIDS WITH HER IN THE FUTURE

"Overall, we did have such an incredible relationship, it was just two people that wanted two different lives. We were trying so hard to make it one. And, it was like, even in the end when he was willing to give me kids, I could just tell, it's not what we wanted. And that's really, like, you know, what pushed me in the end, was like, if I'm going to force someone to be a father...what if he looks at you down the road and just regrets everything, and then you have this child and you've built this life. Is that what you want? And I remember thinking: it's not what I want. And, it was like, even in the end when he was willing to give me kids, I could just tell, it's not what we wanted. And that's really, like, you know, what pushed me in the end, was like, if I'm going to force someone to be a father...what if he looks at you down the road and just regrets everything, and then you have this child and you've built this life. Is that what you want? And I remember thinking: it's not what I want."

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Rhea Ripley guest appeared on Flash Morgan Webster’s ‘Wrestling Friends’ podcast. During their conversation, Rhea revealed that she was never supposed to win the NXT Women’s Championship from Shayna Baszler and plans changed when she made her initial appearance on NXT TV to kick off the program with Shayna. Once the powers that be backstage heard the reaction that Rhea got, they decided to do a DQ finish in their first match so the program could continue.

“So Shayna had pretty much gone through everyone in NXT, so I pretty much finished with NXT UK, handed it off to Piper [Niven] and I was coming into NXT to do that promo. So we were supposed to do a match later because everything was pre-recorded at that time, so we were supposed to do a match later on that night [for] a couple weeks after and I was supposed to tap out. That’s what was supposed to happen. It was supposed to be a one-off thing, I tap out, that’s it. So I went out, and as soon as my music hit, the whole Full Sail just erupted so loud. Like it was extremely loud. It was extremely loud! It doesn’t even sound that loud when you watch it back, but if you were there in person, it was insane and then I went into the ring, cut my promo the best that I have, and people popped so loud for that. Shayna left, I left, I came back and everyone backstage was just like, ‘Oh my God, that was really good.’ So anyways, Shayna and I, we go to get changed into our gear. Sara [Amato] comes running into the room, and Sara’s just like, ‘Guys, change of plans. Rhea got too much of a pop, we need to change the ending,’ and I was like, ‘Well, okay… like what are we gonna do?’ Shayna’s like, ‘We’ve been trying to tell you this for weeks. Every time we’re on a road loop, Rhea gets the biggest pop out of anyone’ and Sara’s like, ‘Yep! We believe you now. We need to change the ending.’

Legit, I was like, ‘Oh my God, so what’s happening?’ And they’re like, ‘So we’re gonna need to do a DQ so we can continue this some other time.’ I’m like, ‘Okay, cool. That’s cool with me, whatever.’” Rhea laughed. “So that’s why I hit her with the chair so we could continue it.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Britt Baker was the latest AEW talent to appear on the AEW Unrestricted podcast with Tony Schiavone and Aubrey Edwards. Britt spoke about Tony Khan allowing her to attend NXT shows to support Adam Cole but how that wasn’t reciprocated on the other side. Britt shared that WWE cleared Adam Cole to attend AEW’s New Year’s show in Jacksonville and Cole was present at the show.

“As we all know, I was in the crowd at TakeOver when he won the title for the first time, which, he’s — this is also annoying but he originally was told he can’t come to our shows. For ALL IN actually, he had a plane ticket booked, and then they told him, ‘You can’t go.’ So he still came to be supportful. He just watched it on his phone in the hotel and went to the after party afterwards but he wasn’t allowed to go, and then recently they’ve changed their tune and he was able to come to our New Year’s show and it’s great for him too because this is his family. The Young Bucks and Adam Cole go way back. They have been together long before Adam Cole and Britt Baker were together." ...

Earlier in the podcast, Baker expressed her feelings about her profession becoming a running joke amongst wrestling fans. She said that she is hurt by it because it’s something she worked hard to achieve, only for it to be turned into a meme of sorts.

“And it was kind of heartbreaking to me that the fans kind of turned on, ‘Oh, she’s a dentist?’ And it became a joke and it was like a mockery, and that is crushing when you literally spent blood, sweat and tears and worked your ass off to become a dentist and a professional wrestler and it’s just a meme or something to joke about, that really sucked and that’s something I was beating myself up over so much because I was just like, ‘Oh my gosh, now what!?’ That’s my thing. That’s what I worked so hard to do. That’s why I announce myself as Doctor Britt Baker, D.M.D. which by the way is redundant. You don’t need the ‘doctor’ and the ‘D.M.D.’ but I was like, ‘It’s professional wrestling. We have to do it big.’ So that was really hard for me at first. The joking, ‘Oh she’s a dentist, she’s a dentist’ and because for me, it’s not a joke. Those were the hardest years of my life. That’s the biggest accomplishment I will ever have and then it was actually Kenny [Omega] who, we were just training in the ring one day and he said, ‘How do you feel about becoming a heel?’ And I’m, ‘Sure, I’m up for anything. With that being said, I have zero experience at being a heel.’”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Justin Barrasso of Sports Illustrated conducted an interview with Brodie Lee. Lee feels that for a great portion of his run in WWE, self-doubt hindered him a lot because of the lack of opportunities although his co-workers would tell him how good he is.

“Self-doubt played a huge role in my life for a long time in WWE. It makes you doubt who you are and what you are. I knew that I was a great professional wrestler and I knew I was one of the better ones in the locker room, and I had co-workers telling me that. But that wasn’t the decision that was made. I knew I was better than that, and that’s why I needed to get out of that environment.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
While speaking with Wrestling Inc., Matt Hardy said that during he and Jeff Hardy’s time in TNA Wrestling, there was an inter-promotional match being planned with The Young Bucks who were in Ring of Honor at the time. Hardy says the match was going to happen but Jeff Jarrett prevented it from happening.

“I stayed in contact with The Bucks the whole time since Ring of Honor. We actually had something set up in TNA/IMPACT with them where we were gonna do an inter-promotional angle. We were gonna go to the Hardy Compound and do The Hardys vs. The Young Bucks. We had a whole angle planned out but the thing that brought that crashing down was Jeff Jarrett. He was coming back into power under Anthem and Jeff was in a bad place in his life at the time. Fortunately, he’s turned things around and is doing great but then he was in a bad place and things fell apart.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
JTG, Shad Gaspard's partner in Cryme Tyme, posted the following tribute to Gaspard, showcasing the memorial for Gaspard in California:

pic.twitter.com/hn7cZe8o8t
— JTG (@Jtg1284) May 21, 2020

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="und" dir="ltr"><a href="https://t.co/hn7cZe8o8t">pic.twitter.com/hn7cZe8o8t</a></p>&mdash; JTG (@Jtg1284) <a href="https://twitter.com/Jtg1284/status/1263316180057481216?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 21, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 05-22-2020 05:25 PM

The Sheets (Observer Newsletter Edition):

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Dr. Martha Hart, in promoting the Vice special with an interview with CBS Sports, brought up the question of Owen Hart in the WWE Hall of Fame, a position she’s held from the start and doesn’t look to change her mind on.

She had steadfast been of the belief that she would stand in the way of any attempt to WWE to profit off the death of her husband ...

I’ve brought up some hypothetical situations that will never happen, to her, extreme scenarios and she made it clear that she will never make a business deal with WWE under any circumstances. And as the Vice show made clear, her son is as resolute as she is on this subject ...

Jerry McDevitt, who was the WWF and McMahon’s attorney in the case, contacted CBS Sports after the interview and said Dr. Hart’s version was not accurate ...

“She talked about how $18 million settlement, she didn't really want to do that, she wanted justice. Again, that's just not true. There was court-ordered mediation. We went to the mediation, and her lawyers were demanding $35 million and some admission of punitive damages. Vince told her right there, 'Look, Martha, I feel so bad for what happened. I feel responsible because this happened on my watch. I want to take care of you and your family, I loved Owen.' He was almost crying. We offered $17 million to take care of her. How many times does a CEO walk in a room and say he feels responsible? 'I'm not going to argue, I just feel responsible for what happened.' They turned it down; they wanted to go to court for their $35 million. Fine, we'll go and litigate. The next day, I get a call from her Canadian lawyer, saying they didn't want to do it because they knew what they were facing with the other things I talked about. They said, 'If you could put a little more money in. If you can go to $18 million we'll settle right now.' That's how the settlement went down." ...

While there is a common belief that the case cost WWF $18 million, in reality, the only costs to WWF directly when all was said and done were the legal bills. Much of the negotiated settlement was covered by company insurance as opposed to the company. The remainder the WWF was able to get when it sued Lewmar, Ltd., the company that manufactured the snap shackle.

Lewmar Ltd. settled out of court with WWE for $9 million after WWE went to the Missouri Supreme Court to argue that Martha Hart should have never allowed Lewmar out of the lawsuit without pursuing a settlement from their insurance company. Hart said that she did not find them at fault because the snap shackle was made for sailboat’s, not people ...

The $18 million settlement was compromised of $10 million to Martha Hart, which she used to form the Owen Hart Foundation, which helped get lower income families into homes in the Calgary area and was also used to help people in the city who did not have the financial means to do so to attend college. Oje and Athena received $3 million each and Stu and Helen Hart received $1 million each.
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For the 5/13 show, for AEW, the show averaged 1.32 viewers per home, a lower number than usual.

The high quarter among Men both 18-34 and 35-49 was the Kenny Omega &amp; Matt Hardy vs. Ortiz &amp; Santana. For Women both 18-34 and 35-49, the high quarter was the Cody-Lance Archer brawl and the beginning of Best Friends vs. Jurassic Express.

For NXT, in Males 18-34 and 35-49, the high point was Finn Balor vs. Cameron Grimes and in Women 18-34 it was Matt Riddle &amp; Timothy Thatcher vs. Imperium. In Women 35-49, it was Balor vs. Grimes.
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The 5/20 head-to-head battle saw AEW do 701,000 viewers and a 0.26 in 18-49 (337,000 viewers) while NXT did 592,000 viewers and 0.13 (172,000 viewers) in 18-49.

For AEW, it was No. 7 for the night in 18-49. It was up 7.8 percent overall and 14.6 percent in 18-49, which seems to confirm what was suspected that last week’s decline was due to going head-to-head with UFC.

Still, some expected it to worsen or do the same since NASCAR from Darlington head-to-head did 2,087,000 viewers and 0.34 in 18-49. But all indications are even with those numbers, there is more AEW/UFC crossover than AEW/NASCAR crossover.

NXT actually dropped 2.0 percent overall and 9.0 percent in 18-49, which may indicate the opposite in the sense maybe NASCAR hurt more than UFC. It was the lowest 18-49 number in the history of a regular NXT show, and second lowest overall number (the record low is 590,000 for a regular show) ...

Besides NASCAR, both shows also went against Game 6: The Movie, built around the finals of the 1998 NBA championships and Michael Jordan. That show did 608,000 viewers on ESPN and a 0.29 in 18-49 ...

So the key is both companies were way down in males 18-34 even though it went head-to-head with UFC last week. But AEW had huge gains in both male and female 35-49. Other notable points is that in 18-34, NXT had more males than females only by a 23,000 to 22,000 range, while AEW had 38,000 men and 48,000 women in that age group, a women’s edge completely unheard of for the promotion. AEW doubled NXT in women 18-34and women 35-49 ...

In the quarters, AEW won every quarter, and huge in the key demo. The only thing close was the first quarter, where NXT has the benefit of the much-stronger lead-in.

AEW opened with 706,000 viewers and 331,000 in 18-49 for a Brodie Lee promo and Jon Moxley vs. 10. NXT had 701,000 viewers and 198,000 in 18-49 for the Karrion Kross &amp; Scarlett ring entrance and Kross vs. Liam Gray.

In the second quarter, AEW lost 31,000 viewers and 20,000 in 18-49 for MJF vs. Marko Stunt. NXT lost 82,000 viewers but only 10,000 in 18-49 and El Hijo del Fantasma vs. Akira Tozawa.

In the third quarrier, AEW gained 41,000 viewers and 37,000 in 18-49 for the Jake Roberts/Arn Anderson interview. This was also the second highest 18-49 number of the night with 348,000 viewers. NXT lost 9,000 viewers and 4,000 in 18-49 the a Shotzi Blackheart vignette, Mia Yim vs. Santana Garrett post-match with Johnny Gargano, Candice LeRae and Keith Lee and a Cameron Grimes promo.

In the fourth quarter, AEW lost 37,000 viewers and 16,000 in 18-49 for a Darby Allin vignette, a Pac vignette and the start of Orange Cassidy vs. Rey Fenix. NXT lot 32,000 viewers and 16,000 in 18-49 for Roderick Strong vs Dexter Lumis.

In the fifth quarter, AEW gained 13,000 viewers and 7,000 in 18-49 for the ending and post-match of Fenix vs. Cassidy and beginning of Kris Statlander &amp; Hikaru Shida vs. Britt Baker &amp; Nyla Rose. NXT gained 0 viewer and lost 1,000 in 18-49 for the ending and post-match of Strong vs. Lumis, and Oney Lorcan &amp; Danny Burch vs. Ever Rise. This was the first quarter of the show where AEW doubled NXT in 18-49.

In the sixth quarter, AEW gained 47,000 viewers but lost 1,000 in 18-49 for most of the Statlander &amp; Shida vs. Baker &amp; Rose match and a Moxley interview. NXT lost 55,000 viewers and 17,000 in 18-49 for Kushida vs. Drake Maverick. This was the highest total viewer number of the show, with 739,000, for AEW. It was the lowest, at 527,000, for NXT. AEW also won the demo battle 338,000 to 150,000.

In the seventh quarter, AEW lost 57,000 viewers but only 4,000 in 18-49 for a Shawn Spears vignette, promoting next week’s show and the PPV and the beginning of Hardy vs. Guevara. NXT gained 34,000 viewers and 15,000 in 18-49 for the ending of Kushida vs. Maverick and a Damien Priest promo. AEW had another quarter more than doubling NXT in 18-49.

In the final quarter, AEW gained 40,000 viewers and 30,000 in 18-49 for Hardy vs. Guevara and the post-match with the Inner Circle vs. Elite &amp; Hardy. It also was the high point of the night for either group in 18-49. NT gained 15,000 overall but lost 10,000 in 18-49 for Shirai vs. Ripley and the post-match with Charlotte Flair.
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The final episode of the second season of Dark Side of the Ring, on the death of Owen Hart, as was expected, did the all-time biggest audience in the history of the station with 349,000 viewers, breaking the record of 320,000 for the episode on Chris Benoit that started the season.

It was the first show in the history of Vice to crack the top 50 for the day in 18-49, finishing No. 31 for the day and No. 9 in the time slot with a 0.18 rating in the demo. It beat NXT by a significant margin in 18-49. The audience was up 32.2 percent from last week’s show on the Road Warriors, and the demo number was up 50.0 percent.

The show did its strongest numbers in 35-49 with it doing a 0.31 with males in that demo.
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Smackdown on 5/15 did a 1.30 rating and 2,042,000 viewers (1.30 viewers per home), up 0.8 percent from the prior week, with the same 0.5 in the 18-49 demo the show has been doing the past several weeks, but 695,000 in that demo was up 2.2 percent from last week.

The key to the difference seems to be the lack of competition, as CBS ran special shows on the Coronavirus that didn’t do well. FOX tied NBC for second in the demo with ABC first. Overall, Smackdown was the least-watched prime time show although one of the Coronavirus specials on CBS did only 2,369,000 viewers. FOX did win in 18-34, tied CBS for third among the four networks in Women 18-49 and tied ABC for first in Men 18-49 while finishing last in over 50.

Last year at this time, FOX had rerun programming which averaged 1,460,000 viewers and 0.4 in the 18-49 demo, so the network was up 39.9 percent in viewers, one of the few times it beat the year before in that regard, and up 25.0 percent in 18-49.
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The situation with SummerSlam in Boston continues to not look promising. As noted, Vince wants SummerSlam with fans this year, and there will likely be states that will open up for at least limited seating. Marty Walsh, the Mayor of Boston this past week said, “There will be no fans in Fenway Park in July; there will be no fans in Fenway Park in August–we won’t even be near a situation where there’s herd immunity and there certainly won’t be a vaccine” (by then). If they aren’t going to allow fans at outdoor events, they aren’t going to let large numbers at indoor events either
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Michael Mansury, the Vice President of Global Television Production, who was believed to be the heir apparent of Kevin Dunn, has left the company. This happened back in April. Mansury directed a number of episodes of Raw and Smackdown if Dunn didn’t attend the show. One person close to the situation compared his plight with David Sahadi, who works for Impact now. Everyone that is seen as a potential successor to Dunn has their life made difficult and they get constantly criticized to Vince McMahon, who would then hear people talk negatively about the person in the spot. Mansury had also reportedly gotten impatient regarding upward mobility. Mansury had been in the company for 11 years and one person told us they were shocked because they thought he was a lifer. He got his current title four years ago and directed a ton of television shows and some PPV shows
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Certain strategies have led to speculation that Vince McMahon will attempt to buy the intellectual property of the XFL in bankruptcy court and then resurrect the league.

Daniel Kaplan of The Athletic first wrote the story on 5/19, based on the fact those involved with the bankruptcy are attempting to refund the $3.5 million in money owed fans for tickets for the remainder of this season and season tickets that were sold for next season ...

Other creditors who are owed money want the $3.5 million as part of the debt with whatever money could be left by selling assets going to the creditors. Another aspect of the story is that McMahon himself is also listed as a creditor because he loaned the XFL money for the last few payrolls and is still paying XFL President Jeffrey Pollack and some office workers basically to facilitate the closing of the league.

The idea being floated is that McMahon would purchase the assets of the league, the key being intellectual property and some contracts he would want to keep, at a fire sale price, while allowing him to get out of paying up to $50 million in bills still owed from the launch of the league.

Axios had reported that the XFL itself was launching a Hail Mary to find a new financial backer after the Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing with Houlihan Lokey managing the process and letters of intent being due on 6/12 and formal bidding among those interested for the assets taking place on 7/6.

The league was owned 80 percent by McMahon and 20 percent by WWE, which came out at bankruptcy and also called into question many statements, including at conference calls, where McMahon claimed the WWE would not be involved with the XFL and it was his solo venture. The WWE was actually given the ownership rights and did not put money into the league, in a deal that McMahon essentially made with himself so he would own the league name and other intellectual property rights that WWE owned from the first version of the league.

Unsecured debtors expressed concern in recent court filings that moves they had learned make them believe the bankruptcy could have been a “cutthroat finance ploy by McMahon to ride out the pandemic and resultant economic turmoil without paying the costs of operating the league...(and then acquiring the rights to the league again) at a fire-sale price.”

The story noted that Pollack has contacted the stadiums in both Seattle and St. Louis, two cities where they drew well, about reinstating the league’s lease agreements. The XFL owed money all over both of those markets and one of the biggest debts listed in the bankruptcy was to the stadium in St. Louis.

While some look at this like it was a plan, it was a bad plan because McMahon, while perhaps saving some money, pretty much ruined his name in football when stiffing Oliver Luck, and many of the coaches who were well respected in that world. There perhaps could have been the idea to get out of the huge salary he paid Luck and some of the higher-priced coaches on multi-year contracts and start up with a lower budget. The original marketing idea was to build teams around well-know coaches, who got big contracts, and star quarterbacks.

Perhaps it was also a way to get out of his television deals which paid no money, with the idea that with the ratings the league did at first, there was value in those shows. But that’s tough right now because with the state of the television economy, nobody is looking at adding new costs and XFL ratings were declining significantly by the week ...

The feeling is that getting players, even after so many were also stiffed, won’t be a problem because there are tons of players coming out of college every year who still want to play football and won’t make NFL teams. In addition, the Canadian Football League is also facing great economic hardships right now related to the pandemic and the economy.

But getting quality people working in administrations, promotions, coaching and other facets of running a league will become far more difficult. Host cities and stadiums will almost surely want money up front or be ambivalent about working with the league. The league will be seen, rightly so, as something with no stability and being headed by someone who can’t be trusted given the stiffing of the coaches and the publicity around the Luck firing.
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AEW’s first PPV show since the Pandemic, the 5/23 Double or Nothing II show that was originally scheduled for the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, will take place with no fans at Dailey’s Place in Jacksonville.

Currently it is listed as a nine-match show, although at press time one would think the Britt Baker vs. Kris Statlander match is in question ...

On television they were strongly pushing the idea that Tyson was going to deck somebody. Roberts cut a promo on it. This actually reminded me of something nearly 35 years ago when Mid South Wrestling brought Muhammad Ali to the Superdome as a manager for The Snowman (Eddie Lee Crawford) and the booked post-match included Ali decking Roberts. Ali threw the punch and Roberts didn’t go down with Roberts (who was someone who never got along well with owner Bill Watts and if anyone knows both of them it would be obvious why) complaining that he had to stay and work there while Ali wasn’t coming back.
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The U.S. and Canadian borders will be closed for at least one more month for non-essential travel, so all wrestlers living in Canada who work for an American company will not be allowed to perform in this country for that period. I can’t answer why, but that rule does not seem to apply to Brock Lesnar, who performed for WWE on a few shows while the borders were shut
Quote:

Court Bauer on Twitter said that, “The deal I’ve been hinting at is done! Cannot wait to share this one with our fans, locker room and crew. It fortifies our future.” The deal should be announced at any time and is believed to be a streaming deal with a major carrier
Quote:

In what would be considered bad news, the AEW audience aged in the second quarter of 2020 (since 4/1). This is only for live and same day (until midnight on Wednesday) via DVR viewing. AEW is still the youngest audience watching wrestling but not by nearly as much, with it averaging 48 years old as the median viewer, with 69 percent male. Raw is the second youngest, averaging 51 with 64 percent male. Smackdown averages 54 with 60 percent male, while NXT averages 56 with 64 percent male. AEW averages more viewers watching together live than any of the other wrestling shows. We didn’t know if that was friends watching together or family, but when the pandemic started and people started isolating more aside from their families, the numbers for most shows didn’t change much (Smackdown on Friday did drop noticeably some weeks during the pandemic) so it’s mostly families watching together. The key to all these numbers is the pandemic was already in play, so all of these shows dropped their 20 percent or more but the younger audience, even though home more, dropped more, probably because they were watching more cable news when home. Raw is the one that kept its audience at a similar level as it was 49-50 last year, while Smackdown has aged from 50 to 54, NXT is slightly older and AEW aged the most as it was starting out at 39 and then stabilized at around 42 before the pandemic changed everything with shows in empty arenas

Regarding DVR viewership, since the pandemic, it’s gone down significantly. The 5/6 AEW show, the last we have a listing for, did 204,000 additional viewers via DVR while NXT did 140,000. Both figures are way below pre-pandemic numbers
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The travel ban leaving Mexico has been extended to 6/18. The people that affects is anyone from AAA, although AEW hasn’t brought in any AAA talent in a long time, as well as their own two guys living in Mexico, Pentagon Jr. and Jack Evans
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UFC: There is no show this week but they will return on 5/30 and evidently there is the belief the show will be okay to take place. Dana White texted the Las Vegas Review Journal just after midnight on 5/19 to say the show is on at the Apex Arena, on the UFC’s headquarters in Las Vegas. The Nevada State Athletic Commission will meet on 5/27 regarding allowing live events with no fans in the state. If approved, that looks to be the home for U.S. shows at least until they can open up shows with fans in attendance. White had said that if they couldn’t run in Las Vegas they would base in Arizona, which had given them the word that they were open for business and was encouraging all professional sports ...

There was a fourth COVID-19 positive over the last week in Jacksonville. Calvin Kattar in an interview with MMA Fighting said, “My coach, Carlos Neto, he actually tested positive for the antibody in the beginning. We didn’t know until weigh-in day that he was actually going to be able to corner with us. So that was a quick scare. We were nervous. And especially, if the fight was going to happen. The last time we got the plug pulled by ESPN. You never know when they’re going to pull the plug, and when you see one (positive test result), you don’t want it to multiply.” What we were told is that Neto tested positive in the antibodies test but negative in two swab tests and since the swab tests are considered more accurate, UFC didn’t send him home and he was able to work the corner. Kattar defeated Jeremy Stephens on the 5/9 show

Emperor Smeat 05-26-2020 09:31 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Last night Dwayne Johnson's "Titan Games"two hour second season premiere received 0. 7 in the 18 to 49 demographic with 3.42 million viewers, which was a little down from the first season premiere.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Triple H responded to a question from TMZ about whether or not we’re going to see Ronda Rousey back in WWE: “I think Ronda's in a place in her personal life where she's figuring some things out. But, the thing with Ronda is you never know what she is saying. Is she attacking the business really or is she attacking the business because she knows that's what will light up the fans that love the business?" Triple H called Rousey one of the greatest performers ever for WWE and said they still have a great relationship with her and would love to have her back when she’s ready.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Apollo Crews tweeted about his United States title win on last night’s Raw: “The grind never stops!!! And it won’t stop now!! Here’s where the hard work really begins! Thanks to anyone who has supported me since day 1! Let’s make this the first of many!! #AndNew #unitedstateschampion #WWERaw @usa_network @WWE”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
STARDOM founder Rossy Ogawa chatted with Sanspo.com about Hana Kimura’s death and talked about how the ‘Terrace House’ series brought a great deal of negative attention to the 22-year old. Rossy said that with the blessing of Hana’s family, STARDOM as a whole are considering taking legal action against cyberbullying.

“I discussed this matter of slander with Chigusa Nagayo (of Marvelous Women Pro Wrestling). We can’t judge it on our own, but in consultation with her bereaved family, STARDOM is considering taking legal action against malicious cyber-bullying.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Lilian Garcia welcomed JTG onto her Chasing Glory podcast to discuss the passing of JTG’s longtime friend, Shad Gaspard. To open the discussion, JTG recalled how he received the news of Shad’s disappearance and after searching for hours on end, JTG began to accept what happened but he still held out hope.

“Siliana [Gaspard] called me Sunday night. I was getting ready to go to bed and she called me from Shad’s phone. When Shad calls me, I pick up on the first, second ring. We speak to each other every day. We text and we spoke to each other every day. But [his number] called me that evening and it was his wife and his wife told me that Shad was missing… the first thing I thought it was a prank because we always prank each other. That’s Shad and I’s relationship. We roasted each other, we pulled pranks on each other and that’s the first thing that came to mind but for some reason the tone in her voice, I’m like, ‘Either this is real or she’s a good actress.’ But I said I’m gonna go along with it. Jumped in the shower, brushed my teeth and I rushed over there and then we were on the beach with flashlights looking for Shad. I was there a little past midnight, and that day I think I accepted it. I had to accept it. I was waiting for a big bear hug from behind like, ‘Ah! Got cha,’ but a part of me is still waiting for that big bear hug from behind.”

JTG further expressed his feelings about Shad’s passing and said he has never dealt with losing somebody that he was that close with.

“I’ve been on this planet for 35 years. I’ve never lost somebody this close to me where you engage with them every day, where you share the most intimate stories with them and I’ve lost family, I’ve lost distant uncles and grandparents. But you know they’re older and it’s like, I don’t want them to be here and suffer, so when they transition you’re like, ‘Okay, they’re at peace.’ I’ve lost co-workers. We’ve lost a lot of co-workers but it never really hit home like this.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Two-time WWE Hall Of Famer Ric Flair joined The Wrestling Inc. Daily Podcast. Last week, Flair shared a photo of the new WWE contract he signed and he spoke about re-signing during the interview. Flair said he wasn’t going to go anywhere else but did recall a conversation he had with AEW President Tony Khan in-which Khan said that he would never bring Flair into AEW out of respect for Flair’s relationship with WWE.

“Well it’s not for life, no, but I hope they keep renewing me. You know, I’m obviously never gonna go anywhere else, so if they didn’t renew me, I gotta be honest with you and I thought about this answer so I’ll answer before you ask it, but Tony Khan was at my — when Hunter immortalized me with the statue. Tony was there and Tony had told me when I’ve seen him that he wouldn’t even ask me to come to work there, because he knows how tight I am with them.

Our friendship is one thing, but he respects my loyalty to the company. It’s like when we make a joke about it when we did — he said, ‘I won’t even ask you.’ That’s how much respect he has for me and my relationship with the company which speaks volumes to what kind of guy Tony is.”

Flair also probably signed the new deal since he didn't want to cause any issues for Charlotte considering the level of pettiness WWE can be at times.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Former WWE talent Rusev hosted a Twitch stream recently and he shared his thoughts about AEW’s Double Or Nothing event and stated that he enjoyed the show.

“But speaking of wrestling though, last night was fun. I work out every now and again, and I set my phone or whatever and I watched a little of AEW. I don’t know if it’s legal to say. Is it legal to say? I’m looking at my lawyer. Is it legal to say? ‘Yeah, yeah. You can talk about it. Don’t worry about it,’” Rusev said sarcastically as he played the role of his ‘lawyer’. “Okay, so I guess I can talk about it. It was fun man. It was fun watching, especially that main event.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Lewis Nicholls has an extensive interview with former two-time WWE Tag Team Champion Rico Constantino. Towards the end of the interview, names were pitched to Rico and he would go on to share his thoughts about those names. Booker T was brought up and here’s what Rico had to say about Booker T:

“Booker T, I’m really mixed with that. When I had my full face paint instead of the lines, it was told to me that Booker T was complaining because the sparkles were coming off my face and then getting in his hair and his girlfriend at the time… was saying he was going to strip joints. Accusing him of going to strip joints after he wrestled me. So they asked me to tone down the makeup so it went from the full face to the lines to just the stuff over the eyes. So I had to tone down. That’s my memory of Booker T" ...

Rico also reflected on the ‘ceremony’ segment with Billy, Chuck and Eric Bischoff from 2002. Rico said that the entire day, Vince McMahon was catering to the “minister” who Bischoff was dressed as and the ‘minister’ was introducing himself to everybody. Rico said that there were very few people who were clued in but the majority of those backstage thought the minister was who he appeared to be.

“Me personally, I feel like if that was on live or on RAW, that would have been the best kayfabe event in the history of wrestling, even better than the double Hebners with the Hulk Hogan thing. The reason why I say that is only a handful of people actually knew that the minister was Eric Bischoff and that was the people in the inner circle. Vince came to the arena in his limousine as he usually does, but he brought the minister, and he took him out of the limousine. He was already in makeup and everything, shaking and Vince catered to him the whole day. Now on a TV taping day, TV starts about 6:30, 7 o’clock, where whatever brand you tape Heat and go into RAW or tape Velocity, go right into SmackDown. So we’re there, at noon and everybody sees this old minister. Vince caters to him in the catering room, goes and gets him a plate of food and is walking him around introducing him to everybody, puts him in the green room and everybody thinks this is the actual minister for the ‘commitment ceremony’ of Billy and Chuck. So the only people that know about it is me, Billy, Chuck, Stephanie, Rosey, Jamal [Umaga], Eric, Vince, the agent for the show which Stephanie was basically the agent for everything. That’s all that knew.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by WrestlingInc
WWE officials are reportedly working on plans to resume regular live event touring.

It remains to be seen when WWE will be allowed to move forward with regular touring, but @Wrestlevotes reports that internally the company is slowly rebuilding their live event schedule.

It was noted that still nothing is expected to happen with fans attending events before July at least, but things are apparently happening behind-the-scenes so that the company will be ready when they are given permission to resume touring amid the coronavirus pandemic. There have been discussions about ticket sales for arena events moving forward, with social distancing guidelines remaining in place.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has lifted the state of emergency in Tokyo, Hokkaido, Kanagawa, Chiba, and Saitama. In a statement, Abe said that hospitalizations have fallen to approximately 2,000 from the coronavirus compared to over 10,000 during the peak. It comes the same day that Japanese baseball has stated it will open its season on June 19th while excluding fans from attending games. The teams will be able to practice beginning next Tuesday on June 2nd. The Super J Cast crew posted a photo indicating the dates that pro sports can move forward with empty arena shows able to begin June 19th, 50% capacity with a limit of 5,000 fans is being targeted for July 10th, and 50% of the maximum capacity of a venue on August 1st.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
The promotion [MLW] began work on a new TV pilot over the weekend. There has been talk of a talk show featuring personalities from the company as well as a project centered around Alicia Atout in recent weeks.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
On day two of the WWE tapings, Fightful Select learned that an injury went down about an hour into the Raw portion of the tapings. In a match with Nia Jax and Kairi Sane, Kairi sustained a cut to her head outside of the ring.

The spot occurred outside near the stairs when Kairi was thrown and her head hit the corner of the stairs, opening her up. The match was paused and medical came out to take care of Kairi Sane, sealing the wound and bandaging her up. We were told that Kairi indicated that she was fine, and insisted on finishing up the match.

WWE would resume the match, which will have to be edited. Pretty quickly, Nia and Kairi Sane went to the finish.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
The lawsuit between Jeff Jarrett/GFW and IMPACT/Anthem could finally be coming to an end.

Mike Johnson at PWInsider reports that Jarrett and Anthem are set to go to trial on June 30. The trial will begin at 9 a.m. local time. The trial is expected to last up to a week with the court noting the "trial date is realistic notwithstanding COVID-19, and the parties shall anticipate going forward on that date."

The lawsuit between Jarrett and Anthem revolves around the usage, and deleted, of the GFW Amped tapes. Jarrett and GWE hit IMPACT and Anthem with a lawsuit in August 2018, suing over copyright infringement pertaining to their use of Jarrett's name and likeness along with their use of GFW Amped content.

There reportedly was an attempt to resolve the lawsuit with the two parties entering mediation last month. Jarrett attended the mediation in person while Anthem Wrestling President Ed Nordholm appeared via teleconference as he is in Canada and unable to enter the United States. However, discussions to reach a settlement failed, leading to the upcoming trial.


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 05-27-2020 07:16 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Raw on Monday, the first show with a semblance of a crowd in more than two months, still did the second lowest number in modern show history averaging 1.74 million viewers over the three hours, down one percent from the previous second lowest mark set last week.

The first-to-third hour drop was seven percent, which is lower than usual. It's a combination of a better show to keep the existing viewers and the fact that the Memorial Day Raw often starts out lower and a lot of people tune in later due to the holiday ...

The audience was down 21 percent from the same show last year overall and 29 percent down in 18-49 ...

The three hours were:

8 p.m. 1.81 million viewers
9 p.m. 1.73 million viewers
10 p.m. 1.67 million viewers

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Fightful Select reported that NXT will have a live crowd on Wednesday with Performance Center talent being scattered as the audience.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
MLW National Openweight Champion Alexander Hammerstone's MLW re-signing announcement led to the promotion's website breaking its record for visits in a one day period ...

The promotion is working on several new signings.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Coming out this past weekend’s tragedy involving Hana Kimura, the ‘Terrace House’ reality series she was a part of has said it will not air any new episodes of the current season. Production has already been halted due to the COVID-19 pandemic but on Wednesday they stated that the current season is canceled. It has not been made official that the series is completely done:

Regarding “TERRACE HOUSE TOKYO 2019-2020”, we have decided to cancel the production. We take this issue very seriously and would like to continue to earnestly respond to it.

A Twitter account that follows the series is reporting that the series has not been canceled outright and thus far, it is the current season that has been canceled:

Terrace House Tokyo 2019 – 2020 has been cancelled. No new episodes will be released or produced. There’s speculation that this means Terrace House in general has been cancelled, but at this time, it’s only been announced that it’s the current season which has cancelled and won’t be continuing.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
WarnerMedia launched its HBO Max streaming platform on Wednesday with several ads running of AEW talent promoting the service. The platform is available for $14.99 per month in the U.S. with over 10,000 hours of content at launch. The idea is that HBO Max will replace HBO Now, which is an existing service with 8 million subscribers that features only HBO content – HBO Max includes content from all WarnerMedia properties including HBO. The price point of HBO Max has been debated as they have priced themselves above the industry leaders in Netflix and Disney+.

Quote:

Originally Posted by HeelByNature.com
Deonna Purrazzo appeared in a vignette during Tuesday’s edition of Impact Wrestling on AXS televison.

According to Fightful Select (subscription required), Purrazzo has not signed a deal with Impact Wrestling, and is working on a per-show basis at the moment.

She is scheduled to work at the up-coming television tapings in Nashville to see how things work out.

Purrazzo was among the recent WWE releases, and was on a non-compete clause until May 22 according to the report.

It was initially thought she was free to work elsewhere on May 15, but WWE decided to extend that date "be be safe."

Quote:

Originally Posted by HeelByNature.com
WWE will be using a new name for for digital music releases as soon as next week.

As first revealed by Arenataping, WWE will use the name ‘Def Rebel’ for synchronization of music production made by DJDTP.

DJDTP was hired by WWE last year, and has produced over 40 entrance themes for the company.

When looking at WWE’s upload of Seth Rollins latest theme on Youtube, the name ‘Def Rebel’ is shown as the artist.

The group is also responsible for Karrion Kross’ theme, titled ‘Dead Silent’

For some reference, this group also did Io Shiari's heel NXT theme that hasn't been officially released yet due to some behind-the-scenes legal issues.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
WWE made a change to its production on Monday's Raw when they had NXT superstars as part of the live audience for the show. The superstars were behind plexiglass and helped create a more natural environment than the empty arena shows WWE had been producing over the last two months.

Tommaso Ciampa wasn't part of the empty arena crowd on Monday, but he weighed in on the change in an interview with Chuck Carroll of CBS New York.

"I was visiting my brother in North Carolina and driving home, so I didn’t see it. The plexiglass sounds a lot like NHL to me. I don’t know. I just feel like there’s no rights and wrongs. It doesn’t feel like there’s any right or wrong to anything. Everybody’s just trying. We’re just trying to give the best product we can give while abiding by guidelines, and keeping people safe and healthy, and giving people the next thing in entertainment. So I don’t know what’s right or wrong."

He continued, "You know, cinematic sounds really cool. Too much cinematic seems bad. It’s crazy to me. It’s just like, they don’t have really long matches. It’s just, there’s so many directions, and there’s just, at the end of the day, it’s exactly what wrestling is. It’s flavors and ice cream and opinions. And I think some people are going to be like, ‘oh yeah, this is great.’ And other people that are going to be like, ‘oh no, I don’t like this because I saw Shotzi [Blackheart], and she shouldn’t be there.’"

AEW first had wrestlers as members of the crowd to help differentiate themselves from WWE. The idea, which Tony Khan admitted he took from Jimmy Fallon, worked. Ciampa believes it can work in WWE, but there needs to be a change as far as who is actually part of the crowd.

"Having people who are on NXT, if I’m being completely honest with you, I don’t think that sounds like a good idea. I wouldn’t expect to see people from Raw or SmackDown in the NXT crowd come Wednesday night. And I don’t think you should see any NXT talent in the crowd come Monday night or Friday night. It doesn’t seem right. [Performance Center] guys, people who are students trying to figure this out? Sure. That makes perfect sense to me. You want to put them through the COVID test and all that, and give them that experience? That’s great. But people who we’re trying to build as Superstars, maybe we just keep them in front of the camera," he said.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
During an interview with Steve Austin in 2014, Vince McMahon implored WWE superstars to "grab the brass ring" and go for the top spot. McMahon's comments were sparked by what he believed to be a lack of ambition in WWE.

In 2011, Zack Ryder tried grabbing the brass ring by creating his own YouTube show as a way to get himself over. The show worked as crowds began rallying behind Ryder despite him not being featured much on television. But Ryder's push quickly faded and so did the notion that the "brass ring" was attainable.

"Every year, as long as I was in WWE, the Raw after Mania we had this BS company....everyone there at TV meeting where they say, 'The brass ring is there, it's yours, it's a fresh year. Who is gonna get it?' Ever since Long Island Iced Z, they don't even bother with that meeting anymore because they know it's not true. Even if you grab the brass ring, you're gonna get your hand smacked. If they don't want you to have it, you're not going to have it," said Curt Hawkins on Talk Is Jericho.

Chris Jericho weighed in on WWE not wanting Ryder to get over by saying, "There is a strange resentment where, if Vince doesn't think of it, it's not valid or real. The same thing happened with Daniel Bryan when he first came in. He got over because he knows how to get over, but they resisted it for so long until they didn't have a choice. I feel the same thing happened with Zack Ryder."

Ryder seemed to be in line for a big push as he was working with John Cena and Kane. But his push ended in a wheelchair, off the stage, on WWE Raw.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Since the Wednesday Night Wars have started between NXT and AEW, NXT has seen an increase in main roster talent joining the brand including big names like Finn Balor and Charlotte Flair, who is currently the NXT Women's Champion.

During The Arn Show, Arn Anderson discussed why NXT feels to some that it has lost its coolness and swag with the debut of AEW. Anderson credits the returning stars from the main roster as the reason NXT feels different.

"Well do you think that some of the guys from the main roster that were bumped back down so that you have more star power on that show," Anderson said. "This is in the front offices mind, 'Okay, we'll take some of these proven talents and bump them back down to make that a more competitive brand with those people', but when they come back down they bring their Raw or Smackdown style with them. So it's not NXT or NXT style matches.

"Now it's guys from Raw or Smackdown that are bringing their style of work back down with them so that show dynamic changes. [The fans] are seeing a lot of stuff they see on Monday or Friday and now it's on NXT so it's not a pure NXT show."

Anderson also talked about his first thoughts about NXT when it originally started up and became a developmental brand. He noted what he enjoyed so much about it as a platform to teach talent the fundamentals of wrestling.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Five years after their classic in Brooklyn, Bayley and Sasha Banks were reportedly set to meet in Boston.

According to Louis Dangoor of WrestleTalk, Sasha Banks vs. Bayley was originally planned for SummerSlam 2020. However, WWE now wants to extend the feud as they reportedly see more potential in drawing it out rather than rushing it.

The report goes on to say that part of the decision to delay the match has to do with the venue. SummerSlam was originally slated to take place in Boston, where Banks is billed from, but those plans are now up in the air due to the coronavirus pandemic.

WrestleTalk ends the report by noting that Banks vs. Bayley at SummerSlam isn't off the table, but WWE is "considering other options" at the moment.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
The Bump featured a tremendous tribute for the late Shad Gaspard on today’s episode. It featured comments and memories from MVP, New Day, Tyson Kidd, Natalya, Bobby Lashley, Shelton Benjamin, Jeff Hardy, Dolph Ziggler, Drew McIntyre, referee John Cone, and John Morrison.

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/ynTyA012hwQ" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>


TPWW Frontpage:
The Chris Jericho Cruise Is Returning Next Year
AEW Dynamite & NXT Cards for Tonight + AEW Rankings
Deonna Purrazzo Joins Impact Wrestling
Ratings: The Rock’s Titan Games Premiere, AEW Countdown Special

Emperor Smeat 05-28-2020 10:31 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Coming off the well-received and apparently commercially successful Double or Nothing pay-per-view, last night's AEW Dynamite on TNT averaged 827,000 viewers, up 18 percent from last week. That's the highest viewership total for the show since March 18, which was the first week of closed set episodes.

In the 18-49 demo, Dynamite finished fourth on cable with a 0.32 rating, up 23.1 percent from last week. That was AEW's best number in that category since March 25, and the fourth place finish was the highest for AEW since before the coronavirus pandemic began, with news shows now starting to get back to normal viewership after a couple months of dominating the ratings.

On the USA Network, NXT was also up significantly. Last night's NXT averaged 731,000 viewers, up 23.5 percent from last week. That's the biggest audience for the show in over three months. In 18-49, NXT was up 46.2 percent, averaging a 0.19 rating, tying the show's highest mark in the demo since March 25. NXT finished 24th on cable in that category after being outside the top 50 in most recent weeks.

The combined audience of 1.558 million viewers for Dynamite and NXT was the highest since March 4, two weeks before the start of closed set shows.

The postponement of the NASCAR event that was scheduled to air opposite both shows on FOX likely contributed to the rise in viewership, along with decreased viewing of the news networks as things slowly start to get back to normal.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
The annual Champion Carnival tournament may still happen this year.

All Japan Pro Wrestling announced in a press conference this morning that they plan on running their annual Champion Carnival tournament in September. The tournament, which was originally supposed to run on April 6 through May 5, was canceled just days before the start of the tour. AJPW President Takeki Fukada hoped in a press conference announcing the cancelation that he hoped to run the tournament later this year ...

The news comes as Japan has lifted its state of emergency due to the COVID-19 pandemic in recent days, most notably in Tokyo. Most promotions will be able to hold events with no fans in attendance starting on June 19.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
With the season now over, Vice TV is touting the ratings success of Dark Side of the Ring season two.

Dark Side of the Ring is the highest rated series in Vice TV history, and last week's season two finale on Owen Hart is also the highest rated show in the history of the station. Variety wrote today that season two averaged 485,000 total viewers and 288,000 viewers in the 18-49 demo through May 19 in Nielsen live-plus-three data, which includes the same-day ratings and three days of DVR and on-demand viewing.

That total viewers number is up 52 percent from season one, while the 18-49 number is up 73 percent from the first season.

In the live-plus-three data, the Owen Hart documentary drew 626,000 viewers and did 390,000 viewers in the 18-49 demo.

“We are absolutely ecstatic with the success of Dark Side of the Ring,” Vice TV executive vice president and general manager Morgan Hertzan said. "Audiences respond to our courageous compelling storytelling, and this series has proven to be heavyweight in the television landscape. I am very proud to partner with the incredible creatives at Vice Studios, and tag team executive producers Evan Husney and Jason Eisener who have so skillfully crafted this show. It is in every way the no holds barred type of programming that you can expect to see on Vice TV. Looking forward to the next KO!”

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Bray Wyatt tweeted the following:

Hyrie Von Rotunda pic.twitter.com/1pzQ2j4P1o
— Bray Wyatt (@WWEBrayWyatt) May 28, 2020

Hyrie is the second child for Bray and WWE ring announcer Jojo Offerman. The family had chosen to keep the pregnancy private, but for those who had asked, this is why Offerman had not returned to her on-air duties for WWE.

Link: https://twitter.com/WWEBrayWyatt/sta...44794855825410

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Playing off of the hype for Edge and Randy Orton at Backlash being the "Greatest Wrestling Match Ever", WWE Shop has a new line of "Greatest Match" graphic tees showcasing legendary matchups throughout history.

Link: https://shop.wwe.com/great-matches-t-shirts/ Out of all the shirts available, only one I'd disagree with is last year's Mania Women's Triple Threat match since it wasn't that good although not entirely the wrestlers fault.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Former ROH World Champion PCO joined the Ringsiders Wrestling podcast and revealed that Ring of Honor was planning on running the Montreal Bell Centre in Quebec which holds 20,000 people.

“Yeah, it’s funny that you mentioned that because the plan — the first match where I was supposed to go against Nick Aldis for the NWA World Title in Montreal, in Canada. But, something happened — Ring of Honor didn’t want it to happen — kinda didn’t want it to happen or it didn’t happen or I don’t know. We lost our relationship at one point with NWA, and when Marty [Scurll] signed and then Marty’s a good friend of Nick…

That would be awesome to get a title match with Nick. Also, when I was the champ, I had done so many talk shows back home where Ring of Honor was not known that much, and we were about to sell out like 20,000 tickets. For me, it was gonna be the next ALL IN. It was gonna be title [defenses], Montreal Bell Centre in a sold-out arena and anyways, stars weren’t aligned like that but maybe it could happen with the NWA Title. Maybe it’s gonna happen — it might happen in Atlanta first, Georgia. It might happen. I don’t know.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Comicbook.com’s Brandon Davis did an Instagram Live interview with Chris Jericho and Jericho revealed that the Stadium Stampede match at AEW’s Double Or Nothing pay-per-view took 12 hours to film.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Two weeks ago, Jim Cornette took to his podcast and made negative comments about Becky Lynch announcing that she and Seth Rollins are expecting a child and she’ll be taking time away from wrestling to be a mother. Cornette expressed that he felt it was the wrong time because of where Becky Lynch is career-wise. Seth Rollins would react to Cornette’s comments on WWE’s After The Bell podcast and said that he was hurt by Cornette’s words and felt disrespected that Cornette would speak of his fiancée like that. On a recent edition of Jim Cornette’s podcast, he spoke about Seth Rollins’ appearance on After The Bell and here’s what Cornette had to say:

“Honestly, I feel bad that I hurt Seth Rollins’ feelings. I seriously, legitimately — this is not part of a bit. I feel bad that I hurt his feelings. I wouldn’t have felt bad if I would’ve made him mad, because people in the wrestling business get mad all the time, right? And I figured he might get mad because when I was criticizing the timing of the incident, he had a hand in the timing so I thought he might be a little mad about that, and you know, people get mad all the time. Blah, blah, blah. But when he said I actually hurt his feelings, that made me feel bad because I did not believe that I said anything that should’ve hurt Seth Rollins’ feelings, and the bone of contention where I hurt his feelings was that I said bad things about his wife and obviously that would tend to hurt one’s feelings but, and I want you to help me here Mr. Don’t Agree With Me Either [Brian Last], let’s go back and did I say anything bad about Becky Lynch as a talent or as a person? I said she was the biggest female wrestling star in the world and maybe the biggest in the world because there ain’t a lot of big male stars these days. That’s not bad. I said she was a female Stone Cold that put her f*cking — she was a huge box office draw and the most important member of the women’s division. I never said anything about her looks. I think she’s a very attractive young lady. I did paint a less than rosy picture about the physical effects of pregnancy but I have heard these things and never having been pregnant myself, from all the pregnant women I’ve ever heard talk about being pregnant have said these things happen. Did I quote any side effects of pregnancy that do not exist? I do not believe I did. But I didn’t say anything bad about Becky Lynch as a person. I put her over as a talent and I was talking about the astonishing timing of the situation, and I don’t know whether that Seth had heard the actual show or whether he just read the text of it that everybody was clipping and putting on their little play websites where they play wrestling reporter, which was a little harsher than the overall tone of the piece.

But I didn’t say that and I’ve actually in the past said Seth Rollins is an amazing worker and one of the best in-ring talents and looks like a superstar and I’ve taken issue with how they present him. They’ve managed to make him boring with his Monday Night Messiah thing. But the overall bigger picture was, I didn’t say anything bad about Becky Lynch besides the fact that she had gone and got pregnant at a time when she has attained a spot that few have ever attained and that all aspire to in the business and is making a sh*t ton of money. So that’s the worst thing I said about Becky Lynch. Did I miss anything Brian?”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Enes Kanter appeared on The No-Sports Report Podcast with Jensen Karp and during their conversation, Kanter revealed that he was told not to watch All Elite Wrestling if he wanted to get into WWE.

“I watched a little of AEW, but like they said, ‘Hey, if you ever want to get on WWE, do not mess with it.’ I’m like, ‘Okay, sure. I’m not! (laughs)”

WWE threatening to pull a contract offer simply over someone's wrestling viewing habits is like next level pettiness by WWE. Also fear of AEW that WWE never really had with TNA/Impact outside of the brief Monday Night Wars Part Deux.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Justin Barrasso of Sports Illustrated chatted with former 8-time IWGP Heavyweight Champion Hiroshi Tanahashi. When Tanahashi was asked about wrestling continuing on during the COVID-19 pandemic, he stated that it is a “black eye” on the business that might remain even after the pandemic is over.

“There isn’t a governing body for Japanese pro wrestling. As such, we can’t necessarily enforce cancellations. That’s been the responsibility of each company. But to run events in the middle of a pandemic presents the wrong image of professional wrestling to society and would deal a black eye to the industry that might still remain even after the pandemic ends.

I thought it was important for us to come together, understand exactly what’s happening and do what’s right, even if that means returning to action after other pro sports.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
BallerStatus.com spoke with R-Truth about Truth’s career in music and pro wrestling. Truth shared that Roman Reigns has been an Executive Producer of his music and has been helping him with funding.

“Actually man, me and Roman, we were riding together a lot. He would dictate and critique all my music and he was actually one of my Executive Producers helping me fund a lot of stuff so it’s like, he has his hands in with my music.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
On May 25, ROH announced the re-signing of Flip Gordon.

Gordon has become one of the top names in ROH over the past couple of years, aligning himself alongside Marty Scurll, Brody King, and PCO in Villain Enterprises. Gordon is the current number one contender to the ROH World Title and was scheduled to receive his title shot at Supercard of Honor as part of WrestleMania week.

Appearing on Busted Open Radio, Gordon discussed his decision to remain with ROH.

"There was interest from AEW and WWE, a few others as well, but Ring of Honor offered me the best deal. I also believed that's where I wanted to be because I still have a lot of time to grow. I've only been doing this for five years and I have a lot of goals in Ring of Honor, so why would I want to leave?"

Gordon went on to call the deal "life-changing" and note that he is looking forward to getting back in the ring whenever ROH runs shows again. He said his ultimate goal is the ROH World Title.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Prior to the coronavirus pandemic affecting the wrestling world, AEW had planned to run live events.

In an interview on Wrestling Observer Live, Jim Ross was asked about whether or not AEW needs live events to help develop some of the younger talent on AEW's roster. Ross agrees that touring would help some of the wrestlers improve as he doesn't think working one night of the week on Dynamite is enough to get better.

“Absolutely and I think that’s the plan. There were some live events penciled into the schedule until the virus. You can’t get better working one night of the week. It doesn’t matter who you are. There are some minor exceptions. Chris Jericho doesn’t need to work three or four days of the week to be grateful. He can be great working on Wednesday nights. But a lot of guys need to continue to work under the supervision of the coaches in AEW to continue to learn the fundamentals, primarily slowing down, using psychology and selling. [Just] because you’ve been in the business for 10 years doesn’t necessarily mean you’re a 10-year veteran. It could mean you’ve had the same experience 10 times. Getting house shows is important for development talent and for revenue going forward, but who the hell knows when is that going to be? It won’t be any time soon apparently,” Ross said.


TPWW Frontpage:

XL 05-29-2020 10:02 AM

Bray popping those kids out in quick order. Also, surprised Cornette has never been pregnant, he’s certainly looked like he was at points.

Emperor Smeat 05-29-2020 05:43 PM

The Sheets (Observer Newsletter Edition):

Quote:

WWE started using NXT wrestlers as fans on the 5/25 tapings.

It made for a far improved atmosphere at the shows. The delay in doing so after AEW’s atmosphere had been noted universally as being superior likely came because the company didn’t want to come across as copying AEW. This is the same reason why it took them weeks to move the position of the hard camera to facing the entrance ramp instead of to the side facing empty stands.

They had to stand up and cheer for just under seven hours of television, a Raw and a Smackdown, as well as Main Event and 205 Live. We were told the actual process of all the taping lasted for about 12 hours on 5/25 and a similar length on 5/26. A number of talents noted losing their voices on the first day from making so much noise for so long, not to mention the obvious exhaustion from such a process. Talent was allowed to sit down between matches and it kind of makes no sense why chairs weren’t provided given how much time was being spent taping.

At ringside they had plexiglass walls which may become the new norm going forward with the idea of keeping fans from touching wrestlers ...

Although it was hinted on the air that they were testing all talent for COVID-19, there was no testing done at all again at the tapings this past week past temperature readings and asking people if they didn’t feel well.

I know of people in the company who were shocked given UFC finding multiple people who passed the temperature checks but later tested positive and that AEW had already done multiple tapings where everyone was tested.
Quote:

Most of the key details had already emerged regarding the backstory of the death of Owen Hart, between Dr. Martha Hart’s 2002 Book “Broken Hearts” and her recent media appearances including Dark Side of the Ring and a 90 minute interview with me on our web site.

But David Bixenspan and Fanbyte.com went through a number of new details and also emphasized what had already been reported when going through a detailed Kansas City Police Department investigation report on Hart’s death.

The gist of the report from the death scene itself was as follows:

Upon arrival (police) contact was made with Jim Vinzant, who is a "Rigger" with Local #31 of the Teamsters, who stated he is responsible for the "rigging" of the cables for shows at Kansas City, Missouri, owned facilities ...

He stated that Bobby Talbert (spelled Tolbert in the report) and the victim were also present when the rigging was assembled. He stated that he and James Williams assembled the "span sets and bridals" in the ceiling, however had no affiliation with the actual harness that the victim was wearing. He stated that the harness was a product of the World Wrestling Federation ...

Jim Vinzant stated that he did not think that the victim seemed very experienced with the stunt and that he (Jim Vinzant) would not have had the victim perform the stunt with the harness system that was used because it had minimal safety. He stated that he left the Arena at 1500 hours, and returned at 1700 hours ...

Joe Branam was the rigger for the first stunt. He was contacted for the job a second time but WWF turned him down because he had asked for more money.

The WWF then contacted Bobby Talbert. Branam then had his wife contact WWF to say he would agree to do it for whatever they wanted to pay him. WWF did not get back to him. Branam had turned down doing stunts previously WWF wanted him to rig because he felt they were dangerous.

The key is the quick release Snap Shackle made by Lewmar had no back up if it failed, and that the snap shackle only needed six pounds of pressure to open.

Interviews with other stuntmen talked about how in situations like this you would have a secondary line. What was noted was the vest Hart was wearing was inappropriately restrictive of breathing.

Talbert said he was referred to WWF by Barry Brazell, who was the main rigger for Sting’s repelling from the ceiling. Steve Taylor of WWF, at the time the Vice President of Event Operations, had called Brazell ...

Taylor said that the company has had other people do things like this in the past but WWF felt they were executed too slow for television. Talbert told Taylor he had performed the same stunts with Sting in WCW. But the deposition of Ellis Edwards, who handled stunts for WCW, sad that Talbert assisted Brazell three times only and was not Sting’s rigger or WCW’s rigger.

Taylor called Talbert the week of the show in Kansas City with the idea of what they wanted. The original idea was that Owen Hart and Max Mini (a tiny mini wrestler who was working for WWF at the time) would come down together. The belief was that Max Mini (also known as Mascarita Sagrada Jr., Tzuki and Mini Rey Misterio) refused to do it. Mini was let go by WWF in mid-July, less than two months after turning down the stunt. He did return to the company for three matches in 2006 ...

The key is that over 20 years, even though much of the basic information was known, there was this belief that the same crew who did Sting’s stunt did the Owen Hart stunt and it was the same stunt. While it was a tragic accident, people were able in some cases to go with the idea it was a safe stunt given how many times Sting did it, that unfortunately went wrong.

The reality is there was no back-up wire that Sting had, and it was done differently because Vince McMahon felt it was too slow for television because of those split seconds on WCW television where Sting would unhook himself while all the heels just had to stand there and wait. So, even after being told multiple times that there was a reason for that and otherwise it wouldn’t be safe, WWF kept looking for someone who would do it in a different manner. While Talbert, who still works in the stunt industry, had worked on Sting a few times, he was not the main person and it was a different crew. The week after the incident WWF hinted that perhaps it was Hart’s fault in some way, that he panicked and did something wrong, when that was not the case
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Smackdown on 5/22 held steady with the previous week doing a 1.31 rating and 2,044,000 viewers (a lower than usual 1.29 viewers per home) and an 0.5 in 18-49 (707,000 viewers). The 5/15 show did a 1.30 rating 2,042,000 viewers and an 0.5 in 18-49 (695,000 viewers).

So 18-49 was up 1.7 percent and everything else was almost identical.

However, this would be a more disappointing showing because ABC, CBS and NBC all ran rerun programming and first-run Smackdown still finished last with total viewers. It did win in 18-49 because in a weird coincidence, every other rerun show on the other three networks did 0.4. Smackdown was expected to dominate the summer months in 18-49, rather than squeak by.

Last year over the same week, FOX ran rerun shows that did 1,708,000 viewers but the same 0.5 in 18-49, so live Smackdown in the key demo did the same as reruns last year that essentially cost them nothing new to produce.
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For 5/20, as far as the different demos were concerned, in Males 18-34, the high point for AEW was the beginning of Matt Hardy vs. Sammy Guevara. The low point was MJF vs. Marko Stunt.

For NXT in Males 18-34, the high point was Io Shirai vs. Rhea Ripley and low point was Kushida vs. Drake Maverick.

For Women 18-34, for AEW the high point was the Jake Roberts and Arn Anderson face-off and the low point was MJF vs. Marko Stunt. Quarter hours always teach you something. For example here, you’d think it would be one of the young guys that would be most appealing to women and here it is Jake Roberts and Arn Anderson, two older overweight guys in their 60s who happen to be great on the mic. I remember in the WCW Nitro days where Dusty Rhodes (in his rare appearances) and Ric Flair, who were older guys, would just kill it with teenage girls while Buff Bagwell, who you would think would, made no difference.

For NXT in Women 18-34, the high point was El Hijo del Fantasma vs. Akira Tozawa. The low point was Oney Lorcan &amp; Danny Burch vs. Ever Rise.

For AEW in Males 18-49, the high point was Hardy vs. Guevara and low point was MJF vs. Marko Stunt.

For NXT in Males 18-49, the high point was Fantasma vs. Tozawa and love point was Kushida vs. Maverick.

For Women 18-49, for AEW the high point was the Roberts/Anderson quarter and low point was MJF vs. Stunt.

For NXT in Women 18-49, the high point was Karrion Kross vs. Liam Gray (which has more to do with the lead-in show than what was on the show) and low point was Shirai vs. Ripley.
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Both AEW and NXT had major viewership increases on 5/27. The AEW increase was expected, as they got the usual post-PPV boost, plus had advertised Mike Tyson for the show, even though the show had no marquee matches. The NXT increase was a surprise, as it appeared aside from Timothy Thatcher vs. Matt Riddle in a unique cage match with Kurt Angle as referee, it didn’t appear going in to be much different from previous weeks shows.

AEW did 827,000 viewers and a 0.32 (413,000 viewers) in 18-49, and was fourth in the demo, partially because younger viewers have stopped watching the news in the kind of numbers they were doing until recently. Plus, AEW had no competition from NASCAR or a Michael Jordan Game Sis movie on ESPN that hurt last week ...

Similarly, NXT which was No. 53 in the demo last week with a record low of 0.13, increased to 731,000 viewers and 0.19 (251,000 viewers) in 18-49. It was in the No. 24 spot in the key demo, and 15th with males 18-49 ...

AEW won seven of eight quarters, with one close. AEW opened at 863,000 viewers dn 398,000 in 18-49 for Young Bucks & Matt Hardy vs. Private Party & Joey Janela. NXT opened at 771,000 viewers and 252,000 in 18-49 for Drake Maverick vs. Kushida vs. Jake Atlas.

In the second quarter, AEW lost 26,000 viewers and 15,000 in 18-49 for the end of the six-man tag, The former Revival debut and Brian Cage vs. Lee Johnson with Jon Moxley and Taz doing interviews. NXT gained 13,000 viewers and 18,000 in 18-49 for Johnny Gargano and Candice LeRae doing a promo, Gargano vs. Adrian Alanis and the Keith Lee and Mia Yim promo with Gargano & LeRae out.

In the third quarter, AEW lost 60,000 viewers but only 2,000 in 18-49 for promos by Britt Baker and Chris Jericho. NXT lost 44,000 viewers and 11,000 in 18-49 for Shotzi Blackheart vs. Reina Gonzalez. The AEW margin was 777,000 to 740,000 during this quarter.

In the fourth quarter, AEW gained 67,000 viewers and 54,000 in 18-49 for Hikaru Shida vs. Christi Jaynes and the beginning of a Cody interview. NXT gained 5,000 viewers but lost 1,000 in 18-49 for the ending of Blackheart vs. Gonzalez a Finn Balor promo and the introductions for the women’s tag match.

The fifth quarter saw NXT take the quarter. AEW lost 55,000 viewers and 24,000 in 18-49 for the end of the Cody promo and mostly Kip Sabian &amp; Jimmy Havoc vs. Frankie Kazarian &amp; Scorpio Sky. NXT gained 68,000 viewers and 14,000 in 18-49 for Charlotte Flair &amp; Chelsea Green vs. Io Shirai &amp; Rhea Ripley. NXT had 813,000 viewers and 272,000 in 18-49 compared with AEW’s 789,000 viewers and 411,000 in 18-49.

In the sixth quarter, AEW gained 27,000 viewers and 6,000 in 18-49 for the ending of the Sabian & Havoc vs. Kazarian &amp; Sky match, the MJF promo, Battle Royal intros and the beginning of the Battle Royal. NXT lost 141,000 viewers and 41,000 in 18-49 the Adam Cole/William Regal vignette and an Oney Lorcan & Danny Burch vignette. Vignettes are always going to lose but often they are necessary for building characters.

In the seventh quarter, AEW gained 53,000 viewers and 25,000 in18-49 for the Battle Royal and highlights of Stadium Stampede. This was the peak part of the show in both total viewers with 869,000 and 18-49 with 442,000. NXT lost 28,000 viewers and 2,000 in 18-49 for Tommaso Ciampa vs. Leon Ruff, promos from Ciampa and Karrion Kross and the beginning of Riddle vs. Thatcher.

In the eighth quarter, AEW lost 47,000 viewers and 2,000 in 18-49 for the Inner Circle celebration and Mike Tyson angle. I’m amazed the Tyson angle lost viewers from the Battle Royal and Stadium Stampede highlights. NXT gained 34,000 viewers and 10,000 in 18-49 for the Riddle vs. Thatcher match.
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We have not heard anything regarding Angle and a new deal. It was noted to us that Angle is still being paid through mid-July like the rest of the people on main roster contracts that were released. The company will use that talent if they have a idea for them, such as Maverick in the tournament (and it would make no sense to let him go after his recent push) and had planned to use Sarah Logan at one point
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Originally Posted by Observer
A rare case of something at a taped show getting out took place due to an injury to Sane at the 5/27 tapings for the 6/1 Raw show. There was yet another Jax vs. Sane match for Sane to put over Jax like a monster as the set-up woman for the Asuka match. During the match, Jax whipped Sane into the ring steps. She went to take the steps with her side but she clipped the steps with the top of her head and was busted open and was out and they had to stop the match. Not sure if this will be edited on television or not. It turned into an outcry on social media against Jax, and in fairness, Jax has hurt several people in the past with her sloppiness, plus many fans are protective of Sane who has been injured a few times of late including a concussion in a match that continued while it was clear she was hurt. But in this case it appears to be, since I haven’t seen it, an unfair rush to judgment. I’ve heard from a number of people, including one person who is very much not a fan of Jax as a worker. All know the track record, and not one blamed her in this instance. It was described to me as Sane being in control of her bump but she may have slipped and clipped her head according to one person or tried to make it look so good that in doing so clipped her head. We do know there was no internal blaming of Jax for this one. Sane was cleaned up and said to be okay, although being out is never a good thing with her history

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The death of Hana Kimura this past week is a complicated story about reality shows, the worst aspects of social media and cyber bullying, and likely with the unique aspects of the time we are living in.

The end result was the suicide death of a 22-year-old woman who had high-level stage presence and a unique look, and was likely to explode in 2020 had this been a normal year, as the most marketable and biggest star in Japanese women’s wrestling.

The story has far wider implications in so many different ways than most pro wrestling stories. Its repercussions, besides her own death, include the possibility of the end of a popular worldwide television show, and even more, talk in Japan about enacting new legislation that would make cyber bullying a more serious crime. While obviously a huge news story in Japan, it garnered a lot of mainstream attention in the U.S. due to the popularity of the television reality show “Terrace House" ...

On 5/22, the day of her death, Terrace House and Hana Kimura was the most searched topic in the U.S. on the Internet, with more than 500,000 searches, just ahead of Joe Biden

Kimura was suffering from bad depression for some time even as her wrestling career was on its ascent. She had mutilated her arms and cut her wrists in the past.

The turning point was an incident on the reality show where people wanting to be celebrities are put together with both scripted and unscripted scenarios to attempt to create relationships and relationship dramas ...

It should be noted that Kimura went through a lot of bullying when she was growing up. Her mother, Kyoko Kimura, was a woman pro wrestler who competed a lot in death match style. Hana Kimura was of mixed ethnicity. Her father, who split from her mother and her when she was one, was Indonesian, so she was half-Japanese and half-Indonesian. This gave her unique features, but while growing up in school she was taunted over being different ...

“Obviously Hana is very beautiful,” said one person close to her to us regarding the show. “But on the show, she is like twice the size of the other girls. And on the show, and in real life, she is very self-conscious because she has huge muscular shoulders compared to the other girls. And Terrace House fans also bullied her about that kind of stuff. It seems silly, because she is a very pretty girl, but it just goes to show that anyone can have self-confidence issues. You’d think from the looks of it, this girl would have it all. Very obviously she’s the one being pushed to lead her company" ...

But the actual storyline came later, in a show taped during the week of 1/19 to 1/25, and aired on 3/31.

Kimura had put her wrestling costume that she had been using of late in the washing machine. Kai put his own clothes in the washing machine. He then came back and threw his clothes and her wrestling costume in the dryer, which shrank it and ruined it.

When she found out, she started yelling at him, saying this was the ring costume she wore on 1/4 at the Tokyo Dome on the biggest match of her life and the costume had so many memories for hear and it was like her life. She yelled at Kai and basically slapped his hat off his head because at first he wasn’t apologetic ...

She was bombarded with hate over social media. Whether no more filming of episodes (the show had continue on Fuji television with the final episode on 5/19 before this week’s episode and the rest of the season was canceled but new footage had not been shot in a few months), plus her regular routine of wrestling was shut down and taken away. It may have taken away a means to cope with the depression, and things got much worse.

It should be noted that all the negative messages, including her getting messages daily saying she should die, came from Terrace House viewers and not from the wrestling fan side. But a tiny but hurtful percentage of wrestling fans are no different which why this touched such a nerve in wrestling, particularly among women performers. She was constantly being told if her costume meant so much to her, why did she leave it in the washing machine ...

Others were negative to her about leaving her gear in the washer and that she shouldn’t have been so rude. It got to the point where Kimura disabled all comments on her Instagram because she was getting so much hate. In a later episode, Kai left the house and tried to make up with her by paying her the costs of making a new outfit. When he left the house, everyone gave him a goodbye hug except her, which also villainized her since to a lot of the women viewers, he was a popular character ...

It was told to us from someone close to her that they knew the negative social media response was bothering Kimura and that in recent weeks it had gotten worse.

However, nobody had any sign her depression reached the level it did ...

It seemed to be a cocktail of many things. The bullying from childhood leading to insecurity. Her wanting to become a mainstream star to make women’s wrestling popular again like it was more than 25 years earlier. A television show that emphasized her weaknesses on screen. Perhaps the pressures of knowing that she was chosen to be the person whose would the focal point of a company aggressively trying to bring back to glory days of the past under new ownership, and trying to live up to that status while perceiving she wasn’t coming across well on the television show.

Late at night on the morning of 5/23 in Japan (5/22 in the U.S.), Kimura posted images of her arm that she had self-mutilated, which was covered by her ring costume when she had wrestled. She was there with her pet kitten, and basically did a farewell note on both Twitter and Instagram ...

This drew a ton of immediate attention throughout the U.S. pro wrestling community with people obviously panicking and questioning what was going on. In Japan, where everyone was asleep, people in that community were not at first aware of it.

Kaori Housako (Kairi Sane) had either seen the posts herself or been alerted immediately. She called up Stardom founder and CEO Rossy Ogawa, and I believe Jungle Kyona. It was Kyona who rushed to the apartment that Kimura lived alone in, but it was too late.

Sponichi News in Japan reported that at around 4 a.m., which would be 3 p.m. on 5/22 Eastern time, some fire engines and an ambulance rushed into her apartment. Her death was believed to be a suicide due to the ingestion of hydrogen sulfide. The Koto Police Department’s Metropolitan department acknowledged a hydrogen sulfide fatality at 4 a.m., but further details were not released at the request of the family.

According to police sources in the Japanese media, Kimura was found on her bed with a plastic bag covering her head. A container of what was believed to have been hydrogen sulfide was found nearby. Several different suicide notes were found in the room.

There was a piece of paper attached to the door that read, “Toxic gas being generated,” according to Kyodo News ...

The kitten, named Karage, which means fried chicken ball, because Kimura thought he looked like a fried chicken ball, was being taken care of in the Stardom wrestlers dormitory ...

In addition, “Terrace House,” canceled the remainder of this season and there is some question whether the show will ever return ...

After Kimura’s death, numerous people who had harassed her on social media began deleting their accounts, while media reports
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With the 5/23 AEW Double or Nothing shows, we’ve learned that the current conditions may be negative for television ratings, but in no way are they negative for PPVs.

Two weeks after UFC did a shockingly high number for UFC 249, AEW followed suit with what, at least at this point, looks to be the most-purchased PPV show in company history.

Streaming numbers from B/R Live in the U.S. and FITE for international markets both ended up more than 10 percent up from the 2/29 Revolution show and may end up closer to 15 percent up, which was tracking to be the second highest number in company history, behind only the first Double or Nothing show, at about 100,000 to 110,000 buys. The cable buys for Revolution are still only estimated until final numbers are to come in at some point in the next few week ...

If cable holds up similarly, that would indicate 115,000 to 120,000 buys, which would equal to or slightly beat the final numbers of the first Double or Nothing ... There’s also the aspect that streaming buys as a general rule over the past year are increasing at a higher level than cable buys, which are decreasing. So streaming buys both in the U.S. and overseas being the biggest in company history does not necessarily mean cable numbers will follow suit ...

There was the argument, which proved to be false, that with so many ordering WrestleMania for free and disposable income being down for so many who have lost their jobs, that people couldn’t justify a $50 purchase for a show.

Historically, every time this argument goes into play, it always ends up being wrong. There is a price point that becomes a negative, but $50 for AEW and $65 for UFC are clearly below that threshold at this point with the current economy and the current marketplace. There are always arguments that differ from this point, but the consumer behavior always seems to trump those arguments. The reality is that if you have a show with a low price but people aren’t interested, they aren’t buying. If you have a show people want to see, they will find a way to see it. There is a price point too high, but that depends more on the value of the product than the price point. People have proven in gigantic numbers a willingness to pay $100 for a singular event if the names involved are big enough. UFC has constantly increased the price of its shows and that has never had a bearing on the number of buyers.

The numbers are how many people really want to see it either themselves or as part of a social gathering. And with social gatherings likely down, that probably, surprisingly to most, is likely the biggest difference maker of all ...

Replay buys were said to be slightly ahead of the pace of the last show. Replay buys are often based on word of mouth, but word of mouth has been strong after almost every AEW PPV show ...

From a general interest standpoint, the show did 100,000 Google searches, which were half of what WWE did with Money in the Bank. It was in the No. 10 spot for the day, and was the same as what the Revolution show did. AEW, with a stronger harder core fan base, seems to convert its audience to PPV and live event buyers at a much stronger rate than WWE
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Contrary to the speculation of those who had unsecured debts in the XFL bankruptcy case, Vince McMahon said that he is not going to restart the XFL.

McMahon is looking for a buyer to take over the league in bankruptcy court.

Speculation from debtors last week had seen the actions McMahon took and felt it was a way for him to get away from the money losses suffered thus far and then restart next year with a clean slate. Others felt that McMahon did so much damage do his reputation within the football world that, other than players, who it was conceded he would be able to get, that anyone of any value in coaching or management would steer clear of the league because of how many high profile people and buildings were stiffed on money.

McMahon did admit in the filing that he was considering putting in a bid to buy it back, but had changed his mind.

This appears to be strategic in the sense of wanting it out there that they were looking for someone to buy it and if Vince was interested, others would. But the strategy changed with the idea that people were scared away by the idea Vince might do it. Or they could simply have been scared away with the idea of the amount of money it would take at a time when the economy is questionable ...

McMahon’s filing claimed that he put up at least $200 million for the league. But that doesn’t add up with the prior filings that listed the amount of money the company lost being declaring bankruptcy at less than $50 million.

McMahon believed the stories this past week chased away people interested.

There have been 20 potential purchasers that have signed non-disclosure agreements to gain access to confidential filings regarding the economics of the business. Another six have at least inquired about interest and getting that information.
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On 5/27, due to the losses from the Pandemic, Bushiroad announced that the directors of Bushiroad and their group companies would have pay cut from 15 percent to 95 percent, depending on the person, for the five month period covering May through September, and then would return to the regular compensation. Every company in the group will have to cut expenses notably in advertising, promotion and through all facets. Employee salaries and bonuses will also be cut. New Japan Pro Wrestling will start running live events as soon as they are able to allow fans to attend shows, if not do empty arena shows first. You can see the difference in mentalities in that the people at the top took cuts, and some large cuts, but on the flip side, nobody in Bushiroad companies lost their jobs
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Cage was signed in January but couldn’t debut for months due to his torn biceps and when they figured out the timing the goal was for him to be a mystery debut in Las Vegas. The plan was to always put him with Taz but they had to delay Taz’s start as a manager until now. This would seem to build a Cage vs. Darby Allin program since the idea is Taz’s first recruit was going to be Allin until Allin blew him off although there’s been no follow up on that yet

* Smeat's note: Taking next week off as a break except for Friday and might do the same for the week after. Just been too busy with other stuff and getting a bit burned out again with doing sheet reports.

Emperor Smeat 06-05-2020 04:45 PM

The Sheets (Observer Newsletter Edition):

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There is usually an unwritten rule in WWE about talent criticizing other talent publicly unless it has to do with storylines going on, and even storyline criticism is frowned upon unless it relates to business, such as issues talent like Bill Goldberg, Brock Lesnar and others had with Matt Riddle months back.

But with tensions high on 6/1, shortly after President Trump ordered tear gassing of peaceful protesters in Washington, DC, so he could give a speech and pose for photos in front of a church, a tweet by Jaxson Ryker was so poorly timed and got a number of people very upset. Ryker, real name Chad Lail, 37, served in the U.S. Marines as a Gunner–hence his old TNA name–during the Iraqi war, who is part of the Forgotten Sons trio, the one who rarely wrestles.

Under his character name, he wrote, “Thankful for the POTUS (Trump) we have ! God bless America. Built of freedom. Forgotten No More.

The last line was part of the team’s catch phrase, although both Wesley Blake and Steve Cutler, the other members of the team, responded negatively to the tweet.

According to one person high up in the company, the belief is that Lail can’t be fired for expressing freedom of speech, but that the locker room is fuming at him.

Another Facebook post Lail made under his own name before this week but on the current situation did not come out to the talent but it won’t make people any happier given Sports Illustrated reported it, which said, “Pretty touchy subject but all this Black Lives Matter garbage baffles me. I challenge anyone of any color or race to go watch 12 years as a slave, the movie, and realize how good you all actually have it. Learn heritage. Christ, Gandhi, Buddha, they all taught love and caring for others. This is getting out of hand. I pray for this nation daily.”

Most stayed quiet and ignored it.

But the tensions are very high.

Kevin Owens wrote, “The freedom you speak of entitles you to speak your mind all you want. I’m not here to argue that. I just really need to tell you that I think you pushing your shitty wrestling catchphrase as all of this is happening is absolutely f***ing pathetic.”

Adeel Alam, who wrestles as Mustafa Ali, and is a former Chicago police officer who has stated many times his attempts to portray a positive role model for people of other ethnicities in the U.S. (Alam is part Indian and part Pakistani) and not wanting to play the former evil foreigner role as a wrestler, said, “I’m thankful you posted this because I’m now aware of what you stand for. When black brothers and sisters are crying, you praise someone that refuses to acknowledge their hurt.”

Sami Zayn, responded to Ryker’s tweet saying, “Literally built on oppression.”

Ricochet wrote, “I get you’re a `bad guy’ on TV. And I’m HOPING that’s all this is. Even then, that ain’t it. But if this is actually your true thoughts–I’ll be really sad.”

Cutler (Thomas Maclin, 33), also a former U.S. Marine, wrote, “Regardless of my political views, I am not blind to the injustices that continue in the world. I have chosen to stay silent because I don’t know how to put into words the heartbreak I feel watching what is going on across our country. This is not what I fought for or what I believe America is. What I’ve liked and retweeted depicts otherwise. I wanted to take this time to express my feelings, as silence does not help in this situation. I understand that I will never understand. However, I stand, Black Lives Matter.”

“Although I am part of a tag team while I wrestle, I am my own person with my own thoughts and beliefs. It pains me to see what’s going on in the world. I fought for the freedom of our country and ALL of the people who live here. It shouldn’t matter your race or however you identify, we are all human beings and all deserve to be equal. #Justice for George Floyd.”

Blake wrote when asked about what Ryker said, “Don’t care about Jaxson’s goofy ass either.”

Aside from that, as best we can tell, nobody else publicly acknowledged it, although privately the vast majority were not happy.

One person suggested that after what happened this week, the actual gimmick they were portraying even had Ryker not said it, would be tough to continue.
Ryker also had another past insensitive social media posting that came to light recently that added more to the online backlash he received. Link: https://wrestlingnews.co/wwe-news/ja...hoto-from-2017

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Raw on 6/1 once again did the second-lowest number in history with 1,728,000 viewers, down slightly from 1,735,000 last week (1.30 viewers per home).

The show did a 0.49 (640,000 viewers) in 18-49, down 2.4 percent from last week.

The record lows for Raw were set on 5/4 with 1,682,000 viewers and 0.46 in 18-49.

Raw overall finished 14th for the night in 18-49, trailing news shows and Below Deck Mediterranean (0.55) on Bravo in the key demo. Raw was 42nd overall in viewers, its lowest ranking I can ever recall, but only two shows, different episodes of 90 Day Fiancé on TLC (1,801,000 and 1,797,000) beat it among non-news shows.

The show was down 30.1 percent in total viewers from the same week last year and 36.9 percent from that week in 18-49.

The main key was all the news coverage and partially the increase in viewers of Titan Games on NBC, which did 4,152,000 viewers, up 20.8 percent from last week.

The first hour did 1,810,000 viewers. The second hour did 1,803,000 viewers. The third hour did 1,571,000.

The third hour was the second lowest hour in the modern history of the show, beating only hour three on 5/4 which did 1,546,000 viewers ...

The high point of the show was the Apollo Crews vs. Kevin Owens U.S. title match and ensuing Owens &amp; Crews vs. Andrade &amp; Angel Garza match with 1,911,000 viewers. The low point was the end of Charlotte Flair vs. Asuka and the Drew McIntyre vs. MVP main event at 1,515,000 viewers. The last 15 minutes of the show did a 0.9 overall rating, which I believe is the lowest quarter hour of all-time.
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Smackdown on 5/29 did a 1.32 rating and 2,054,000 viewers (1.30 viewers per home), as well as an 0.5 in 18-49 (681,000 viewers, which was 396,000 men and 285,000 women, so Smackdown is faring much worse than Raw among men and much better among women, with an 18-49 male skew being 58.1 percent, and drawing the most women of any wrestling show).

This was an update from the original listed numbers of 2,170,000 viewers and 0.6, as those numbers included certain markets like Atlanta and Minneapolis which actually aired news coverage on FOX during that time slot ...

Last year in the same time slot, with rerun programming, FOX averaged 1,515,000 viewers and a 0.5 in 18-49, so this year was up 35.6 percent in viewers (a rare time this year beat last year but that will get more frequent when compared to reruns) but the 18-49 number was identical to last week, but actual 18-49 viewers were up 16.2 percent.
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For 6/3, cable news dominated the night, and historically big news days are going to, likely because they increase the 18-49 viewership away from entertainment, hurt AEW more than NXT.

AEW did 730,000 viewers and an 0.29 (374,000 viewers) in 18-49, down to No. 27 in the 18-49 standings due to the big numbers of all the news shows.

NXT did 715,000 viewers and an 0.20 (257,000 viewers) in 18-49, for the No. 45 spot ...

A lot of the AEW decline was over 50, although they were also down in 35-49. They were actually up in 18-34 and did their best numbers in that demo since 3/18. NXT was up across the board, also more in 18-34, but held steady post-35 which AEW did not ...

AEW won four of eight quarters, NXT won the first, due to the lead-in, and the two, due to the main event, and tied in one. AEW won all eight quarters in 18-49, with none that close although the final quarter was the closest ...

AEW won every key demo. In men 18-34, AEW had 75,000 viewers (identical to last week) and NXT had 45,000 (up 25.0 percent). In women 18-34, AEW had 51,000 viewers (up 10.9 percent) and NXT had 30,000 (up 57.9 percent after the terrible showing in women under 35 last week). In men 35-49, AEW had 163,000 viewers (down 10.4 percent from last week) and NXT had 119,000 (up 4.4 percent). In women 35-49, AEW had 85,000 viewers (down 22.7 percent) and NXT had 63,000 (down 3.1 percent).

In the first quarter, AEW with Kenny Omega & Adam Page vs. Kip Sabian &amp; Jimmy Havoc did 740,000 viewers and 387,000 in 18-49. The were hurt by a weak lead-in while NXT usually benefits from a very strong one. NXT did 790,000 viewers and 259,000 in18-49 for Mia Yim vs. Candice LeRae, the post match brawl, and Yim &amp; Keith Lee vs. LeRae &amp; Johnny Gargano. It was NXT’s high point for overall viewers.

In the second quarter, AEW gained 24,000 viewers and 30,000 in 18-49 for the second half of the Omega & Page vs Sabian & Havoc match, a Shawn Spears &amp; Tully Blanchard vignette and Brian Cage vs. Shawn Dean. NXT lost 69,000 viewers but only 1,000 in 18-49 for the end of Lee & Yim vs. Gargano & LeRae, a Maverick vignette and a build for Adam Cole vs. Velveteen Dream piece.

In the third quarter, AEW gained 10,000 viewers and 11,000 in 18-49 for Taz &amp; Jon Moxley promos, a Lance Archer/Jake Roberts vignette and Matt Hardy meets Private Party. At 774,000 viewers and 428,000 in 18-49, this was the peak number of the night for AEW. NXT lose 13,000 viewers but gained 1,000 in18-49 for Tony Nese vs. Isaiah Scott.

In the fourth quarter, AEW lost 62,000 viewers and 61,000 in 18-49 for a Jericho/Tyson vignette and the beginning of Jericho vs. Colt Cabana. NXT lost 66,000 viewers and 21,000 in 18-49 for the Tyler Breeze &amp; Fandango vs. Roderick Strong &amp; Bobby Fish vs. Oney Lorcan &amp; Danny Burch No. 1 contenders to the tag title match.

In the fifth quarter AEW gained 60,000 viewers and 26,000 in 18-49 for the end of Jericho vs. Cabana, a Jericho promo, and the Britt Baker training video. NXT gained 67,000 viewers and 29,000 in 18-49 for the end of the tag title match, the confrontation after with Breeze &amp; Fandango, Imperium and Saurav &amp; Rinku, and Santana Garrett vs. Aliyah. It tied with the final quarter for NXT’s 18-49 high with 267,000.

In the sixth quarter, AEW gained lost 66,000 viewers and 61,000 in 18-49 for Nyla Rose vs. Big Swole, the post-match with Swole &amp; Baker and a Darby Allin interview. NXT lost 3,000 viewers and 11,000 in 18-49 for te video package with Charlotte Flair, Io Shirai and Rhea Ripley. Both groups did identical 706,000 viewers. It was the low point for AEW in 18-49 with 332,000.

In the seventh quarter, AEW lost 37,000 viewers and gained 1,000 in 18-49 for the FTR interview and post interview, build for next week and a Cabana interview. NXT went ahead by gaining 16,000 viewers but losing 7,000 in18-49 for Cameron Grimes vs. Bronson Reed and the beginning of Fantasma vs. Maverick.

In the eighth quarter, AEW gained 31,000 viewers and 3,000 in 18-49 for Cody vs. Jungle Boy. NXT lost 1,000 viewers but gained 18,000 in 18-49 for Fantasma vs. Maverick.
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Vince McMahon sent out a company wide e-mail saying that 24/7 mental health care counseling is available to anyone in the company who needs assistance. He also gave out an e-mail address for anyone to contact if they have any diversity concerns and to bring them to the attention of the company. The e-mail was short, basically giving a phone number and instructions on mental health issues and an e-mail regarding diversity issues, which, in theory, should have been under Human Resources previously. The e-mail also had a Martin Luther King Jr. quote (“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere” and the statement WWE released to all media platforms
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Christopher DeJoseph who was just given a promotion to sort of lead writer (Ed Koskey is actually the lead writer but both had the same job title with DeJoseph’s promotion) on Smackdown, was then fired on 5/29. Details are not available as to why past that it was disciplinary in nature and didn’t involve the layoff process like virtually all the people let go in the last few months. The decision was made by Vince McMahon and seems to have involved something McMahon either heard him say or was told he said. WWE has put up a notice that they are looking for a new lead writer
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The Jax-Sane injury aired on the 6/1 Raw show. To me, it looked a lot more like Jax’s fault than the view of those in the company. Jax whipped Sane into the steps and her head hit the steps and split it open. They did some cuts to the audience and basically hid all the blood, edited out her being worked on and her having to recover, and when she was cleaned up, she was in the ring and Jax immediately leg dropped her for the pin. The problem is that Jax threw her hard but was far too close to the steps when she threw her so it looked like Sane wasn’t in control of her bump like would be normal when you whip someone into the steps from a farther distance. One veteran wrestler who watched it after the fact on television said, “She didn’t whip her, she grabbed her by the head and threw/shoved her. It was 100% Nia’s fault. She never let Kairi find her balance after pulling her out of the ring, she then pushed her head down so Kairi would be unable to see and then threw her forward hard head first off balance towards the steps. Kairi has zero chance.” Another person noted to us that while the word within the company backstage was that it was not Jax’s fault, after watching it on television, it did look to be 100 percent her fault There is no word on the severity of the injury past Sane was said to be okay later that night
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Drake Maverick is obviously staying. The cruiserweight tournament ended with Maverick losing to El Hijo del Fantasma. It is no longer called the interim cruiserweight title that Fantasma holds, but just the cruiserweight title. However, Jordan Devlin is also the cruiserweight champion, so there are two of them and they will meet as soon as it’s feasible. There’s really no answer as far as when the Maverick firing became a storyline. It is possible it was a carefully kept secret from the start since if you go back to the start it feels like storyline from the moment of the firing. Top people in the company were told that several people would still be used for the next 90 days and he was booked in the tournament at the same time the decision was made on the firings as one hand didn’t know what the other hand was doing. Still, once he won his first match in the tournament, if not earlier, it was clear it was an angle and he was staying. Really once they started pushing the storyline on television, he had to be staying because you can’t do that storyline and then have him get all that sympathy, and firing him will get fans mad at the company and he could walk into AEW the next week
Maverick's firing being legit or not is something not even PWI and Post Wrestling have been able to find out.

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The most-watched shows of the past week on the WWE Network: 1. Sting the Lost Tape; 2. Undertaker’s Last Ride episode 3; 3. Rock’s Most Electrifying Matches; 4. 10 Biggest Matches in WWE History; 5. WrestleMania 35; 6. Undertaker’s Last Ride episode 2; 7. Raw Talk; 8. Raw on 4/27; 9. Greatest Backlash Moments; 10. Smackdown on 5/1. NXT was only No. 13, meaning that viewership on the network has declined to a point where one month old Raw and Smackdown episodes are beating it. And NXT U.K. and 205 Live don’t even crack the top 15 anymore
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[MLW] It is believed a new [tv] deal is in place but the decision from both sides was that this wasn’t the week to make that announcement

The plan for the [MLW] 2020 Opera Cup is November, but there is no clear date when they are starting back because Court Bauer has seen too many COVID-19 issues firsthand and isn’t going to be the one who rushes back.
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[ROH] Mark Haskins was fined $4,000 by the Maryland State Athletic Commission regarding usage of blood in a Bully Ray vs. Mark Haskins match on 12/13 at the UMBC Events Center in Baltimore. The commission ruling was that Mr. LaMonaco (Bully Ray) brought into action a board with barbed wire and that Haskins allowed himself to be lifted and thrown into the table with the barbed wire board and Haskins suffered lacerations in several areas. This violated the banning of blood in matches. This punishment was different from the Kenny Omega vs. Jon Moxley match where both men bled and AEW, the promotion, was fined $25,000. The commission order, which dated back to 2/29, was that Haskins had to pay $2,000 by the end of March and another $2,000 by the end of February 2021
ROH and/or Haskins probably not too happy at Christopher Cruise since antics against AEW ended up causing the Maryland Commission to actually start paying more attention to wrestling.

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Fyter Fest 2 will be the 7/1 and 7/8 episodes of Dynamite. All the TV’s leading up to the show and the show itself have already been written. The idea is that it’s going to be the equivalent of a PPV show but split over two dates. All titles will be at stake with Jon Moxley vs. Brian Cage and Kenny Omega &amp; Adam Page vs. Best Friends as the main bouts. It appeared like Hikaru Shida vs. Nyla Rose would be on the show as well from TV. They said both shows would be live but actually 7/1 will be live and the 7/8 show will be taped on 7/2

The rest of the upcoming schedule will be a live show on 6/10, a taping on 6/11, and a live show on 6/24
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There was a controversy regarding a match on Dark on 5/19 and a wrestler named Clutch Adams, who debuted and lost to Shawn Spears. Adams, who is 27, at the age of 19 on Twitter wrote a bunch of gay slurs when tweeting about Tony Romo of the Dallas Cowboys when watching a football game. A fan, who evidently was one of those guys who constantly trolls AEW incessantly, found the post because people like that will go back more than seven years on the timeline of a debuting enhancement guy to play gotcha and was looking to embarrass the company. He tagged Kenny Omega, Cody and Khan, and when they saw the posts, they removed his already taped match off the show that aired this week. Adams deleted his account and immediately wrote a lengthy apology over it. Obviously there is no defense for using any slurs in public or private for that matter. Other independent groups that he was working for also cut ties with him over it. This is something that everyone who wants to be a wrestler or in wrestling should learn from. First, obviously, don’t in any form say anything racial or involving current slurs in public, and really in private. It’s never justified, even if you’re blowing off steam about an opposing quarterback to one of your friends. Second, given everyone is young and dumb at one point in their lives, if you ever did something stupid on social media, get rid of it now and don’t think for a second that if you were a teenager or just mad ten years ago that nobody will find it. It’s one thing if somebody said it last year, but there will be people who will search if you are in WWE or AEW and people who will uncover it to try and ruin your life just because that’s the world we live in. In this case, it wasn’t at all about the person, and it rarely is. It’s about trying to publicly embarrass the company, which in this case AEW ended the outrage quickly by pulling the match, except for people wanting to blame AEW (and this could be New Japan, WWE or ROH or anyone else) and somehow think when they hire someone as an extra they should be aware of everything they wrote in social media when they were a teenager. This is hardly Dave Hollenbeck aka Havoc, a 20-plus year veteran of Pacific Northwest indies who did a job as last summer on 205 Live for Humberto Carrillo using the name Rob Rollenbeck, who this past weekend did a tasteless mocking of George Floyd and claimed the media was race baiting and he was doing it for “are (sic) police officers.” Don’t be that guy either if you want to have a future in wrestling right now
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The Athletic had an updated story on the XFL bankruptcy and why creditors are very unhappy. The league shut down on 4/10, when President Jeffrey Pollock said it was closing due to COVID-19. On the last day of operations, the league paid out $2.1 million that it owed people, none going to the vast majority of creditors. The last payment included $602,707.75 to the WWE for office work and marketing. In the final 90 days before filing bankruptcy, the XFL made nine payments to WWE totaling $2.3 million. Bankruptcy papers show the XFL still owing WWE $203,424.65. All players, coaches and staff were paid through 4/12, two days after the league shut down. The last game was played on 3/13. There will be an auction for XFL assets on 8/3 in Delaware. If somebody does buy the XFL, the first $9 million of that price goes to Vince McMahon, because rather than continue to use his money to fund the league, in late March, for the last few weeks, McMahon instead loaned the league $9 million to stay alive and made himself the first secured creditor. The league still has $8.1 million in cash, $9 million in office furniture, equipment and collectibles and $3 million in property to sell in bankruptcy court

Sting Fan 06-05-2020 09:11 PM

I dont get the forgotten sons thing. Mainly the company heat on him aspect, isnt Mc Mahon a big Trump backer? Donates to his Super PAC, Linda works in govt in some way, Vince works in sports re opening taskforces.

Some of thats just business but its hard to say hes not a Trump supporter. Why would the company have heat on him?

Talent I get, company not so much.

Emperor Smeat 06-05-2020 09:26 PM

Seems its less so about the tweet itself but just how poorly timed it was, other past stuff from Ryker being unearthed, and him losing support of not only his teammates but the locker room as well.

The whole portion of the newsletter about Ryker was a lot longer and went into more details on WWE's association with Trump and why they were not going to be publicly outspoken on Ryker nor the on-going protests itself beyond the simple statement released.

Emperor Smeat 06-12-2020 04:32 PM

The Sheets (Observer Newsletter Edition):

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New Japan Pro Wrestling returns to action on 6/15 and will have five other empty arena events this month before the first shows with fans on 7/11 and 7/12 at Osaka Jo Hall.

The Osaka shows will be set up for around 4,000 fans, or 33 percent capacity. The first show will be the finals of the New Japan Cup, which starts on 6/16, a 32-man single elimination tournament. The 7/12 show will be Dominion, which has traditionally been the company’s second biggest show of the year, but with little in the way of foreign talent, that’s unlikely to be the case this year. Tetsuya Naito will defend the IWGP and IC titles against the winner of the New Japan Cup, meaning the full show line-up won’t be announced until just before show time.

All 11 shows announced so far will air live on New Japan World, with the June shows along with the first four shows in July being built around the New Japan Cup tournament, that was originally scheduled for March.

Nothing was said regarding announcing but there is no date scheduled for English language announcers to be in the country, or any of the foreign talent that isn’t living there. It is possible they could hook something up for Kevin Kelly to use a home studio and call the matches but not actually be there similar to what WWE does with Mauro Ranallo and Beth Phoenix, but right now nobody knows how the English broadcasting will be handled.

The tournament is bracketed exactly like was planned for March, except that there are 15 new wrestlers of the 32 planned, with only two foreigners, Gabriel Kidd and Zack Sabre Jr.

The belief is that it will be several months before they will be able to bring in foreigners. The target date we were told this week was October. Perhaps it could be sooner. Right now for a foreigner to get into the country it requires two weeks of quarantine when they arrive before they can work. The feeling is that the guys who do have places in Japan like Will Ospreay and Juice Robinson may be back sooner but they couldn’t bring people like that in because of the time constraints because once the decision was made, it was too late to bring them in for the tournament ...

While Ospreay and Robinson live in Japan, both went home to their respective countries at the start of the pandemic and have not been able to return. The decision was made so late in the game of doing the tournament that they weren’t alerted with enough time to do the two weeks of quarantine necessary when traveling into Japan.

Because of 15 replacements being needed, they went heavily to junior heavyweights to fill out the field, something that had never been done to this level in the past.
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The 6/7 Takeover In Your House show was a mostly good easy watch. The show went two hours 17 minutes, and in this day and age without fans, shorter is almost always going to better. Four of the six matches were good, and one of the two that was nothing special was by design and accomplished its key goal. The main event delivered. There was some nice lighthearted entertainment from the nostalgia of the In Your House name ...

This show was built around the women’s three way match where Io Shirai took the title by winning a three-way over Charlotte Flair and Rhea Ripley. The match delivered and was the best women’s match on an NXT show in a long time. The show ended with Shirai as the star, with the in-ring confetti celebration of the title change, just as it was designed to do. Shirai was supposed to stand out and did, while Flair was the workhorse and played her role as well. The finish is a new WWE trope that actually makes no sense, as Ripley was in Flair’s figure eight submission while Shirai came off the top rope with a moonsault. The moonsault actually mostly missed, although Shirai did graze Ripley’s face and pinned her. The problem is for decades pins off figure fours have been part of wrestling. So if Ripley’s shoulders were down, fact is, the initial move was the figure eight, not the moonsault. At worst, it would be judged a tie and otherwise with Flair having the move on first, she should have won. But this isn’t the first time WWE has done this finish and it won’t be the last. The idea was to take the title off Flair while still keeping her perceived as superior, since on the main roster, with Becky Lynch gone, Flair is pushed as the top female performer in the company.

At the same time, her role should have been to put Ripley over, and instead, Ripley has been cooled off badly. Plus, it’s always cheap when you have a champion who actually doesn’t lose in the title change. It cheapens the title and cheapens the new champion. Granted, today, a lot of people who produce wrestling see belts as just props and nothing more. In NXT, that isn’t the attitude as you can tell by the booking with less fluke title wins. But in NXT, titles often feel like it’s somebody’s turn as opposed to it being emblematic of being the best person in the company at that period of time ...

Paul Levesque after said that people will complain about Flair not losing the match herself but said in the long run it will all play out. There are scenarios where it could, such as Shirai vs. Flair where Shirai goes over clean, or Ripley over Shirai leading to Ripley beating Flair. But all scenarios for it to make sense end with Flair putting over someone on the brand in a high profile title match, and someone who stays on the brand, not then moves to Raw off the win. But that’s tricky because with Lynch gone, Flair’s role has greatly changed ...

The weakest part of the show was the one that should have been the strongest. There is a huge advantage in taping matches ahead of time, such as the ability to do multiple takes and edit the bad things out.

But the flip side of these cinematic matches is the standard has gotten so high after the graveyard match and Stadium Stampede. At this stage, if you’re going to do such a match, you need to be overflowing with ideas for the concept. And this match didn’t have that. There were far too few ideas and most of them were predictable. Adam Cole beat Velveteen Dream to retain the NXT title in a back lot match that was generally considered the weakest thing on the show. I thought it was average at best, bordering on bad. The stipulations were that Dream was to not be able to get an NXT title shot again as long as Cole is champion. That doesn’t mean never again. Some thought this would lead to Dream being called up, but he absolutely should not until we’re back with real spectators. Dream is a well below average empty arena wrestler. He is a very charismatic live show performer and unfortunately for him, the timing doesn’t work right now to introduce him. We’re told there are no plans for Dream on the main roster right now.
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Raw on 6/8 did 1,737,000 viewers and a 0.53 (684,000 viewers) in 18-49.

The audience was slightly up from the 1,728,000 from last week, even though the interest in news was down week-to-week, but 18-49 was up 6.9 percent so that would be considered good ...

It was the fourth lowest number in the history of the show, with all four of these numbers coming since 5/4 ...

The first hour did 1,827,000 viewers. The second hour did 1,790,000 viewers. The third hour did 1,595,000 viewers.

The audience was down 18.5 percent from last year. The 18-49 audience was down 20.6 percent from last year.

But it should be noted that the same week last year went against an NBA playoff game (Warriors vs. Raptors) that did 18,217,000 viewers, and because of that, was the lowest non-holiday number in Raw history. And granted the pandemic has continued to hurt all numbers, but that’s a big drop from what was a record low at the time.

The opening segment did 1,761,000 viewers for talking with Bayley, Sasha Banks, Charlotte Flair, Asuka and the Iiconics. The Iiconics vs. Flair & Asuka vs. Bayley & Banks match grew 124,000 viewers to a show high point of 1,885,000. Interviews with Seth Rollins and Rey Mysterio lost 66,000 viewers. Austin Theory & Murphy vs. Aleister Black & Humberto Carrillo gained 22,000 viewers. The Peep Show segment with Edge, Christian and Randy Orton gained 30,000 viewers. The Street Profits/Viking Raiders decathlon and Kevin Owens attack of Andrade and Angel Garza lost 77,000 viewers. Owens vs Andrade vs. Garza lost 17,000 viewers. Interviews with Kurt Angle, Drew McIntyre & Viking Raiders and the VIP Lounge with McIntyre and then Lashley, Vikings and Street Profits coming out lost 58,000 viewers. Viking Raiders vs. Lashley & MVP lost 84,000 viewers. Charlotte Flair vs. Asuka ended up down 60,000 viewers. The good thing is that it picked up interest late as the first half was down 131,000 viewers to a show low 1,503,000 viewers but the last 15 minutes picked up 71,000 viewers to 1,574,000 viewers.
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Smackdown on 6/5 did a 1.27 rating and 1,984,000 viewers (1.30 viewers per home. It did another 0.5 in the 18-49 demo (656,000 viewers).

Those numbers were down 3.8 percent in ratings, 3.4 percent in viewers and 3.7 percent in 18-49 against almost all rerun programming (aside from a new episode of 20/20 on ABC) on the networks and lesser news interest than last week but still that was significant.

FOX finished second in 18-49 behind ABC at 0.6. Smackdown’s 0.3 in 18-34 won the night. Smackdown was last in total viewers but a rerun of The Wall on NBC did 2,085,000 so it almost beat one show. It won with males 18-49 and tied for last with women 18-49 and finished last in over 50.

It did significantly beat rerun programming on FOX the same weekend last year which averaged 1,337,000 viewers and an 0.3 in 18-49, so up 48.4 percent in viewers and 66.7 percent in 18-49.
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The 6/10 battle saw disappointing numbers from both AEW and NXT, seemingly hurt by NASCAR and news coverage.

NXT in particular should have gotten a bump coming off the Takeover show, but there was less interest in this past Takeover than most ...

AEW did 677,000 viewers, its second lowest in history (it did 663,000 on the night before Thanksgiving but that week also did huge DVR numbers) and 0.23 (296,000 viewers) in 18-49, also a low level number. NXT did 673,000 viewers and 0.16 in 18-49 (213,000), the latter being among its lowest 18-49 numbers.

AEW was down 7.3 percent in viewers and 20.9 percent in 18-49, a bad drop in the key demo. NXT was down 5.9 percent in viewers and 17.1 percent in 18-49, which was less than AEW, but really significantly worse because it was coming off a Takeover ...

The NASCAR race from Martinsville, VA, which featured A.J. Styles and Daniel Bryan all over promoting Smackdown and as starters did 1,711,000 viewers and a 0.30 in 18-49.

Worse, the AEW audience was older than usual, with over 50 up but every other demo down, and real bad drops under 35. NXT did terribly in 18-34 in particular.

In the demos, AEW won in all the key categories. In males 18-34, AEW did 51,000 viewers (down 32.0 percent) and NXT had 31,000 (down 31.1 percent). In women 18-34, AEW had 22,000 (down 56.9 percent) and NXT had 20,000 (down 33.3 percent). In men 35-49, AEW had 147,000 (down 9.8 percent) and NXT had 106,000 (down 10.9 percent). In women 35-49, AEW had 76,000 (down 10.6 percent) and NXT had 56,000 (down 11.1 percent).

The basic breakdown is that AEW won the first hour in viewers and NXT won the second hour, AEW taking the first four quarters and NXT taking the next four. So NXT got stronger. AEW won in 18-49, but the gap closed greatly as AEW won the first quarter by 107,000 viewers and the final quarter by 68,000.

In the main event battle, Cody vs. Marq Quen for AEW did 632,000 viewer and 288,000 in 18-49. Adam Cole vs. Dexter Lumis for NXT did 653,000 viewers and 220,000 in 18-49.

AEW opened with 760,000 viewers and 322,000 in 18-49 with FTR vs. Butcher & Blade. It was also the high point of the show. NXT opened with 758,000 viewers and 215,000 in 18-49 for an Undisputed Era in-ring and an Undisputed Era backstage with Keith Lee & Mia Yim.

In quarter two, AEW lost 30,000 viewers and 16,000 in 18-49 for the ending of FTR vs. Butcher & Blade, the in-ring with Butcher & Blade and Young Bucks and ensuing multiple team brawl and backstage interview with Dustin Rhodes, Brandi Rhodes, Q.T. Marshall and The Bunny. NXT lost 74,000 viewers and 22,000 in 18-49 for Lee & Yim vs. Johnny Gargano & Candice LeRae and a Damien Priest interview.

In quarter three, AEW lost 26,000 viewers and 12,000 in 18-49 for Kris Statlander & Hikaru Shida vs. Penelope Ford & Nyla Rose, plus Darby Allin & Tony Hawk and a Britt Baker workout comedy bit. NXT lost 68,000 viewers but gained 4,000 in18-49 a Cameron Grimes/Damien Priest spot, an Io Shirai segment, and a Saurav & Gurjar squash.

In quarter four, AEW lost 52,000 viewers and 5,000 in 18-49 for Best Friends & Orange Cassidy vs. Santana & Ortiz & Jake Hager. NXT gained 35,000 viewers and 14,000 in 18-49 a Cameron Grimes skit with girls and Drake Wuertz and William Regal, a Fandango & Tyler Breeze profile segment, a Tommaso Ciampa non-interview and Rhea Ripley & Robert Stone. AEW had 652,000 viewers this quarter to 651,000 for NXT.

In quarter five, AEW gained 19,000 viewers and 15,000 in 18-49 for the ending of Best Friends & Cassidy vs. Santana & Ortiz & Hager and the post-match with Chris Jericho and the oranges, MJF and Billy Gunn and the beginning of Sammy Guevara vs. Colt Cabana. NXT gained 37,000 viewers and 19,000 in 18-49 for Finn Balor vs. Cameron Grimes. The NXT lad in viewers of 688,000 to 671,000 would be only the second time since October that NXT beat a segment with Jericho, even though Jericho was only in for a few minutes in the quarter.

In quarter six, AEW lost 17,000 viewers and 9,000 in 18-49 for the ending of Guevara vs. Cabana, the Dark Order coming out, Guevara in-ring with Matt Hardy, a Joey Janela & Sonny Kiss vignette and Cabana going into Brodie Lee’s dressing room. NXT lost 27,000 viewers and 25,000 in 18-49 for Dakota Kai vs. Kacy Catanzaro and a Timothy Thatcher skit.

In quarter seven, AEW lost 42,000 viewers and 24,000 in 18-49 for a look at next week’s show, Jon Moxley, Taz and Brian Cage in a parking lot brawl and the beginning of Cody vs. Quen. NXT gained 15,000 viewers and 28,000 in 18-49 for the Drake Maverick/Fantasma segment and another Undisputed Era segment.

And in quarter eight, AEW gained 20,000 viewers and 17,000 in 18-49 for the remainder of Cody vs. Quen and the post-match. NXT lost 26,000 viewers and 12,000 in 18-49 for Cole vs. Lumis and the post-match.
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TNT aired an AEW repeat with no promotion at all at 12:45 a.m. on 6/6 and it still placed No. 40 in 18-49 for the night at 0.13 with 319,000 viewers of which 171,000 were in 18-49. Also notable is that it did 1.39 viewers per home and for a show in a post-midnight time slot to do that is shocking. If you take out news shows, it was No. 3 for the entire night in the Male 12-34 demo trailing only UFC and the Sports Center show and No. 6 in Women 12-34. In males 18-49 it was No. 5 and overall 18-49 was No. 9 all day and was first in its time slot in overall viewers and in almost every demo.
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Will Ospreay, who has been concentrating on eating and heavy lifting with no wrestling happening, is up to 227 pounds and ripped. That’s about 25 pounds up from nine months ago. He’s probably going to have to adjust his in-ring style to compensate for the added weight. Whether it’s a good or bad thing is to be determined. We’ve seen it work both ways where guys who aren’t going to be mass monsters add weight and it works against what they can do. Japan, like the U.S., has still favored thickness in its top guys and obviously Ospreay is looking to be on top in the heavyweight division. Often also when guys add weight it ups their injury rate because larger muscles tear more often and more weight can be detrimental to knees and back
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MLW and DAZN have reached a deal and MLW programming started airing on the station on 6/9. MLW programming is expected to appear on DAZN worldwide, both on Demand and as part of the regular programming schedule. Right now episodes of MLW Fusion as well as the Opera Cup are appearing now. The key to the deal will be monthly live arena shows once MLW starts running again. The main MLW Fusion show will for now remain on Bein Sports and YouTube. There’s still hope to move the show to another platform as there’s very little money in YouTube

MLW is still in talks regarding another U.S. cable deal
Quote:

ROH are in the stage of planning for a return and doing shows for television without fans. Right now they have been doing weekly one hour profiles using their library for the television show but the feeling is they have to start planning weekly content. Whether this be Florida or its home base of Maryland (which, due to its athletic commission would probably have stricter protocols regarding how shows are handled, even with no fans) or somewhere else is probably not yet determined and there is no start date past the point they recognize how to do it and are working on protocol for how to handle policy and testing for a return
Quote:

Regarding the stuff from last week involving the names teased for the 7/18 Slammiversary PPV, obviously no Drake Maverick. Luke Gallows & Karl Anderson are looking for what was described as two deals, one of which would be New Japan, which would be the main deal, and the other would be a U.S. deal, and Impact is in play for being the second deal. They can’t actually do anything until mid-July because they are still under a WWE deal, but they legally could appear on Slammiversary if they make a deal here a few days beforehand. .. Taylor Wilde (Shantelle Malawski, 34) has been teasing on Twitter a return to the company.
Quote:

Chris Jericho had the Inner Circle on Talk is Jericho this week to talk about the formation of the group. Jericho asked Sammy Guevara to join the group over Labor Day weekend last year. When WWE & AEW & Impact were all recruiting Santana & Ortiz since it was known their contracts were up, AEW won the bidding by telling them their idea was to put them in a group with Jericho so they knew they’d be used well. Jericho said that Pentagon Jr. & Fenix were originally suggested to him to be his team since they had been the Young Bucks top rivals previously, but Jericho thought they were too gimmicky for what he wanted. Jericho was pitched on Anthony Agogo, a former pro boxer who won a bronze medal in boxing in the 2012 Olympics, who AEW signed to a developmental deal, as his tough guy. Jericho wanted Jake Hager, who is much bigger, had lots of pro wrestling experience and they knew each other and trained at the same MMA gym

Jericho also gave some background on the Mike Tyson angle. Hager said he wrestled Rashad Evans in college which would not be correct since Evans wrestled at 174 at Michigan and Hager at heavyweight for Oklahoma. They were contemporaries. Evans was a senior in 2003 and competed at the 2002 and 2003 NCAA tournament. Hager was a senior in 2006 and competed at the 2005 and 2006 NCAA tournament. The original plan was for Tyson to knock out Sammy Guevara in the brawl, but that changed. The actual plan was for only Evans, Vitor Belfort, Tyson and Henry Cejudo to come out and not any of the other guys. But Tyson was doing what he wanted and he brought other guys out. Jericho was pissed about actor Mickey Gooch Jr., coming out. If you watch the replay of it, you can see Jericho going after Gooch and trying to throw him out of there. Jericho also mentioned the Hager, Adam Page and Kenny Omega bar fight was done in one take. They put baby oil all over the bar so Page would slide on it when Hager threw him but it didn’t work as well as hoped for. He also said by the time they did the Omega-Guevara finish it was raining badly. He also said the fire marshal was there and not happy about all the explosives and pyro being used
Quote:

Cena made a $1 million donation to the Black Life Matter Foundation. Some people talk the talk or say what is convenient without walking the walk. Cena goes much farther than just walking the walk. Some people will say he’s rich and all, and he is well off obviously, but even for him, that is a very significant amount of money
Quote:

Mahal underwent knee surgery this past week in Birmingham. Originally it was scheduled to be minor surgery but the damage ended up being more significant than expected. There was a report regarding a McIntyre vs. Mahal program that had to be scrapped. There was talk due to the dearth of top heels of doing one match since they have the storyline of being former partners (although bringing that period up kind of reminds people of just how low on the totem pole both were for years) but not a long-term program
Quote:

There are a lot of different versions of what happened that led to the firing of Christopher DeJoseph. The consistent stories is that he was on a Zoom conference call with Stan Stansky, the Senior Vice President of Creative Services, and Kevin Moore, the Senior Vice President of E-Commerce and Venue Merchandise. Essentially he said things that he shouldn’t have and according to some versions came off to them in a bad way, and Vince McMahon found out and that was it
Quote:

The most-watched shows on the WWE Network this past week were: 1. NXT Takeover In Your House; 2. Ric Flair: The Final Farewell; 3. Best of The Nexus; 4. Undertaker’s Last Ride episode three; 5. NXT Takeover pre-game show; 6. Masked Impostors; 7. Money in the Bank 2020; 8. Raw Talk for 6/8; 9. Undertaker’s Last Ride episode two; 10. WrestleMania 35. The regular NXT show from 6/3 did not crack the top 15

Damian Rey 2.0 06-12-2020 07:30 PM

https://i.redd.it/th9n2xeo5mr41.jpg

Even if he has to cut back a bit on the high risk/acrobatic moveset, I think this might workwell for him. He looks like a million bucks at this size.

Mr. Nerfect 06-13-2020 05:20 PM

Come on, MLW.

Emperor Smeat 06-16-2020 09:50 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Last night's Raw, with a post-Backlash bump and a show-long tease of the return to the ring of Christian, plus Ric Flair and Big Show returning and a more loaded third hour, averaged 1.94 million viewers, the best number since the day after WrestleMania, even beating the night Becky Lynch announced her pregnancy.

The 0.53 rating in 18-49 was identical to last week even though it was a strong 12 percent increase in viewers overall. The real gains from last week were with teenagers and those over the age of 50.

While the open was strong, the show kept its viewers through tons of talking and angles better than any Raw episode in a long time, with the second hour beating the first and the third hour only being down seven percent from the first.

The show was down 13 percent from the same week last year and 25 percent in 18-49, both numbers better than the show had been doing ...

The three hours were:
8 p.m. 1.98 million viewers
9 p.m. 2.00 million viewers
10 p.m. 1.84 million viewers

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
NJPW has announced four additional events that will be part of their July schedule.

The promotion will return to Korakuen Hall in Tokyo for a New Japan Road event on Monday, July 20. Sengoku Lord will then take place at Aichi Prefectural Gymnasium in Nagoya on Saturday, July 25. NJPW will be back at Korakuen Hall on Monday, July 27 and Friday, July 31 for Summer Struggle 2020 shows ...

Fans will be allowed to attend the four shows, but the venues will be at a reduced capacity. "All events will take place with strict measures to counteract the spread of COVID-19. Thoroughly check our event policy," NJPW wrote.

NJPW noted that further events will be announced upon careful monitoring of the developing global situation with the coronavirus pandemic.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
WWE is dismissing allegations stemming from recent claims made by an ex-WWE star regarding last year’s Crown Jewel event.

Jerry McDevitt on behalf of WWE issued the following statement to Forbes:

After the Court appointed a third law firm to be lead counsel, WWE provided all three law firms with specific detailed facts from the persons with actual knowledge of the situation, including the phony allegation about the plane. The first two law firms then dropped their lawsuits to avoid sanction motions, but the third firm chose to ignore the specific facts they had been provided, and instead cited an unnamed disgruntled former wrestler with no knowledge of the facts. WWE is preparing its response to the lawsuit and will be moving to have it dismissed.

The claims were made in one of several recent lawsuits by WWE shareholders, who argue that WWE has made misleading statements regarding their business dealings with Saudi Arabia.

In one of these lawsuits, a former employee identified as CW-2, who performed for WWE from 2012 to April 2020, was initally told that the flight had been delayed. When he spoke to a stewardess, they were quoted as saying that “it seems someone doesn’t want us to leave the country.”

CW-2 also recalled seeing guards wearing “black militia attire” staring at the wrestlers on board.

He was also told by the Senior Director of Talent Relations Mark Carrano that Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and Vince McMahon had gotten into an argument over payments regarding the last event held in Saudi Arabia, Super Showdown. As a result, McMahaon cut the live feed for the Crown Jewel event, which had made the Crown Prince upset.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Bloomberg.com is reporting that the Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, Long Island will be shuttered indefinitely ...

WWE has been run the venue for decades, dating back to the early 1970s when the Coliseum opened. The first episode of Saturday Night's Main Event was taped in the venue and the second Wrestlemania had it's New York portion featuring Mr. T boxing Roddy Piper hosted there. The venue also hosted a number of PPVs over the years, including Summerslam 2002 which saw Shawn Michaels return to the ring against HHH, Brock Lesnar win his first WWE championship and was one of the best top to bottom WWE shows ever. The Coliseum also hosted Jim Crockett Promotions in 1987 and 1988 including JCP's first-ever PPV, the Bunkhouse Stampede in January 1987. JCP last ran the venue in April 1988.

The Coliseum was shut down in 2015 with WWE running a farewell Raw taping that saw Vince McMahon pay tribute to the venue. It was remodeled and reopened in 2017 with WWE returning for TV tapings and live events. They last ran the venue in July 2019

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
With today's TV taping canceled, WWE is testing everyone for COVID-19 today. They are rotating everyone. We are told that this was a legitimate COVID-19 test via the nose ...

Yesterday's taping at the PC covered yesterday's Raw, this Friday's Smackdown and this weekend's edition of Main Event. There were invited fans at the taping yesterday, which has to be worst timing ever.

If/when they resume tapings, WWE would tape next week's episodes of Raw, Smackdown, Main Event and two weeks of 205 Live. The hope is to resume tomorrow but that would be pending an all clear from today's COVID-19 testing. Since all signs are this is the first time the majority of those being tested have actually taken a COVID-19 test, there's no telling what the results will be.

That last line is the scary part since WWE wasn't doing any real testing for the virus until today, even after they had the first confirmed positive test during Mania tapings and started doing crowds for their shows. Temperature checks are the least effective test for actually discovering who has and doesn't have the virus.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
ESPN has an extensive article up about the closing of Vince McMahon’s rebooted XFL football league. The league ceased operations on April 10th and the majority of the league’s staff had been laid off. The ESPN article takes a look at how the COVID-19 pandemic may or may not have been the reason for the collapse of the league, how the WWE factored into the situation and several interviews were conducted with former XFL employees to get their thoughts about how everything unfolded.

Vince McMahon and Oliver declined to do an interview for the piece but it’s noted in the article that prior to WrestleMania 36, Vince McMahon began making plans for the mass layoffs/furloughs that WWE made on April 15th.

“The XFL’s shared services agreement with the WWE also had raised eyebrows within the XFL offices, which were regularly interacting with WWE counterparts. In December 2019, the Oklahoma Firefighters Pension and Retirement System filed a shareholders lawsuit seeking information about the exact nature of the relationship between WWE and the XFL, and whether McMahon or other senior officers might have diminished the WWE by diverting some of its resources to the XFL. The suit was dropped this spring.

The WWE managed to resume content production amid the pandemic, airing a fanless but well-received WrestleMania 36 on April 4-5. McMahon was already working on plans for a series of WWE layoffs, furloughs and other cost-cutting moves designed to stabilize the company for an extended period of lower revenues. They were announced April 15. And according to Forbes magazine, McMahon’s net worth has dropped by $1 billion, from $2.9 billion to $1.9 billion, in the past year.”

Randy Mueller, who was the Director of Player Personnel for the Houston Roughnecks spoke to ESPN and stated that everyone knew the failed AAF football league was “smoke and mirrors” but with Vince McMahon, everyone involved in the new venture was aware that McMahon has money and didn’t think he would step away from the $200 million that was already put into the league ...

For the many XFL staff members that were cut, they were offered COBRA insurance benefits, but their dental and vision plans were cut this month. Those individuals, along with many creditors are in bankruptcy court to attempt to recover what was left on their contracts on April 10th.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
WWE Champion Drew McIntyre spoke with Justin Barrasso of Sports Illustrated following his successful title defense on the 6/15 edition of RAW. Before Paul Levesque called McIntyre about returning to the WWE in 2017, McIntyre planned on going to New Japan Pro-Wrestling to mix it up with the likes of Hiroshi Tanahashi, Kazuchika Okada and Will Ospreay.

“Before Hunter called me to come back to WWE, the place I was going next was Japan. My style would be perfect there and I could learn so much. The two opponents on the top of my list were Tanahashi and Okada. Ospreay would be great, as well. I wrestled him outside of WWE in a couple of my favorite matches. But still, I have to go with Tanahashi and Okada.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
FTR (Cash Wheeler & Dax Hardwood) did an interview with Bleacher Report Live to discuss their arrival in All Elite Wrestling and some of the memorable moments from their runs in WWE. Cash Wheeler reflected on one of those moments and the trio of Big E, Kofi Kingston and Xavier Woods was a part of said moment[s]. Wheeler recalled that whenever he and Dax Harwood wrestled New Day, the two teams always tried to get one another to break character.

“I don’t know. I mean, there’s a lot so it’s hard to pinpoint any of them. I’m never gonna be able to pinpoint one but I know some of the most fun we had on the main roster amongst ourselves and with other guys would be like when we worked with The New Day and we’d have some really, really fun and good matches on live events with these guys but, there’s also like this underlying contest to see who could make the others break the most. So like, I would be looking at Big E from across the ring just trying to give him the widest eyes that I could, just hoping he would catch it and every time he would finally see it, it would just break him but, those guys are so fun and so good and just getting them to break a little bit or — they get me to break all the time. Dax? Not so much. He can keep a pretty straight face but I break so easy.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
The COVID-19 pandemic impacted a number of wrestling promotions across the globe and one of those promotions is EVOLVE. The last time that EVOLVE hosted a show was on March 1st which was EVOLVE 146 that was headlined by an AR Fox versus Josh Briggs match. Per a report from PWTorch, the promotion has no plans to run events going forward as they are going on hiatus.

PWTorch obtained a private Facebook message board post from EVOLVE VP of talent relations, creative and marketing, Gabe Sapolsky. Sapolsky sent the message out to members of the EVOLVE roster. Sapolsky reportedly told the roster that he is going to delete the private Facebook board because there are no plans to run EVOLVE events going forward. PWTorch confirmed that the screenshot is legit, by way of WWN management and members of the EVOLVE roster.

WWN will continue to operate, but EVOLVE is going on hiatus because of the COVID-19 pandemic. In the aforementioned Facebook message, Sapolsky told the roster that this is just a “fork in the road” and encouraged talent to stay in touch with him.

Think David Bixenspan was the first to debunk rumors of WWN was filing for bankruptcy and selling off EVOLVE to WWE. Latest scoop from him is WWN is currently in the process of splitting into several different companies.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
On June 3rd, Bushiroad made the announcement that both New Japan Pro-Wrestling and World Wonder Ring STARDOM were in the process of starting shows back up. New Japan Pro-Wrestling’s events are already under way and they are in the beginning stages of the New Japan Cup tournament and will have their first show with fans in attendance on July 11th. As for STARDOM, it was announced today via the promotion’s social media platforms that they will be back in action on June 21st.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Vince McMahon reportedly looks at Angel Garza and sees a young version of a WWE Hall of Famer.

Angel Garza quickly moved from being the NXT Cruiserweight Champion to being a part of the Monday Night Raw brand. While that all happened because of happenstance and Andrade getting suspended for 30 days, Angel Garza is now being viewed as a potential future key player in WWE.

According to a report by Alex McCarthy of talkSPORT, Vince McMahon sees a younger version of Eddie Guerrero in Angel Garza. On the surface, there are some basic similarities. both have a strong knack for in-ring ability, exude comfort on the microphone, and both are of Mexican descent.

Prior to his tragic death in 2005, Eddie Guerrero became the first Mexican WWE Champion in history and Vince McMahon was one of the very first people to congratulate Guerrero on his victory in February of 2004.

Angel Garza was called up to the brand by former WWE Raw Executive Director, Paul Heyman and Fightful Select exclusively reported that prior to being moved up to Raw, the only thing Vince McMahon knew about Angel Garza was that he was the cousin of Humberto Carrillo.

I'd believe it when I see it considering the long line of Eddie and Rey successors over the years that WWE viewed favorable at first only to get bored or lose all interest afterwards.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
On Monday's Raw, WWE allowed some extra personnel into the building. Along with the usual Performance Center recruits, WWE had non-employees in the crowd as well.

The non-PC recruits were friends of the roster.

According to Louis Dangoor of WrestleTalk, WWE talent didn't know that non-roster members would be allowed inside the Performance Center for the show.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Rusev talked about Impact's showing a Bulgarian flag in its Slammiversary commercial as a tease he's coming, not confirming or denying anything, saying: “As I said, any Bulgarian can go and debut. They may have another kid from Bulgaria. I keep saying that. Could be anybody. Look, I don't know why you think it's me. I understand why you think it's me, but I can't confirm or deny. Or I don't wanna confirm or deny. Maybe they wanna pay me a million dollars for one match. Who knows? Maybe I'll come in.” You can watch the clip here.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
One question we continue to receive quite a bit at PWInsider.com is whether Drake Maverick's WWE release had always been a work.

The quick is answer is no. PWInsider.com is told that Maverick was not aware he was going to be offered a new deal until the day his Cruiserweight Championship tournament was filmed at the WWE Performance Center.

While there will always be some who assume the release was a work, it's important to point out that on 5/27, Maverick had filed trademark applications for "Rockstar Spud" and "Spud", the ring names he utilized in Impact Wrestling and internationally before he signed with WWE. So, as late as the end of May, Maverick was preparing for a future after a WWE exit.

Maverick is instead now part of the NXT brand with the trademarks for Spud now officially in his pocket if he needs it down the line.

Quote:

Originally Posted by WrestlingInc
The finish to Nia Jax vs. RAW Women's Champion Asuka at Sunday's WWE Backlash pay-per-view was reportedly changed the day of the show, according to Wrestling Observer Radio.

It's believed that original plans had Asuka pinning Jax to retain, but they ended up with a double count out finish after brawling on the outside of the ring. There's no word yet on why the finish was changed.

The Observer provided an update afterwards saying it was due to WWE officials wanting to keep Nia looking strong due to the lack of big name female stars and heels on the RAW brand.


TPWW Frontpage:

* Smeat's note: Not doing any sheet reports for at least the next two Wednesdays. Rather use the extra time to relax and get other stuff done than having to cram watching NJPW shows in the afternoon, the usual stuff for the frontpage, my usual daily web surfing and stuff, and getting a sheets report done all before AEW's show starts. Even worse if I oversleep like usual which means less time to do everything.

Emperor Smeat 06-18-2020 09:34 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
In the wake of indie wrestler David Starr being accused of sexual assault, several independent wrestling companies have stripped him of their titles or announced intentions to not work with him again.

On Thursday, Ireland's OTT tweeted that their championship is now vacant, RevPro tweeted their Southside title is now vacant, and TNT Extreme Wrestling tweeted they have also stripped Starr (real name Max Barsky) of their title.

A Twitter user named Tori shared her story earlier this week, saying the 29-year-old sexually assaulted and abused her, prompting another woman to share her experience.

Since the accusation, Starr tweeted several times that he is not a sexual predator, but that he was "an emotionally immature d*ckhead", denying doing what Tori claims and that he was "an awful partner." He said if this means the end of wrestling for him, he's fine with that, but he isn't going on the offensive. "No matter what I say, I'm the bad guy. No pity party. It is what it is," he tweeted.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
World Wrestling Entertainment has re-hired Producer Pat Buck, who was back working on both Raw and Smackdown this week in Orlando.

Buck had been among those let go by the company during their cost-cutting back in April. There had been discussions within at least one company about bringing Buck in as a Producer, but with WWE bringing him back into the fold, that talk has obviously ceased.

Buck was originally hired in August 2019 and has been running Wrestle Pro promotion and the Create-A-Pro wrestling school with Curt Hawkins for several years.

There is no confirmed word yet whether any of the other WWE Producers released have also returned to the company.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Paul Heyman's ousting one week ago was a hot topic among wrestlers across all WWE brands.

Fightful spoke to a dozen wrestlers about Paul Heyman's replacement in his spot on WWE Raw as it was revealed Bruce Prichard would be heading up that branch, too. We've heard from a variety of performers both in and out of WWE, with responses landing all over the map. General disappointment and surprise from some, to others indicating they could see the writing on the wall of late. It should be noted that nobody we've talked to said that they knew of the change before WWE announced it on Twitter.

We were told numerous stars that Paul Heyman was instrumental in promoting along the way during his Executive Director role. Drew McIntyre was the primary name, who was said to have been groomed long before his Rumble win and protected for his main roster push ...

Heyman was said to have specifically wanted to build the Raw brand around future stars. There was a lighthearted joke backstage that Raw was built around the "catering crew" instead of the "Smackdown Six" this time, because AOP, Zelina, Andrade, Humberto Carrillo, Aleister Black, Andrade and Buddy Murphy were all relegated to Smackdown catering areas the year before and were hardly used on WWE TV. Specifically, we're told Heyman pushed to get Buddy Murphy on Raw, and was willing to pass on star power to get him. Apollo Crews was later added to that list.

On the other hand, Ricochet and Cedric Alexander were talents that Heyman wanted to continue trying with, but Vince McMahon had pulled the plug on their pushes. Street Profits and Liv Morgan were also people that he fought for.

Younger wrestlers we've spoken to were particularly disappointed, as Heyman was well known for wanting new blood on his shows.

In a follow up, none of the wrestlers or staff we've spoken to has heard blatantly why the replacement was made, but have heard that it was Vince McMahon's decision ...

The talent reactions to Paul Heyman and WWE kept rolling in after that. One said that he was open to hearing ideas and pitches, and talking storylines, even during the wee hours of the night, and said that if that's how he was with everyone else, there's a good chance he was overwhelmed ...

You may have heard Andrew Zarian of Mat Men Radio say on his show recently that Paul Heyman and AJ Styles had creative differences that led to Styles being "traded" to the Smackdown side. Dave Meltzer noted that it was due to issues with Paul Heyman, Luke Gallows, Karl Anderson and their fates.

When asking around about what those differences could have been, at least two on the Raw side of things believe that it stemmed from Heyman not seeing the value in Karl Anderson and Luke Gallows that Styles saw, which could have led to Anderson and Gallows being on the chopping block and released. AJ was said to have been very upset by their firings, which isn't much of a surprise, but particularly considering his somber reaction when speaking about it a few weeks later. The word "furious" was used by multiple wrestlers. Styles only worked one Raw match after their firing.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Gabe Sapolsky has given an update on those awaiting refunds for WWNLive events that were put on hold or canceled.

On Twitter, Sapolsky said some refunds have been issued for those who previously bought tickets to events that never took place due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. In addition, the rest of the refunds are going to be made within the next two weeks.

"We just got an update from Etix. They’ve made some refunds. The rest will be made in the next week or two. They are working on them and everyone will be refunded. My deepest apologies it is taking this long. I’m not going to make any excuses, but I assure you this has been the foremost thing on our minds and we are doing everything we can to get this done as quickly as possible. I understand if you are angry and upset. You will be made whole if you are owed a refund. Be safe & well," Sapolsky wrote on Twitter.

Some of the events that were canceled, included events taking place during WrestleMania 36 week, but all wrestling events that were scheduled to be a part of the week were called off. WrestleMania 36 was planned to take place at Tampa's Raymond James Stadium, but was then moved to the WWE Performance Center as a two-day show.

There's no word on when WWNLive events will resume.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Four years after their first interview, Flash Morgan Webster welcomed Tegan Nox onto his ‘Wrestling Friends’ podcast. Tegan and Flash discussed Tegan’s knee injury that she suffered during the 2018 Mae Young Classic that kept her out of action until June of 2019. It has been reported that Nox was scheduled to go to the finals of the 2018 Mae Young Classic but she confirmed it during the interview. The finals of the tourney took place at Evolution where Toni Storm defeated Io Shirai.

“Yeah. That’s what made everything that much more heartbreaking for me. I don’t know how much I can say but, definitely going to the finals, and I think knowing that the finals would be at Evolution and I think the most heartbreaking thing was knowing that Molly Holly was gonna be there. I’d get to wrestle in front of Molly Holly and have her watch my match. I think that’s what was such a heartbreaking — thinking I was gonna go wrestle Toni [Storm] who [when] the last time we had wrestled in front of maybe 15, 20 people? And that’s a push to wrestling at the first-ever women’s Evolution in front of thousands and also in front of a ton of legends. It was heartbreaking. I think that’s more so than the injury was not getting that opportunity.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Referee Aubrey Edwards joined Chris Jericho on the ‘Talk Is Jericho’ podcast. Aubrey revealed that she is working on the AEW video game with Kenny Omega and while the game is in its infancy, she and Omega have been discussing what they want out of the game.

“I’m working on the AEW video game. I can’t actually talk too much about it. I don’t know what I can say. I mean, we’re very, very early on, there’s a lot of things that we’re talking about. I talk to Kenny a lot about what he wants out of it, but it’s definitely a ways out. I’m not gonna put a number on it because I don’t want the internet to get mad at me but…”

Aubrey spoke about Michael Nakazawa’s contributions to AEW. With multiple women in AEW’s women’s division having Japanese as their first language and in the process of learning English, Aubrey said that Nakazawa has been a massive help in regard to being that bridge of communication backstage.

“Its been interesting because a lot of the match planning involves Kenny and Nakazawa translating. So, it’s a little bit more heavy just because there’s that extra layer to it. But, I don’t know if people know but that’s a big reason Nakazawa is here. He does translating while match planning and it’s hugely helpful. I don’t know how we would do what we do without him.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Ahead of the next chapter of The Undertaker’s ‘Last Ride’ docu-series, he chatted with Corey Graves on the After The Bell podcast. Undertaker and Corey discussed Randy Orton and Edge’s match from Backlash that was promoted as the “Greatest Wrestling Match Ever”. Undertaker said the match brought a tear to his eye because it reminded him of what wrestling used to be and spoke about how wrestling has changed over the years from his perspective.

“Prime example, last night, Backlash, Edge and Randy, honestly, it almost brought a tear to my eye because I haven’t seen that kind of wrestling match in so long and I understand time parameters and everything else so they had a lot of time but my gosh, what a story they told. An unbelievable story and I sent Edge a text today, ‘Like the next time I go to the P.C. and work with guys, I’m gonna pull that tape up and show these guys and dissect it.’ Not that it’ll be dissected 100 times by then, but just the little nuances of the things those two guys did last night, it was phenomenal and it restored so much faith in where I think the business should be and could be. But that tape right there, that needs to be studied by our main roster guys. That’s what professional wrestling is, or is supposed to be is what they did last night, in my opinion and it’s great to be able to be as athletic as all these guys are, but really at the end of the day, it doesn’t mean anything because when you rely on all that athleticism and you rely solely on your athleticism, you continuously push the envelope to our audience, because they’re gonna get desensitized to the double back flip off the top onto to somebody onto the floor. They’re gonna see it a couple of times and then they’re gonna go, ‘Okay, I’ve seen that. Now what do you got for me?’ So what happens is, you have to continually push the envelope athletically which puts you at a higher risk for injury.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
All Elite Wrestling’s Q.T. Marshall joined The Wrestling Inc. Daily podcast. Q.T. currently runs the Nightmare Factory wrestling school and he used to be a part of Danny Cage’s Monster Factory school. One of the trainees that came through the Monster Factory is Matt Riddle and Q.T. spoke about what he saw in Riddle early on in Riddle’s career.

“He was like a prodigy, right? Because he was a giant fan of pro wrestling so that helps, and he wasn’t really getting smashed in the face like he was in UFC so, he was really easy to coach, he was a little knucklehead-ish with some of the stuff that he did back then but, he’s a good kid and I remember meeting him at a Ring of Honor camp and kinda pulling him aside because Danny [Cage] had kinda given me the heads up that he came by the Monster Factory first. I said, ‘Hey, if you really wanna learn, come to the Monster Factory. We’ll teach you the right way and then you’d find your own spin’ and he ended up working with EVOLVE but, 2015, I think he was about four months into training. I had like an 18-minute match on the fly, didn’t call anything and he was a natural, so he was gonna make it no matter what. It was just a matter of him finding the right connection and all that other stuff so…”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Deonna Purrazzo was a guest on Busted Open Radio with David LaGreca and Tommy Dreamer. Dreamer asked Deonna to describe the difference between the feel and aura of the NXT locker room versus the IMPACT Wrestling locker room. Here was Deonna’s response:

“Everyone at IMPACT is people that I’ve known from before I went to NXT. Kind of people that I got to know as I was coming up and has kinda seen me in every stage of my life and they’ve just been so welcoming and everyone was so happy, whether they’re actually happy or not but seem to be happy that I was in the locker room and just wanted me to feel apart and feel comfortable and not be on eggshells and I think I never got to that point in NXT. I never got to the point of, ‘I’m comfortable in my position here and I know that others want me to succeed.’ So just that environment of feeling welcomed and feeling like everyone wants me to do well and everyone understands who I am and understands what I’m about and kind of how I see wrestling and how I see myself fitting into the picture here, was like the most liberating and freeing and the best feeling that I wanted when I came back and went somewhere.”

In like 2 weeks, Impact managed to make Deonna feel more special and a big deal star than NXT ever did during her whole time there.

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Originally Posted by Fightful
AXS TV and Women of Wrestling have parted ways.

Shannon Walsh of Pro Sports Extra first reported that AXS TV has canceled WOW Superheroes as the television company wants to focus on its relationship with IMPACT Wrestling. Walsh reports that WOW plans on taping again in Los Angeles in the fall -- though the coronavirus pandemic could change plans -- and will announce a new distribution deal at that time.

Anthem, the parent company for IMPACT Wrestling, bought AXS TV in September 2019, which helped provide IMPACT with a new television home. AXS TV previously aired WOW and New Japan Pro-Wrestling.

Anthem CCO Ed Nordholm said at the time that programming would not change, but AXS and NJPW parted ways in December 2019 and AXS also canceled Legacy Fighting Alliance shortly after the deal between Anthem and AXS was made.

The final episode of WOW Superheroes aired on November 23, 2019. The show ran for two seasons on AXS TV. The show featured IMPACT stars such as Kiera Hogan, Tessa Blanchard, Havok and Nevaeh.

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Originally Posted by Fightful
Orange County Mayor Jerry Demings will sign an executive order requiring all residents to wear a face mask in public. The order will go into effect on Saturday and last for an indefinite amount of time. Employees of businesses must wear a face covering at all times.

Orange County reported 212 coronavirus cases Thursday, setting a daily record for new cases.

The WWE Performance Center is located in Orange County and has come under scrutiny regarding face masks. WWE has allowed PC recruits to act as the audience during its weekly shows and this past week, friends and family of roster members were allowed inside the Performance Center as well. Those in the audience do not wear face masks on television.

WWE put out a statement saying, "Attendance was below 20% capacity and social distancing guidelines were adhered to with at least six feet between parties, thus face masks were not required."

It remains to be seen if WWE performers will begin wearing face masks on television.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
WWE’s Music-based YouTube channel uploaded audio of Io Shirai’s theme song

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/tbTwzMZ3u1k" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>


TPWW Frontpage:

drave 06-19-2020 09:22 AM

That entrance theme is pretty damn good.

Emperor Smeat 06-19-2020 05:22 PM

The Sheets (Observer Newsletter Edition):

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A positive COVID-19 test of a WWE wrestler led to issues with television tapings this week and the company for the first time testing all its talent and key staff that works the tapings on 6/16 ...

The performer who tested positive was a female wrestler in NXT who has not been used on television. She has been one of the fans in the crowd, and was last used in that role on 6/9.

No positive test results have been reported so hopefully nobody else was infected by her.

WWE had only been taking the temperature of people coming in, as well as asking them if they had any COVID symptoms. Of all the sports running, WWE was believed to be the only one not testing. They were able to get by with it due to a number of factors, including lack of unionization of talent, lack of regulation of pro wrestling in Florida, and mainstream sports media and general media lack of interest or care about wrestlers because they are not considered sports or athletes.

On 6/16, WWE tested many in the morning, and many others later. They tested wrestlers, staff, some people listed as family and friends such as a number of fans who were well known as Full Sail NXT regulars that were being allowed to attend the shows going forward.

The 6/15 Raw and Smackdown tapings were the first where fans, basically family and friends, were allowed to attend. There was concern of talent because instead of those under contract, there would be people that were not working for the company allowed into the small building as part of the group gathering.

In addition, for fans who wanted to come, many contacted us and other media members saying they were told that wearing masks during the taping of the show would not be allowed. This was as the COVID case numbers in Florida were rising.

Some had said they were told the WWE did not want anyone wearing masks on television. Another person said that they were told that they would prefer fans not to wear masks and if people were uncomfortable being in a group without masks they shouldn’t come.

John Alba, a Florida reporter who covers WWE, said that fans at the event denied this to them. However, there was nobody with a mask on at the tapings.

The company released a statement after news broke that many fans believed that masks would not be allowed, and the fact was, nobody was in the building on camera in a mask except for Catalina Garcia from Chile, whose gimmick is that she’s a masked woman wrestler.

“Fans have not been in attendance at WWE events since March 13. Yesterday, a select number of friends and family were permitted to attend WWE’s TV production. These individuals were required to participate in medical screenings prior to entering the closed set at our training facility, and were kept apart from in-ring performers and production personnel. Attendance was below 20% capacity and social distancing guidelines were adhered to with at least six feet between parties, thus face masks were not required.”

The company did get criticized for this statement, particularly when the news media ran photos of The Street Profits dancing with fans in close proximity, and from watching, while fans, who were all standing rather than in chairs, while not on top of each other, like with AEW, they weren’t six feet apart at all times either ...

Paul Levesque had defended the lack of testing by saying that the tests aren’t accurate enough and that at the time he made the statement a few weeks ago, what they had been doing was working since aside from the case in March, nobody else affiliated with taping of WWE television had tested positive.

But as soon as somebody tested positive, WWE pretty much had to have everyone tested. They were all tested using the nasal swab method, which is considered superior to the antibodies test, but is said to be less reliable than the throat swab tests that UFC uses, although some have believed that the nasal test when done by someone who is skilled at administering the test or more reliable than the throat swab. UFC switched from nasal to throat based on the idea the throat swab is the more accurate of the two.

What will be notable is that Orange County, in Florida, where WWE tapes, due to increases in cases, is now requiring masks.

On 6/18 Orange County Mayor Jerry Demings said every person in the county must wear a mask, an effort to try to stem a resurgence of the coronavirus ...

The order goes into effect on 6/20, meaning it will be in place for the 6/26 tapings.

People are allowed to take their masks off to eat and drink, but must wear them as they enter restaurants or clubs. All employees working at businesses must wear them at all times. The only exemption would be people outdoors who are exercising ...

In Orange County, they set a record with 212 new cases on 6/18, with the median age of the cases being 29.

There is no answer at this point regarding WWE televison tapings will be getting an exemption from this ordinance ...

It is not known when the wrestler found out and told WWE officials they had tested positive. Unlike the first positive test, which was by a non-wrestling performer who appeared on the WrestleMania tapings, and then took several weeks off, the talent was told immediately in a company memo. Talent was aware of the name of the person who did not ask to be kept confidential. It was nearly a week before that story broke when reporter Sean Sapp got a copy of the memo, and asked WWE, and WWE released a statement to all reporters at the time.

In this case, WWE released the statement and the talent found out about this on social media. The name was not released to talent although many believed they knew the name since the name was bandied about.

Only one performer that we are aware of, Kevin Owens, did not come back for the 6/17 tapings. Owens’ wife’s grandfather passed away about three weeks ago fo COVID-19, so it was a major issue in his family. There are some others who haven’t been around, some NXT talent that went home, as well as Sami Zayn, Roman Reigns and Riddick Moss. They were all told it was their choice and wouldn’t be held against them.

Owens was told the same thing and it was expected he would be returning for the 6/29 tapings, because at that point it would be 20 days since the person who tested positive was in the building. Obviously everything is up in the air in the event new positives are discovered ...

A lot of WWE talent was concerned because on 6/17 the story broke that 132 employees that worked at the Orlando Airport, which the non-Florida talent flies in and out of, had tested positive for COVID-19. This is not a recent number but a total number since March.
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A week after the departure of Paul Heyman from WWE creative, it appears that it wasn’t so much, as in the past, any kind of a blow-up, but simply a philosophical change that led to it.

Heyman had been going with the idea of rebuilding Raw around creating his own group of stars. When the new rosters were being put together before Smackdown went to FOX, and when Eric Bischoff was still in charge, there was a legitimate draft or trade or negotiations between the two regarding talent. In that, Heyman allowed Bischoff to take two of the biggest stars of the Raw brand, Bray Wyatt, who had been pushed the hardest and was Universal champion, and Braun Strowman, but in exchange wanted people like Aleister Black, wife Zelina Vega, Andrade, Charlotte Flair and Buddy Murphy in particular.

Vince McMahon had sold the Raw ratings decline to stockholders as the same thing, a rebuilding phase. Heyman when he started told people it would be 18 to 24 months before the new roster mix would start to show consistent results. But two things happened. The pandemic basically slowed down that timeline of getting people over, because nobody new was organically going to get over in the sterile environment with no fans ...

One thing notable is that even though ratings were at consistent all-time lows, the USA Network was behind the changes as they were convinced the rebuilding had to take place with a largely aging roster on top. Evidently those at the network did not find out much ahead of the rest of the world of the change, and were not happy with the news ...

Make no mistake about it, both Raw and Smackdown are, and have always been, Vince McMahon’s shows. That won’t change now. If you follow the booking, Bruce Prichard presents shows and ideas knowing what McMahon likes. Heyman was attempting to build his own new crew, that would be loyal to him, and trying to keep the casualty count low when McMahon would routinely lose interest in the newer wrestlers. The most obvious casualty counts were Ricochet, Shayna Baszler, Cedric Alexander and Humberto Carrillo, who McMahon pretty much took off Raw of late. Heyman was able to protect Black better than most, and Apollo Crews, who was in catering for the most part on Smackdown did an injury angle which bided him some time. Austin Theory and Murphy were aligned with Seth Rollins, which gave them protection ...

Most people we heard from in the company felt like Heyman’s days were numbered dating back a few weeks. It wasn’t any specific thing, past not seeing what Heyman saw in some characters and the ratings and ratings patterns weren’t good.

As far as the talent went, it was a mixed bag. For those Heyman was pushing, they were pretty much all nervous, because, aside from the obvious people whose futures seemed guaranteed strong, Randy Orton, Charlotte Flair, Drew McIntyre and Seth Rollins, most owed their pushes to him. Others, who were not getting television time and in that group, were not as happy with him.

It had been pretty clear that Orton and A.J. Styles, and to a lesser extent Rollins, were there to give rubs and feud with younger talent. But circumstances led to the planned programs falling apart due to WrestleMania and the big picture. The crew Heyman wanted to push as the young stars, Carrillo, Alexander, Black and Ricochet were unable to get planned wins and in some cases the U.S. title because once the direction of WrestleMania came, particularly with Styles working with Undertaker and Orton with Edge, beating either of them went out the window. And given the big picture, it had to until after Mania.

Styles was then moved to Smackdown. There were issues with Styles and Heyman and different people will tell different stories. It had to do with Karl Anderson and Luke Gallows being fired. Styles was extremely upset about it. It was a McMahon decision, and this turned into the classic post-demotion or being let go wrestler interview of “Vince always liked me but that (Jim Ross, J.J. Dillon, John Laurinaitis, pick your name) hated me and screwed me over.” After three decades you’d think the pattern would be obvious. Perhaps Heyman could have argued with McMahon over it, but in the end, even if he had, the end result would have been the same ...

Not only did Raw have a new look this week, but so did NXT, which was patterned with similar changes to Raw, which may mean Vince McMahon has a belief that this is what is needed across the board.

NXT felt like this week’s Raw or Smackdown, with the vomiting angle, shorter matches, and vandalizing babyfaces cars. It’s either the people in NXT copying main roster thinking that’s the change needed, or more likely, the overseer believing these changes are necessary to bring up numbers and beat AEW. For a while it felt like NXT was on its own path and not really being reactive to AEW except on rare times. Since Mania it was built on Charlotte Flair from the main roster and NXT’s overall numbers declined less than the other shows, but that wasn’t the case in18-49 which dropped badly, so the gains were over 50. So now it looks like a change in the pacing and nature of the show. They are doing a quick build to a NXT vs. North American title winner take all match on 7/8 to go against the main event of Fyter Fest, which was very clearly totally reactive ...

As far as the future of Heyman within the company, he is still under a talent contract. Before being promoted to head Raw, he was at every Raw show producing certain talent and pitching Vince McMahon on the key storylines involving pushing of certain characters, most notably Brock Lesnar and Ronda Rousey. Exactly how that fits in with the future won’t be known until Lesnar returns. But Lesnar, in the end, will always have a great amount of control of everything he does ... Lesnar has always heavily relied on Heyman when it comes to both business and in-ring stories of his matches.
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A key when looking at the ratings is not just the numbers themselves and the pattern, but the audience itself. If the rating decline in 18-49 is greater than that overall, which goes for every show in some form except AEW since the pandemic, it indicates a major above previous level aging of the audience. For NXT in particular, but across all brands, what appears to be a lesser decline is more when the older audience stays steady but the younger audience is down a lot. From November to the present, NXT actually fares the worst with the younger audience and of the WWE shows, Raw fares better than the other two, but quickly, that’s also comparing football season with non-football season. For a fairer comparison, using February to now, NXT fares the best among the WWE shows at maintaining audience and Smackdown fares the worst with 18-49s, but for Smackdown that’s also more notable because 18-49s are going out less on Friday and thus, realistically, it should fare the best of the three.

As far as long-term goes, the pattern of November until now, AEW is down 12.0 percent overall and 22.2 percent in 18-49. NXT is down 17.3 percent overall and 37.0 percent in 18-49. Raw is down 17.4 percent overall and 29.2 percent in 18-49. Smackdown is down 17.5 percent overall and 35.9 percent in 18-49. So while nobody was doing well, and AEW is clearly holding its audience better than WWE, Raw was in the younger demo, the one WWE is losing, clearly doing better than either NXT or Smackdown, while all three were roughly the same 17.3 to 17.5 percent drop overall.

The numbers are a little different when you use the pre-pandemic February as the data point to judge by.

AEW averaged 834,000 viewers in November and 0.36. AEW averaged 876,000 viewers in February and 0.32, so up in viewers and down in the key demo and aging up. The last four weeks they averaged 734,000 viewers and 0.28, so the drop is 16.2 percent in viewers and 12.5 percent in 18-49.

NXT averaged 820,000 viewers in November and 0.27. In February that was 760,000 viewers and 0.24. The last four weeks have been 678,000 viewers and 0.17, so the pandemic drop is 7.3 percent in viewers and 29.2 percent in 18-49. Essentially the show has held up better in viewers but has aged greatly.

Raw averaged in November 2,106,000 viewers and 0.72, and keep in mind Raw is hurt a lot by football. In February, bouncing back from football, it averaged 2,334,000 viewers and 0.74, so good increases although still aging. The last four weeks dropped greatly, to 1,739,000 viewers and 0.51, so the pandemic led to a 26.6 percent viewership drop and 31.1 percent in the key demo.

Smackdown averaged 2,462,000 and 0.78 in November. In February, Smackdown averaged 2,543,000 viewers and 0.75, so viewers were up but the viewership was also aging. The last four weeks have averaged 2,031,000 and 0.50. So the pandemic drop has been 20.1 percent in viewers and 33.3 percent drop in the key demo.

Since the key number right now has to be 18-49 or younger, Raw was faring very slightly better than Smackdown in that demo, skewing older, even with the advantage Smackdown had of being on FOX and with the advantage of far more people at home Friday over the past month as compared with February.
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There were two major notes reported by Wrestlenomics regarding the multitude of lawsuits filed against WWE regarding the Middle East situation and misleading stockholders and two confidential witnesses that have come out that are part of changes in the complaint ...

The second is a statement from a former WWE active wrestler who is listed as Confidential Witness No. 2, or CW-2, listing him as working for the company starting in 2012 and working there through April.

The confidential witness was one of the wrestlers who performed on the October 31, 2019, show which was the subject of much controversy regarding the wrestlers being stranded in Saudi Arabia ...

WWE would likely know the identity of the two witnesses since one was the point person for MBC that they were in talks with ...

The wrestler in question, besides the 2012 start date, was one of about a dozen wrestlers on the charter flight to Buffalo that didn’t get there on time for the show. The wrestler also told management he would never go to Saudi Arabia again. He claimed that he heard while on his plane that military police were holding the other wrestlers. He said WWE made comments regarding the story that it was a mechanical failure issue and that WWE denounced the stories that came out as laughable and conspiracies. He said he and another worker at the time went to management and said they wouldn’t go back. We also had heard there was talk about some talent trying to get people to sign a papers saying they wouldn’t go back. It was believed nothing significant transpired from that and as far as the key stars went, on the next show, the same main people, John Cena, Daniel Bryan and Kevin Owens were the only major names who didn’t go. Sami Zayn and Aleister Black didn’t go, Zayn due to Saudi Arabia not wanting him there because he was Syrian and Black because somebody, and we don’t know if it was on the WWE side of the Saudi side, felt his tattoos would be seen negatively in Saudi Arabia due to the religious beliefs in the country. The wrestler in question said that other talent also wanted to not go back and claimed WWE threatened the future trajectory of their careers if they refused to go ...

Obviously when it comes to the arguments in the lawsuit, it is the television negotiations that were the key. If there was trouble after the October show, it’s been quelled since WWE has gone back and has been paid for shows they’ve done since. The lawsuit surrounds the idea that WWE misled shareholders and inflated the stock price based on statements without informing stockholders and the market that there were problems in the Middle East. While the situation from the October show was a news story at the time, the fact the deal is still ongoing means that it led to know long-term economic harm or changes in the lucrative deal.
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For the second time in its history, the WWE declared a match the greatest of all-time before it took place.

The 6/14 Backlash show from the Performance Center in Orlando was built around Edge vs. Randy Orton, billed ahead of time as the greatest match of all-time ...

While most have long forgotten this, in September 1972, prior to the Pedro Morales vs. Bruno Sammartino WWWF title match at Shea Stadium, Vince McMahon, as an announcer pushed the bout in the weeks leading up to it, not only in the New York market but in other markets that they never advertised Madison Square Garden shows in, telling fans they would see “the greatest wrestling match in our lifetime.” The match was a 65 minute (billed as 75 minute) draw, ending with the 11 p.m. New York State Athletic Commission curfew. As the only time the two met, it was historical, and because of the nature of a face vs. face match, completely different from any match either of them ever had in New York, or really, anywhere. The match got mixed reviews, as those who expected the typical Morales or Sammartino match didn’t get it. Some felt two faces exchanging holds for that long was boring. Others felt it was refreshing. Generally it was viewed as good, but not great. Sammartino also talked of this match as a career highlight only because he was forced to do a totally different style match as usual for a long period of time and felt he pulled it off.
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Raw on 6/15 averaged 1,939,000 viewers, the best number for the show since 4/6, the Raw after WrestleMania, which did 2,100,000 viewers. It even beat the 5/11 show’s 1,919,000 viewers which was the show where Becky Lynch announced her pregnancy.

The keys appear to be the PPV bump in the first hour, but also retention through three hours with more angles and talking, less wrestling, and the show-long tease of Christian’s first match in years, Ric Flair appearing live and Big Show returning.

The audience was up 11.6 percent from last week, but in 18-49, the number was identical. The key to the growth was a huge increase in teenage girls and a huge increase in those over 50, plus retaining the over 50 viewers over the three hours far better than usual, which likely ties in with the focus on older performers and Flair, who is a historically big draw to that group, plus Show and Christian who haven’t been around. I don’t believe Christian himself is going to be a ratings changer since Edge hasn’t been, but the show was built around Christian wrestling, whereas Edge never teased an actual television match.

Raw was 12th overall for the night, with the news audience being way down from the past three months. It was fourth among non-news shows. In 18-49, Raw was fifth overall, and beat every news show.

The first-to-third hour overall drop was 7.3 percent, much lower than usual, largely due to a much lower than usual drop of over 50 aged viewers. It also fared better than it has in a long time when compared with last year at the same time, with a 13.2 percent decline in viewers and 25.4 percent drop in 18-49, which in both cases is far better than the show has done in recent months in comparisons ...

The overall first-to-third hour declines were 14.0 percent in women 18-49, 11.6 percent in men 18-49, 12.6 percent in girls 12-17, 27.2 percent with teenage boys and 5.2 percent over 50. The latter is a great improvement over usual while the teenage boys tuning out was far greater than usual.

The first hour did 1,982,000 viewers. The second hour did 1,996,000, the first time since 3/9, the last show in an arena, where the second hour gained viewers, which historically happens most of the time during a normal summer. The third hour did 1,838,000 viewers.

The show did a 0.31 in 12-17 (up 19.2 percent from last week), 0.29 in 18-34 (down 9.4 percent from last week), 0.77 in 35-49 (up 4.1 percent from last week) and 0.95 in 50+ (up 15.9 percent from last week).
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Smackdown on 6/11 did a 1.35 rating and 2,065,000 viewers (a low 1.27 viewers per home), the best numbers for ratings and viewers since 4/17. Most likely the increase had to do with the long build for the A.J. Styles vs. Daniel Bryan IC title match as well as lack of competition since every other network show was a rerun.

The keys are that far more homes watched, but they were single viewer homes, and older viewers than usual.

Smackdown won in 18-49 at 0.5 (655,000 viewers, basically the same as the 656,000 the prior week with the lower overall audience). It’s the same number it’s been locked at for weeks. It also won in 18-34 at 0.3 and tied with a 20/20 rerun for first in 25-54 at 0.7 as well as won in all male demos ...

Last year in the same time slot, FOX had U.S. Open golf coverage which did 2,601,000 viewers and an 0.5 in 18-49, so 20.6 percent overall and the same in the demo.
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Both AEW & NXT were up on 6/17, which probably speaks to the NASCAR race as the key reason the numbers were down last week. In addition, all the increases on both sides were under 50, since over 50 numbers were identical to last week.

AEW did 772,000 viewers and a 0.28 in 18-49 (364,000 viewers), putting it No. 8 for the night in 18-49, and No. 3 among entertainment shows. NXT did 746,000 viewers and 0.20 in 18-49 (262,000 viewers), putting it at No. 25 in 18-49, and No. 9 among entertainment shows for the night ...

Both sides had major gains among teenage girls, with AEW up 87.5 percent and NXT up 221.4 percent from last week when both did poorly. Among teenage girls. AEW still held a 45.3 percent lead over NXT.

AEW won every key demo. In Men 18-34, AEW had 60,000 viewers (up 17.6 percent from last week) and NXT had 31,000 (identical to last week). In Women 18-34, AEW had 34,000 (up 54.5 percent from last week) and NXT had 25,000 (up 25.0 percent). In Men 18-49, AEW had 171,000 (up 16.3 percent) and NXT had 124,000 (up 17.0 percent). In Women 35-49, NXT had 99,000 (up 30.3 percent) and NXT had 85,000 (up 51.8 percent).

It was competitive much of the way with AEW winning five of eight quarters but losing the main event, even though Chris Jericho was in it. AEW won every quarter in 18-49, but the second quarter was as close as its been ...

In the main event segment, NXT with Bayley & Sasha Banks vs. Tegan Nox & Shotzi Blackheart and Io Shirai cleaning house won overall with 757,000 viewers to 705,000 for Chris Jericho & Sammy Guevara vs. Best Friends with the Jericho vs. Orange Cassidy angle, but in the key demo, AEW maintained a strong 367,000 to 264,000 lead, so the difference was those over 50.

NXT also won the first and second quarters. NXT did have the edge with the better lead-in, and that may give them the first quarter, but that usually runs out after ten minutes, and they still had more viewers in quarter two.

In quarter one, AEW opened with 782,000 viewers and 379,000 in18-49 for Kenny Omega & Adam Page defending the tag titles against Dustin Rhodes & QT Marshall. This was AEW’s peak in 18-49. NXT had 793,000 viewers and 264,000 in 18-49 for Fabian Aichner & Marcel Barthel vs. Tyler Breeze & Fandango for the tag titles. This was NXT’s peak in overall viewers.

In quarter two, AEW lost 41,000 viewers and 47,000 in 18-49 for the Anna Jay video package and interview, Jay vs. Abadon and the Dark Order coming out. Given they were introducing a new character that’s to be expected. NXT lost 6,000 viewers and gained 33,000 in 18-49 for the end of the tag title mach, a Velveteen Dream interview and Damien Priest vs. Killian Dain. In 18-49, AEW’s edge was 332,000 to 297,000, the closest quarter hour in a long time. This was NXT’s peak in 18-49.

In quarter three, AEW gained 59,000 viewers and 39,000 in 18-49 for MJF vs. Billy and the post-match brawl. NXT lost 13,000 viewers and 14,000 in 18-49 for the ending of Priest vs. Dain and Xia Li vs. Aliyah with the Robert Stone throw-up spot.

In quarter four, AEW lost 3,000 viewers and 2,000 in 18-49 for Cody and Ricky Starks promos and the beginning of their match. NXT lost 62,000 viewers and 27,000 in 18-49 for the Timothy Thatcher vignette and the Undisputed Era skit where they took Roderick Strong to see the psychiatrist.

In quarter five, AEW lost 2,000 viewers and 4,000 in 18-49 for the ending of Cody vs. Starks and the beginning of Young Bucks vs. Kip Sabian & Jimmy Havoc. NXT gained 33,000 viewers but lost 7,000 in 18-49 for the in-ring with Adam Cole, Keith Lee, Johnny Gargano and Finn Balor.

In quarter six, AEW gained 29,000 viewers and 10,000 in 18-49 for Young Bucks vs. Sabian & Havoc and the Taz & Brian Cage promo. With 824,000 viewers, this was AEW’s overall peak. NXT lost 71,000 viewers and 21,000 in 18-49 for Dakota Kai vs. Kayden Carter, Bronson Reed vs. Leon Ruff and the Reed promo. It was the low point of the show for NXT.

In quarter seven, AEW lost 90,000 viewers and 16,000 in 18-49 for a Jon Moxley promo, Britt Baker & Rebel in the garbage dump and the intros and beginning of Jericho & Guevara vs. Best Friends. NXT gained 53,000 viewers and 25,000 in 18-49 for the angle with Santos Escobar and his group with Drake Maverick, and the beginning of Bayley & Banks vs. Nox & Blackheart for the women’s tag titles.

In quarter eight, AEW lost 29,000 viewers and gained 8,000 in 18-49 for Jericho & Guevara vs. Best Friends and the Jericho/Cassidy post-match. NXT gained 30,000 viewers and 11,000 in 18-49 for Bayley & Banks vs. Blackheart & Nox.
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The ten most-watched shows of the past week on WWE Network were: 1. Backlash; 2. Undertaker’s Last Ride Episode 4; 3. Undertaker’s Last Ride episode 1; 4. Backlash kickoff show; 5. Dream Match Mania: Backlash edition; 6. Undertaker’s Last Ride episode 3; 7. Undertaker’s Last Ride episode 2; 8. Last Ride Post Mortem; 9. Backlash 2018; 10. Raw Talk for 6/15. Neither NXT nor 205 Live cracked the top 15
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The career of David Starr (Max Barsky, 29) appears in jeopardy after a sexual assault charge and public exchange between Starr and an ex-girlfriend named Victoria took place on social media this past week.

This has led to a groundswell of charges on social media, largely involving U.K. wrestlers, but also a number of well known names on the U.S. scene ...

Before the end of the day, accusations were being thrown around that included a ton of name wrestlers and former wrestling performers, including one Hall of Famer. There are at least six performers for the WWE U.K. brand charged in different social media posts, as well as one AEW wrestler by name and second one implied, a top ROH star, an NWA exec and a well known Impact name. Undoubtedly this is the tip of the iceberg and all of these stories and more are likely to unfold over the next week ...

There are different aspects of this, ranging from aggressive hitting on women, using power for sex, sex with underage girls which in a different era was considered one of the fringe benefits during the heyday of territorial wrestling. There was even a phrase that was used when wrestlers weren’t paid well but how the benefits of being a star on television gave access to women that working at a regular job wouldn’t give you. Some promoters hated this because they felt it gave wrestling a bad name and looked the other way, and some outright told talent to lay off because it could hurt the business. Others used it as a lure to get and keep wrestles working for them while not paying them well ...

It’s also known that a woman doing so in pro wrestling throughout most of its history would get extreme backlash and this opened the floodgates to something that is exponentially larger historically than anyone could imagine. This would also be the case in almost every sports or entertainment field. Many of the other cases involve guys coming on to women who didn’t want it but would be inappropriate behavior, and in some cases such as trainer/student or veteran/rookie, in some cases power issues involved, or inappropriate messages sent through texting or social media. In some cases, particularly involving people with power over careers and young women getting started, like in most any form of entertainment, this is going to exist but it shouldn’t exist. In some higher profile industries it has come out and huge names in major entertainment industries have been forced out of the business by stories.
Quote:

After what happened with Hana Kimura, there was concern over a tweet by recently retired Stardom wrestler Arisa Hoshiki. “The human waste is still alive. I’m sorry, sorry for not contributing anything. I’m worthless because I’m a person who makes you notice things I can’t do, but I have a respiratory system so I’m sorry for breathing. Ah, I wasn’t recognized as a person. I’m sorry to call myself a human.” Hoshiki, 24, announced her retirement in May due to head and neck injuries and has been focusing on her music. She has been a victim of cyberbullying, like Kimura, particularly over the past year, and it got so bad she had gone to the police about it
Quote:

There have been a crazy amount of deaths in the Mexican wrestling scene in recent weeks, a lot of which have been COVID-19 related
Quote:

Regarding starting up, Joe Koff said, “Nothing has been confirmed yet, but we are trying to develop what we believe would be safe production in July. Obviously, anything that does get finalized would come with an asterisk as we monitor the daily progressions of the pandemic.

There are multiple reports that ROH is offering no new deals at this time due to not running shows. There are some deals that have expired over the past few months and no new offers have been made. ROH did tape one match with Brody King vs. Tyler Bateman at the New Japan show over the weekend. There was talk of empty arena tapings to cover two months of television as soon as possible in July

Due to the situation in Mexico, the Mexicans on the roster, Rush, Dragon Lee, Bandido, Flamita and Rey Horus, would be the ones in question.
Quote:

While the XFL losses for season one in the bankruptcy filings were said to be less than $50 million, it has been noted that with all of the costs involved in starting up, Vince McMahon had gone through $200 million of what those in the company believed was $500 million that had been committed for three seasons. The XFL is up for bankruptcy bidding so it’s possible it will be restarted, just not under McMahon, who was considering trying to buy it back in bankruptcy court to get out of the money owed people and starting up fresh, but after so much negative reaction from other creditors about the process, he stated he would not be doing so
Quote:

Details are still not known, but Evolve/WWN is said to be finished and it is believed its library and other assets were sold to WWE, but neither side has confirmed or denied the transaction. However, Gabe Sapolsky did send out a message to the Evolve core roster telling them that there are no more plans to run shows and that the core roster secret social page is shutting down. He said that for those in the group he feels you have a good future in the business, it’s not the end of the road, just taking a different path from a fork in the road. Evolve/WWN had not sent out refunds until recently for the canceled WrestleMania week shows due to the company’s financial issues. In April they had stated that they would refund all money but said that it would take some time, so they’ve acknowledged the issues. On 6/18, Sapolsky wrote, “We just got an update from Etix. They’ve made some refunds. The rest will be made in the next week or two. They are working on them and everyone will be refunded. My deepest apologies it is taking this long. I’m not going to make any excuses, but I assure you this has been the foremost thing on our minds and we are doing everything we can to get this done as quickly as possible. I understand if you are angry and upset. You will be made whole if you are owed a refund. Be safe &amp; well.”

Emperor Smeat 06-23-2020 09:19 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
For the second consecutive week, WWE Raw was able to top 1.9 million viewers for a show advertised as “Championship Monday” along with the return of Rey Mysterio, and an update from Edge.

Monday’s three-hour show averaged 1,922,000 viewers, which is on par with last week’s average of 1,939,000. Both weeks finished with 0.53 in the key 18-49 demographic. The three hours of Raw this week finished fourth, sixth, and seventh among cable programming for the evening.

Raw opened with 2,035,000 viewers in the first hour, which is the first time Raw has cracked two million viewers for any hour of the program since the night after WrestleMania on April 6th.

In the second hour, it fell 4% to 1,950,000 viewers and declined another 8.5% in the third hour with an average of 1,782,000 viewers. The show built to the closing angle involving Rey Mysterio’s return alongside son Dominick and a brawl involving Aleister Black and Humberto Carrillo against Seth Rollins, Murphy, and Austin Theory.

The consecutive weeks of audience improvement coincide with the recent creative shake-up where the company announced Bruce Prichard would be overseeing both Raw and SmackDown, while Paul Heyman was being removed from his position on Raw and would retain his on-air role. While the shows are always going to be Vince McMahon produced shows, a change in Raw’s presentation has been evident in the past two episodes.

The key demographics were interesting when it came to the 12-34 audience. The show was a hit with males as they were up 30% from last week, although it declined 11% by the third hour. With females in the same age group, they were down 32% from last week, although that audience stayed consistent for all three hours with no decline in the third hour, which is a rarity for any demographic on Raw.

Every other demo fell in the third hour compared to hour one with the biggest drop among males 18-49 declining by 17% in the last hour.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
One of the patterns we are seeing since the [WWE] creative shake-up is more championship matches on television with three on last week’s Raw and another three this week. The show had a strong audience by current standards last week and assisted by a show-long tease of Christian’s first match since 2014.

Assuming it continues, similar mentality as NXT since it moved to USA Network with the constant tossing of title matches on tv compared to how it was handled before.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
SunSport pushed out their interview with Sonya Deville. Deville was asked for her Mount Rushmore of women’s wrestling and her list included Asuka, Sasha Banks, Bayley, Charlotte Flair and Deville also mentioned Nikki and Brie Bella.

“Yeah, I think (Charlotte would) be on there for sure. I think she’s incredible. I think Asuka’s incredible. Bayley and Sasha, are incredible. Becky, for sure. There’s a lot of women that have paved the way before me, everyone has added something different to women’s wrestling. The Bellas I think are incredibly smart, business savvy women that knew how to build a brand and are incredible in the ring too. I think we’ve all contributed to the success of women’s wrestling and we’re just going to keep going up from here because the talents [have] never been more competitive.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Terri Runnels was a guest on the ‘Kee On Sports’ podcast and Terri recalled being harassed by Brock Lesnar backstage at a WWE event. She said that while she was walking down the hall, Lesnar called her name and opened the towel that was around his waist. At that point in time, Runnels was aware that Lesnar was making his way up in WWE and that the company was going to put the world title on him so he knew that he had pull.

“I don’t have a lot of respect for Brock. I don’t think Brock respects wrestling fans. Brock did something that was, in today’s day in time… I mean he showed his penis to me, and called my name as I was walking past where he was in the dressing room and opened his towel so I could see his manly bits, and I’ve often said when I actually tell that story, I’ve often said — and of course this is me being absolutely [a] smart ass when I say it because I would’ve much rather him not been so disrespectful of a female that’s been in the business as long as I had been and at that point, he was a greenhorn. He knew he was gonna have a lot of power, that they were gonna give him the strap but at that point, I’d been in this business for a long time, I have respect and what he did was very, very wrong from a respect standpoint, from a sexual harassment standpoint. Whatever you wanna look at it [as], it was wrong. But my joke to kind of bring levity to it so I don’t get so darn upset about it is that I’m like, ‘If you’re gonna show me your junk, at least let it be impressive,’ and so like, I don’t know if you know what a pink feeder mouse is that they sell in animal shops to feed snakes. They’re like the mice before they get their little hair on them. Well, that’s basically what that vision was akin to. A pink feeder mouse, and so I’m thinking like, ‘Wow, why did…’ not that it would’ve been any less disrespectful or less sexual harassing had he been hung like a horse, but I mean come on, so, yeah. I mean that’s my only levity as that’s concerned.”

Terri Runnels was a part of a miscarriage storyline on WWE programming with Val Venis. Runnels said that she fought against Vince Russo to put an end to the storyline before it got started. To this day, that storyline still upsets her.

“Oh my God. So that to this day is one of the storylines that I fought and fought Vince Russo over and I lost. Obviously I lost because it happened, right? It was so tone deaf to women and for me personally, even though I told you Dakota [Terri’s daughter] gets the difference between gimmick and real life storylines and stuff like that, I’m like, that’s just one of those things that if her — she’s in school now and if one of her little friends says, ‘Oh my gosh, your mommy’s pregnant. Oh my gosh, your mommy lost her baby’ and like, that’s not a conversation I wanna sit down and try to explain what was even part of what I did with the character. That pissed me off, it upset me and yeah, I fought it and I lost obviously.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
It was first reported by Dave Meltzer on Wrestling Observer Radio that Charlotte Flair is set to undergo surgery and it’s not known if she will be back for SummerSlam or not. Prior to the 6/22 episode of RAW on-which Charlotte Flair was written off TV by way of an attack from Nia Jax, Ric Flair appeared on The Wrestling Inc. Daily podcast and he mentioned that Charlotte would be taking time off and “finishing her commitments up until SummerSlam”.

“I’m hoping that when she finishes her commitments up until SummerSlam or whatever it is — I mean I don’t know. I have no idea. I know she has a TV series looking at her. She’s got fitness people wanting to do work with her. I hope that she takes as long as she wants off so that all these people that can fill her shoes and do that every night have the opportunity. Good luck and God bless that thought.”

Seems Charlotte originally was planning on taking her break after SummerSlam but changed her mind recently.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Ring of Honor’s Marty Scurll was accused of sexual assault on June 22nd by Twitter user @mystickttn, who worked for the promotion IPW:UK at the time of the alleged assault. She was 16-years old at the time and ran into Marty Scurll at a post-show party. Per the story, she was drunk and Marty asked her to go back to the hotel and when they got there, he pulled out his penis and asked her to perform oral sex which she did. Before the situation escalated further, a friend of hers showed up and told Marty to leave.

Scurll has released a statement on Twitter addressing the allegations and made mention that he believes the encounter was consensual and legal since the age of 16 is considered of age in the United Kingdom.

“I am aware that a young woman has bravely come forward with her account of sexual abuse by some members of the wrestling community in the UK 5 years ago, a community I was a part of.

Although I truly believe that our encounter that evening was consensual, and the fact that the encounter was legal; is almost not the point. I understand that she now views our encounter as part of a bigger problem within the wrestling community.

What concerns me at this moment is that from what I have been reading, she is a fan of wrestling and was made to feel unsafe within that community. This is not acceptable. I also understand that people have been attacking her on social media, and I implore you to please stop. She has a right to her voice and it is our responsibility to listen.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
After many women in wrestling shared their stories of harassment and assault by way of Joey Ryan, Ryan’s former tag team partner Candice LeRae took to Twitter to show support for the women that have had these experiences with Ryan over the years.

“I am mortified. I absolutely DO NOT and never have condoned such horrible actions. I have zero tolerance for it. To the women he did this to- my heart breaks for you. I trusted this person. Reading the stories and learning how he acted sickens me. Especially because you all trusted him too. I can’t imagine how YOU felt. For every woman and man who has been brave enough to speak out, I have nothing but love and respect for you.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
On Monday, it was reported that WWE Backstage would not continue in its current weekly format ...

On his Hall of Fame podcast, Backstage co-host Booker T commented on the news.

"We got the news that we're not going to be shooting a weekly series, not right now anyway. I want to think everybody on the Fox family crew and making it work for eight months. Hopefully, the project will be a little different and going to something digital, we don't know just yet. A show like that is something needed to be able to deliver that side of insight. The show last week that I did with Bret Hart really touched me. I never knew that if Bret Hart had a chance to do it all over again, he would have said, 'I'm staying in WWE.' Stories like that for people to hear, it brought something different to the table. Hopefully, we'll be back on track soon and doing it again," he said.

Booker was the co-host of the show alongside Renee Young. The panel of guest hosts included Christian, Mark Henry, Paige, and more. CM Punk also served as a monthly special analyst.

When asked if he would have done anything different with the show, Booker replied, "I wish we could have done things differently at certain times, but some things I wouldn't change at all, like all those suckas I ripped in promo school. I always thought about The View and that format and how they talked about a little bit of everything. To be able to talk about Independent wrestling groups, for instance, NWA, EVOLVE, to talk about how those groups might be no more, that's news. These are stories that are prevalent in professional wrestling and stories that need to be captured."

WWE Backstage largely focused on the week that was on WWE television and had interviews with various superstars.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
PROGRESS Wrestling made structural changes on Monday morning, and on Monday evening they are taking even more action.

PROGRESS announced that the company will shut down until they are happy with the changes they have made, saying they will pioneer the change that the industry needs.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
After being forced to cancel the 2020 event due to the COVID-19 pandemic, WrestleCon is ready for another ride in 2021 in Los Angeles.

The convention has announced WrestleCon will be held at the Westin Bonaventure in downtown Los Angeles from March 25 - 28.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Ring of Honor is dedicating an episode of its weekly television to Hana Kimura.

The company recently announced that an episode of "Ring of Honor Wrestling" taking place in July will do a tribute episode to Kimura, who tragically died in May. Below is what ROH said about the future episode.

"As first announced on “ROH Week By Week,” ROH is dedicating an entire episode of “Ring of Honor Wrestling” to the late Hana Kimura next month. The tribute show will celebrate Hana’s life and feature some of her outstanding matches."

Kimura wrestled for a number of promotions throughout her career, most notably with Stardom, which did a ten-count in tribute to Kimura on a recent show. Kimura has wrestled for Ring of Honor a handful of times, competing in the tournament to crown an inaugural Women Of Honor champion, losing to eventual tournament winner Sumie Sakai in the first round.

Kimura also wrestled at Madison Square Garden at the ROH/NJPW G1 Supercard in 2019 and also in a match at Wrestle Kingdom 14, teaming with Giulia to face Mayu Iwatani and Arisa Hoshiki in a tag team match.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Being The Elite posts statement regarding past episodes featuring Joey Ryan.

Ryan has been accused by multiple women of sexual assault and abuse, leading to him leaving social media and closing down Bar Wrestling. Ryan gained in popularity thanks to Being The Elite, the online show put together by The Young Bucks, Kenny Omega, Brandon Cutler, and more.

On Tuesday's episode of BTE, the crew posted the following statement:

Hi guys and girls. We hope this video provides an escape, or even maybe makes you laugh during these tough times. We love you all.

Out of respect to the victims, we have began the process of taking down BTE videos which featured an accused serial sexual abuser. Our biggest regret is providing a platform unknowingly to such a despicable person. Our hearts go out to the victims and anyone else affected.

- From the BTE Team

Being the Elite #109, which features the Joey Ryan memorial has already been removed along with episodes #82 and #83.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Sarah Logan will be stepping away from the wrestling business.

The former WWE star announced on Instagram that she won't be in the wrestling business "for the foreseeable future." Logan wrestled for WWE in recent years, but was part of the talent releases that were announced back in April.


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 06-25-2020 09:54 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Heading into big summer specials for both Wednesday night shows over the next two weeks, NXT had its biggest ratings success in over four months with last night's show on the USA Network averaging 786,000 viewers ...

In the 18-49 demo, NXT averaged a 0.19 rating, which was actually down five percent from last Wednesday. The show finished 26th on cable TV in that demo.

Dynamite averaged 633,000 viewers, down 18 percent and the lowest number the show has ever done. Dynamite also had a series low with a 0.22 rating in 18-49, down 21.4 percent from last week and 17th for the night on cable. The .03 difference between the two shows in 18-49 is the closest they've been since December 18, the first and only time NXT ever beat Dynamite in 18-49.

The 153,000 difference in total viewers is the biggest win NXT has had to date.

The individual demos were much more competitive this week as AEW usually beats NXT in every category except persons over 50. NXT had a huge advantage in that category again with a 0.42 rating to AEW's 0.26. NXT also won in females 12-34 and the shows tied in females 18-49.

Dynamite won every other demo, but they were much closer. AEW's best category was men 18-49, where they had a 0.29 rating to NXT's 0.23.

The combined audience of 1.419 million was down seven percent from last week but still above the 10-week average.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
The story of the night was AEW falling 18% in viewership and 21% in the key demo and was a show that its audience was not compelled to see but it’s hard to pinpoint the specific reason. The show was presented as a set-up for the upcoming Fyter Fest shows but on paper, had a deeper line up advertised than NXT, which was promoted around the North American title match.

It was AEW’s lowest viewership and 18-49 demo rating in the show’s history since premiering last October on TNT.

NXT improved 5% in viewership while falling 5% in the key demo. It was NXT’s highest viewership since February 19th, so the largest of the empty arena shows, although the key demo rating was down from last week.

Among the key demos, AEW won four, NXT won three, and they were even among females 18-49.

NXT had big increases with females 12-34 up 43% this week, adults 18-34 growing 25%, and adults over 50 improved by 17% and was the widest gap with NXT at 0.42 to AEW’s 0.26 with the over fifty demographic. It was NXT’s largest head-to-head rating in the 50+ demo with AEW, equaling the 0.42 they posted during an unopposed week over the Christmas holidays and highest since September 25th.

AEW was hurt among females 18-49 dropping 28.5%, females 12-34 down 20%, and males 18-49 down 19% in addition to big loss among the main demo. Every category was down for AEW with the smallest loss seen with adults 18-34 that fell by 8%.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
On June 8th, WWE Raw averaged 1,737,000 viewers over the three hours. Programming Insider reports that with the Live+3 numbers, the average would be 2,000,000. The audience increased 15% (263,000 viewers) and the 18-49 demographic increased by 16.5% with the Live+3 numbers.

For the June 10th episode of AEW Dynamite that did 677,000 viewers, the Live+3 numbers bring the average up to 837,000. In the 18-49 demo, Live+ brings the rating up from 0.23 to 0.30. For that week, viewership increased 23.6% in viewers and 32.8% in the main demo. On the same night, NXT did 673,000 viewers and Live+3 increased it by 18.3% to 796,000 viewers and up 34.4% in the 18-49 demo from 0.16 to 0.22.

Link: https://programminginsider.com/live3...-adults-18-49/

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
WWE brought all talents and staff scheduled for this weekend's TV tapings to Orlando yesterday in order to go through a round of drive-through testing for COVID-19 this morning.

Those brought in would be wrestlers and staff who were not sent emails on Monday and Tuesday advising them to get themselves tested due to a newly discovered COVID-19 positive test result. PWInsider.com is also told that anyone who tested negative for COVID-19 earlier this this week will also get tested again today at the PC. If they are not tested again today, they will not cleared to work the TV tapings. Once WWE gets the test results, they will adjust their taping plans according.

WWE is scheduled to tape TV on Friday and Saturday.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
After disclosing that she had contracted COVID-19 for the second time, WWE's Kayla Braxton deleted her Twitter account, citing that she was going to take of her health.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Yesterday, The Governors of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut announced they will be requiring all travelers coming from the State of Florida via flights to quarantine for 14 days upon arrival in those States.

With WWE and AEW each taping in Orlando and Jacksonville, respectively, this could put talents and staff from the Northeast, especially with WWE headquartered in Stamford, CT, at risk of having to quarantine.

In AEW alone, MJF, Private Party, Santana and Ortiz are from the New York City area and would likely fall under the quarantine requirement if they flew out of Florida.

Technically, Vince McMahon would be required to quarantine if he flew into New York (where the WWE's private jet is usually parked) from Florida.

Other States falling under this edict currently are Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, North Carolina, South Carolina, Utah and Texas.

Whether this leads to WWE and AEW talents and staff having to fly in and out of a neighboring State, such as Pennsylvania, remains to be seen.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
WWE has revealed the tagline for July's Extreme Rules pay-per-view.

The PPV is now referred to as "WWE Extreme Rules: The Horror Show" on WWE.com. The event is taking place on Sunday, July 19.

Two matches have been confirmed for Extreme Rules thus far. WWE Champion Drew McIntyre will defend his title against Dolph Ziggler, while Sasha Banks will challenge Asuka for the Raw Women's Championship.

WWE picked a pretty bad time to reveal that tag line for Extreme Rules considering the recent circumstances or just them being tone deaf as usual.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
PWInsider is reporting that CHIKARA is shutting down in the wake of a number of allegations against Mike Quackenbush. CHIKARA talent including Jakob Hammermeier, Hallowicked, Kimber Lee, and Frightmare have resigned from the promotion. Allegations have specifically come out against Quackenbush and Icarus over inappropriate behavior.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
ECCW released a statement saying they have removed people from their promotion following “allegations involving certain members of our promotion”. John Pollock later reported one of these members being Jeff Duncan, the co-owner and booker of the promotion. Duncan gave Pollock the following statement: "I am no longer involved with ECCW. While I deny the allegations, I understand this course of action is best for the company".

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
MLW has announced the signing of Calvin Tankman

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
On Tuesday, David Lagana issued a statement refuting the claim by wrestler Liz Savage that he sexually assaulted her in 2010. After his statement ran on several sites, Savage responded by stating:

"Yes he absolutely did touch me. I put my trust into him as a friend and he violated me."

Previous allegations against Lagana from Matthew Randazzo’s 2008 book Ring of Hell have come up during his time working at WWE from 2002 to 2008. In the book, multiple sources spoke to Randazzo including former WWE writers Dominick Pagliaro and Dan Madigan on the record. Pagliaro alleged that Lagana leveraged his power for sexual favors from both male and female talent. Madigan stated that he believed that WWE’s human resources were compiling a case involving complaints against Lagana prior to his 2008 departure. Madigan believed the company was aware but looked the other way and claimed that a male wrestler was propositioned and led to a veteran wrestler going to Talent Relations over it.

POST Wrestling has reached out to both Lagana and WWE for statements regarding these past allegations and the nature of his departure from the company. When reached by this outlet, Dan Madigan stands by the statements he made in the book.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
I wanted to direct people to a great discussion that Wade Keller and Rich Fann had on the PW Torch site regarding all these issues. I thought the discussion covered a lot of ground, many questions that fans are left to face, the obligation of both management and performers amidst these allegations that are wide-spread, systemic changes necessary, and how the business changes after these scandals. I highly recommend this episode for those seeking analysis on issues broad and specific on these complex stories.

Link: https://www.pwtorch.com/site/2020/06...dustry-89-min/

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
MLW CEO Court Bauer spoke with the New York Post about their new distribution deal with DAZN. It was noted that episodes of Fusion will continue to run on beIN Sports with older episodes and the Opera Cup event currently available on DAZN. Bauer also noted an eventual split from YouTube citing how YouTube underpays unless you have a strategic partnership, which they attempted. He also noted they are under no pressure to return and won’t until there is “some sort of therapy, treatment, and or a vaccine”.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Ring of Honor has put plans to produce an empty arena TV taping in the Baltimore area next month on pause due to the spiking of COVID-19 cases around the country. There is a chance they may attempt to tape in August but nothing is anywhere close to confirmed at this moment.

ROH has an empty arena bout featuring Bateman vs. Brody King that was filmed several weeks back in California for use on a future episode of ROH TV.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Next week's AEW Fyterfest Night One is slated to broadcast live on TNT. Night two will be taped on 7/2.

As a precautionary measure, anyone who had been in contact with QT Marshall or at his gym in Georgia was kept away from last night's taping.

Former WWE NXT talent Cesar Bononi was among those in the crowd at last night's Dynamite episode.

AEW is taping Tuesday's episode of Dark later today ...

John Skyler is slated to undergo surgery tomorrow to repair his ACL, PCL and MCL ...

The references to Liz Hunter and Matt Brock last night during the press conference for Jake Hager vs. Cody were two fictional reporters from Pro Wrestling Illustrated back in the day.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
As noted earlier this week, Impact Wrestling worked feverishly to get a new, reassembled episode of Impact on AXS on the air this week after the termination of Joey Ryan. We are told that it was down to the wire and that they just made it in time to deliver the episode to AXS TV. It was described to PWInsider as "another 30 minutes and we wouldn't have been on the air, at all", according to one source. The same source noted that Impact cannibalized material originally set to air in the weeks to come and the company will have to devise what their plans are for future episodes, but felt that making sure Impact did everything they could to deliver a new episode under any circumstances was the most important goal this week.

[QUOTE=Post Wrestling]Charlotte Flair appeared on the ‘Sport Hiatus’ show and addressed her status in WWE, amid the report that she’ll be stepping away from WWE programming to have surgery. Charlotte stated that she’ll only be absent from TV for a few weeks./QUOTE]

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Chris Jericho will return to the commentary table next Wednesday for AEW Fyter Fest.

Tony Khan confirmed the news on AEW Unrestricted when discussing Private Party vs. Santana &amp; Ortiz, which is scheduled for night one of the event. Khan said, "Chris Jericho is going to be on commentary for this show and Matt Hardy is going to be at ringside. So you have two teams advised by all-time legends."

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
WWE wants to put smiles on faces.

While other sports have shut down during the COVID-19 pandemic, WWE has continued to run. They've moved events to the Performance Center in Florida and have taken certain precautions to protect performers.

Speaking on Sports Hiatus conference call discussing Syncing Sponsorship Value with the Return of Live Action, WWE EVP of Global Head of Sales and Partnerships John Brody commented on WWE's decision to keep running live events during the pandemic.

"The health and safety of our superstars is first and foremost paramount. It comes down to leadership in many ways. Our leader [Vince McMahon] believes we have a social responsibility to put fans first and to help them get a break from what was coming and what we're in the midst of. We have a responsibility to take them away for a few hours and give them a smile and a chance to feel something other than what they're watching, which is also important, on the news. We leaned in to say 'we're going to put fans first' and do everything we can, working with state, local, and federal officials to make sure it's safe for our most important resource, the WWE superstars, and we're going to do whatever we can to deliver content for our partners and our fans," he said.

Brody went on to say that WWE ran from a closed set with essential personnel.

He continued, "We understand the decision other sports made, we wouldn't have made the decision we made if we didn't think we could do it safely for our internal (staff) and for all those affected, but we felt America needed it and needed the 'pick me up.'"

He called pulling off WrestleMania was "superhuman" and that WWE communicated with broadcast partners and sponsors, who were all happy they were able to deliver content.

On Wednesday, it was reported multiple WWE staff and talent had tested positive for COVID-19. The exact number is known, but three people have already stepped forward.


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Emperor Smeat 06-26-2020 11:27 PM

Observer Newsletter ended up getting delayed by a day because of all the recent craziness that has happened in WWE and elsewhere in wrestling.

The Sheets (Observer Newsletter Edition):

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The Pro Wrestling industry in Europe and North America, an industry that has had a male-dominated culture since its inception, was rocked to the core by women this past week with story after story of abuse with names from every significant promotion.

The U.K. scene was hit the hardest, but there were allegations against significant names in every promotion.

When the week was over, Joey Ryan was accused by so many women of inappropriate sexual actions that people lost count (there were at least 16 stories that had come out), and was not only fired by Impact, closed down his Southern California promotion, Bar Wrestling, and it’s hard to believe that his career in pro wrestling isn’t over. His closest friends were shocked, saying they had no idea and many people who knew him as these revelations came out went into some deep depression and soul-searching trying to process the information. One person close to everyone on the Southern California scene said that Ryan’s entire life was wrestling and that nobody had any contact with him since 6/21, and also noted that probably very few tried to get in contact with him either ...

The Bootleg Theater, the home of Ryan’s Bar Wrestling promotion that he founded in 2017, was reported by SoCal Uncensored to have ended their relationship with him and Bar Wrestling events were pulled from the Highspots Network video library. The promotion, which helped springboard Jungle Boy, Luchasaurus and Jake Atlas to getting major contracts, is now shut down.

A number of close friends of Ryan, both performers and several who are not working in the wrestling industry but were close to him, were shocked. Still, there were women in wrestling who were not. One promoter noted to us in detail what a model employee Ryan was, and said he had never heard rumors. Another major independent promoter told us that he believes more people knew and said he had heard and that was the specific reason he never booked Ryan. Another person said that people on the inside on the East Coast have heard rumors for yeas and can’t believe others hadn’t heard.

“To say this was shocking was an understatement,” said someone who would have been considered one of his closest friends who is not directly in the wrestling industry. “I've known him 20 years and have never seen this side. It feels like when the news interviews a murderer's family and they say they had no idea.”
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WWE has fired Jack Gallagher, Travis Banks and El Ligero. Banks, Ligero, David Starr and referee Mark Parry were earlier let go by Progress Wrestling, which has strong ties to WWE.

Jordan Devlin & Scotty Davis, the Progress tag team champions, were both suspended indefinitely by that promotion. Devlin is also WWE co-cruiserweight champion. At press time, WWE has taken no public action against Devlin.

Another WWE NXT U.K. performer, Joe Coffey was claimed to have sent unsolicited inappropriate photos.

Wolfgang’s former fiancé, Laura Ryan, claimed emotional torture and mental illness from the relationship.

Gallagher was accused of, at a New Year’s Eve party in 2014, that he kept pouring her drinks and tried to accost her in the bathroom. She said as she tried to get away, her skirt was ripped and she left the party. There were also screenshots of Gallagher trying to contact the host of the party saying he had no idea of these accusations until they were made public, had no memory of the situation, and wanted to reach out and apologize to her.

Aside from Gallagher, WWE has not taken any public action on anyone. In addition, this past week, another allegation claim was made against Patrick Clark (Velveteen Dream), who had been pushed as one of the top characters in NXT and was in a program with the Undisputed Era. Dream was not on the 6/24 show nor was his name mentioned. AEW suspended Jimmy Havoc, who was sent to rehab with his future in question. They suspended Sammy Guevara without pay and his salary will be donated to a women’s charity.

Violet O’Hara claimed Ligero had indecently assaulted her after she allowed him to lay in her bad when he was in a hotel room she was sharing with others. Ligero denied that, but did apologize to two specific women he trained ...

But he did corroborate other women regarding his role as their trainer ...

Hannah Francesca posted photos of her body bruised up and attributed that to Devlin ...

Matt Riddle has an accusation of a sexual assault against him by female wrestler Candy Cartwright from May 2018 several years back in Evolve in a van that a group traveled together in where other people were there but the claim is they were asleep when this happened. The accusation surfaced publicly on 6/19, the day the A.J. Styles vs. Riddle match was to air. WWE aired the match with Riddle winning a non-title match in his Smackdown debut. We’ve been told WWE has been aware of the claim by Cartwright for more than a year and investigated it.

WWE had made no public comment on the subject ...

But it’s the major UK groups that have key figures like David Starr, Devlin and Banks, among those carrying the scene, likely out of commission. CHIKARA has folded. The NWA, with the resignation of David Lagana, is temporarily shut down since he was behind the producing of all content.

Alex Shane, a key figure in the U.K. scene and the person largely behind the failed World of Sport series, resigned from his position. ROH head of creative Marty Scurll’s future is in question as ROH announced an investigation over allegations, and Scurll himself admitted to a sexual encounter with a 16-year-old. Jim Cornette and Will Ospreay’s names were brought in, although with Cornette, the allegations really center around his wife Stacey and former OVW wrestler Josh Ashcraft ...

Essentially it started with accusations by a woman named Tori claiming that David Starr, her ex-boyfriend, sexually assaulted her, and his response ...

After the Starr allegation last week, the floodgates opened. It’s been an open secret that there is a problem in British wrestling, with the boys will be boys mentality. It was noted that in the industry, everyone heard stories but nobody really knew the extent of them or the veracity of them. And even now, it’s impossible to separate the fact from fiction and the shades of grey in between. It was noted that there was nothing truly substantial with evidence.

Sierra Loxton, a former woman wrestler, was among the first to speak out, which led to others following suit. A Twitter account called Expose Wrestling retweeted every allegation and gained 10,000 followers in 48 hours. Very quickly it went from current allegations to rumors about things decades ago, and a GOTCHA mentality. It was exposed for getting things wrong and posting every accusation, which threatened the credibility of the very real ones that had actual evidence. The account closed, said to be due to threats of legal action from some claiming they were unfairly accused.

There were anonymous claims and fake accounts created. An incredible list of names, even many with no stories involved, were listed.

In the U.K. there are believed to have been several true or widely believed to be true cases passed onto the authorities to deal with and people have been advised not to talk about them any longer until the investigations are completed or it could undermine them.
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In the U.K. the general feeling among many in and around the industry is shock and disgust, and within the U.S., it’s the same but with less fear regarding the future of the business itself. In the U.K. we’re told there is a realization that this has gone on too long, and while hidden in some ways, it’s been in plain sight all along. But the belief is few if anyone, while every knew something existed and maybe even suspected it being very bad, realized the problem was as big as it was ...

There is great concern about the U.K. scene. The popularity of wrestling peaked during the period when the independent scene was also strong in the U.S., with lots of marketable talent all around at the same time. Then WWE started stockpiling talent, first to keep them from ROH and New Japan which were gaining popularity, and then from World of Sport, and even more in the past year, from AEW. AEW itself put together a major roster, and ROH, MLW and Impact started signing up more people to try and fill their rosters and be competitive. Suddenly, the independent scene guys dried up in the U.K. and WWE also had a major decrease in popularity and drawing on recent tours.

Several promotions that relied on so many of the names mentioned, like Progress, OTT and RevPro, are hurt badly. The belief is some companies may not have come back from COVID even if this didn’t happen. The fear is the scene will revert back to the levels of 20 years ago and have to be rebuilt. But to rebuild needs a structure where young people can learn by working a ton of shows, which the top guys were able to do in the past.
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Impact did not announce Michael Elgin was fired or released directly, but did say that he would no longer appear on Impact television. Elgin was named for sending unsolicited dick picture to a woman. He also got into a backstage fight with Sami Callihan arguing about how a three-way match with the two of them and Ken Shamrock would be laid out. Scott D’Amore was said to have broken up the fight. We were told it was shoving with no punches thrown.

Elgin made a statement but didn’t acknowledge anything, just saying, “I appreciate the time and opportunities given to me with Impact. That locker room, the film crew and all the company officials were a pleasure to be associated with. I hope that in time things get sorted. For now I have to look at the bright side, I have more time to spend with my son and reclaim time that has been missed.”
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CHIKARA Pro Wrestling is being shut down after allegations against owner Mike Spillane (Mike Quackenbush) as well as the wrestler Icarus. In addition, Spillane is expected to be leaving as head trainer of the Wrestle Factory school in Philadelphia.

CHIKARA is an 18-year-old company based in Pennsylvania that has run shows all over the world, and has at times for big shows brought in some of the biggest legends in pro wrestling internationally.

Among the charges making the rounds were someone stating a CHIKARA wrestler bragged about photos of a bruised up woman who was underage who he claimed “liked it rough.”

There were a number of tweets from regulars with the group regarding quitting.
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Vicky Haskins, who has worked for ROH alongside her husband Mark Haskins this year, claimed Brian Dixon, the U.K. promoter instructed a photographer to take upskirt photos of her for his private collection when claiming they were for a program. She said she and her husband confronted the photographer, and then Dixon, who profusely apologized and begged them not to tell his family.

Alex Shane, a longtime promoter, wrestler, announcer, trainer and reporter, was accused by a woman of repeatedly getting her then 15-year-old sister drunk and having sex with her, and taking photos of the encounters and doing so and calling it “The Wall of Shane.” The girl committed suicide and the sister said it was not exclusively due to Shane but she thinks it was part of the reason.

Shane denied it but resigned from his job at WrestleTalk ...

She said she sent out feelers on 6/19 looking for responses to the issues.

She said nine people called her, four women and five men. One of the women told her that her trainer had taken out his dick and tried to get her to have sex with him in the shower. One of the guys told her he had touch his coach's penis when he was still underage and had to drink urine.

Gabert indicated she suffered sexual abuse after she started her career in 2001, implying it happened very early on. She says she has since forgiven the people involved and spoke to current trainees who insist things are different today.

She claims a ref in England touched her breasts and that her time in WWE was a nightmare. She had feared for her safety but doesn't want to say more than that because she fears retaliation.

She said when she came to the U.K., she was part of systematic problems.

She also talked about how women in Europe knew that if you complain, you don’t get booked.
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During a week of ugliness, a second terrible story broke out with a COVID outbreak within WWE that also impacted AEW.

Details are sketchy because WWE literally has said nothing, not to talent, not to anyone. What we do know is that they were scheduled to tape two weeks of Smackdown and Raw on 6/26 and 6/27,and all shows have had to be rewritten multiple times because of talent that won’t be available.

Renee Young, Kayla Braxton, Jamie Noble and Adam Pearce are the only official names because they, for their own reasons, decided to go public with positive tests ...

We do know that Young did it on her own and the company did not know she was going to do it. I can’t imagine Noble or Pearce doing it without getting a go-ahead, but none of the actual in-ring talent has done. While there are names bandied about of people who have failed, none are confirmed.

One of the NXT talents in the audience had gotten sick and on her own, was tested. WWE alerted the media and talent of this on 6/15, and canceled tapings on 6/16 for a test for all performers, production people and staff who worked the tapings, as well as for friends and families of talent that were allowed in as fans starting on 6/15 ...

Talent was brought in a few days early for testing scheduled for everyone involved, including the fans, from 6/23 to 6/25. It was the tests on the first day that had multiple positives, and there were evidently more as the week went on. Literally nobody knows anything about how deep the problems are except for perhaps the few top people in charge.

The first person to publicly come forward, Young, had not been tested this week but she felt sick early in the week with symptoms similar to COVID, and because she was aware of having worked the taping that one of the NXT women tested positive after, she was home and she and Jon Moxley both were tested on their own on 6/22 ...

Rumors on Young started that day (6/24) because AEW reported that Jon Moxley, her husband, QT Marshall and all of Marshall’s students wouldn’t be at the live television tapings for reasons related to COVID ...

In the case of Marshall, it was someone not related to the wrestling business. But because he did, the decision was made not to risk having he or his students, who were exposed to him, including television performers Anna Jay, Alan Angels (one of the masked men in the Dark Order) and Lee Johnson, brought in.

With Moxley being pulled at the same time stories came out about a WWE outbreak, it was clear people would make assumptions and start speculating. Young came right out and said what the situation was, which did not go over well in WWE as her telling the public. WWE still at this point has yet to acknowledge the cases or inform the performers and their families of the extent of the outbreak ...

It’s also notable that neither Vince McMahon, Kevin Dunn, Paul Levesque or Mark Carrano contacted her as of 6/25 to ask how she was doing, although a lot of talent did. For the record, she had improved from the worst, At last word on 6/25 she was tired and her chest felt heavy, which were the main issues, and her cough had gotten better. The belief was that she had already been through the worst.

Moxley was told by AEW’s doctor to isolate himself and if he doesn’t test positive or show symptoms he should be okay for 7/2, when he has his scheduled Fyter Fest title match with Brian Cage. But it’s not that simple. He made the call not to leave and go to a hotel, both for not wanting to leave his wife alone in case she gets worse, and also the fear of if he has it, infecting people at a hotel. They are isolating themselves in different parts of the house and he will be taking multiple tests this week and everything else will play itself out. As far as a worst case scenario, if he ends up testing positive, obviously his match would have to be delayed until a full recovery. If not, while 7/2 is the taping date, they could potentially do an empty arena match as late as 7/8 and it would be on the show scheduled.

With Pearce, there was a lot of concern since he worked so closely with both Bruce Prichard, who is 57, and very heavy, and Vince McMahon, who is 74. In addition, Ric Flair, who is 71, and has had numerous major health issues in recent years, was one of the performers who appeared on both days of tapings last week when the breakout took place. As of last word, Flair was not experiencing any health issues ...

While it can’t be pointed out with surety, the belief is the person responsible for this latest outbreak was a female NXT performer in the stands.

Producer T.J. Wilson (who wrestled as Tyson Kidd), came to testing on 6/25 with a fever. Both he and wife Nattie Neidhart tested negative for COVID in I believe two different tests, but as a precautionary measure, the company asked both to sit out this weekend even though she was fine
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Regarding the mandating of masks in Orange County, FL, where WWE starts taping again on 6/26, it will not apply to the WWE television shoot. Those in WWE have said the mandate is for all public places and the Performance Center is not under that category.

Yet another issue related to this and theoretically a major one is that Governors Andrew Cuomo of New York, Phil Murphy of New Jersey and Ned Lamont of Connecticut together issued an order that everyone who leaves the state for a number of different states where the outbreaks are high right now, in particular Florida, must quarantine for two weeks before they can return to society.

With both WWE and AEW taping in Florida, this affects some AEW talent, notably MJF, who lives in Long Island, Brodie Lee in Rochester, NY, and maybe others, as well as the entire executive branch of WWE.

Those at AEW were hopeful that the fact everyone was being tested while in Florida would allow their talent to return home without quarantine. Where it becomes an issue is that even if you do it once, with AEW taping every other week, it almost makes it silly to even go back home. But there are also people with families. At this point it is unknown how this will affect next week’s tapings.

WWE did not respond to any questions on this, nor much of anything on the subject at all past that they now are scheduled to test weekly.

We do know that the plan going forward to subvert the quarantine, including this week, was for the people in those states to instead fly out of Philadelphia to Orlando, and back to Philadelphia, and drive from there back to Connecticut or New York for those who live there. Even though that is very much a violation of what the governors want and can be punishable by a $1,000 fine (in New York the potential fines are $2,000 for a first offense and $10,000 for subsequent offenses), the reality is they are not blockading the border of New Jersey driving in so there is a large Philadelphia loophole. It does go against the very thing the Governors are trying to avoid, but it’s an exceedingly low-risk of getting punished. WWE had also thwarted similar regulations months ago, when New York was in such bad shape and Florida had regulations not allowing people to fly into their state, and WWE moved all flights at that time to Philadelphia to get around the statute
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WWE had planned to start taping with crowds in Florida. They have contacted a company for local people for a Friday and a Monday in late July (7/24 and 7/27 were the dates being bandied about) for live televison shoots at the RP Funding Center in Lakeland, FL, an 8,000 seat arena. The plans was to allow fans but to have social distancing, so limiting crowds to a percentage of capacity. Last word is that may be pushed to August, but the July dates were originally set to be announced this coming week because Vince McMahon was determined to be the first person to run a live indoor sports event with a crowd.
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FOX made a decision on 6/22 to cut back on WWE, boxing and MMA shoulder programming on FS 1.

Both the WWE Backstage show and a similar weekly boxing and soccer show were canceled immediately. FS 1 aired a repeat of a previous episode of WWE Backstage in the time slot on 6/23.

The changes were not due to COVID but due to the feeling FS 1 was spending too much on the shows considering the ratings the shows were drawing ...

According to WWE officials, the Tuesday FS 1 taped prime time programming such as old PPVs or WWE Network documentary shows will be continuing.

There will be no change to Smackdown programming on Fridays ...

FOX said that Backstage was done as a weekly show but occasional episodes would be done building up a few major shows per year, but with the production and on-air staff of the three talk shows let go, it would probably be scaled down if it even does return, and internally some are saying the show will not be returning.
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The 6/24 Wednesday Night War had a stunning result, as NXT had its second biggest audience of the year while AEW had the lowest audience in its history.

NXT did have the stronger main event by far on paper with the Keith Lee vs. Finn Balor vs. Johnny Gargano North American title match leading to the title vs. title match on 7/8 with Adam Cole. But much of NXT was video packages and short matches, none of which looked like ratings movers ...

AEW was coming off good shows, and this show, live (not that it matters) was entertaining most of the way even without any ratings matches. Chris Jericho did a show-ending angle with Orange Cassidy while Cody was involved in a press conference.

NXT did 786,000 viewers, second best of the year behind only the pre-pandemic 2/19 show that did 794,000, but only 0.19 in 18-49, as the gains were almost all over the age of 50.

But AEW did 633,000 viewers, it’s all-time worst, and a 0.22 in 18-49, also its all-time worst. AEW was down heavily everywhere and NXT was up significantly in 18-34 and 50+, while 35-49 was down heavily for both groups.

As far as the margin for viewers, it was the largest win for NXT in history, and not on a night where that was expected based on he respective shows. There is a theory that the news in wrestling of the week left a bad taste more with AEW fans, because they are more inside wrestling social media based, but NXT’s numbers of older fans went so far up while AEW’s declined greatly, so most of the difference was over 50 fans switching to NXT, as well as teenagers.

AEW was No. 17 for the night in 18-49 and No. 8 among non-news shows ...

NXT was No. 26, overall and No. 12 among non-news shows ...

NXT was up 5.6 percent in viewers and down 5.0 percent in 18-49. AEW was down 18.0 percent in viewers with no real explanation, and 21.4 percent in 18-49, with big losses in every age group except 18-34. NXT was No. 16 in Males 18-49 and No.7 among non-news shows.

AEW did a 0.08 in 12-17 (down 38.5 percent), 0.12 in 18-34 (down 7.7 percent), 0.32 in 35-49 (down 25.6 percent) and 0.26 in 50+ (down 16.1 percent) ... So basically record lows with teens and 35-49s.

NXT did 0.13 in 12-17 (up 8.3 percent), 0.10 in 18-34 (up 25.0 percent), 0.28 in 35-49 (down 12.5 percent) and 0.42 in 50+ (up 16.7 percent) ...

Due to a Nielsen glitch and other work in getting the show done, further information on the Wednesday shows won’t be available until next week’s issue, although AEW only won one quarter, the second, overall and won six of eight in 18-49, but the final 30 minutes saw NXT ahead of AEW in 18-49. The main event segment from a viewership standpoint was an 852,000 to 552,000 margin for NXT, even more notable since AEW had Matt Hardy, Chris Jericho and Orange Cassidy featured in those last 30 minutes.
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Raw on 6/22, billed as Championship Monday, with four title matches plus Edge and Ric Flair prominently advertised, did 1,922,000 viewers and 0.53 in 18-49.

The viewership number was the second best for the show since the Raw after WrestleMania, just trailing the 1,939,000 for last week’s show ...

The 0.53 is what the last Paul Heyman show did and in the range of what his shows were doing, so the gains are mostly with viewers over the age of 50, which makes sense due to using more established stars from the past and limiting screen time for newcomers. There is also a concentration on lots of talking and less wrestling.

Raw was 14th on cable and fourth among non-news shows. In 18-49, it was No. 5 for the night, behind three episodes of 90 Day Fiancé and Below Deck Mediterranean.

As compared to last year, the show was down 15.6 percent overall and 27.4 percent in 18-49, both better than it had been doing.

The first hour did 2,035,000 viewers, making it the first hour to hit two million since 4/6. The second hour did 1,950,000 viewers. The third hour did 1,782,000 viewers ...

Really, as far as changes from last week, most demos were even but teenage boys were way up and teenage girls were way down.
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Smackdown on 6/19 did a 1.34 rating and 2,072,000 viewers (a very low 1.28 viewers per home) and 0.5 in 18-49 (664,000 viewers) , up 7,000 in total viewers from the week before and making it the best number the show has done since 4/17.

The numbers are higher likely because less network competition, as with the exception of a Juneteenth special on ABC, everything else during those two hours on the networks were reruns.

The rating was down 0.7 percent from last week, viewers were up 0.3 percent and 18-49 was up 1.4 percent, so essentially it’s the exact same thing.

The show has been doing a consistent 0.5 in 18-49 since the drop from the pandemic ...

Last year this week FOX has rerun programming that averaged 1,462,000 viewers and 0.4 in 18-49, so was up 41.7 percent from what FOX had in the time slot last season, and up 25.0 percent in 18-49.
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Regarding DVR viewership, Raw on 6/8 gained 263,000, AEW on 6/10 gained 160,000 and NXT on 6/10 gained 123,000 over the next three days via DVR. The UFC show on 6/8 only gained 61,000 so UFC is largely not DVR’d. The final episode of Total Bellas gained 453,000 over the next three days, a gain of 65.3 percent from the original airing. This was the episode where Nikki Bella revealed the sex of her baby that did tremendous numbers live as well
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Bushiroad released its February to April business report. New Japan isn’t broken down specifically, but they do have a category of sports business, which is mostly New Japan revenue although does include Knock Out, the kickboxing promotion Bushiroad recently sold, and Stardom in these numbers ...

The other key note is that even after three-and-a-half months between shows, the New Japan World subscription numbers stayed steady, although no actual number was given, but the usual range is 100,000 to 125,000 depending on the time of the year, higher during G-1 and early January

The company has announced a new U.S. based weekly show on New Japan World called Lion’s Break Collision. It will air every Friday night at 10 p.m. Eastern, no doubt timed to start when Smackdown ends. The first show will be 7/3 with Clark Connors vs. Alex Coughlin and Jeff Cobb & Rocky Romero vs. TJP & Karl Fredericks. Actually it sounds like a New Japan version of the old 205 Live, where you had great matches and little crowd reaction because for now it’s empty arena shows. Besides guys that have worked for New Japan and live in the U.S., other names as part of the first taping last week were Danny Limelight, The DKC, Tom Lawlor and Rust Taylor. MLW positioned it as Lawlor representing MLW in interpromotional matches on the New Japan show which is notable because New Japan had worked exclusively with ROH and still maintains that relationship.
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El Fantasma, who is the father of the WWE NXT cruiserweight champion and head of the Mexico City Box y Lucha commission, said that they are aware of at least 30 different deaths of wrestlers since 5/1, both active and retired. He said that his impression is that 90 percent of them were COVID related. This was the second straight week of ridiculous numbers of deaths of Mexican pro wrestlers.
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The WWE Network programming is essentially all Undertaker as far as viewing goes. The top ten shows for the past week were: 1. Undertaker’s Last Ride episode five; 2. Undertaker’s Last Ride episode four; 3. Adam Cole’s Undisputed Best; 4. Undertaker’s Last Ride episode one; 5. Backlash 2020; 6. Undertaker’s Last Ride episode three; 7. Undertaker’s Last Ride episode two; 8. Raw Talk (which is in the post-Raw time slot where it should be No. 1 most weeks); 9. Best of Undertaker; 10. Last Ride post-mortem with A.J. Styles

Emperor Smeat 06-30-2020 09:14 PM

The Sheets:

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Originally Posted by Observer
Going to the past when it comes to wrestling usually works the first time, but the shelf life of doing so is limited.

And thus after a few weeks of doing that, Raw fell last night to 1.74 million viewers, tying its third worst mark in the modern history of the show. The show did a 0.49 rating in 18-49, which tied for the second lowest in history, behind only the May 4 episode.

The audience was down 10 percent from last week and 18-49 was down eight percent from last week. The audience was down 24 percent from the same week last year.

Raw finished 25th overall in viewers and tied for fourth in 18-49. Raw was first in males 18-49 and first in males 12-34 and fifth in 18-34 ...

Raw had seen ratings rise in recent weeks by relying on older wrestlers like Ric Flair, Big Show, Edge, and Christian to success, and going to less wrestling and more talking. But this week that same format saw the show revert back to the level that the show had been doing focusing on the newer talent.

The three hours were:

8 p.m. 1.86 million viewers
9 p.m. 1.75 million viewers
10 p.m. 1.59 million viewers

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Originally Posted by Fightful
Baron Corbin feels like you should have to earn your shot at the King.

Matt Riddle is the latest Superstar to join the SmackDown brand. Upon his arrival, he defeated Intercontinental Champion AJ Styles in a non-title match. When it comes to his first rivalry, it looks like the “Bro” may be setting his sights on royalty.

According to a report from Gary Cassidy of Sportskeeda, Baron Corbin is not happy about being positioned as the first rivalry for Riddle on the main roster. Reportedly, Corbin feels that Riddle should have to defeat five enhancement talents before facing him. However, this has been the plan for Riddle for quite some time as illustrated by the fact that Baron Corbin eliminated Matt Riddle from both Survivor Series and the Royal Rumble.

Riddle vs. Corbin has been the plan internally for months but Baron Corbin only found out about the plans within the past week.

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Originally Posted by Pst Wrestling
Roman Reigns (Joe Anoa’i) spoke with The Hindu Times and discussed his decision to remove himself from WWE’s tapings back in March ahead of WrestleMania. Reigns said it was due to his wife and him having twins and not wanting to expose them to the virus. Reigns did do one empty arena episode of SmackDown with a contract signing with Bill Goldberg prior to Reigns removing himself from WrestleMania.

"The decision was taken mainly because each performer travels so much, and we are all such a diverse group and from all over the place. I’m not convinced, and I can’t trust the fact that everybody is taking it as seriously and locking themselves down at home like I am. I trust my life with my co-workers every time I step foot in the ring, but I just can’t put the same trust when it has my children, my wife and my family involved.

But I don’t want it to come off as I am taking a stand against the company at all, because I love the WWE. I’ve been a part of this company just since I was a little boy. That’s why I always take it so personally when I represent them."

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Originally Posted by Observer
WWE is promoting that this Wednesday's episode of NXT will feature limited commercials.

That was announced during an advertisement that aired on tonight's Raw. This week's NXT is the first night of the Great American Bash.

The Great American Bash is taking place over the next two weeks of NXT and is going up against both nights of AEW's Fyter Fest.

NXT had limited commercial interruption for its October 2, 2019 episode, which was the show that went up against Dynamite's debut and was the first time NXT aired on the USA Network for its full two hours. The Adam Cole vs. Finn Balor NXT Championship match on the December 18 episode of NXT was also presented commercial-free.

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Originally Posted by Observer
Ricochet will be the subject of the next episode of WWE 365.

"An incredible year for @KingRicochet takes center stage THIS SUNDAY on an all-new #WWE365," WWE announced today. The episode will premiere on demand on the WWE Network at 10 a.m. Eastern time on Sunday (July 5) and will also air on the WWE Network live stream at 8 p.m. Eastern time that night.

WWE 365 is a documentary-style series that focuses on one wrestler over the course of a year.

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Originally Posted by Fightful
Tessa Blanchard was fired by IMPACT Wrestling on June 25, days before her contract with the company was set to expire. Blanchard was the reigning IMPACT World Champion when the decision was made to terminate her contract.

Fightful Select reported Blanchard's contract was expired on June 30 and there is no non-compete clause attached, meaning she is free to sign with any promotion.

According to Dave Meltzer of the Wrestling Observer, WWE has sent out feelers towards Blanchard. Alex McCarthy of talkSPORT adds that a source close to Blanchard told talkSPORT that WWE is the "likely landing spot" for Blanchard.

The source also noted to McCarthy that they didn't believe Tony Khan and AEW were interested. Tessa's father Tully currently works for AEW.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
On Google search charts for the past week, Dustin Poirier was the No. 5 most searched term in the U.S. yesterday with more than 100,000. Mike Perry was no. 10 with 100,000. On Friday, Dave Bautista was No. 16 with 50,000 for the Love Walk in Tampa that he and Titus O'Neil spearheaded. The Rock was No. 20 on Thursday with 50,000 because he's The Rock. And the dubious distinction of the most searched for name over the past week in pro wrestling, boxing or MMA is Sammy Guevara with 200,000 on Monday. Guevara is the only name from any Speaking Out stories that got any traction at all mainstream, and the WWE's COVID breakout also got nothing.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
While appearing on Busted Open Radio, Cody discussed NXT’s Great American Bash: “So there are two events. People, I think sometimes mistakenly think Dusty just named Starrcade and Great American Bash, and it’s well beyond naming them. It’s a matter of booking them, of marketing them, of the creation of what the event stands for, especially at the advents of pay-per-views. My dad always told me that Starrcade was for my sister and that Great American Bash was for me and obviously at the time he came up with these events, I’m not sure if that was actually the case but that’s what he told me and that’s why it’s very special, both events to me and my sister. I’m not going to get angry, because it still brings up his name in a positive way. The marketing of the event reminds me a lot of what Disney currently does. If you go to Disney World, they still sell Haunted Mansion shirts and they are all done retro-style. That’s something that’s been marketed really well. They market nostalgia. If you run a sizzle with Sting and Dusty Rhodes and Hulk Hogan, none of those guys are gonna be there. So it’s a unique marketing thing. I’m not really upset about it. I know my sister was kind of -- really thought it was so strange it was announced willy nilly, last minute. In the strangest of ways, I would hope that they do something special with it. I think our show is better. I think it will be better in execution but I hope they do something special with it because I hated what Michael Hayes did with Starrcade. He took a creation of my dad’s and he made it a live event because they weren’t selling any tickets in North Carolina and he wanted to save his job, and that was disappointing to me in terms of that was the premier event in World Championship Wrestling and the NWA and you did what you did with it and the same I hope is not what happens with Great American Bash. I’m not upset at anything that brings my dad’s name in a positive light. Is it a weird feeling? For sure, but I’ve also been in a tag match with my brother competing ratings-wise against the Dusty Rhodes Tag Team Classic. One guy who I’ll never mind competing with is my own dad. I’ll never mind that and The Great American Bash… it is what it is and I hope that they do something positive with it. That’s really the only outlet I have on it unless I had like three or four Bourbons and then I would have an absolutely different outlook on it. But I like that they bring his name up in a charming and loving way. I just hope it’s not another Starrcade situation.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Cody also shared high praise for Ricky Starks who received his AEW contract after facing Cody for the TNT Title at the Dynamite tapings. Cody thinks Starks has a certain presence that was missing from AEW and is proud that Ricky earned his spot in the company.

“I’ve loved every match I had [as TNT Champion]. Ricky Starks is such a unique example too. The open challenge was not intended on, ‘Let’s give people a job.’ That’s not what it was intended on and if you win the title, of course you’re gonna become an AEW — a member of our roster but in the case of Ricky Starks, as soon as I got in the ring, I looked at him and thought, ‘Man he’s got a swag. He’s got a presence that we’re missing in some areas here’ and Tony Khan thought the exact same thing. As soon as he walked back through the curtain, that was a done deal and it was something that I had not planned for so I was really proud of Ricky Starks and proud of the open challenge for being able to do that.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Karl Fredericks has graduated from the NJPW LA Dojo and is no longer a Young Lion. His matches at NJPW Lion’s Break Collision will be his first since graduation. Fredericks was originally supposed to face KENTA in the New Japan Cup prior to that tournament being affected by the coronavirus pandemic

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
A number of NXT UK talents have taken to social media over the last few hours, noting their excitement about soon being back in the ring.

We are told that while there was a lot of speculation about a conference call held today with members of the talent roster, the call was more or less a chance for WWE officials to touch base with the NXT UK roster, telling them to be ready to get back to work when the time was right. Tahere's been talk of taping material for NXT UK soon but nothing is concrete in terms of when that will be. WWE obviously has a plan as last week's TV episode saw talents beginning to cut promos and teasing rivalries again, as opposed to just overviews of older content.

Talents were also made clear that any future allegations against talent will be taken seriously by the company and that WWE would be taking an extremely hard-line stance against them. That falls in line with what PWInsider.com has heard over the last week, which is that the company won't tolerate any future issues and will be very quick to release and suspend talents and even revoke potential new deals from talents should anything come up.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
It was reported this morning that WarnerMedia, the company that now oversees the former Time-Warner, will be selling off CNN Center in Atlanta, GA.

CNN Center has been the centerpiece of what used to be Ted Turner's empire for decades and for most of its existence, was the headquarters of World Championship Wrestling when that promotion was owned by Turner Broadcasting from late 1988 through 2000. The building is the world headquarters of the CNN cable news network, having broadcast there since 1987.

WCW was even featured in the official CNN Center tour at one point, with the old NWA United States Tag Team Championship belts being displayed among the Turner assets at the onset of the tour and clips of WCW shown in video packages featuring during the tour. For a time, there was also a dedicated area for WCW on the ground floor of CNN Center, which allowed those passing by to watch WCW content being edited on scene through windows.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Pro Wrestling ZERO1 is hosting an emergency press conference on July 11th, which is the 15th anniversary of Shinya Hashimoto’s passing, who is the founder of the promotion.

Recent news and rumors from Japan about the promotion's future are not good. Currently dealing with a very dire financial situation caused by the coronavris pandemic.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Comicbook.com has an interview with The Undertaker that they ran last week and during that interview, Undertaker talked about his biker persona and feeling that more could’ve been done with that version of his character.

“I think we cut that off. We cut that off kind of early when we did the American Badass the first time. I think we could have got a little more mileage out of it, but, it was a different variation. It was an older iteration of it. The American Badass has got a few more years on him. He’s a little more grizzled even. And there were still so many I think, aspects of The Undertaker you could see in there, so I think it was just like I’ve wrapped everything all together. And I think those people were really excited.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Per the official Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse website, WWE has scheduled a RAW TV event at the arena for September 28th. The Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse is in Cleveland, Ohio and it’s noted on the website that the Cleveland show was scheduled for April 17th but has been postponed to September 28th. All tickets purchased for the April show will be honored in September. Ticket information can be found at this link.

The last time that WWE ran a show in an arena was on March 9th in Washington D.C. which was an episode of RAW. The COVID-19 outbreak forced the sports-entertainment company to relocate their product to their Performance Center in Orlando and they’ve utilized Full Sail University for NXT. The Performance Center is where WWE’s last four pay-per-view events have taken place and the forthcoming Extreme Rules: Horror Show pay-per-view will emanate from the P.C. as well.

According to Fightful, WWE is currently looking at a potential July 31st date for a return to running events outside of the Performance Center based on their current events schedule.


TPWW Frontpage:

drave 07-01-2020 08:27 AM

Quote:

Reportedly, Corbin feels that Riddle should have to defeat five enhancement talents before facing him.

Corbin IS enhancement talent. What an ego for a dude who has done fuckall except shave his balding head and put on a shirt. Still boring as fuck.

Ol Dirty Dastard 07-01-2020 08:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by drave (Post 5355118)
Corbin IS enhancement talent. What an ego for a dude who has done fuckall except shave his balding head and put on a shirt. Still boring as fuck.

My guess is that this was a worked-shoot kind of interview, and he was just in character.

drave 07-01-2020 10:59 AM

He's horrible, none the less. He has "go away" heat because he's bland as fuck.


Someone had it right when they said he just looks like an angry bartender. Then he added a crown and some faux fur.

drave 07-01-2020 11:00 AM

Best thing about Corbin


<iframe width="910" height="512" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/yVu1FCGbHko" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>

Ol Dirty Dastard 07-01-2020 11:08 AM

i fucking can't stand corbin. He is a reason not to watch.

drave 07-01-2020 11:18 AM

I still get e-mails from the "WWE Fan Council" where they survey you on previous events as well as stuff they plan for the future.


Each time Corbin came up, I always answered "get him off the TV, he is horrible.

Damian Rey 2.0 07-01-2020 11:28 AM

He was good for about 5 minutes when he was just destroying guys in record time. Once that gimmick ran its course it was obvious how meh he was. And yet, here we are, years later, with him getting prominent tv time.

Evil Vito 07-01-2020 11:34 AM

I didn’t mind Corbin in 2016 when they brought back the roster split. But at the same time they didn’t overuse him like they do now.

Cannot possibly imagine what they see in him to make him such an omnipresent part of programming.

drave 07-01-2020 12:51 PM

A lack of heels.

Lock Jaw 07-01-2020 01:08 PM

When Drew McIntyre/Baron Corbin/Bobby Lashley were the top heels of RAW I felt like we were in the bleakest of times

drave 07-01-2020 01:11 PM

hellish, one might say.


Doubtful I was watching, but glad I wasn't from the sound of it.

Lock Jaw 07-01-2020 01:14 PM

Just endless months of Roman Reigns/Seth Rollins vs. some combination of those three

Jordan 07-01-2020 02:11 PM

I am a Corbin fan. He eats great cuts of beef and drinks good liquor, a true king!

Evil Vito 07-01-2020 03:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lock Jaw (Post 5355187)
Just endless months of Roman Reigns/Seth Rollins vs. some combination of those three

And it was only like a year and a half ago. I checked out around that time and just shook my head reading the results.

Emperor Smeat 07-01-2020 07:07 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
On 6/26, WWE applied to trademark "Wrestle War" for G & S: Entertainment services, namely, a show about professional wrestling; entertainment services, namely, the production and exhibition of professional wrestling events rendered live and through broadcast media including television and distributed via various platforms across multiple forms of transmission media; providing wrestling news and information through broadcast media including television and distributed via various platforms across multiple forms of transmission media; providing information in the fields of sports and entertainment through broadcast media including television and distributed via various platforms across multiple forms of transmission media; providing a website in the field of sports entertainment information.

Of course, Wrestlewar was the title of WCW PPVs held from 1989 through 1992, including the final chapter of the Ric Flair vs. Ricky Steamboat trilogy.

WWE also applied to trademark "Bella Army" for G & S: Entertainment services, namely, wrestling exhibitions and performances by a professional wrestler and entertainer rendered live and through broadcast media including television and radio, and via the internet or commercial online service; providing wrestling news and information via a global computer network; providing information in the fields of sports and entertainment via an online community portal; providing a website in the field of sports entertainment information; fan club services, namely, organizing sporting events in the field of wrestling for wrestling fan club members; organizing social entertainment events for entertainment purposes for wrestling fan club members; providing online newsletters in the fields of sports entertainment; online journals, namely blogs, in the field of sports entertainment

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
On today's edition of "The Bump", Alexa Bliss discussed her upcoming WWE branded podcast, "Uncool with Alexa Bliss."

Bliss said the concept of the show would be her interviewing celebrities and WWE personalities, discussing their life before they attained a level of fame.

Bliss said that she has already interviewed her childhood idols on the show and that the podcast would be coming later this summer.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Batista tweeted the following, revealing his involvement with The Princess Bride remake on Quibi:

I'm honored to work with @JasonReitman supporting Chef José Andrés' @wckitchen with @DavidSpade @RainnWilson @JasonSegel! Thanks to a $1 million donation from @Quibi, 100,000 meals were funded! Check out our homemade fan film the Princess Bride! https://t.co/HR27NkWesx pic.twitter.com/JqWksCt9B2
— Super Duper Dave Bautista (@DaveBautista) June 30, 2020

From the preview, Bautista will be playing the role of Fezzik.

Link: https://twitter.com/DaveBautista/sta...87284105691139

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Becky Lynch was a guest on The Bellas Podcast to discuss her news of learning she was pregnant earlier this year, and some scenarios laid out to drop the Raw women’s title she held ...

Lynch said that she pitched the idea of dropping the Raw women’s title to Shayna Baszler at WrestleMania 36, which was taped near the end of the March. Lynch’s pitch wasn’t taken as she defeated Baszler at the show. Lynch would reveal she was pregnant during the May 11th episode of Raw where the title was presented to Asuka following her win in the Money in the Bank Ladder Match ...

Becky Lynch says she pitched to lose the RAW Women’s Title at WrestleMania 36/being pregnant while holding the title:

"So, I don’t know about you guys but you know, you have your goals and you’re working towards everything but in the back of your mind, I always wanted to be a mother, I always wanted to have a family, and I knew that… just because — so I started wrestling when I was 15, and just everything, bodybuilding… is that a word? I do bodybuilding competitions, all kinds of stuff. So I just felt like I had probably damaged my body a lot. So, I knew, okay, I wanna try and have a baby before 35, and then I met Colby [Seth Rollins] and I was like, ‘Well, perfect. This is my person,’ and so this was always the plan because originally I was like, ‘Well, okay, I’ll wait until I’m done wrestling then I’ll have a family.’ Then I started thinking, ‘Wait. But wait, why do I have to do that? Guys don’t have to do that. Hell, I’ll just do it whenever the time feels right.’ So we started trying and I just thought it would take a long time, and it didn’t. We were super lucky. It happened before I would’ve expected and I was still the champ at the time which I actually thought I was going to lose the title at WrestleMania, which I also pitched but that’s neither here or there. But plans change. So yeah, when we came back from filming WrestleMania, I was feeling sick already and so this was even too early to take a test and so then I got the early response ones which are the ones with the lines and so, I took one of them and Colby didn’t even know that I took it and just one line popped up real quick but I didn’t even read the instructions so I was like, ‘Oh, it’s the negative line’ and I was like, ‘I am so not pregnant’ and I threw it into the bin and then we came back from the gym that night and I took it out and I was like, ‘Oh wait, hang on. There’s a second line here’ and so then I went to him and I was like, ‘Is that a second line?’ And then we Googled it and then it said it was like an evaporation line if you wait too long and so I was like, ‘Okay, that’s probably it.’"

Ideas Becky pitched to creatively relinquish the RAW Women’s Title/wanted to do a tournament:

"So then, it was like, ‘Is there a way that she [Shayna Baszler] can just beat me real quick?’ Colby’s like, ‘No! No! You’re not — no!’ I’m like, ‘Yeah, yeah, you’re right.’

Then we talked a lot and then decided, ‘Well okay, what if there’s a tournament for the #1 contendership?’ So the people, they don’t know that they’re actually gonna be competing for the title and then right as they go to have that last match, whoever gets there at the end then I tell them, ‘This is for the title.’ But, Money In The Bank was happening at the same time so it was too confusing to merge the two so they just decided that they would do the Money In The Bank Ladder match and have that as the title match essentially but without them knowing."

Becky not being a fan of WWE marketing her as “The Mom”:

"Actually, but I really didn’t want to be marketed as ‘The Mom’. I told Colby, I was like, ‘Man, they’re gonna make me The Mom, I know it. I know it’ and he’s like, ‘No, they’re not.’ Soon as I said it, freaking t-shirt came out."

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Tonight, AEW and NXT kick off their two-weeks specials of Fyter Fest and the Great American Bash with both sides loading up their events that have added intrigue following last week’s performance from NXT. Fyter Fest has been promoted for the last month with the significance of a pay-per-view but presented on free television. NXT revealed they would hold a double title match on July 8th going against the second week of Fyter Fest prior to branding both July 1st and July 8th as the Great American Bash, a name coined by Dusty Rhodes when booking for Jim Crockett Promotions ...

For tonight, AEW has matches involving Cody, Kenny Omega, Hangman Page, and MJF as its biggest stars on the show. The promotional pieces for Cody and Jake Hager show a simple but effective build and are the best candidate to headline the show. I can see them opening the show with the AEW tag title match as both shows need to start big to grab viewers and hopefully, hold onto them. NXT will also have limited commercial breaks that will invariably frontload the show. NXT has the added task of building up to next week’s episode that has the double title match while AEW has their card set for July 8th. The outstanding question regards Jon Moxley and whether he will be available or not for the match with Brian Cage, which would be taping on Thursday.

NXT has picked up steam over the past week off the fumes of last week’s number and a strong list of matches they have revealed. When announced over the weekend, Io Shirai vs. Sasha Banks gained a lot of attention as a first-time match and could be a difference-maker viewership-wise.

Creatively, I’ve found NXT to be in a rut where it’s broken away from its initial calling card of being a strong wrestling show with minimal outside elements. There is nothing wrong with episodes heavy on promos, skits, and content outside of Full Sail, but it hasn’t been riveting quality. The Undisputed Era’s feuds with Velveteen Dream and Dexter Lumis have felt like a drain on its audience, Roderick Strong is playing a paranoid character out of a different era and is the style of presentation NXT broke away from during the brand’s initial rise six years ago, and Rhea Ripley has fallen in the wake of the Charlotte Flair feud and almost feels like a call-up would be necessary to hit the “reset” button on her.

It’s been offset by a strong introduction of Karrion Kross and Scarlett Bordeaux as a tremendous main event act and it was a major feather in the caps of Keith Lee, Johnny Gargano, and Finn Balor to perform so well in last week’s numbers with a quality match to boot.

John Pollock's thoughts on NXT's creative changes in recent times is pretty much similar to what I have had for a while now. In the past, whenever NXT booking felt like WWE, they had the workrate and pool of quality talent to minimize those issues. Now that they are leaning harder into WWE style booking mentality, that workrate isn't covering it up as much as before. Doesn't help that Road Dogg, Triple H, and HBK have been having a lot more involvement with the booking process than in the past.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Former Impact Wrestling referee Kris Levin spoke to Nick Hausman of Wrestling INC regarding a 2019 investigation by the promotion regarding allegations of sexual harassment by an official. This was confirmed by Impact’s parent company Anthem Sports and Entertainment with a statement acknowledging the investigation and that an “external human resources consultant” conducted an investigation with the allegations “proven to be completely without merit” and no disciplinary action taken ...

Levin spoke to Hausman about his interview with the third-party investigator:

"I was called by a woman who said she was a neutral third-party investigator, hired by Anthem, in order to look into allegations of sexual harassment and putting employees in unsafe working conditions, messing with people’s contracts and things like that. I told her what I knew, under the guarantee that I would be doing so anonymously and off the record. She just said, ‘I need to build my case and need to know the context of this.’ I said if they find out, they’ll retaliate. She said, ‘No one will know.’ So, I told her everything.

I testified in a way that paints the executives in a negative light. I had finally had enough and decided that I could bet on myself and didn’t need to be at a place that treated me so disrespectfully. So, in late December I messaged a handful of people from the office who I considered friends who I hadn’t involved in this just because it was outside of their purview. I gave a very ambiguous message saying I’m thankful for the time I had here and appreciate the friendship and all the opportunities but I’m parting ways."

Levin stated that 20 minutes after sending this message, he received a call and was told they were going in a new direction and would not require Levin. This occurred at the end of 2019.

It was later reported by David Bixenspan that the third-party investigator had a history of working for Anthem CEO Leonard Asper. Through e-mails he obtained, Bixenspan determined this was Michelle Hall, who listed working at Canwest (the company founded by the Asper family) from 2004-2010 as its Senior Vice President of People on her LinkedIn account. On the same account, there is no mention of work with Anthem.

After the interview with Levin, Wrestling INC reached out to Impact Wrestling to respond to Levin’s comments and received a response that they don’t discuss or comment on internal matters and deny the allegations he had made. After that, Wrestling INC added that they received a follow-up, which may have included them on the e-mail by mistake and included Michelle Hall, who had an Anthem e-mail address

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
FS1 will be airing the 2018 Royal Rumble next Tuesday night in its WWE pay-per-view timeslot. This was the first year they held a women’s Royal Rumble and featured the debut of Ronda Rousey.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Tessa Blanchard got let go by IMPACT, but it was a formality.

On Fightful Select over the past week, and this morning in the Fightful Wrestling Weekly, it was reported that Tessa Blanchard's deal and departure from IMPACT had a lot more than met the eye. Even last month on various Fightful Podcasts, it was noted that many didn't not expect her at the Slammiversary show.

In addition to this, Select reported that Blanchard has a non-disparagement clause tied to her contract, which has become standard for many promotions.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
The League of Nations came together in 2015 with Sheamus, Rusev, Wade Barrett and Alberto Del Rio uniting to....do something.

The group formed around Sheamus, who was fresh off his WWE Title cash-in victory over Roman Reigns at Survivor Series. What could have been a dominant faction in WWE was nothing more than a vehicle to help top babyface acts.

"I just beat Roman for the World Title at Survivor Series, I didn't know I was cashing in until that night. The next day at Raw, they tell us 'we're putting League of Nations together.' This whole idea came from Jamie Noble. There was no idea or plan behind it. They just put the four of us together," recalled Sheamus in an appearance on Rusev's Twitch channel.

Rusev noted, "The idea was four foreigners. That was the exact plan. 'Hey, we have four foreigners, lets put them together.' Great idea."

The two continued, discussing the initial hopes for the group and how quickly they realized what was going to happen.

"The four of us individually were doing good and were successful. You had four strong heels put together to make a weak faction. People talk about The Shield being dominant. We could have been a successful and dominant group. In our first match together on SmackDown, we basically lost a four-on-one match against Roman," said Sheamus.

"When they pitched this idea, we legitimately thought, 'We have a shot. Look at us, we can dominate.' We have a four vs. one match and Roman beat us by countout. That's when we knew. It took us two days to find out 'Wow, we're not going to do good with this,'" Rusev said followed by a laugh.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Kairi Sane's status with WWE was pretty complicated as of last month.

Sane hasn't been on WWE TV since sustaining a cut to the head during a match with Nia Jax at the end of May, but there were already other plans for her at that time.

Many have been asking about Sane's contract status. That, we haven't heard, but as of May, there were plans for her to return to Japan and serve as an ambassador for WWE in Japan. We have been provided no details as to how that would have affected her in-ring career with the company.

We did ask if this role was to involve the long-rumored expansion into Japan for WWE and NXT, and were just told that there is no expansion at this moment due to the COVID-19 situation. We were not informed as to whether or not the original plans for Sane even got far enough to discuss that.

In the weeks that followed, many have gone radio silent about Sane's status with the company. Many want her to continue wrestling, and all of those we've spoken had positive things to say about her. To be clear, we are unsure of how this situation has developed over the past month.


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 07-02-2020 09:33 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Night one of AEW's Fyter Fest on TNT saw the show's ratings rebound from a series low last week.

AEW averaged 748,000 viewers last night, up 18.2 percent from last Wednesday. In the 18-49 demo, the show was up 31.8 percent, averaging a 0.29 rating and matching its best number in that category since May 27. Dynamite finished sixth for the night on cable in the demo.

Night one of NXT's Great American Bash was much higher than usual in the 18-49 rankings, finishing 13th on cable with a 0.22 rating. That was up 15.8 percent from last week and was the best number for the show since March 4. In terms of total viewers, NXT was up 0.8 percent to an average of 792,000, its highest number since February 19 and its second best of 2020.

It's the first time since late November -- during the build to Survivor Series which featured wrestlers from Raw and SmackDown on the show -- that NXT has beaten Dynamite in total viewers on consecutive weeks. The total combined viewership of 1.54 million was up nine percent from last week and the highest number since May 27.

It was back to usual in the individual demo categories with AEW beating NXT in every one except people over 50, where NXT had a big advantage with a 0.40 rating to Dynamite's 0.29. The best category for AEW was men 18-49, where they held a 0.37 rating to NXT's 0.29.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
The viewership total would be AEW’s third-highest since April 1st trailing episodes of Dynamite on May 27th (following Double or Nothing), and June 17th.

NXT’s Great American Bash special that promoted limited commercial interruptions (saved for the second hour of the show) averaged 792,000 viewers and 0.22 in the 18-49 demo. They were up 0.8% in viewers from last week and would be NXT’s second-highest viewership average in 2020 ...

AEW saw big increases across the board in the demographics as a rebound from last week’s figures. Females 12-34 led the way with a 37.5% increase, females 18-49 improved by 33%, and the main 18-49 demo was up 32%.

It was back to the usual pattern where AEW won all the key demos except for adults over 50, where NXT owned that category with a 0.40 to AEW’s 0.29.

NXT had a big increase among males 18-49 with a 26% increase, and adults 25-54 were up 18% this week. The big loss was among females 12-34 which dropped by 20%, which was a demo they beat AEW last week.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
In a move that was inevitable given the current state of the pandemic in the United States, AEW announced on Thursday that their Boston, MA, and Philadelphia, PA, Dynamite events will take place in 2021 instead.

The rescheduled show set for Philadelphia's Liacouras Center on July 29th (originally set for April 22nd) will now take place on Wednesday, April 7th while the Boston show at Agganis Arena on August 5th (originally set for April 15th) will now happen on Wednesday, April 21st.

In both cases, ticket buyers can hold their tickets for the respective shows or get refunds at their point of purchase. This will be the second time AEW has run both cities.

At this point, AEW still has six live dates scheduled for the duration of 2020: St. Louis, MO, (October 7th); Milwaukee, WI (October 28th); Houston, TX (November 4); Rochester, NY (November 11th); New Orleans, LA (December 2nd): and Albuquerque, NM (December 30th).

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
All Elite Wrestling announced the following storyline suspension for Jake Hager:

AEW has suspended @RealJakeHager for 10 days and fined him an undisclosed amount for striking an official following his TNT Championship match with @CodyRhodes at Fyter Fest on #AEWDynamite pic.twitter.com/ITF7JJDIAM
— All Elite Wrestling (@AEWrestling) July 2, 2020

May or may not have written him off due to the allegations against him despite not being actually named from the recent wave of allegations that hit the wrestling industry.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
WWE's application of 'The Man' was abandoned by the USPTO because it was initially refused back in December while still under ownership by Ric Flair, and the 6-month window to respond just passed.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
The trial regarding the lawsuit brought against Impact Wrestling parent company Anthem Wrestling by Jeff Jarrett and his company Global Force Entertainment (parent company of GFW) is still ongoing in Nashville, TN.

Thus far, the only confirmed note coming out of the proceedings is that GFW and Jarrett have dropped their claims of Federal Trademark Infringement and Counterfeiting of the GFW brand as well as the allegation that Anthem created Unfair Competition under Tennessee common law by their usage of the GFW brand.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Both Faye Jackson and Brian Pillman Jr. were present backstage and at ringside for Fyter Fest. Pillman Jr. is a former MLW World Tag Team Champion and his last match with the promotion was in March for their joint-show with AAA.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Former Impact star Diamante was sitting in the crowd at last night's Dynamite.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Weekly Bunshun wrote an article detailing Hana Kimura’s experiences working on Terrance House prior to her death. It features quotes from Kyoko Kimura, Hana’s mother. Kyoko said that Hana told her she was being forced by Terrace House to behave more obnoxiously on camera and the staff were the ones that instigated the ring outfit incident that led to the cyberbullying.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
The Knox County Board of Health in Tennessee took a vote on Wednesday to mandate a mask ordinance for anyone inside certain buildings.

The board voted 7-1 in favor of the mandate.

The lone vote to not wear a mask?

It had to be Kane.

Kane (Glenn Jacobs) is the Mayor of Knox County and, as you can see by the picture above, hasn't been a fan of the face mask during the coronavirus pandemic. Kane wore a full mask in WWE for years before he started wearing a half mask that didn't cover his mouth or nose. He was eventually unmasked in 2003. When he would wear the mask again, it was the half mask, which would also be useless during the pandemic.

Kane's stance on gloves is unclear.

Quote:

Originally Posted by 411Mania
A new report has details on the car accident that resulted in Velveteen Dream needing to visit the hospital. As reported on Friday, Dream was released from the hospital after his involvement in a car accident, and Wrestling Inc has some details on what went down.

According to the site, the accident took place at about 4 PM local time when Dream allegedly failed to stop at a red light. That resulted in him hitting another car. The driver of the other car sustained injuries, but it isn’t known how bad they were.

Dream was given a citation over the incident but will not appear in court.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
John Brody, WWE’s Executive Vice President, global head of sales and partnerships was the most recent guest on the SportsPro podcast. Brody discussed some of WWE’s plans to further expand their brand into Latin America and said there are some exciting things in the works that had to be delayed because of the COVID-19 outbreak.

“So, I’ve spent a lot of time in Mexico over the last few years. Also, throughout Latin, been to South America and spent a good deal of time in Brazil. There’s a tremendous culture of fandom for wrestling, for WWE throughout Latin America. Its been an area where we see opportunity and growth. It’s an area where we’d love to be able to create a televised live event. Some sort of special live event in the short-to-medium term. Our fans have passion there. We deliver tons of content through YouTube and all of our other channels and we just watch the numbers continue to go up so, anywhere we have a particular fan-base that needs to be served, we want to try to super serve them and I think there are a lot of exciting plans that we’ll be unveiling for Latin America in the months ahead. Obviously, COVID makes you have to rejigger some calendars and we’re truly a global property so when you’re a global property, you actually have to be a global property. You need to have events all around the world. You need to create compelling storylines. You need to also make sure that when you’re doing something in Latin America that you do it in language. So we’re continuing to find ways to do that whether it’s through our network, through our live events, through our digital and social to make sure we feed this insatiable thirst for WWE.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Edge joined Booker T and Brad Gilmore for a 30-minute chat on the ‘Hall Of Fame’ podcast. Edge is currently recovering from tearing his tricep during his match against Randy Orton at Backlash. Edge detailed when he knew he was injured and talked about some of the conversations he had with doctors in the P.C. after the match and his surgeon.

“So we’re going through the match and contrary to reports, we did it once, straight through. Like 48 minutes or whatever it was, and in coming back, I kinda wanted to re-calibrate my style a little bit and really make it a Bret Hart-kind of feel to my matches. Lot less high spots, more grappling, more wrestling, more fighting for things, selling. The little things like we talked about, right? So, we were doing this match and we’re having a blast and we got a queue at one point. I think it was like 35 minutes and I was like, ‘Woah! Alright. Man, I’m feeling great. This is awesome.’ I did a springboard into the second RKO and I went, ‘Ohh… okay, I got the cold sweats and I feel like I’m gonna throw up.’ That’s usually a sign. Now, and that’s where it popped and I thought, ‘Okay well, you know, I think I got a little bit more in the tank to finish this out’ and then we got it finished. We tried to do a couple pickup shots to see how those would feel. Maybe try and [add] a different element to the match and I didn’t like them, but we were just trying something different. Got to the back, I was like, ‘I think something happened to my tricep. I don’t think it’s complete, but it feels like something,’ and they felt around, they said, ‘We think it might be a complete [tear].’ Now, by the time I got the surgery, surgeon said, ‘You know, you probably went in with it partially torn, because the tissue was already very diseased, and my elbow had been bugging me for probably about a month but it had only bugged me when I did chest or triceps so I just thought…”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Royal Albert Hall is going to go broke by March of 2021 if it doesn’t receive financial support according to the building’s Chief Executive Officer. Per News UK, the building has lost £12m ($14 million USD) due to being closed because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Chief Executive Craig Hassall said that hundreds of staff members may have to be laid off.

“The Government support has been very oblique and vague. We have lobbied hard and consistently across the sector. But [Culture Secretary] Oliver Dowden’s roadmap for recovery has no dates and nothing firm.

There is no guidance from Government on when we can open or how we can open. Without that it’s impossible for us to trade – and that means the whole sector.”

Royal Albert Hall has played host to many pro wrestling events over the years. Most recently, WWE held the 2018 United Kingdom Championship tournament in that building and that tournament was won by NXT U.K.’s Zack Gibson.

Besides those events, the venue is also the main location for NXT UK tapings.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Bleacher Report Live posted their interview with AEW’s Wardlow. Wardlow revealed how his AEW signing came about and he credited Britt Baker for playing a role in him joining AEW. He also talked about working a quick match with Q.T. Marshall in front of Cody for only a few minutes before Cody decided to sign him.

“I was in between training sessions and I had a voicemail and I checked it and it was really just everything coming together. Cody had heard my name from a couple different people all in the same week. One of those people being Britt Baker who came up together with myself in IWC in Pittsburgh. We kind of started at the same time and grew up together in the company. So she had mentioned my name, a couple of other people. So Q.T. Marshall gave me a phone call and told me they were gonna fly me down to Atlanta to take a look at me. I go to Atlanta, work with Q.T. for maybe five minutes in front of Cody before he offered me contract.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Per Pro Wrestling Sheet, the people invited to Fyter Fest that were seated in the hard cam’s direction were Daily’s Place or Jaguars sponsors. Those individuals also brought family and friends. The people seated in the upper bowl of the building were likely not tested for COVID-19 because they could not possibly come into contact with anyone in the backstage or ringside areas. Anyone who was in those respective areas were tested for COVID.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
WWE underwent more testing early in the week ahead of Great American Bash, with some wrestlers coming in very early for testing.

WWE has indicated that social distancing, masks, and other measures will be mandatory moving forward, saying " “As a reminder, wearing masks, sanitizing and social distancing will be required at the Performance Center this week and going forward. You'll be required to wear a mask upon entering and we ask that you adhere to these requirements in order to minimize risks.”


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 07-03-2020 02:44 PM

The Sheets (Observer Newsletter Edition):

Quote:

After a COVID-19 outbreak that has greatly affected the promotion, WWE has made a number of changes ...

The outbreak caused a change in the tapings schedule and more taping this week. NXT was to tape its shows for 7/1 and 7/8 on 7/1, which it did. It was supposed to tape 7/15 and 7/22 on 7/2, which has been moved to an upcoming set of tapings. Smackdown and 205 Live for 7/3 and 7/10 was taped on 7/2, while Raw and Main Event for 7/6 and 7/13 was to be taped on 7/3. It was noted that it was a lot safer keeping the Raw brand tapings on one night and Smackdown on the other, because taping both the same night and doing different weeks on different days led to an outbreak that hit both brands hard. Keeping the brands on separate days means, in theory, if there is another outbreak, it would only affect one brand.

The WWE outbreak affected AEW, as Jon Moxley, on his own, decided it wasn’t prudent to come for the taping on 7/2 for the second night of Fyter Fest, where he was to face Brian Cage for the AEW title. Moxley took a second COVID test on 6/26 in Las Vegas. He got the test result on 6/30 or 7/1 and it was negative. Moxley is expected to return on the 7/15 live show, called Fight for the Fallen, provided he tests negative on a third test that will be taken in a few days.

Even with the two negative tests, Moxley noted he was around someone who tested positive for several straight days and after talking to doctors felt there was still a risk he could have it in its early stages where it would not come up in a test but could be contagious. He didn’t want to risk the safety of the AEW locker room or be responsible for a new outbreak.

Renee Young, his wife, has been doing much better. As of midweek, she still felt funny and her chest felt heavy but overall felt a lot better.
Quote:

The only names public from WWE who tested positive were Renee Young, who went public without telling WWE, and Kayla Braxton, Jamie Noble and Adam Pearce. It’s pretty much impossible to believe Noble or Pearce would have gone public on their own so it appears WWE wanted a few names out of people that the fans wouldn’t care about since they aren’t active wrestles. Due to HIPPA laws, WWE could not release the names of anyone who tested positive without their permission. Braxton did give them her permission in March to release her name but they did not.

One anonymous WWE name told Wrestlinginc.com that the company has forbid any talent who contracted it to go public. It is known that they were not happy at all that Young posted what she did. It was said that the company would take care of all medical treatment and that the public relations department would handle all information to the public.

Talent that had been appearing on television regularly of late that were not on the tapings included The Street Profits, A.J. Styles, Austin Theory, Daniel Bryan, Finn Balor, Kevin Owens, Liv Morgan, Mandy Rose, Randy Orton, Natalya, Nia Jax, Otis, Tucker, Mojo Rawley, Shorty G, Raquel Gonzalez, Rey Mysterio, Dominick, Sheamus, Shorty G and Sonya Deville.

What is known is that some of those names tested positive, at least one was held off for precautionary reasons, some asked for time off so as not to risk their families due to the outbreak, and some were not originally booked this week. There were no answers as to who fit into the latter two scenarios. The Mysterios were definitely booked to appear live and instead did a taped segment from home.

One would think, but given WWE nothing is for sure, that with the number of positive tests being 6/23 to 6/25, that anyone who tested positive would be home until 7/8 at the earliest.

What we do know is that Styles vs. Drew Gulak, advertised for 6/26, and neither Styles nor Bryan was at the show, and both were in the ring with Young being interviewed the week before, didn’t happen. Gulak was the only one of the four there. However, Styles vs,. Gulak was taped on 7/2. Sheamus’ segment with Jeff Hardy was pulled from 6/26 but also advertised on 7/2, so if that’s the case, Sheamus in theory would be off the list, as would be, at least in theory, who was on the list who appears on the 7/3 Smackdown or 7/6 Raw show.

Regarding The Street Profits, if something happened to one, it would make sense for neither to appear. Theory was not even mentioned on Raw when Seth Rollins and Murphy were on screen ... It’s also known that Natalya did not test positive but was taken off the show because her husband, producer T.J. Wilson, was sick on the day of testing and even though he also didn’t test positive, when he was sick they took her off the show.

Morgan, Rose, Deville and Lana were all on a boat trip together days before the testing. Lana was the only one on television.

Some have noted that a major issue to some talent is how other talent is not taking it seriously enough. One person noted to us that they basically go to work, and to the store, and that’s it, while others are out at bars hanging out with no masks in close quarters, or boats, or hot tubs, crowded beaches, or gyms, with the risk they can get it, and bring it in the room ...

Rawley and Shorty G had their match the week before agented by Noble. The Pearce name was also notable because of how closely he worked the week before with the major power players at the tapings.
Quote:

After two weeks of increases with a show built around Christian wrestling and Championship Monday, Raw, even with Ric Flair and Big Show pushed, fell to 1,735,000 viewers, which tied for the third lowest number in modern wrestling history. The 0.49 in 18-49 tied the 6/1 show for the second lowest number in the key demo in the history of the show.

The record lows remain 1,682,000 viewers and 0.46 in 18-49, set on 5/4.

Raw was 25th overall, fourth among non-news shows and tied for fourth for the night in 18-49. It was first in Males 18-49 and Males 12-34.

Raw was down 9.7 percent in viewers and 7.5 percent in 18-49 from last week’s show. As compared to the same week one year ago, Raw was down 23.8 percent in viewers and 32.9 percent in 18-49 ...

If this becomes the normal pattern, the key is now that instead of record low numbers while attempting to rebuild and create new stars, the show will be doing record lows while at the same time going to the past trying to use stars from the past to stabilize while not pushing younger talent. There is no guarantee the first method will pay off. There is a guarantee the second method won’t, and it was basically the mindset that killed WCW until it was too late, although WWE still has far less out of touch with the audience creative. This creative is just not making new stars.
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Smackdown on 6/26, a show changed at the last minute due to COVID test positives, to be a tribute to The Undertaker, was up to a 1.37 rating and 2,174,000 viewers (1.32 viewers per home) and did the same 0.5 (685,000 viewers) in 18-49 the show has been doing weekly.

The rating was up 2.2 percent. Viewers were up 4.9 percent. 18-49 was up 3.2 percent.

The other three networks all ran rerun programming. Smackdown tied a repeat of Shark Tank and 20/20 on ABC for first place at 0.5. It was first in 18-34 and first in men 18-49, while tied for fourth in women 18-49 and tied for last in 50+ ...

The increase over last week was for The Undertaker special as the first hour did 2,271,000 viewers which was Undertaker clips and the Undertaker vs. A.J. Styles Boneyard match from WrestleMania. The second hour did 2,076,000 viewers.

Last year FOX with rerun programming did 1,318,000 viewers and 0.4 in 18-49, an increase of 64.9 percent overall and 25.0 percent in 18-49.
The summer period is pretty much where Smackdown is almost guaranteed to do better than what FOX had last year since its usually the weakest period of the year for FOX in terms of ratings.

Quote:

For 6/27, in the key demos, AEW still won everywhere except Women 18-34. In total, AEW had 285,000 viewers to NXT’s 242,000, which is the closest of the year ...

The show actually started at normal levels, so in 18-49, NXT grew and AEW fell tremendously as the show went on. NXT still had a major edge because its lead-in did 993,000 viewers while AEW’s lead-in did 342,000 viewers.

The main event segment, where NXT had the Keith Lee win over Finn Balor and Johnny Gargano in a North American title match, and AEW had the Chris Jericho/Orange Cassidy angle, saw the huge win over NXT, by 852,000 to 557,000, as well as a win in 18-49 by 277,000 to 238,000. The two quarters of the main event were the first two quarters NXT has won in 18-49 this year. It was also the highest rated main event NXT had done head-to-head. The lowest quarter AEW had ever done prior to last week was 606,000 for the seventh quarter on 4/29, a figure they died on 6/27 in quarter four and full underneath in quarters seven and eight.

The first quarter, with AEW having Wardlow vs. Luchasaurus in a lumberjack match, did 744,000 viewers and 379,000 in 18-49, which ended up as the high point of the show in both numbers. NXT had Cameron Grimes vs. Damien Priest plus Timothy Thatcher, which did 794,000 viewers but only 207,000 in 18-49.

In the second quarter, AEW lost 62,000 viewers and 74,000 in 18-49 with Hikaru Shida vs. Red Velvet, the Shida-Penelope Ford brawl and the Cody and Jake Hager press conference. Even though they lost big, it was the only quarter AEW won in total viewers because NXT fell harder. NXT lost 118,000 viewers and 9,000 in 18-49 for Santos Escobar vs. Jake Atlas and the Undisputed Era psychiatrist segment.

In the third quarter, AEW lost 35,000 viewers and 28,000 in 18-49 with the Joey Janela & Sonny Kiss vignette and Janela & Kiss vs. Brodie Lee & Colt Cabana. NXT gained 66,000 viewers and 32,000 in 18-49 with Malcolm Bivens with Rinku & Saurav and a video package promoting the three-way main event. That’s the difference with AEW and NXT, is that AEW’s video packages to promote the future are necessarily evils but don’t do well in keeping viewers while NXT gained viewers doing its package.

In the fourth quarter, AEW lost 41,000 viewers and 3,000 in 18-49 for FTR vs. Christopher Daniels & Frankie Kazarian. NXT gained 53,000 viewers and 6,000 in 18-49 for Dakota Kai & Raquel Gonzalez vs. Kacy Catanzaro & Kayden Carter.

In the fifth quarter, AEW gained 24,000 viewers and 11,000 in 18-49 for the ending of FTR vs. Daniels & Kazarian, the post-match brawl with the Young Bucks and Butcher & Blade, as well as a promotional package for Kenny Omega & Adam Page vs. Best Friends. NXT gained 19,000 viewers and 27,000 in 18-49 for Karrion Kross vs. Bronson Red, an Adam Cole interview and Rhea Ripley vs. Aliyah.

In the sixth quarter, AEW lost 12,000 viewers and 11,000 in 18-49 for a Jon Moxley promo and Brian Cage vs. Joe Cruz. NXT lost 2,000 viewers and 8,000 in 18-49 for Roderick Strong vs. Dexter Lumis and a vignette with Robert Stone, Aliyah, William Regal and Rhea Ripley.

In the seventh quarter, AEW lost 40,000 viewers and 30,000 in 18-49 for Matt Hardy vs. Santana. NXT lost 11,000 viewers but gained 15,000 in 18-49 for the beginning of Keith Lee vs. Johnny Gargano vs. Finn Balor.

In the final quarter, AEW lost 31,000 viewers and 6,000 in 18-49 for the Chris Jericho/Orange Cassidy angle. NXT gained 51,000 viewers and 7,000 in 18-49 for the ending of Lee vs. Balor vs. Gargano.
That lead-in number from TNT might have been the lowest ever since AEW's debut. Also been a key reason why NXT has been able to win the first 1-2 segments in recent weeks because of their much stronger lead-in.

Quote:

The biggest Wednesday night competition of the year took place as part of the two-week Fyter Fest vs. Great American Bash promotion.

Both sides can claim victory in week one, with NXT having more viewers due to its huge edge over 50, but AEW winning solidly in the key 18-49 demo ...

NXT did 792,000 viewers for a show built around Io Shirai vs. Sasha Banks, which figured to be the strongest drawing match on either show and did a 0.22 in 18-49 (284,000 viewers). It was its second best overall number of the year and sixth best in 18-49.

AEW did 748,000 viewers and did a 0.29 (372,000 viewers) in 18-49, good numbers but in a sense disappointing given the weeks of hype for Fyter Fest.

AEW was No. 6 for the night in 18-49 ...

NXT was No. 13, its best position in recent memory in the 18-49 listings ...

NXT and USA in competition announced limited commercial interruptions on the show, and going with no commercials for the main event. That would have contributed somewhat to an increase in the show’s numbers but the minute-by-minute data isn’t available at press time to fully examine how much difference it made. Based on the usual loss of viewers during commercials, it would have made a minor difference in the overall ratings, not enough to change NXT winning in total viewers, but the gap would be a little closer ...

NXT won the first two quarters in total viewers based somewhat on having a bigger lead-in. AEW won quarters three through five, and then as the build came for the NXT main event, it took back over. Still, even with a giant difference in viewers, with the Io Shirai vs. Sasha Banks doing 900,000 viewers to the Kenny Omega & Adam Page vs. Best Friends match doing 645,000, AEW still had the edge in 18-49 by a 316,000 to 309,000 range. But AEW lost a huge amount of viewership in the last 45 minutes while NXT stayed pretty steady until a huge increase in the final quarter, with the no commercials playing a part in this ...

AEW had the deeper show and better match quality, but NXT having a unique never-seen-before main event made a difference.

NXT for that reason, should also win next week with total viewers, and has a good shot to come close in 18-49, with the Adam Cole vs. Keith Lee double title match on 7/8 likely going against Omega & Page vs. Private Party. AEW again has the deeper show but no match that can come close to Cole vs. Lee with the winner-take-all stipulations, in what is easily the biggest NXT match so far this year ...

Still, AEW without weeks of hype did 770,000 viewers two weeks ago for a show headlined by Best Friends vs. Chris Jericho & Sammy Guevara, which also went against Bayley and Banks on NXT. The 0.29 was less than the 5/27 show. NXT’s 0.22 was its best 18-49 mark since 3/6, which was a lifetime ago.

The combined 18-49 viewers of 656,000 beat Monday solidly, and fell just shy of the 685,000 for Friday, which has the huge network advantage ...

The show opened with AEW having Luchasaurus & Jungle Boy vs. Wardlow & MJF, doing 799,000 viewers and 425,000 in 18-49. The 425,000 was the high point of the show for either group in 18-49. NXT had Dakota Kai vs. Tegan Nox vs. Candice LeRae vs. Mia Yim which did 839,000 viewers and 287,000 in 18-49.

Quarter two saw AEW lost 72,000 viewers and 47,000 in 18-49 for a Lance Archer/Joey Janela quick brawl, a promo package and the beginning of Penelope Ford vs. Hikaru Shida. NXT lost 51,000 viewers but gained 10,000 in 18-49 for the end of the women’s four-way match and a Damien Priest interview.

Quarter three saw AEW gain 60,000 viewers but actually lose 1,000 in 18-49 for Shida vs. Ford. NXT lost 86,000 viewers and 20,000 in 18-49 for Timothy Thatcher vs. Oney Lorcan, so this was where AEW took the viewership lead 787,000 to 702,000.

Quarter four saw AEW lose 4,000 viewers but gain 7,000 in 18-49 for the beginning of Cody vs. Jake Hager. NXT gained 62,000 viewers and 7,000 in 18-49 for Rhea Ripley vs. Robert Stone & Aliyah.

Quarter five saw AEW gain 31,000 viewers and 19,000 in18-49 for the ending of Cody vs. Hager, a Darby Allin video and the beginning of Private Party vs. Santana & Ortiz. This was AEW’s peak overall number with 814,000. NXT gained 12,000 viewers but lost 8,000 in 18-49 for the beginning of Roderick Strong vs. Dexter Lumis in a strap match.

Quarter six saw AEW lost 90,000 viewers and 45,000 in 18-49 for the ending of Private Party vs. Santana & Ortiz and the Jericho-Cassidy pull-apart brawl. NXT gained 8,000 viewers and lost 1,000 in 18-49 for the ending of Strong vs. Lumis and the Adam Cole/Keith Lee video package.

Quarter seven saw AEW lost 15,000 viewers and 25,000 in 18-49 for plugging next week and the beginning of Omega & Page vs. Best Friends. NXT lost 2,000 viewers and 6,000 in 18-49 for the beginning of Shirai vs. Banks.

Quarter eight, and this is where the no commercials made a difference, AEW lost 64,000 viewers and 17,000 in 18-49 for Omega & Page vs. Best Friends while NXT gained 118,000 viewers and 40,000 in 18-49 for Shirai vs. Banks ...

Cody, in promoting Fyter Fest on Busted Open radio, commented on the uniqueness of WWE using the name of one of his father’s creations, the Great American Bash, at the last minute to combat their two shows.

It’s noted that his sister Teil, was very upset about it and said WWE should pay her mother royalties.
Quote:

NEW JAPAN: The current backstage rules in place related to talent and staff for the live events right now are that talent undergoes temperature checks twice daily and has to keep a log of every person they’ve been in contact with between tests. They are tested constantly. Locker rooms are zoned and have staggered entry. All conversations are supposed to be limited. The previous buffet-style catering has been done away with. Instead, the promotion brings containers of food and beverages with the names of the individual on them. The ring and ringside area are disinfected between matches
Quote:

Malaysia Pro Wrestling is going to offer a new form of pro wrestling. Malaysia Pro is being recognized by the government of the country as a legitimate sport as opposed to entertainment, by tweaking things to make it similar to a judging sport like figure skating or gymnastics. They are looking at doing a competitive sports show next year where the matches will be graded by judges and it will be competition. I’ve never heard of this idea being used, but in the past, both Nick Bockwinkel and Eric Bischoff have come up with similar ideas but were never able to get them off the ground. Both had approached me with those ideas at different times and Bockwinkel had asked me about being one of the judges
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The NWA has released Zicky Dice. Dice had considerable locker room heat for not selling for people and when he was told he needed to improve his work and his attitude he asked for his release. William Corgan granted him that because the idea is they only want team players. The NWA, with David Lagana gone, is restructuring the company on both the business and wrestling sides, with veteran wrestlers taking on advisory positions and more collaboration between the office the wrestlers
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Bully Ray’s contract expired and he wasn’t given an offer for a new deal because ROH isn’t offering people new deals right now. The company likes him but aside from Danhausen, because they build a storyline around it, nobody whose deals are up are getting new offers right now. There are expectations that once they start running things may change, including having interest in Alex Zayne, who had just started when the pandemic hit, and Tony Deppen
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As part of the 7/15 Fight for the Fallen show, AEW and the Khan family are donating $1 million for COVID relief
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The WWE purchase of the Evolve intellectual property and tape library is believed to have been finalized. It was more a question of when since we reported it those close said it was basically done at the time. WWE had already had a clause, similar to Progress and the other U.K. groups that it worked with, that WWE could buy the promotion for a set price whenever it wanted. PW Insider reported that somebody was interested in buying Evolve but that clause made it so they couldn’t sell without WWE’s agreeing to it because of the clause. But WWE at that point would have had to buy it themselves and agreed to do so. Sal Hamaoui, who ran Evolve with Gabe Sapolsky since its inception, will continue to promote shows under the WWN banner with his FIP, Shine and ACW brands. Gabe Sapolsky will not be involved any longer as he is expected to be working full-time for WWE as part of NXT creative. Some of the better Evolve talent may also get developmental deals. Basically, it appears they needed the money from the sale to pay back the money owed to fans and others for the costs of having to cancel all the WrestleMania week shows. So while this was probably inevitable at some point, it happened at this specific point because of COVID likely speeding up the process since over Mania week is when they would have gotten a large percentage of their annual income. The tape library sold includes that of the old Dragon Gate USA promotion. The promotion had been hanging by a thread ever since the Flo Sports deal fell apart in 2016 and was kept alive by its relationship with WWE, even though its fan base hated that it had become an NXT farm club. Lenny Leonard, who has announced for these groups for years, said that between the sale and the pandemic, there is a chance that he has called his last pro wrestling match
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Sane, 31, is returning to Japan to be with her husband. This has been in the works for a while and the company has known about it since May if not earlier. Sane was injured by Jax legit by being thrown into the ring steps hard when she was too close to the steps to control her bump on a Raw match taped on 5/26, which had to be stopped and was edited before it aired on television on 6/1. That’s why she hasn’t been around since, although she is cleared and is scheduled to appear on Raw soon as she is listed for the 7/3 tapings which would be for 7/6 and/or 7/13. But the decision at the time was to not harp on the injury on television nor talk about it at all publicly which is why they never played it up and her name hasn’t been talked about. The idea in play before the Sane-Jax legit injury was to do a career-ending injury angle with her later when it was time for her to leave, which was to set up Asuka against that person at SummerSlam for the title. This is also likely changed since Heyman left, and the person who would have most likely (not confirmed) been put in that spot would be either Flair, who may or may not be back by then, or Baszler, who Vince removed from television. The only thing we know is the person who ended her career was not scheduled to be Jax. While there’s been no talk about it of late, there had been talk that once her contract with WWE was up that she would wrestle one more year in Japan and then retire
Quote:

The most-watched shows of the past week on the WWE Network were: 1. Steve Austin’s Broken Skull Sessions with Mark Henry; 2. Undertaker’s Last Ride episode five; 3. Undertaker’s Last Ride episode four; 4. Backlash PPV; 5. Undertaker’s Last Ride episode one; 6. Best Raw matches of the decade; 7. Undertaker’s Last Ride episode three; 8. Undertaker’s Last Ride episode two; 9. Best of Undertaker; 10. WWE top ten savage kendo stick attacks. NXT from 6/24 was No 11 and Raw Talk was No. 13

Fignuts 07-04-2020 01:45 AM

What the fuck kind of name is Zicky Dice?

erickman 07-04-2020 05:04 AM

wonder if bully ray is going to impact, he would be the aces and 8s dude

Emperor Smeat 07-07-2020 09:34 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Raw ratings are delayed due to this past weekend’s Fourth of July holiday.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
In an interview with Sports Illustrated, Triple H was asked about counter-programming and if NXT would still be putting on the Great American Bash if it wasn’t for AEW’s Fyter Fest: “It absolutely is part of healthy of competition. Anyone that thinks it isn’t, to a degree, is being naive to the situation. You saw that back in the day when Clash of Champions was counter-programming [to WWE’s WrestleMania IV in 1988]. At the same point, it can’t drive your booking decisions. Obviously there are counter-programming decisions, but I can tell you exactly how this came about. Almost all of these storylines were headed where they are now. There was a gap, timing wise, between In Your House and what will become the SummerSlam TakeOver, and you need a halfway point and a build. This is that halfway point. So it doesn’t change our decision-making process. I don’t counter-book, I book what’s right for NXT.

Basically almost a 180 on his earlier claims and stance about NXT not counter-programming AEW.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
A major announcement by Taz has been announced for tomorrow’s Fyter Fest event.

Tony Khan tweeted the following this afternoon: “Also tomorrow night at Night 2 of the Fyter Fest on #AEWDynamite on TNT, @OfficialTAZ & Brian Cage @MrGMSI_BCage will be interviewed by @tonyschiavone24, and Taz will make an announcement that I guarantee will send shockwaves through the world of professional wrestling!”

Cage was originally set to face Jon Moxley for the AEW World title on the second night of Fyter Fest. However, Moxley has been at home following his wife Renee Young’s positive COVID-19 test. The match has been rescheduled for Fight for the Fallen, which will take place on the July 15th edition of Dynamite.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
There are now four matches confirmed for night two of NXT's Great American Bash.

WWE announced today that Johnny Gargano vs. Isaiah "Swerve" Scott will air on night two of the Great American Bash this Wednesday. The match was set up by a backstage segment on night one of the event.

Gargano and Scott argued on last week's show after Scott tried to break up a backstage brawl between Candice LeRae and Mia Yim.

LeRae vs. Yim in a street fight is also set for Great American Bash night two.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
The ongoing trial brought against Impact Wrestling parent company Anthem Wrestling LLC by Jeff Jarrett and his company, Global Force Entertainment has been put on pause and delayed until the morning of 7/21, Chief Judge Waverly D. Crenshaw, Jr. informed all parties.

The belief among sources we have spoken to is that a concern about rising COVID-19 cases locally led to the court pushing back the trial several weeks.

The two sides will have a telephone conference on 7/10 discussing the case as well.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Multi-time NWA World Tag Team Champions and WWE Hall of Famers Ricky Morton and Robert Gibson jointly filed a trademark on their team name "Rock 'n' Roll Express" on 6/30.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
After TSN2’s airing of AEW Dynamite this Wednesday night in Canada, they will air four episodes of Dark Side of the Ring beginning at 10 pm Eastern. They will air the episodes covering the Montreal Screwjob, The Match Made in Heaven (Randy Savage &amp; Miss Elizabeth), The Killing of Bruiser Brody, and The Last of the Von Erichs. I would highly recommend the latter two, which were the strongest episodes of the first season

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Jay Lethal comments on allegations against him.

In 2018, Taeler Hendrix came forward and alleged she was taken off ROH television for not sleeping with Lethal, who she managed during her time in the company.
Triple H On Counter-Programming AEW: I Don't Counter-Book, I Book What's Right For NXT
Related Article Triple H On Counter-Programming AEW: I Don't Counter-Book, I Book What's Right For NXT

Lethal denied the allegations and ROH announced that they had launched an investigation into the matter, which nothing came of.

On July 6, former Women of Honor Champion Kelly Klein alleged Jay Lethal would sexually harass women in ROH and that ROH covered it up. Klein did not specifically reference the 2018 allegations by Hendrix, but said multiple women came forward regarding Lethal.

Klein wrote on social media, "When [J-Rocc] harassed a female member of [ROH] locker room, he was told to leave and was not welcome back. ---- MULTIPLE women brought complaints & evidence of sexual misconduct/harassment by Jay Lethal. ROH ignored/covered it up. They only take action when convenient. They are hoping to use another “investigation” to wait everyone out until we 'forget.' Thank you, ROH for all of the truly wonderful things you do and have done. Now please address the bad behavior. Do better. Right now you continue to CHOOSE not to. It’s hard when your faves get called out. Imagine what it’s like to be targeted/harassed by that person & not protected because he/she is a 'favorite.' People can be talented, friend to many, good for community, & also take advantage of & abuse others. Not mutually exclusive. In fact, qualities that make it hard to accept that a “favorite” could do something horrible are the things they use to gain access to victims & escape accountability. They don’t usually wear a sign or broadcast their bad intentions."

With allegations being brought up again, Lethal put out the following statement on Monday night:

"It has always been my choice to use silence to keep my dignity, refrain from publicly attacking people I'm not fond of, and relying on who I have been as a person to speak for itself. I've also never wanted to sue MY platform to boost or give attention to any negativity. I do however know and realize that some people will sadly take my silence to mean something else.

The #speakingout movement has given me hope that the industry that I've chosen to give my life to will become a better place. I've wanted to stand in support of all those brave enough to share their painful stories. Unfortunately I was afraid to due to the lies that are being said about me.

I have never and would never sexually harass, sexually assault, rape or force myself on anyone. I would never use my status to deny anyone opportunities. Even now, it pain me to know that defending myself might somehow tarnish an important movement and cast doubt on real, troubling experiences."

ROH has not commented on the matter.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
WWE announced Tuesday that Kristina Salen is their new Chief Financial Officer, effective August 3rd and reporting directly to Vince McMahon.

Salen replaces interim CFO Frank Riddick who stepped in when co-presidents George Barrios and Michelle Wilson were fired in late-January. The company has yet to replace their Chief Revenue Officer position.

Salen comes with an impressive resume as the first CFO of Etsy from January 2013 through March 2017, helping grow the business from $895 million to $3 billion in gross sales over four years and executing their move to go public, according to the WWE release.

Following that, she was in similar roles for UnitedMasters and Moda Operandi, both New York-based companies. She was the first woman named to the board of Endeavor (the former WME-IMG) in 2019, and also sits on the boards of SiriusXM and Cornerstone OnDemand ...

As of this writing, WWE's stock price was down nearly 2% for the day to $45.48.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
The forthcoming A&E documentary on WWE Hall of Famer Steve Austin officially commenced production today.

The plan is to broadcast the documentary this December.

The Austin doc is one of several announced earlier this year, alongside docs on the lives and careers of Roddy Piper, Shawn Michaels and Booker T.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Scout Comics announced that they have published 1,000 variant tribute versions of Assassin and Son, the comic book written by former WWE stars Shad Gaspard and Marc Copani (aka Mohammad Hussan) available at this link with money raised being donated to Gaspard's family.

Link: https://www.scoutcomics.com/collecti...ssin-and-son-1

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
The likes of Jordan Devlin, former OTT World Champion David Starr and Scotty Davis had allegations placed against them by way of the #SpeakingOut movement. Multiple promotions have cut ties with the aforementioned performers and the Over The Top Wrestling promotion based in Ireland issued a statement today regarding changes within the organization.

They announced that Anne O’Brien is joining their team. Anne is going to lead the talent relations department and will be the designated contact for any issues that talents are dealing with. Anne is also going to work with the OTT Wrestling schools in Dublin and Belfast respectively. OTT management, staff and the performers will undergo Garda vetting, which is a background check conducted by the National Vetting Bureau.

Joe Cabray is continuing on as the promoter of OTT. Roster members LJ Cleary and Kaydee McKeon Joyce are going to be working with Fight Factory Pro Wrestling in Ireland. Karen Glennon, who’s known as Session Moth Martina has also been appointed as a coach for OTT’s ‘School Of Wrestling NI’, formerly the ‘Wrespect Wrestling’ school. OTT acquired the school recently.

The promotion is drafting a code of conduct for fans who attend shows. The full press release can be read on OTT’s official website.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
On Monday’s edition of Raw, two new matches were added to the Extreme Rules event taking place on Sunday, July 19th.

The event is now being branded as “The Horror Show at Extreme Rules” with varying degrees of success for the performers getting that mouthful across in their promos on Monday’s episode.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
MLW’s Jared St. Laurent issued a statement on Brian Pillman Jr.’s contract status: “Brian is not released and is fully aware of our schedule, which includes events October 3rd and December 5th pending the state of the pandemic. We put the health of our talent/staff and their family and our fans before bookings, which is why we are not running at the moment. We’ve been in contact with Brian to relay this. If he elects to perform elsewhere under the terms of his deal, he certainly has our full blessing to do so.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Brandon Thurston is conducting a Pro Wrestling Favorability Survey. The goal of the survey is to understand "fan demographics, favorability of major brands, and possible economic effects on the wrestling business of COVID-19 and the #SpeakingOut movement,” and the results of it are intended to be used in future published work.

Link: https://forms.gle/wLC7QbDX6boLHMZB9


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 07-08-2020 07:18 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Raw on Monday did the second lowest audience number in modern history as well as tied for the second lowest in the main demo.

The show did 1.69 million viewers, beating only the May 4 episode that did 1.68 million viewers. The 0.49 rating in 18-49 tied episodes on June 9 and June 30 for second place behind the May 4 Raw that did a 0.46.

The total audience dropped three percent from last week, but stayed even in 18-49. The good news is that the first-to-third hour drop was 5.0 percent, much lower than usual, but that wasn't the key. That was due to a strong hour two. The first hour was the lowest hour one in modern history. The second hour increased greatly and hour three dropped ...

The real story is that people tuned into the show late. This pattern used to be fairly regular in the summer months but has rarely happened this year. It could be holiday related ...

Raw was 21st overall on cable, but fourth among non-news shows. In 18-49, Raw was fourth overall. Raw was first on cable in men 18-49 and teenage boys. In hour three, Raw dropped across the board.

In looking at the key first-to-second hour increase, because it was hour two that saved the show from all-time record lows, there was a 10 percent increase in women 18-49, a three percent increase in men 18-49, a 19 percent drop in teenage girls, a five percent drop in teenage boys, and one percent increase in over 50, so it was women 18-49 who really saved the show from record lows.

The three hours were:

8 p.m. 1.70 million
9 p.m. 1.75 million
10 p.m. 1.61 million

For a comparison, the May 4 record low pattern was:

8 p.m. 1.81 million
9 p.m. 1.69 million
10 p.m. 1.55 million

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Over the last few weeks, PWInsider.com has received questions asking about whether there's been any follow-up to former WWE Champion Alberto Del Rio's May arrest in San Antonio, Texas for sexual assault, a second degree felony.

PWInsider.com has learned there has not been additional movement in the case as of this writing, as the charges have not yet been brought before a grand jury. Once that happens, if the Grand Jury rules there should be an official indictment, prosecution would commence and move towards a criminal trial. Del Rio remains free on $50,000 bond and we are told that he has hired several defense attorneys to represent him.

Del Rio, real name Jose Alberto Rodriguez Chucuan, 43, was arrested on 5/4 after the victim went to local authorities, stating that on Sunday 5/3 at 10 PM Chucuan allegedly became angry with her and physically assaulted her after accusing her of infidelity. When the victim would not admit to the infidelity, Chucuan allegedly slapped her "across the head" several times. The victim also alleged that Chucuan "forced her to wear a dress and dance for him" and that when she refused and he told her not to start crying because if she did, "he would take her son and drop him in the middle of the road somewhere."

The arrest affidavit stated that the woman alleged Chucuan had sexually assaulted her and that she had her injuries documented via photographs.

At the time, The FOX affiliate in San Antonio reported, "Police said Rodriguez Chucuan then tied the woman's hands with boxing straps, put a sock in her mouth and sexually assaulted her for several hours, using various objects. According to investigators, he also punched her in the back during the assault, causing visible injuries. The victim told detectives she does not remember much after he placed his hand around her throat."

TMZ later reported additional details that brought the accusations into a much more disturbing light, stating that the victim reported the attack started at around 10 PM on 5/3 and that it lasted over 16 hours, ending on 5/4 on 2:30 PM. The victim went to the police the same day with TMZ's report noting that the responding officer saw bruises on her face, arms, legs and neck. The victim alleged that Chucuan attempted to burn her passport and smashed her laptop computer and cell phone. TMZ reported that the victim, "..also claims Del Rio attacked her, causing multiple injuries and left her, 'feeling woozy and dizzy from the hits to her head.' " The victim told police she was afraid and intended to leave San Antonio as soon as possible.

If Chucuan is found guilty, the minimum prison sentence for sexual assault under Texas law would be 2 years with a maximum of up to 20 years. As a second degree felony under Texas law, sexual assault can also lead to a fine of up to $10,000, in addition to incarceration.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Farrah Akase, who has been translating the stories covering Hana Kimura’s suicide and the role that Fuji TV and Terrace House played has reported on the following from the second part of an article that includes comments from Hana’s mother, Kyoko Kimura:
*Hana had been a fan of Terrace House since she was in her teen years
*Cast members on the show were paid 100,000 yen per month, equivalent to $1,000 (U.S.) when they filmed outings with their friends they paid out of pocket
*Their contracts were strict limiting their ability to leave the house until the producers allowed them, violation of the contracts came with heavy fines ranging from $10,000 to $100,000 (U.S.)
*There was a scandal in 2014 where cast members went public with allegations of sexual harassment and staged scenes & relationships leading to Fuji TV canceling the series
*They later began working with Netflix and the same director was used for both iterations of the series
*The director was interviewed for the article and when asked about staging scenes, directed their questions to Fuji TV
*Those working on the article spoke with Fuji TV president Ryunosuke Endo, who denied the allegations and wanted to know who provided the testimonies
*Endo said they were still investigating the claims and cast members were asked for their full consent ahead of time
*Cast member Kai Kobayashi spoke on the record for the article stating he called to apologize to Hana on May 15th (days before she died), he knew from the start the scene was staged and they were going to meet up when the coronavirus subsided

The Unseen Japan Twitter account translated comments made by Kai Kobayashi to the Bunshun outlet regarding instructions he was given by an assistant director for Terrace House. Kobayashi says when he was filming a scene with Hana for their first date, they were jumping on a trampoline and the AD told him that it wasn’t interesting and told him “What if you feel her up or something?” with Kobayashi adding that such requests were “typical” on the show. The article added that Fuji TV is denying that staff instructed Hana to escalate tension during the costuming scene to help ratings, although those around Hana dispute Fuji TV’s assertion.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Many, including Stu Bennett, have plenty of opinions on NXT UK's impact in the UK wrestling scene.

Bennett, who wrestled in WWE as Wade Barrett, is one of many that did not think highly of the additional NXT brand in the United Kingdom. In an interview with 411 Mania, Bennett said NXT UK has not helped the wrestling scene in the region, saying that certain wrestlers benefited from it, but several promotions did not.

"I wouldn’t say it's helped the UK scene. I would say it’s helped the wrestlers who have been signed, but outside of that, I don’t think it’s been beneficial. You’d have to look at the affect it’s had on some of the companies or some of the independents, the independent companies, who were thriving prior that versus now. So, I don’t think it’s been beneficial to the scene at all. I understand why WWE have done it. They want to have a stake hold there. It was not coincidental that NXT UK was brought out at the same time that WOS [World of Sport], which at the same time, was seen as a threat to WWE over in the UK. It wasn’t coincidental, however, it’s been portrayed by them, and I think we all know the truth behind that. Again, that’s business. I understand why they did it. I’m not casting them for doing that, but to portray it as beneficial to the UK as something benevolent is ludicrous. And as good as the product might, it’s certainly not something that’s helped the UK independent scene," Bennett said.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Randy Orton appears headed towards a feud with the current WWE Champion.

A prior report stated how Orton wanted to work with NXT stars but a new report from WrestleTalk's Louis Dangoor notes that Orton is likely feuding with WWE Champion Drew McIntyre for SummerSlam.

Previously, Orton has reportedly thrown out the idea of working with NXT roster members including Tommaso Ciampa and Adam Cole. However, the new report states that although Orton doing an angle with either Ciampa or Cole is not in the cards for SummerSlam, it doesn't mean that WWE isn't open to the idea of exploring that in the future.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
More details on the new United States Championship belt design have been unveiled.

Twitter user @BeltFanDan, who first reported that the new design that was created last December, would go on Twitter to talk more about the new design. Something that was noteworthy about the new design was that it was 3d laser metal powder printed ...

In other WWE-belt design news, there have been new designs for the SmackDown Tag Team titles since WrestleMania 36, but they have yet to be officially unveiled and there's no word on if they will ever be unveiled. In addition, the NXT titles have new belts that are simply a larger version of the existing ones.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Nintendo of America announced that Super Nintendo game Natsume Championship Wrestling will be added to their Switch Online game library on 7/15.

Natsume Championship Wrestling was released in 1994 and is an American conversion of Zen Nippon Puroresu Sekai Saiky? Taggu Dasshu which used the All Japan Wrestling license.

1986 Nintendo Entertainment System classic Pro Wrestling is already available on the service.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
The cover for the WWE 2K Battlegrounds video game, which is being released this fall, has been unveiled:

Presenting the OFFICIAL cover of WWE 2K Battlegrounds! Are. You. READY?! #WWE2KBattlegrounds pic.twitter.com/iY7MTrbUCy
— WWE 2K Battlegrounds (@2KBattlegrounds) July 8, 2020

Kofi Kingston, Daniel Bryan, Yokozuna, Roman Reigns, Ronda Rousey, Steve Austin and Asuka join the previously revealed Andre the Giant, John Cena, the Rock, The Undertaker, Becky Lynch, Charlotte Flair, "The Fiend" Bray Wyatt and Big Show in the game.

WWE Battlegrounds will be released on 9/18 for PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Windows PC via Steam, Nintendo Switch and more. The new official trailer can be seen below

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Presenting the OFFICIAL cover of WWE 2K Battlegrounds! Are. You. READY?! <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/WWE2KBattlegrounds?src=hash&amp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#WWE2KBattlegrounds</a> <a href="https://t.co/iY7MTrbUCy">pic.twitter.com/iY7MTrbUCy</a></p>&mdash; WWE 2K Battlegrounds (@2KBattlegrounds) <a href="https://twitter.com/2KBattlegrounds/status/1280830252520857601?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 8, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/z0D42rHYGDM" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>


TPWW Frontpage:

drave 07-09-2020 11:54 AM

Looks kinda fun tbh.

Lock Jaw 07-09-2020 07:00 PM

At the very least you can throw someone into an alligator. That has to be worth something.

fundiddle 07-09-2020 07:31 PM

is this finally the wwe game with a proportionate yokozuna? hard to tell since he's in the background in the promo shot and nowhere in the trailer


whoops, i forgot wrestlemania: the arcade game
https://external-content.duckduckgo....ifv&f=1&nofb=1

Emperor Smeat 07-09-2020 09:50 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
In terms of total viewers, NXT won the latest installment of the Wednesday Night War, averaging 759,000 viewers to AEW Dynamite's 715,000.

NXT on the USA Network was down 4.2 percent in total viewers from last week's night one of the Great American Bash. In the 18-49 demo, the show averaged a 0.20 rating, down 9.1 percent. NXT finished 24th on cable in that demo.

AEW Dynamite on TNT was down from the 748,000 viewers that the previous week's opening night of Fyter Fest averaged. In 18-49, the show averaged a 0.28 rating, topping NXT again but down 3.4 percent from last Wednesday. The number was good for seventh place overall on cable in the demo ...

As it does almost every week, AEW won in every demo category except for people over 50, where NXT had a huge advantage of 0.39 to Dynamite's 0.27. AEW had a similar advantage in men 18-49 with a 0.39 rating to NXT's 0.26. The other demos were all relatively close.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
While AEW’s overall viewership was down, they saw a big increase with adults 18-34 growing by 27% and males 12-34 improving by 23.5% this week. Its largest loss was among women 18-49 which fell by 15%. The show also had a one-minute overrun on TNT.

NXT experienced a 15% loss with males 25-54, females 12-34 dropped by 12.5%, and males 18-49 declined by 10%. They did see an increase in the 18-34 demo, which was up 10%, so both shows saw gains in that category.

A big factor over the past three weeks for NXT has been its 50+ audience. One month ago, they were averaging 0.35-0.36 in that demo, and are coming off weeks of 0.42 on June 24th (their highest head-to-head rating int that demo), 0.40 on July 1st, and 0.39 this week.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Q - Since the last few weeks of the AEW vs. NXT battle, I've seen fans on Twitter pointing out that NXT has won the last few weeks but others are saying AEW is winning because they win the demos. What's more important?

A - From a network perspective, I can tell you that the demographics are more important. Everyone wants to win when they are in competition, but for a network, the demographics are far more important as that is the data that they deliver and promise to advertisers, who want to know that their products are seen by the highly desired younger audience. AEW on Wednesday night was #7 for the evening in the 18-34 demo - and was the tops in LOTS of other demos this week)- and I can tell you that from speaking to a lot of sources at Warner Media, they absolutely love AEW's performance and do so much that there's been a lot of talk in recent weeks about developing other ways to link AEW with additional corners of Warner properties.

Anyone who dismisses the demo numbers is either uneducated to their importance or they are looking for an incorrect way to prove themselves right. If WWE Smackdown is last in the viewership in their timeslot but they win the demo, it's not like FOX is going to look at the series as failing that week - and it's not like WWE would then bemoan that Smackdown was in last place vs. NBC, ABC, CBS, etc. The argument that AEW is "doing bad" in, in any way, is just plain silly and not rooted in reality.

As far as the overnight audience, it is important for bragging rights but it's also an outdated way of looking at things. For fans indoctrinated in the way we all used to track Raw vs. Nitro, it's silly to act like it's 1995. The overnight numbers are different now. Unless there is access to the +3 and +7 numbers via DVR viewing (which we don't have access to) and streaming #s, we don't know the final audience levels for the shows. So, the overnight numbers don't tell the story on viewership the way they did decades ago.

Lastly, it's Twitter. Not exactly the place to go for nuanced, detailed breakdown or discussions!

From PWI's weekly Q&A articles on the topic of viewership vs. demos debate between AEW and NXT in recent weeks.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
The WWE Network's R-Truth game show, simply titled "R-Truth's Game Show" will debut this Tuesday, July 14th.

WWE previews for the show features WWE stars answering questions and completing tasks over videoconferencing with the eclectic R-Truth as the master of ceremonies.

WWE filmed a pilot for the series back in May 2017 but it never went to series. WWE has now resurrected the concept.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Ring of Honor announced that next week's edition of ROH TV will pay tribute to STARDOM star Hana, who took her own life in May:

Next week on ROH TV is a very special tribute episode celebrating the career of Hana Kimura

We look back at Hana’s ROH matches, Her G1 Supercard match at Madison Square Garden, The stars of ROH share their favorite memories of Hana & more!

TV Listings: https://t.co/7wgWAA43tX pic.twitter.com/SWFPYd2QG0
— ROH Wrestling (@ringofhonor) July 8, 2020

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Last night, Taz resurrected his old FTW World Championship belt on AEW Fyterfest and bequeathed the Championship to Brian Cage, who going forward will be billed as the FTW Champion.

Since that time, PWInsider.com has received numerous questions about the title and how it can be used in AEW. While I covered this somewhat in my Q&A this morning, here is the deal.

The FTW belt was never owned by ECW, therefore it did not transfer over to WWE's ownership. In actuality, The belt was designed, created and owned by Taz, who came up with the original 1998 ECW storyline where he declared himself champion as a result of Shane Douglas refusing to defend the ECW World title against Taz. While Paul Heyman obviously gave Taz a platform and the push at the time, it was not something ECW devised for him nor was the belt something ECW commissioned.

Taz actually holds the copyright on the actual design of the belt, which allows him to do whatever he wishes with the design and the FTW intellectual property within professional wrestling. If he ever wanted to merchandise the belt, such a replicas, t-shirts, etc. Taz would be well within his rights to do so.

The belt that Brian Cage now holds is indeed the actual original FTW Championship belt. After FTW the belt was retired following the 1999 ECW Living Dangerously PPV, Taz retained ownership of the championship belt, which has been in his possession for the last 20-plus years.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
FTR (Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler) joined Bully Ray and David LaGreca on Monday’s installment of Busted Open Radio. Harwood revealed that he and Cash’s appearance on Jim Cornette’s podcast was not well received by those within AEW and said that they were “the biggest heels in the locker room” once that podcast hit people’s feeds.

“Just really quick off that, we did Cornette’s podcast not too long ago and we talked to Tony Khan and asked him if it would be okay if we did that, but no one else knew about that, and man when we got to TV, the next day after that podcast aired, we were the biggest heels in the locker room. Everyone, even our buddy MJF, everyone was so pissed off with us because they thought we went rogue and went on Cornette’s podcast to bury The Young Bucks and AEW. We were not a very well-liked pair in the locker room that day" ...

Also during the podcast, Wheeler and Harwood spoke about their new finisher, “The Goodnight Express”. Harwood stated that they did not have to change the “Shatter Machine” name but they wanted to anyway and also, they’ve been using the spike piledriver on AEW programming and they did pitch to use that move in WWE, says Harwood.

“So, the Shatter Machine and now we have to call it the Goodnight — we don’t have to but we enjoy calling it the Goodnight Express. It’s a move that obviously we took from parts of another great tag team. You may have heard of ‘em and we just incorporated [it] and put our own little spin on it. But, going to AEW with a spike piledriver, that’s something we always wanted to use in WWE. We even talked to Hunter about it. He said no. We had asked other people. Like we had asked Vince [McMahon] about it. He obviously didn’t want to use the piledriver at all and so we came to AEW and we started incorporating the spike piledriver just almost as a restart for us, and it’s something we want to incorporate into our matches. But for the Shatter Machine, no one has ever, ever, ever, ever kicked out of it. We learned that from listening to another great tag team that had the same kind of finisher with the same kind of premise. No one’s ever kicked out of it and we just want to take the spike piledriver and utilize it to its fullest extent and if no one can kick out of it, no one can kick out of that one as well. Just another move to the repertoire…”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Corey Graves welcomed Booker T onto the After The Bell podcast. Booker was open about the low ratings for WWE Backstage on FS1 and felt like the minimum number the show should’ve done was 500,000. Booker added that it may have helped if they covered independent wrestling on the program.

“And my thing was, I was always weary weekly, just because the ratings wasn’t what I wanted. I said with my star power and all the rest of the guys on the panel, our star power together man, we shouldn’t have no less than 500,000 per week. That should’ve been the low number for us. For me, I don’t think it was enough thought going into something like that. Everybody was just f*cking loving it. I’m like, ‘Man we gotta get these numbers up,’ and I thought stuff like that [talking independent wrestling] would intrigue not just the casual WWE viewer, but people that’s really thinking about, ‘Man, what is this business really, really truly all about?’”

Expanding the show to cover other wrestling promotions would have been an interesting idea but probably would have meant just promotions WWE is affiliated with. Plus WWE probably wouldn't be happy after a while if they started talking about their competitors in a positive light.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
A month after it was announced that he signed a multi-year deal with MLW, Saieve Al Sabah asked and was given his release from the company.

Earlier today, Sabah announced on Twitter that he is no longer with the company after asking for his release. Al Sabah was the newest member of Injustice, joining Myron Reed and Jordan Oliver on the June 4 episode of MLW Pulp Fusion.

According to Andrew Thompson of Post Wrestling, Al Sabah has been voicing his displeasure with MLW Chief Operating Officer Jared St. Laurent and his connection to Chasyn Rance, who has been registered as a sex offender since 2014. Al Sabah believes that St. Laurent may be tied into or may know more information about the disappearance of Samantha Fiddler who was last seen at the Team Vision Dojo, where St. Laurent used to be a trainer for and Rance currently runs, in 2016.

Thompson then reached out to St. Laurent, who said he hasn't been affiliated with either Rance or Team Vision Dojo in years. St. Laurent added that Al Sabah about a royalty check from a t-shirt sale that was only $5, but noted that he wasn't the one who gave Al Sabah that money and that he didn't know Al Sabah had a shirt due to his contract with MLW still not running.

St. Laurent added that all of his 2020 dealings with Al Sabah were pleasant and that Al Sabah appeared to have been apologetic after negotiations between him and MLW fell through in 2018. St. Laurent added that Al Sabah was telling people that he was going to get him fired.

Going back to the connection with Rance and Team Vision Dojo St. Laurent claimed he cut business ties with Rance and the school a decade ago Rance's legal issues were public, but would check in with the students at the school throughout the years to see how they were doing.

In an update to this story, Chasyn Rance sent an email to Andrew Thompson of POST Wrestling, noting that St. Laurent was booking at Team Vision’s ‘I BELIEVE’ promotion until May 2018

“The last show MSL booked for BELIEVE was May 4, 2018. He started being too busy with MLW and distancing himself from I Believe Court’s request. I did for years try to distance my name and stop wrestling for a bit but that only made the internet calm down but made business slow down. When I wrestle on shows, business has gone up. It’s been an issue for the past 10 years. MSL did not book the June 1, 2018 card. I gave him my thoughts and he said good. He did not come to book anymore shows which was fine. I had a nice handle on things. He had quit previously at one point after my issues but came back when I brought business up and he didn’t have much going on. That was the NJPW/CEO deal 2 years ago. Last year with AEW/CEO, MSL was not booking. I didn’t quite get things pulled from me. I finally got an answer that it was best to lay low. I was in the area promoting and getting my 20 tickets to my students and assistants for that event,” said Rance's email.

Alex Pourteau, the founder of the Pro Wrestling 2.0. Academy, reached out to Andrew to say that Samantha Fiddler, the missing person who was in a relationship with Teddy Hart at the time of her disappearance in November 2016, only trained at the school through the summer of 2016.

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Originally Posted by Fightful
Recently, NXT has played host to a lot of former superstars who cut their teeth on the black and gold brand and have now come back as part of the main roster to help elevate the brand.

Triple H recently spoke with Yahoo! about how often he gets requests from alumni to come back to NXT and how he makes it work with the WWE schedule.

"One of the things that I love about NXT is that there’s a bond and a family feel about it," Hunter began. "It’s something special when people are a part of it. It always reminds me of the pride people have in their college. When you graduate from college you have spent four years of your life there, that’s always your school, you’re proud of it, you wear the sweatshirts, you support the teams, still go to games. I think NXT is like that for a lot of talent. Sasha and Bayley call all of the time asking if they can come down [to Florida] and work. They’re on different brands, so I have to work within the creative components of what they already have, but I see it all the time."

He continued, "When all of this went down, a lot of the stuff that was happening was Charlotte’s idea, her being a part of the brand, being there on a regular basis. Kevin Owens competing for NXT last year in WarGames was something he had been on me about forever, about wanting to come down and do something. Almost everyone who comes through the door and then leaves is asking if they can come back and be a part of it again. You can see it and feel it in the afternoon when they walk in. It’s like going back in time for them, the excitement level is high even though at its best it’s a smaller building and crowd then they are used to. It’s really cool to see."

Main roster Creative and Vince doing a terrible job handling NXT call-ups probably helps a lot on that view former NXT talent have. Already have some like Ciampa being vocal about not wanting to ever leave NXT since he saw what WWE did with his group of call-ups and got lucky he didn't suffer a similar fate due to injury.

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Originally Posted by PWI
WWE released an excellent video on Keith Lee dedicating his WWE NXT Championship win (which aired last night) to his trainer, the late Killer Tim Brooks. The video notes Lee flew back to Texas to see Brooks one last time five days before his passing.

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/h-9Guk6yyGw" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 07-10-2020 04:01 PM

The Sheets (Observer Newsletter):

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COVID-19 and its effect on UFC and pro wrestling continued to dominate the news this past week.

WWE is recovering from an outbreak that caused changes to the taping schedule, a number of rewrites to television and numerous big names taken off this past two weeks of television ...

WWE has not said anything, either in memos to talent, or the media, about its outbreak. Based on different reports, anywhere from 30 or more individuals with the company have tested positive, although the only names released officially are Young, who did so on her own, Kayla Braxton, and producers James Gibson (Jamie Noble) and Adam Pearce.

The list of talent that hasn’t been at the Performance Center since the outbreak includes Dana Brooke, Carmella, Naomi, The Street Profits, Velveteen Dream, Austin Theory, Daniel Bryan, Finn Balor, Liv Morgan, Mandy Rose, Natalya, Nia Jax, Otis, Tucker, Mojo Rawley, Shorty G, Raquel Gonzalez, Sheamus and Sonya Deville.

Of those, Bryan and Sheamus both appeared on Zoom on Smackdown from home so it was clear they were scripted originally for the show and didn’t come. That could be by choice, given Bryan’s wife is pregnant and he’s had issues with his immune system, or other reasons. Dream and Theory were both named in recent allegations. WWE officially has said there is no change in Dream’s status, and he was in an auto accident but had been not been on the show while he was in the middle of a program with the Undisputed Era, and his name was never mentioned in commentary during a Dexter Lumis match where he was part of the storyline. WWE hasn’t responded to any questions on Theory, whose name has also not been mentioned on commentary or his absence when Seth Rollins and Murphy been on TV been acknowledged. Natalya is known to have not tested positive but was pulled for precautionary reasons. Brooke, Carmella and Naomi hadn’t been booked on television prior, so they all just simply may not have been used. Jax also doesn’t appear to have a program going right now, although was the one to “injure” Charlotte Flair so disappearing from television right after wouldn’t seem to make sense either ...

As of early in the week, Renee Young was fully recovered and “felt great,” so she should be returning to work fairly soon. She and Jon Moxley were both going to be tested once more this week and if the test is negative for both, he would be returning on AEW’s 7/15 show against Brian Cage.

After a period when masks were strongly discouraged if not outright banned, WWE has gone full circle and instituted a new mask policy for its NXT wrestlers in the stands on television.

On 7/3, which would have been after the Smackdown tapings that aired on 7/3 but before the Raw show that aired on 7/6, that was being taped that night, all talent working as extras in the stands were told that masks were mandatory and a fine system would be put in place.

On the Smackdown show that aired on 7/3, most of the talent were wearing masks it appeared and they did far less crowd shots. But there were crowd shots. Early in the show, you could see two performers with no masks right in front of the hard cam. They were quickly removed from their position. Everyone else was wearing a mask although one person did not have his mask covering his nose.

The new policy that went into effect the next day was a $500 fine for not wearing a mask the first time and a $1,000 fine a second violation. However, even though WWE confirmed that officially, NXT talent used as extras claimed to be unaware of a fine system for not wearing masks.

There were several people on camera during the 7/8 NXT show not with masks, but that show was taped on 7/1, before the policy went into effect.
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Raw on 7/6 did the second lowest number in modern history overall and tied for second lowest in the 18-49 demo, making it two bad numbers in a row after the heavy talk and angles and little wrestling format started with the departure of Paul Heyman and ascension of Bruce Prichard.

The show averaged 1,686,000 viewers and an 0.49 in 18-49 (637,000 viewers). The viewer number beat only the 5/4 show at 1,682,000 viewers. The 0.49 beat the 5/4 show’s record low of 0.46, and tied shows on 6/1 and 6/29 at 0.49 ...

The story of the number was both good and bad. The first hour was, by far, the lowest first hour in history. However, there was a huge increase in hour two. The second hour beating the first was commonplace most summers, but this year it has only happened a few times. What it appears is with the holiday, some people tuned in late, and there was a normal 8.0 percent drop from the second-to-third hour. The key things in hour two that led to increases were Rey Mysterio & Kevin Owens vs. Seth Rollins & Murphy and Ricochet &amp; Cedric Alexander vs. Bobby Lashley & MVP. There was a significant drop in hour three, headlined by Bayley vs. Asuka, which would have been the fourth lowest hour three in history.

The first-to-second hour gains were not among teenagers at all and very minimal with men 18-49 (three percent) and over 50 (one percent), but most heavily in women 18-49, which gained 10 percent. In hour three, women 18-49 dropped a little six percent, male 18-49 dropped nine percent, teenage girls dropped 14 percent and teenage boys dropped 25 percent and over 50 dropped seven percent ...

As compared to the same week last year, which had head-to-head competition from Home Run Derby, Raw was down 28.3 percent in viewers and 31.8 percent in 18-49 viewers.

The show did 160,000 in men 18-34, the best number in that demo since 3/25. It did 58,000 in women 18-34, 273,000 in men 35-49 and 146,000 in women 35-49.
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Smackdown on 7/3 did its record low on FOX with a 1.14 rating and 1,777,000 viewers (1.29 viewers per home) and an 0.4 (516,000 viewers) in 18-49, and 0.2 in 18-34.

I think you can almost throw this out based on the date, but we’ll know next week whether it’s back to normal or not.

The median viewer on Smackdown was 56.7 years old, the oldest skewing episode I’m aware of, and viewers per home were also down from usual.

The show did 83,000 in men 18-34, 40,000 in women 18-34, 235,000 in men 35-49 and 136,000 in women 35-49.

It’s only a one week pattern thus far so until next week, I wouldn’t put much stock in the number, as the show had been above recent lows for several weeks going into this. The holiday weekend likely hurt and President Trump made a speech that night which led to huge increases in news channels. For right now you have to look at the numbers, given only two other shows did 0.4s on network TV (granted all three networks ran nothing but rerun programming), it looks like the date and not as bad as it sounds. The 0.2 tied four other network reruns. The bad news is that on a night with nothing but reruns, Smackdown was the least-watched show on major network TV for the night.

It still beat what FOX did on the same holiday weekend last year, which was 1.38 million viewers and 0.3 in 18-49, so up 22.3 percent overall and 33.3 percent in 18-49 ...

We don’t have quarter hours for the show, but the Matt Riddle promo and Riddle vs. John Morrison match did 1.83 million viewers. A.J. Styles vs. Drew Gulak did 1.77 million viewers. Bayley & Sasha Banks promo, Bayley vs. Alexa Bliss and a Bray Wyatt-Braun Strowman hype segment did 1.83 million viewers. And Shinsuke Nakamura vs. Kofi Kingston and the Jeff Hardy-Sheamus segment did 1.69 million viewers.
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Week two of the Great American Bash vs. Fyter Fest battle heated up after the business results of 7/1 came out.

WWE and USA had even fewer commercials and more picture-in-picture during the commercials, because minute-by-minute stats show viewers from each show migrating to the other at a fairly substantial rate when either show is in a commercial break. AEW and TNT also did more picture-in-picture than they’ve done previously for a taped show, but didn’t cut back on actual commercial time ...

When it came to numbers, both shows declined overall and in 18-49 when there were reasons both should have increased. NXT had, in theory, its biggest television match of the year, Adam Cole with a 403-day title reign in a double belt match against Keith Lee, the hottest wrestler on the brand. That match was a big success drawing the best quarter for NXT all year and best 18-49 number as well, and spelled the difference completely in the overall number.

Even though the main event always means more than depth on the show, there was a decline for the overall show from the prior two weeks, although perhaps that’s because of a boost from Bayley &amp; Sasha Banks in multiple segments that wasn’t there this week.

AEW had pushed Jericho vs. Cassidy hard for weeks, with strong angles. The reality is the angles didn’t do well. Cassidy is hurt greatly from lack of live crowds. Cassidy had done well in quarters, but it was also midway or once even somewhat late in the show. He hasn’t done well when booked as a main eventer, and there are merch movers and people who get pops and there are main eventers. They are all different animals. And Jericho vs. Cassidy did do well based on usual quarter eights for AEW in 18-49, and had the highest numbers in 35-49 of any segment on either show.

His closest comparison historically is mid-80s heyday JCP Jimmy Valiant, who always got huge crowd reactions for his matches, but the promotion knew enough to keep him in the middle with mid-level heels, and always winning as opposed to headlining him against the top tier guys and losing. And it wasn’t even clear that was the main event ahead of time, as AEW had depth, but no match with any real stakes. Of course that was because the scheduled Jon Moxley vs. Brian Cage main event had to be pushed back a week.

NXT won overall viewers 759,000 to 715,000, but even with Lee vs. Cole, the important number saw them fall in comparison slightly, as AEW did 0.28 in 18-49 (364,000 viewers) to NXT’s 0.20 (262,000 viewers) ...

AEW once again won every key demo. In men 18-34, AEW did 89,000 viewers (up 39.1 percent from last week) to NXT’s 47,000 (up 9.3 percent). In women 18-34, AEW had 42,000 (down 4.5 percent) to 33,000 for NXT (down 19.5 percent). In men 35-49, AEW had 162,000 (down 7.4 percent) and NXT had 118,000 (down 16.3 percent). In women 35-49, AEW had 71,000 (down 20.2 percent) and NXT had 64,000 (down 9.9 percent) ...

Perhaps the biggest surprise after the record low Raw is that Wednesday, with two major shows, did not beat Monday in 18-49, although it was close. Monday had 637,000 in 18-49, which was 433,000 men and 204,000 women. Wednesday had 626,000, which was 416,000 men and 210,000 women.

In the main event segment, Cole vs. Lee did 922,000 viewers and 355,000 in 18-49, both above last week’s Io Shirai vs. Banks match. It was the highest overall viewer number for both shows, and the highest 18-34 and 35-49 number for NXT of the night. It still lost in the demo to Jericho vs. Cassidy, which did 675,000 viewers, and 362,000 in 18-49, which in the demo is a strong quarter eight for both shows.

In overall viewers, AEW won all four quarters in the first hour. NXT won all four in the second hour. In 18-49, AEW won all eight quarters. In 35-49, AEW won all eight quarters. In 18-34, AEW doubled or more than doubled NXT in all of the first four quarters, won seven quarters, but lost 117,000 to 114,000 for the main event. Cole vs. Lee greatly boosted every age group and key demo as well as overall.

The show opened with AEW overcoming the strong lead-in advantage, doing 785,000 viewers and 391,000 in 18-49 for the Kenny Omega &amp; Adam Page vs. Private Party match. Both numbers were AEW’s high point of the show, and the overall highest point of the night for both shows in18-49 and 18-34. NXT had 775,000 viewers and 235,000 in 18-49 for Candice LeRae vs. Mia Yim in a street fight.

In quarter two, AEW lost 90,000 viewers and 35,000 in 18-49 for Joey Janela vs. Lance Archer. NXT lost 94,000 viewers and 9,000 in 18-49 for the ending and post-match of LeRae vs. Yim.

In quarter three, AEW gained 41,000 viewers and 17,000 in 18-49 for the ending of Archer vs. Janela, a Darby Allin video and the Taz &amp; Brian Cage interview with the FTW title. NXT gained 15,000 viewers and 9,000 in 18-49 for Bronson Reed vs. Tony Nese, the Robert Stone brand angle and the beginning of Isaiah Scott vs. Johnny Gargano.

In quarter four, AEW lost 1,000 viewers and gained 6,000 in 18-49 for Young Bucks &amp; FTR vs. Butcher &amp; Blade &amp; Pentagon Jr. &amp; Rey Fenix. It’s notable one of the best TV matches of the year really didn’t move ratings much. NXT lost 15,000 viewers and 10,000 in 18-49 for Scott vs. Gargano.

In quarter five, AEW lost 30,000 viewers and 28,000 in 18-49 for Big Swole being turned away, a Nyla Rose squash and a Rose promo. NXT gained 76,000 viewers and 22,000 in 18-49 for Santos Escobar &amp; Joaquin Wilde &amp; Raul Mendoza vs. Drake Maverick &amp; Tyler Breeze &amp; Fandango.

In quarter six, AEW lost 13,000 viewers and stayed even in 18-49 for SCU vs. Brodie Lee &amp; Stu Grayson &amp; Colt Cabana. NXT lost 16,000 viewers but gained 10,000 in 18-49 for Mercedes Martinez vs. Santana Garrett.

In quarter seven, AEW gained 3,000 viewers and lost 1,000 in 18-49 for the ending of the SCU vs. Dark Order, next week’s card, Britt Baker/Swole angle and the beginning of Jericho vs. Cassidy. NXT gained 75,000 viewers and 55,000 in 18-49 for the beginning of Lee vs. Cole.

In quarter eight, AEW lost 20,000 viewers but gained 12,000 in 18-49 for Cassidy vs. Jericho. NXT gained 106,000 viewers and 47,000 in 18-49 for Lee vs. Cole, but the long commercial free period helped here ...

With the accidental leak of a photo of Lee holding two belts and confetti all around him that came out, there were people trying to push the idea that maybe they taped two endings or you never know. They did not tape two endings. Had they wanted to, they could have taped a different ending the next day to “prove” the news wasn’t real, but that would have been short-sighted, and blown up their long-term plans to build the 8/22 Takeover show, presumably around Lee vs. Karrion Kross for the title.
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AEW announced Fight for the Fallen which will be live on 7/15 and feature Moxley vs. Cage, FTR vs. Pentagon Jr. & Rey Fenix (which should be great), Kenny Omega & Young Bucks vs. Jurassic Express and Cody vs. Sonny Kiss for the TNT title. NXT has countered with Io Shirai vs. Tegan Nox for the women’s title and Damien Priest vs. Cameron Grimes. Based on this, unless something big is added, this should favor AEW. But the flip side is they have both NASCAR and UFC to contend with, which will hurt both shows significantly.
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Post Wrestling listed the WWE’s taping schedule through SummerSlam, which is now scheduled for 8/23 at the Performance Center.

Vince McMahon had hoped to have SummerSlam as the first major arena show, and was willing to move it to September if necessary. As we’ve seen just in the last few weeks, schedule changes are plentiful for a number of reasons, whether pandemic changes and other things that may or may not end up happening. Clearly the decision at this point is that live events with crowds in September aren’t that likely so these are the current plans:
7/15 - NXT for 7/15 and 7/22
7/17 - Smackdown live or live-to-tape
7/19 - Extreme Rules mostly live
7/20 - Raw for 7/20 and 7/27
7/21 - Smackdown for 7/24 and 7/31
7/29 - NXT for 7/29 and 8/5
8/3 - Raw for 8/3 and 8/10
8/4 - Smackdown for 8/7 and 8/14
8/12 - NXT for 8/12 and 8/19
8/17 - Raw for 8/17 and Smackdown for 8/21
8/22 - NXT Takeover
8/23 - SummerSlam

A few notes on how they are doing the schedule. They are not doing any tapings out of order. For example, they could save time and do tapings for Raw and Smackdown after SummerSlam before, but don’t want to risk it. In the old days, WWE routinely would tape television that would air after PPV shows before, but that was also when things were planned on long in advance. With the nature of closed sets, the spoilers aspect isn’t even an issue but the reality is they can’t trust themselves for carry out plans without the ability to change their minds prior to a PPV show.

The other is, with the exception of 8/17, that the Raw, Smackdown and NXT crew will be kept separate. This comes from the recent outbreak where the brands were all affected in some way. There is still an issue with the same fans being used at all shows. Even though they will all be tested prior to every taping, there is still a large element of risk ...

Hopefully the stricter standards by WWE now will mean that a second outbreak isn’t happening. But all groups, whether it’s Marc Ratner at UFC (granted, kept far away from everyone at the events and always masked), Ric Flair, Jim Ross, Jake Roberts and others are older than 65. With the exception of Ratner, all of whom have had health issues and were still regularly appearing.
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There will be at least two taped cinematic matches at the newly named “The Horror Show at Extreme Rules” PPV produced by WWE on 7/19 from the Performance Center.

Besides the Bray Wyatt vs. Braun Strowman non-title match billed as a fight at the swamp, the plan right now is also to tape the Eye For An Eye match with Rey Mysterio vs. Seth Rollins.

The match has gotten a lot of attention in recent days, largely because the stipulation is stupid. They are billing the match as one that can only end when one person pulls the others’ eye out.

The idea is to do a taped match and use some form of CGI effects to simulate an eye being pulled out as the finish.

A key aspect of this match is that Mysterio, 45, has been appearing with WWE for the past few months without a contract. It’s notable because in this type of an environment, with competition, from a legal standpoint, Mysterio could show up on the 7/15 Dynamite show or 7/18 Impact PPV show and not on this show. Now, that isn’t going to happen and it shows the trust Vince McMahon has in Mysterio to book a guy in a key PPV angle who could legally walk out in mid-angle or no-show the PPV card. Mysterio has been working on the terms of his original 18 month contract.

There have been negotiations. Essentially where things stand is that Mysterio had asked for a raise and been told that no raises were being offered, and that they had just let a number of wrestlers go. But given the company is expected by everyone who follows the business end to set a profit record this year due to the size of the television deals, he didn’t initially accept that reasoning ...

The suspicion is that if he does sign a new deal, he shouldn’t lose this match, but that would require Rollins to take time off and wear an eyepatch until some sort of magical fixture storyline comes into play. If he doesn’t sign, it would make sense for this to be his blow-off as it has been months ...

If it was just Mysterio, at this point he would just probably go to who paid him the best, which would probably coome down to either WWE, AEW or a Moxley/Jericho like deal of AEW and New Japan which he is a big enough star to get if that’s what he wanted ...

But his son Dominick is a key to this. Dominick was forgotten about for months, but after Rey’s contract was up, knowing that Rey is going to probably care more about pushing Dominick and Dominick getting a break than perhaps anything right now, he was brought back for the current angle. While he hasn’t done a match yet, from a physical standpoint in the few instances he’s had to perform, from a timing standpoint, he’s looked great.

And that may still be the factor as to why WWE is probably going to be the frontrunner to keep him ...

There is also AAA, although he went there previously on a strong deal but I don’t think AAA has the money to be competitive for what he wants, even though one of his closest friends is the booker. AEW and AAA haven’t worked much together of late but a relationship is there and Kenny Omega is still AAA’s world champion.
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Anthony Crupi on the sports business site Sportico when talking about FOX dropping golf, the reason behind it is that FOX has a buyout clause and in this case even with dropping the rest of the years of their U.S. Open coverage, they have pay a buyout clause of an estimated $51 million per year for the length of the contract plus NBC is paying go the PGA isn’t losing money even though NBC is paying significantly less. The idea is they are saving $42 million per year in rights plus production costs and they are trying to cut to pay for the higher NFL prices. Crupi said that cutting Smackdown before the end of its contract isn’t likely. Even though Smackdown is doing far less than expectations, FOX is up five percent in 18-49 this season and the median viewer age this season of 52.4. Smackdown has aged more than four years of late, making it the second oldest skewing wrestling show behind only NXT. It’s still slightly younger than the programming they had last year. They also noted that Smackdown costs $205 million per year while if they put two dramas in that time slot it would probably cost $220 million but they’d only get 22 new episodes and the reruns would draw poorly or they’d have to pay more for other programming. Plus FOX likes the fall synergy of NFL Thursday, wrestling Friday, college football Saturday and NFL Sunday. This past week may be a fluke, but there’s no way they made this deal thinking they’d possibly be looking at 0.4s. I don’t think pandemic numbers are a reflection of the show because it’s not the atmosphere the show is supposed to have, so decisions made on these numbers really would be foolish right now. The negative that we don’t know if the audience will bounce back when this is over, given this period is going to be lasting a long time
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The most-watched shows on the WWE Network for this past week were: 1. The Very Best of WCW Nitro; 2. WWE 365: Ricochet; 3. Raw Talk for 7/6; 4. NXT Great American Bash from 7/1; 5. Best of WWE: Ricochet; 6. Best U.S. championship matches; 7. Undertaker’s Last Ride episode five; 8. Every Undertaker vs. Kane match; 9. Backlash 2020; 10. Great America Bash 2007
First time in a long while NXT managed to be back in the Top 10 and also hold a high spot for the week even though it was for last week's episode. Before that it got so bad at certain times that Meltzer started tracking the Top 15 and even then there were occasions where NXT still didn't track.

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New Japan Pro Wrestling, barring an emergency, will become the first major promotion in four months to run with a decent-sized crowd with shows on 7/11 and 7/12 at Osaka Jo Hall.

Both shows are to be set up for 30 percent capacity which would be about 3,600 fans and will be a test if they can have that many people at a show and follow their strict protocols to make it safe. Both shows are said to be close to sold out ...

The shows will air live with Japanese commentary at 4 a.m. Eastern early Saturday morning (1 a.m. late Friday on the East Coast) for the first show and at 2 a.m. Eastern time and 11 p.m. Pacific time late Saturday night for the second show, or about one hour after the UFC ends ...

For the two shows in Osaka, all seats are priced at 10,500 yen (about $98 U.S.) so both events, if sold out, will gross about $350,000 apiece. The crowd response may not be at normal levels because unlike in the U.S., where this would never happen, management has asked fans not to yell and scream at the shows because that could spread the virus. All fans at the show have to go through a temperature check and masks covering mouth and nose are mandatory ...

The semifinals of the New Japan Cup, with Okada beating Hiromu Takahashi and Evil over Sanada, took place on 7/3 at an empty Korakuen Hall. They did a four match show with the second hour airing live on BS Asahi at 8 p.m., billed as the first time in 34 years that New Japan returned to a live show in the company traditional (well from 1972 to 1984) time slot when the company had its most mainstream appeal.

We don’t have any numbers for the show although we’re told the viewership number was considered a huge success. However, the show itself had its issues ...

The Okada vs. Hiromu Takahashi match clearly had a purpose. They went 27:00, with the idea of getting Takahashi as much offense and as big a rub of hanging with Okada and having a classic match with him ...

The idea was to go about 17:00 and then the show would go off the air and they would promote people to watch the remainder of the match on New Japan World, which was putting the show up live for free. So the idea was to use the first live show in recent memory to get people used to New Japan World.

But that had its issues as well. With so many people signing into New Japan World, all at the same time, there was a crash in some places in Japan. We don’t know how widespread, but some were able to get on about five minutes later and saw the main event finish. Others couldn’t get on until after the match was over, leading to disappointment.
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For those who follow ratings, a major story when it comes to sports in particular is that Nielsen had been planning on introducing new ratings in September that would combine home ratings with out of home viewing.

The new ratings system that would measure places like restaurants, airports, gyms, bars and hotels has been delayed until January due to COVID-19 slowing up the process. Some prelim data with minor sports has shown six to seven percent increases and the belief the NFL games this fall would have shown 10 to 15 percent increases, perhaps more for prime time games and playoffs.

Networks are furious because they just found out and were expecting major ratings increases for the fall season, most notably for the NFL.

The problem is obvious. You can measure restaurants that have a football game on, but how do you measure viewership? Or a bar, or the airport? Do people who walk by count? Does everyone sitting there near the screen, even if paying no attention at all to the screen count? In some places like sports bars, everyone is watching the game so it should count. In other places, it’s on and few are paying attention. These ratings mean millions and even billions of dollars. For wrestling, the continuing decline was thought to be masked for one year with the change in systems, and now that delay won’t be until January.
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CMLL: Julio Cesar Rivera on Informa, the CMLL weekly streaming update, said that the company was waiting to get approval from the government and the commission to start running again. He said until both groups sign off there will be no shows. He did say they plan on empty arena shows first with all the talent COVID tested. Arena Mexico has been open to tourists with temperature checks and health questionnaires. Fantasma, the head of the commission said that he did get date requests from Salvador Lutteroth, who is currently running the promotion (this is Chavo Lutteroth, obviously a request from the original Salvador Lutteroth would be a far bigger story) and he went to doctors. There’s really no answers yet.

AAA: There are still no answers as to when they will start running again. AAA has an edge over CMLL in that CMLL’s big shows are at Arena Mexico, so they have to wait until Mexico City’s government and commission okay events. AAA is a touring promotion and can go to lower risk parts of the country first. But at this point there’s not even a hint of when this will be
Quote:

Regarding Brian Pillman Jr., who debuted on Dark against Shawn Spears, he is under contract to MLW but there would be no issue from the MLW side if AEW wants to use him. His contract allows for that anyway whereas the newer MLW contracts are more restrictive. That said, Pillman Jr. has asked to get out of his MLW contract and was denied. MLW tentatively has dates scheduled for 10/3 and 12/5, but anything that far in advance is subject to change, and Pillman, if he doesn’t get a release, would in theory be expected to work those dates. MLW and AEW have worked out deals in the past such as with MJF, where he had signed with MLW, AEW used him since his contract allowed for it and he signed with them as well and worked MLW until the end of his agreement. Since MLW usually tapes Friday or Saturday, and AEW on Wednesday, there isn’t likely to be a date conflict.
Quote:

As best we can tell, the only major wrestling company that requested a government PPP loan was Anthem Wrestling Exhibitions, LLC. On 4/5 they filed a request for a loan between $150,000 and $350,000 to retain 106 jobs
Quote:

On the Tessa Blanchard situation, her [Impact Wrestling] contract expired around 6/30 (that isn’t for sure but that was the date we were told but it has expired) so she’s now a free agent. She had said that she wasn’t willing to travel and work during the pandemic. They wanted her to at least come in and drop the title on the 7/18 show. We were told that she offered a one-date price and whatever the number was, they turned it down, and then announced she was fired just days before her contract expired. Her boyfriend, Daga’s situation is unclear past he is still under contract and they don’t think her situation impacts his situation. He wants to work. The story we were told is that he was willing to work the last taping and was willing to try to get out of Mexico but he wasn’t booked and as best we can still, he’s not booked for the PPV and he’s not part of any of the current storylines

Emperor Smeat 07-14-2020 09:52 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
There were slices of good news, but it was mostly very bad news when it came to Raw's ratings last night.

Raw averaged 1.56 million viewers over the three hours, the lowest in modern history. In 18-49, the show averaged a 0.48, which would be the second lowest in the entire history of the show.

The previous record audience low was May 4 which did 1.68 million viewers and a 0.46 rating in the 18-49 demo.

The positives are the audience skewed younger, as the demo number was only down two percent from last week while viewers overall were down seven percent from last week's show which was the second lowest audience and demo of all-time.

The other positive and negative relates to audience drop. Like last week, the second hour beat the first hour, and the first hour-to-third hour audience drop was only five percent, one of the lowest figures of the last year. The problem was that the audience at the start was the lowest ever, and that all three hours set record lows for those hours. The 1.50 million viewers for hour three broke the all-time low hour mark of 1.55 million for the third hour on May 4.

Raw was fourth overall in 18-49 behind 90 Day Fiance, Below Deck Mediterranean and 90 Day Other Way. It was first in males 18-49 and males 12-17.

Overall, Raw was 28th overall for the night, and fifth among non-news shows. It was down 36 percent from the same week last year in total viewers and 40 percent down in 18-49.

Virtually all the second-to-third hour drop was over 50, hence the demo not declining as much as the overall.

The three-hours were:

8 p.m. 1.58 million viewers
9 p.m. 1.60 million viewers
10 p.m. 1.50 million viewers

https://i.imgur.com/X0m4BBi.gif

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
The latest service preparing to enter the streaming wars Wednesday will feature WWE programming.

In a Tuesday story on Variety, NBCUniversal's Peacock service announced a total of 20,000 hours for premium subscribers with 100 of those hours being WWE content available in August. While they didn't list everything that will make up that 100 hours, series like WWE Untold, Steve Austin's Broken Skull Sessions, and compilations like John Cena's Best WrestleMania Matches were given as examples. Recent editions of WWE Raw will not be part of the premium service ...

Similar to the WWE Network, Peacock will also have a free tier, but there was no WWE programming listed. The service will be available everywhere consumers get their traditional streaming services with the exception of Roku or Amazon Fire TV.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Tony Khan spoke to the New York Post about Jimmy Havoc and Sammy Guevara’s suspensions: “I suspended them both. Very different situations. I just needed to address both. We are addressing both. I think Jimmy really needed the counseling. If and when he were to wrestle again, the most important thing for himself and everybody here is that he sought treatment and counseling. When he asked for that help, we’re gonna help him. With Sammy, I think the right thing to do was to suspend him. The comments he made were horrible. I can’t defend them. I can’t even comment on them because they’re unspeakably bad. He has also done a different kind of counseling and he’s in a different kind of counseling and it’s a different kind of coaching. Everybody here, male and female pretty much up and down the roster we talked to felt like Sammy had no history of this kind of behavior. Really people were shocked Sammy had said that. Certainly, it’s an old clip. I think the video was four years old. I had never seen that video and it’s something I would have addressed with him before Sammy started here. I never had an opportunity to address it because I didn’t know it existed and neither did anybody else or if they did nobody told us. For both of them, we really needed to address the situation before talking about what to do in the future afterward. I didn’t want to rush into making a decision on either person, so it felt like until I had all the facts suspending was the right thing to do. Then I could make whatever the right decision is. I knew the right decision wasn’t for those guys to just come to TV and not address this stuff.”

Khan also discussed PAC’s status: “I really miss PAC a lot. Right now the border is not a great situation. As I understand it, if he were to go back to England, if he were to come here and he was able to get in, do a quarantine after travel then he would also, when he tried to go home, he’d be in a two-week quarantine before he could do anything. So it just doesn’t seem like a sustainable situation right now because PAC lives in England, so until travel is sustainable and he could do what he used to do, which is come here and stay and do a few shows and then go back to England and really commute across the Atlantic, it’s very challenging right now. Until it becomes safe to travel back and forth for PAC to make those trips internationally, until the border is really ready, I don’t think we can rush him back even though we’d love to have him.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
While speaking with TalkSport, Cody addressed a report that said CM Punk asked for an “astronomical amount” of money when he negotiated with AEW: “As far as the CM Punk negotiations go, everyone heard the famous ‘he got a text from us.’ Yeah, of course there were negotiations and he did ask for a great amount of money and Punk is worth a great deal of money. But you also have to -- and this isn’t speaking to Punk specifically, this is speaking to recruitment and what we’ve learned in wrestling in general -- a lot of people think ‘these wrestlers are running this wrestling company.’ These wrestlers are doing everything they can to run the creative, the brand and the marketing and things, but there are some very smart and fiscally conservative people who surround us and flank us because this isn’t my money. At all. And I don’t want a situation that happened with WCW or Jim Crockett Promotions where we think we’re flying so high that we can do anything. No -- this is a business. And we have to turn a profit. The fact we were able to turn a profit as a company within only two years of being alive, very few other companies within wrestling -- it’s real limited, you can count on one hand who’s been able to do that versus who has bled money -- but in that situation the negotiations, I don’t think they ever got too serious. Doesn’t mean they won’t one day, but they never got entirely too serious. I think there is a good relationship there. I think I have a good relationship with Phil, I believe Tony does too and I’m not sure really when it comes to him, it’s not so much about the money. It’s about are you interested in doing this? Because the price tag becomes a lot more justifiable if you’re genuinely interested in what we’re doing at the high speed we’re doing it. And again, that’s not even specific to him, just in general, if the passion is not there, the money is not there.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Tetsuya Naito is releasing an autobiography on August 19th, 2020. In the book, Naito covers the start of Los Ingobernables de Japon, the New Japan Cup, becoming the IWGP Heavyweight and Intercontinental Champion and the ambition he had to become double champion.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
The 2010 WWE Money In The Bank pay-per-view was the focus of the latest ARN podcast. Conrad brought up how during this time period, Vince McMahon didn’t want his talents using chops because it would cause the crowd to “woo”, which is a signature of Ric Flair who was with TNA Wrestling at the time.

“Well, to this day, people are woo’ing, and they’re woo’ing on TV shows that doesn’t even warrant a woo or have anything to do with wrestling, you know? It’s just one of those things that stuck. Chops have always been part of the business and just to suddenly, when so many guys use them — okay, it’s a tribute to Flair, okay. But if it’s part of a guy’s offense, I mean how do you take that away from him because they pop for a guy that works for a different company or may not work for any company? It’s just real discombobulated to me,” Arn Anderson said.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Conrad Thompson got Eric Bischoff and Tony Khan together for an hour-plus conversation that’s up on the All Elite Wrestling YouTube channel. Bischoff shared that while he was in WWE, he and fellow members of the writing team would watch AEW and NXT side-by-side.

“One of the things that I think has distinguished your show from anybody else’s, even when I was in WWE last year when you guys debuted, I sat and watched both shows side-by-side. NXT and AEW and clearly I was working in WWE at the time and I was actually watching it in a writer’s conference room with a bunch of other writers and one of the first things I noticed was that you’re handling your production so much better. When I watch your show, even under COVID — that was pre-COVID obviously but even under COVID, the way you’re shooting your show, it’s tighter, your shots tend to be tighter, you embrace your venue as opposed to trying to camouflage it quite as much. It feels — and I said this like the next day. Somebody, somebody! If you can imagine, said, ‘What did you think?’ I told him what I thought. Your show feels more like live TV to me because it has that grit — don’t take this the wrong way, please. I mean this is as a compliment, but your show feels gritty enough to convince me it’s live, and you don’t strive to be so perfect that you lose that sense of live energy.”

Following that conversation while discussing TV deals, Tony Khan revealed that initially, TNT executives were interested in WWE’s TV rights in 2018.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Former NWA World Heavyweight Champion Raven was a guest on The Lewis Nicholls Show. Back in February, Raven appeared on an episode of AEW Dynamite in Atlanta. During the interview, Raven explained his cameo appearance on the show and stated that he would’ve liked to work with AEW in a larger role.

“I live in Atlanta. That’s where the show was and I came by to say hi to a bunch of people and so they asked me if I would be a red herring for a cameo, you know? Sure. A, I don’t mind but B, what am I gonna say no? That’s just disrespectful. Plus, if it helped them out, it was fine. But I would’ve liked to work with them some more but, they… they basically have what they need as far as where my skills are utilized best, you know? Like in creative, they have their creative. They have a system and it works for them so, that’s great.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by WhatCulture
According to Fightful, Matt Riddle botched his debut on SmackDown.

The 19 June episode was set-up to coronate AJ Styles as new Intercontinental Champion before the incoming Riddle interrupted him. During the pre-taped segment, WWE wanted to make sure that certain things happened.

After Styles was "very funny" and bantered with Daniel Bryan about strapping the IC belt around his waist for him, John Laurinaitis crashed the scene via the Performance Center's PA system and repositioned everybody in-ring for Riddle's entrance.

Apparently, it was vitally important that the ex-NXT man could be seen clearly by the hard cam. WWE wanted to make sure that everyone at home could see "he wasn't wearing shoes".

Fightful also reported that AJ, Riddle and host Renee Young had lines written down in front of them on the table. At one stage, Riddle accidentally read one of the lines meant for Styles, recognised his mistake and stopped the filming with a quick, "My bad, bro".

That cracked everyone up, with the possible exception of Laurinaitis.

The WWE trainees in the "live crowd" all laughed because they're said to know Riddle's personality better than some on the main roster.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
WWE Network News reports that next Sunday, July 19 there will be content added to the "Undertaker: The Last Ride" section entitled "Tales from the Deadman." Not much is known about the special as of now, but one can assume that it will feature outtakes and bonus content from the critically acclaimed documentary series.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
UFC has from 7 p.m. to 1 a.m. on Wednesday night on ESPN and ESPN+. The prelims go head-to-head with AEW and NXT. Dan Ige vs. Calvin Kattar is the main event and the full show is covered in the current issue. Tim Elliott vs. Ryan Benoit and Jimmie Rivera vs. Cody Stamann, Molly McCann vs. Talita Santos, Abdul Razak Alhassan vs. Mournir Lazzez and John Phillips vs. Khamzat Chimaev are the top bouts. The main card starts at 10 p.m. Eastern. It being on ESPN means it will hurt the wrestling shows even more, because last time they ran on a Wednesday it made a big difference, particularly to AEW. But since it's only the prelims, it could be worse. Last time it went had-to-head it was an ESPN+ show only, which means really the hardcore UFC fans saw it but the casual fans didn't. There's also a big NASCAR race on FS1.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
In Canada this Wednesday, AEW will air on TSN2 at 8 pm Eastern while TSN5 will carry the UFC card beginning at 8 pm followed by a post-show at 12:30 am.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
PWInsider reported Tammy Sytch was arrested again at 4:42 p.m. for operating a motor vehicle with a suspended license, eluding a police officer, and violation/contempt of a domestic violence restraining. She is being held at the Monmouth County Correctional Institution. Sytch was let out on parole in Carbon County, PA for DUI related arrests earlier this year and had been reportedly doing well with a high priced photo subscription service.


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 07-15-2020 07:30 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by 411Mania
On today’s edition of Wrestling Observer Radio, Dave Meltzer said that Bianca Belair returned on RAW last night and teamed with Ruby Riott to beat The IIconics because Liv Morgan is currently away. The match was originally set to be Morgan & Riott vs. The IIconics.

It’s still unknown why Morgan has been away from RAW since the end of June.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Ring of Honor released the following first look at this weekend's episode of ROH TV, which will pay tribute to STARDOM star Hana, who took her own life in May

Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WoPp6nW_mXM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
The State of Pennsylvania filed a motion yesterday in Carbon County Court to revoke the February 2020 parole of WWE Hall of Famer Tammy "Sunny" Sytch, PWInsider.com has confirmed.

The motion was filed in the wake of Sytch's arrest in New Jersey on the morning of 7/13 in Middletown, NJ. Sytch remains incarcerated at the Monmouth County Correctional Institution, charged with with the following:

*Operating a Motor Vehicle during a second license suspension.

*Eluding a Police Officer.

*Contempt/Violation of a Domestic Violence Restraining Order.

Obviously, the State of PA sees Sytch's arrest as a violation of her existing parole. Court records indicate that until her 7/13 arrest, Sytch had been adhering to her parole requirements, including monthly payments of restitiution. A hearing has not yet been scheduled but if the court sides with the State, they may rule that Sytch be returned to Carbon County Correctional Facility to serve her full original sentence.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
In regard to rumors we've been asked about regarding a Charlotte Flair TV series making the rounds, there is some truth to the story about her involvement in a television project, but no deal has been completed as of this writing.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
AEW presents “Fight for the Fallen” tonight from Daily’s Place in Jacksonville, Florida, and will have a charitable component. This year, they are encouraging fans to donate to Florida’s First Coast Relief Fund and the Feeding Northeast Florida group ...

While the competition from NXT is not as heavy this week, the larger question is the impact the NASCAR All-Star race is going to have, and the UFC prelims airing on ESPN. While the UFC main card doesn’t begin until 10 pm Eastern, UFC has been killing it on free television with their last Fight Night card on June 27th finishing #1 and #2 on cable that night with the main card and prelims. There are no stars on the prelims, but I don’t look at that as significant a factor as the UFC brand has drawn well on ESPN during the pandemic. NASCAR could take out a chunk of both AEW & NXT tonight, so those factors are ones to watch. It’s a precursor of what’s to come with so many sports leagues gearing up for their returns and seeing what effect the added sports competition has on all pro wrestling products and if UFC sees a dip from this phenomenal run of business on pay-per-view and cable.

Link for those interested in donating: https://www.betterunite.com/JaguarsF...covid-19relief

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Monday’s viewership for Raw ranks as the lowest in the history of the show (where data is available) falling beneath 1.6 million viewers. However, the 18-49 demo only fell by 2%. Because they have fallen to a baseline of dedicated viewers, there was less tune-out throughout the show with the larger loss in the third hour among males 12-34 which dropped 12%. So, even though fewer people are tuning in at the start of the show (indicating a lack of interest overall rather than the content turning them off), those that tune in are more likely to watch the entire show.

It’s hard to make sweeping statements about the Raw viewership as their demo rating continues to be among the top shows on cable but you’d be foolish to ignore the major loss of audience during this period. If the USA Network chalks it up to the pandemic, you can make a reasonable case that it’s the largest factor but hardly a guarantee that whenever WWE can run major arenas with fans, that the lost audience returns overnight.

Going a step further, if you’re going to throw your arms in the air and accept that the pandemic was going to negatively affect viewership, then this period may be viewed differently a year from now as a lost opportunity. Going with the notion that viewership will be down regardless, this was the time to double-down on new performers and getting the necessary experience to hopefully, have some fresh acts and more seasoned talent when fans return. This was the playbook that appeared in place for Raw over the past year since Paul Heyman’s appointment. It doesn’t mean a similar philosophy can’t be carried out by Bruce Prichard, but it comes down to Vince McMahon’s interpretation of why viewership is down and what vision he wants the show to reflect – are they just trying to stop the loss of viewers, or not concerned with numbers and building for the future? If it’s the former, then you’re likely to rely on established stars, save big matches for television, and book for that week’s audience rather than invest now with the hopes of it bearing fruit down the road ...

It’s also a deeper question about how to create those new fans and what strategies are left? If there was a mandate to get Raw back over two million viewers, what is your plan? You could hot-shot for one major show and achieve that number but what about averaging two million viewers for a month? How long would it take to get to that status when Raw hasn’t hit that figure since the night after WrestleMania?

We have gone through brand splits, trades, talent popping up on the other show, legends coming back, short matches on TV with more promo time, long matches on TV, show-long builds to a peak in the third hour, peaking for the second hour with less focus on the third hour, etc. The answer is that there isn’t a simple answer to get to the point where you find that breakout star that will lift business when they catch fire.

The ability to take a talent with potential and properly build them into a draw has been an awfully difficult task for the company. Some times, you have to spot the potential and just go with it. Every talent will have his or her detractors, will have their weaknesses (not the “right look”, can’t work “main event style”, weak on promos, doesn’t have the “it” factor) and those are all ambiguous statements that often curtail risks being taken and shaking things up. Typically, fans respond to “new” and things feeling fresh where someone bursts onto the scene and catches fire quickly. Often, that flame gets extinguished or dies down because they aren’t all in, even though the crowd was ready.

Long-term, Braun Strowman is not the guy to build SmackDown around. He was a band-aid solution to get the title off Bill Goldberg when the original challenger Roman Reigns was unavailable. If they were bound and determined to strap the rocket on someone – where an Adam Cole (or pick your star with main event potential) shows up on SmackDown and out of nowhere, challenges and beats Strowman, it would create that shock factor where lapsed fans would want to see what happened. At that point, you have people’s attention, so follow-up is key to retain those lost eyeballs.

That is only one example and it’s not like there is a deep playbook of strategies but playing the long game with patience appears more logical than booking week-to-week and running in the same spot. It also comes with the risk of heavy investment on a vision with no guarantee it will bear fruit in six to nine months.

If you want your viewership to average two million viewers per week, it will probably take months to create new habits for fans not watching Raw weekly and that comes down to an enticing program with characters they are behind and not having such a hard-and-fast rule on who gets over at the top. A lot of characters lose their edge on the main roster through poor attempts at comedy, limitations that handcuff them in match scenarios, and feeling like they are part of the WWE machine rather than individual stars that stand out on their own as a way to enhance the product instead of blend into it.

John Pollock had a very interesting take on WWE squandering a golden chance handed to them to fix their serious issues by not going all in on building for the future and instead still being stuck in their current mentality and band-aid approach to their declining ratings and star power woes.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Brandon Thurston at Wrestlenomics has an extensive study on television ratings and assessing the value of total viewers and the 18-49 demographic, which has become this hot-button issue largely spurred on by Tony Khan and Chris Jericho pointing out the reliance on the demo over overall viewers after Fyter Fest last week.

Link for those interested: https://wrestlenomics.com/2020/07/14...o-they-matter/

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
On that subject, AEW president Tony Khan gave the following answer to Justin Barrasso at SI.com regarding the television numbers and what is most important to them:

"The key for us is TV rights. That is our primary revenue stream. Without a live gate, that revenue stream has become the lifeblood of our company. It’s very important for me to keep producing new shows and have those shows keep performing the way the way they want us to perform, which is performing well in the 18–49-year-old demographic. So far, we’ve been doing those things, and they’re very happy with us. Overall viewership is a nice, round number, and if you want to make the number sound as big as possible, you say the overall viewers. But the network looks at the numbers in the 18–49 demographic, that is what keeps us going.

Over the past two weeks, Fyter Fest was a huge success. We look at that chart every week of where we rank in the 18–49-year-old demographic, and to be in the top seven two weeks in a row is a really good performance for us. It’s important to understand what the network actually looks at, so people will understand what we consider success. The key for us is to keep the demo number high."

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
For Fyter Fest last Wednesday, the show did 0.44 with 715,000 average viewers and 407,000 in the 18-49 demographic. For SmackDown, the show did 1.25 with 1,892,000 average viewers overall with 607,000 in the main demo. Saturday’s UFC 251 prelims did 397,000 viewers in the 18-49 demo and 809,000 overall.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Jake Roberts posted that he underwent an operation this past Monday but didn’t specify what he was being treated for. On Twitter, he added that he still planned to be in Jacksonville for AEW this week.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Voices of Wrestling
FITE (@FiteTV) announced they will be streaming Tokyo Joshi Pro Wrestling on July 22 and DDT Summer Vacation 2020 on July 23 in both English and Japanese.

English commentators are Sonny Onoo (both shows), Dan Madigan (TJPW) & Rob Hochman (DDT).

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
With talks about a second Evolution pay-per-view happening, Tegan Nox already has an opponent or two in mind if that show were to become a reality.

Right before she faces NXT Women's Champion Io Shirai on NXT, Nox spoke with Comic Book to talk about the growth of women's wrestling in WWE within the past decade. Speaking on a potential Evolution 2, Nox said she would love to wrestle in it and says if she had to pick an opponent, it would be Ruby Riott and Molly Holly if she had to pick a legend.

"It's got to be Ruby Riott," Nox said. "She's right at the top for me, but if it's a legends dream match, obviously it's Molly Holly, but Ruby Riott is my next pick. I mean, she's incredible. She's such a good friend, and an incredible athlete and an incredible wrestler. She's my main pick that I want to wrestle, so Ruby Riott at Evolution 2."

Current rumor is Evolution 2 is happening shortly after SummerSlam.

Quote:

Originally Posted by WrestlingHeadlines.com
According to Fightful Select, rising star Ricky Starks, who has since signed with AEW, was offered $1000 a month by the NWA to remain with the promotion but passed. He was featured regularly on Powerrr and was a former NWA Television champion.

The man he lost the belt to, Zicky Dice, has also left the NWA. Reports are that Dice was only being offered $250 a month, an amount he wouldn’t take either. Dice did eventually re-sign to the NWA for the remainder of 2020, but was recently granted his release.

As for the women’s division…Fightful states that current champion Thunder Rosa is still under contract with the NWA. Whether she plans on re-negotiating has yet to be determined. Former women’s champion Allysin Kay is expected to remain in NWA, and still plans on working with them much further into the future.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
On the second night of Fyter Fest on July 8, instead of facing Jon Moxley for the AEW World Championship, Brian Cage was awarded the FTW title by Taz. Although Cage will face Moxley at Fight For The Fallen on July 15, Cage will also defend the FTW title against Brian Pillman Jr. on the July 14 edition of AEW Dark.

Speaking to Mike Johnson of PWInsider, AEW President Tony Khan spoke on where the idea to bring back the FTW belt came from. Khan said it was something in the works for weeks and noted that he personally thought it was great that Taz was the one who presented it to Cage and that it was not the first thing the duo did since joining forces in May.

"Well, it was a few weeks ago. Taz told me he had it. And immediately, that's when the idea struck me to do this. Then I asked him to bring it down and get it down here and Taz's son, Tyler, who is a great kid, traveled down with it and came down and got tested, and joined us in the bubble. Tyler brought it and then we had it. Taz presenting it to Brian was a really important part of the presentation. I think Taz and Brian, it was good that it wasn't the first thing they did together, because they really had become associated. Brian was always supposed to debut in that casino ladder match, as soon as we got his diagnosis that he was going to be out until May," Khan said.

"This thing had been planned for a long time for Brian to make the big intro, and make the big splash, and challenge Moxley. Brian and Taz, they've established a rapport on television. When Taz told me he still had the belt, it was a perfect thing to add to the story I thought. And so, a couple weeks ago, when it came up, I really jumped on it. Once I found out he had it, and we were able to use it, I wanted to make it a part of the story. I wouldn't have done it without his blessing. I mean, he's the one who told me he had it. So once he said he still had possession of it, and I checked, and we're cleared to use it, then, at that point, I was like, 'This is, to me, almost like a no brainer. It adds so much to the story, to the presentation of Brian. It's so much credibility, the FTW title.' I grew up watching ECW, as you know, and that belt meant a lot. Even though it's not a recognized championship, when it was defended, or when you saw it, it felt like it was part of the presentation of Taz as one of the top wrestlers in the sport and I think it can be the same thing for Brian Cage. So I was really excited about it, as soon as Taz told me he still had that belt, and then when I realized that we could use it. It was a few weeks ago," Khan said.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Bret Hart's autobiography "Hitman: My Real Life in the Cartoon World of Wrestling" is regarded as one of the best and most detailed wrestling autobiographies ever written. Though fans saw Bret's career play out in the wrestling ring, and behind the scenes in documentaries, it could have played out in a different television format.

Appearing on New Day: Feel The Power, former WWE writer Michael Notarile discussed his meeting with Bret Hart and how he wanted to develop Bret's book into a television show.

"When I met Bret, I met him before WWE and I wanted to develop his book into a TV show. Long story short, he had my email from a letter I wrote him when I was a kid. Somehow, my email got into his address book, he sent me an email about something, I think by mistake, and I wrote back and was like, 'I want to develop your book into a TV show.' This is before I worked at WWE," he said.

Notarile began working with WWE in 2013.

He continued the story, saying he met with Bret at a hotel in California after the two exchanged emails.

"At this point, I thought it was a prank. I put my wrestling figure in my bag and was like, 'If he could sign the figure, how awesome would that be?' I'm at the hotel, looking around like, 'I'm definitely on a prank show.' Bret Hart walks in. It's real. We sit down, talking about the book and the whole time, in the back of my head, I'm like, 'I've got to get him to sign this wrestling figure.' How do I do it? I go, 'My mom was like, you should bring your wrestling figure and get Bret to sign it.' I go, 'Mom, I'm going to be professional, it's a meeting.' Bret's like, 'Oh, I would have signed the figure for you.' 'Great, I brought it, it's right here,' and he signed it."

The Bret Hart TV show never came to fruition, but Notarile did get to work with Bret in WWE, helping him with a promo in Montreal in 2014. Notarile called working with Bret his third favorite moment during his WWE tenure behind New Day winning their first tag team titles and Xavier Woods' initial New Day promo where he recruited Kofi Kingston and Big E.


TPWW Frontpage:

* Smeat's note: There might mot be a sheets report tomorrow due to I'm going to be very busy with more important stuff during the usual time I read the day's sheet news and put together a report from various places.

Emperor Smeat 07-16-2020 10:08 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Despite competition from both NASCAR on FS1 and UFC on ESPN, AEW Dynamite had its highest viewership since May and scored a big win over NXT on USA Network last night.

Last night's Fight for the Fallen edition of Dynamite, which was headlined by Jon Moxley retaining his AEW World Championship against Brian Cage, averaged 788,000 viewers as compared to NXT's 631,000. It's the first time Dynamite has won the viewership battle in four weeks. The viewership for Dynamite was up 10.2 percent over last week's Fyter Fest night two show.

In the 18-49 demo, Dynamite averaged a 0.29 rating, up 3.6 percent from last week. That was also the best number for the show since May and it ranked fifth for the night on cable.

NXT's viewership total was down 16.9 percent from last week. The last time NASCAR ran on a Wednesday night, it also affected NXT more than Dynamite.

Dynamite and NXT both likely affected the UFC number as the main card had the lowest viewership total to date on ESPN with just 536,000 viewers. The UFC prelims averaged 434,000 viewers. The prelims aired opposite wrestling on the East Coast, with the main card going against it on the West Coast. The NASCAR All-Star race averaged 2.036 million viewers and finished third in the 18-49 demo with a 0.35 rating.

NXT fell to 49th on cable in the 18-49 demo rankings with a 0.14, down 30 percent from last week. It's the second lowest number in that demo the show has done on the USA Network since debuting last October.

AEW won every demo but people over 50, which is usually the case, but it was much closer this week with NXT averaging a 0.36 rating in that category to AEW's 0.30. AEW's biggest category was men 18-49, where they nearly tripled NXT with a 0.40 rating as opposed to 0.14.

https://i.imgur.com/Tl3Qfrz.gif

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Though the series finale aired last month, more "Undertaker: The Last Ride" content is coming to the WWE Network this weekend.

WWE has announced that a bonus episode titled "Undertaker: The Last Ride: Tales from the Deadman" will premiere on the WWE Network on Sunday:

You thought you’d seen the last Last Ride? Think again.

The critically-acclaimed WWE Network series returns this Sunday as Undertaker shares even more stories from his legendary career on Undertaker: The Last Ride: Tales from the Deadman, narrated by Emmy-nominated actor and producer Timothy Olyphant.

Get ready for some incredible behind-the-scenes anecdotes from the man himself, as Undertaker recalls stories about the origins of his character, his experience on an infamous plane ride, and even that time he fought The Godfather over a hat, all accompanied by never-before-seen animation.

Don’t miss the return of Undertaker: The Last Ride, as 'Tales from The Deadman' premieres this Sunday, streaming immediately following The Horror Show at WWE Extreme Rules, only on WWE Network.

In addition to airing on the live stream after Extreme Rules, "Tales from the Deadman" will be made available on demand on the WWE Network at 10 a.m. Eastern time on Sunday.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
NWA President Billy Corgan posted the following on his Instagram account, shooting down rumors of the demise of the National Wrestling Alliance:

"A quick note about the National Wrestling Alliance, which I fought for, and won ownership of a few years back. We are NOT shutting down. So please disregard any and all rumor to effect. The @NWA is not and will not be for sale, and those talent who are under contract remain under contract for a reason: which is that we at the NWA are trying to figure out a way to provide our great fans with wrestling content in a very, very tough environment. And, most importantly, keep our talent safe and the standard of production you’ve come to expect from us at a high level. Anything less, in my opinion, is unacceptable. So yes, appreciate the interest, appreciate the chatter, but don’t appreciate the unsourced rumors and speculation"

The promotion shut down production in the wake of the resignation of Vice President Dave Lagana several weeks ago.

The rumor originated from some comments Raven made in a recent interview with Hannibal TV.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
WWE star Jeff Hardy's scheduled court appearance in Moore County Court in North Carolina today regarding his October 2019 arrest for Driving While Impaired has been pushed back to Monday 9/28 as all court cases have been pushed back due to court closures stemming from the coronavirus pandemic.

Hardy was arrested the evening of Thursday 10/3/19 in Moore County, North Carolina. The police report for the arrest notes that authorities received a tip about a careless driver around 8:40 PM that evening. Authorities located Hardy's car in front of a liquor store and he emerged carrying a case of beer. Authorities followed the car and pulled him over after they "observed him weaving badly in his lane."

Hardy had "what seemed to be dried blood on his nose", according to the police report and told officers that he and his wife "got into a fight." The police report stated that Hardy admitted to having two shots of vodka and admitted to being impaired. Hardy failed a field sobriety test and according to the report, he was "was uncooperative when asked for a breathalyzer or blood sample." A judge signed off on a search warrant, allowing officers to extract a blood sample from Hardy.

Hardy's driver's license has been revoked pending the resolution of the case..

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Former TMZ reporter Adam Glyn caught up with former UFC Flyweight and Bantamweight Champion Henry Cejudo. Cejudo was asked about the possibility of him appearing on All Elite Wrestling programming again, following his appearance at Double Or Nothing in May and Cejudo said there have been more conversations held between his team and AEW.

“Probably the wrestling, probably the Boxing. But I meant it when I said I’m retired. There’s a boatload of money that could bring me back, but I think more importantly than money for me is legacy.

Yeah we’ve been in contact with AEW. There’s a potential big pay-per-view event that they may want to hold but, there’s a lot. Even amateur wrestling man. I mean there’s so many options that I don’t really know which one to pick because they all seem a little appetizing to me, you know?”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Josh Matthews joined Jason Powell of ProWrestling.net on the Pro Wrestling Boom podcast. Matthews talked about the changes that have had to be made to IMPACT’s weekly programming on the lead-up to Slammiversary after the exits of Tessa Blanchard, Michael Elgin and Joey Ryan from IMPACT Wrestling.

“Yeah, I would say everybody. Everybody involved. The guys in Nashville had to do more work. We had to do more V.O.’s, graphics had to be changed. All the little things that we try to do. The go-home week for a pay-per-view to me has always been a very easy week. It’s interviews like this for me. Everything’s done and that really wasn’t the case with this particular show. There was a lot of last minute scrambling and changing of things but it was one of those — we want to put the best product that we can out there publicly and we want to make sure that everyone’s happy with the faces that they’re seeing. So while the work needed to be done, it was done with a smile on our faces because we knew that we were doing everything that we could to give the best content that we possibly could provide.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Bleacher Report Live conducted an interview with Tony Khan to promote Fight For The Fallen. Khan spoke about the six-man tag team match between Jurassic Express (Marko Stunt, Luchasaurus & Jungle Boy) and The Elite (Kenny Omega & The Young Bucks). Khan stated that with all the trios in AEW, there may be a trios tournament in the company some day.

“These are two of the top trios units in our company [The Elite & Jurassic Express]. Six-man tags have been a huge part of AEW. Since the beginning, we featured S.C.U. against Strong Hearts at Double Or Nothing and we’ve done so many six-man tags. The aforementioned Orange Cassidy and the Best Friends, the Jurassic Express obviously and The Elite are two of the top units and we’ve got a bunch of dream units and I think we could some day have a great trios tournament of some kind. I also think that this could be one of the biggest matches in that tournament and we’re seeing it right now. If it were to happen, I think The Elite and the Jurassic Express could be the odds on favorites and they’re two of the most popular teams in AEW so I think it’s gonna be a really fun match and I’m really excited about it.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Charlotte Flair was a guest on Nikki and Brie Bella’s podcast ...

During Charlotte’s segment of the podcast, she said that she hoped that while she was in NXT, a storyline involving herself, Paul “Triple H” Levesque and Stephanie McMahon came about.

“Because I spent some time in NXT recently, I was really hoping that I could get into that with Triple H, being like the brat and then him being like, ‘I made you’ because of the whole NXT, but, maybe later down the road.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Newsweek chatted with Tegan Nox ahead of her NXT Women’s Title match on 7/15. Tegan was asked to speak about coming out as a lesbian. Nox said the reception was mostly positive and she received many messages from colleagues and friends of hers.

“My life has always been a ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ situation, but I felt like it was the right time, especially when you’ve found the right one you’re in love with. It was the right time to do that.

The reaction has been great. There are a few people who obviously don’t agree with that, but 99 percent of the reactions have been positive. I’ve got texts coming through from so many colleagues and friends. It was nice. It’s great to see that there are so many nice people in the world.”

One individual who Tegan Nox spoke with was Sonya Deville. Tegan shared that she spoke with Sonya before the picture went up and added that Deville has been a massive help.

“I actually talked to Sonya before I even did this. She was a big, big help. She gave me her phone number and told me to text her if I needed anything. So we keep in contact quite a lot about it. She’s a massive help with the fans, because my family knew but my fans didn’t. So she helped me bring it out to the public.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
WrestleZone spoke with Dax Harwood and Cash Wheeler of FTR. While speaking about if heels and babyfaces still exist in pro wrestling, Harwood shared his thoughts about how to get people emotionally invested in pro wrestling and he doesn’t think “great matches every week” is the key to drawing money in the sport.

“I don’t know if I believe in ‘babyfaces and heels’. I don’t know. Before anybody is a babyface and before anybody is a heel—at least for myself and Cash—we’re men. We’re men and you’re either going to like us or you’re not going to like us and I think that attributes to your personality and your traits. You’ve got to build on those character traits. Ultimately I think getting emotionally invested is the way you make the most money, the way you draw the most fans, the most viewers. To have someone, one set of guys or one individual fighting another set of guys or an individual, and there’s a conflict of interest and the fans choose what side they believe in, what side they want to be on, I think that’s where we’re at in the world right now. I don’t think ‘great matches’ every week are the answer to pro wrestling and how to make money. There’s a conflict of interest and the fans are going to decide in their mind who is the good guy and who is the ‘bad guy.’”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Shane “Hurricane” Helms joined Chris Featherstone for a Facebook Live Q&A and the full video is up on the Sportskeeda YouTube channel. Helms was asked why he believes WWE’s television ratings have continued to drop for RAW and SmackDown and Helms accredited it to the lack of star power and fans.

“Why are they falling? Because less people are watching. I just think, without an audience, you’re losing a big part of the magic of pro wrestling.

I mean it’s hard to watch for me and I love it as much as anybody has ever loved pro wrestling in the history of the world, and it’s hard for me to watch, and they lost a lot of star power. It’s really an odd time. Not like I have my finger on the pulse by saying it’s an odd time. Obviously, everybody knows that but, it’s an odd time.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by RingSideNews.com
AEW Fight For The Fallen started off this week by announcing that Tony Schiavone wouldn’t be on the show. It was stated that his COVID-19 test didn’t come back in time so he was replaced by Taz. This was apparently a bigger issue than just one individual case.

AEW has conducted blood tests to check for COVID-19. This is different from the swab tests in many ways. This week it caused an issue for the company.

During Wrestling Observer Radio (transcription by Ringside News), Dave Meltzer revealed that Tony Schiavone wasn’t the only person who had issues with their COVID-19 test. He stated that some people had to take their test “multiple times.” Schiavone didn’t receive his test back in time so he couldn’t work the show.

“There’s something that happened that I was told that people were tested multiple times. I don’t know the whole story, but Tony’s test didn’t come back so he was off the show. There were a couple other people who were missing. I don’t know the reasons why, but they were missing.”


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 07-17-2020 02:04 PM

The Sheets (Observer Newsletter Edition):

Quote:

New Japan Pro Wrestling was the first major company to shut down, the one that took their financial lumps as much as any other major company for doing so, and this past weekend became the first major to open up with live crowds with shows on 7/11 and 7/12 in Osaka Jo Hall.

In the most unique year in pro wrestling, and life, the first two shows had a few themes. The biggest is the hope that putting nearly 4,000 fans in the building on two nights will end up being safe and they can continue to run shows before crowds. The second was the unique crowd reactions. New Japan asked the fans not to cheer or boo or make noise with their mouths, and only clap. And while there were exceptions, and some booing of Evil, the star of the weekend as far as booking, for the most part, the crowd was silent except for the constant clapping up and down the shows.

From a storyline standpoint, it was the “Weekend of Evil.” Takaaki Watanabe, 33, known as Evil, defeated Kazuchika Okada in the finals of the New Japan Cup, turned on LIJ to become the top star of the Bullet Club, and then, with the help of the debuting Dick Togo, defeated Tetsuya Naito to win both the IWGP title and the IC title belts ...

Besides Evil, also put over strong was the tag team of Dangerous Tekkers, Zack Sabre Jr. & Taichi, who defeated Hiroshi Tanahashi & Kota Ibushi to win the IWGP tag team titles. There was no obvious challenger team coming off the title change.

Another big move was that the next major show, Sengoku Lord, on 7/25 at the Dolphins Arena in Nagoya, will feature Evil’s first title defense, against Hiromu Takahashi. This is only the second time in company history that a junior heavyweight champion will challenge for the heavyweight title, with the first being Prince Devitt in 2013 against Okada. But they were in the process of moving Devitt out of the junior heavyweight category at the time. Hopefully they don’t do that with Takahashi, because the division should be his showcase for years to come since he’s the best New Japan has had for that role since the heyday of Jushin Liger ...

Some thought Evil winning the Cup and the title was just Gedo replacing Jay White, who hasn’t been brought back due to travel restrictions, with Evil. But we were told months ago that this was scheduled to be a major year for Evil, so it’s probably the existing plan. Togo, who is now 50, started his career with Gedo & Jado in the old Universal promotion in 1991, at the time known as Sato. With much of the Bullet Club overseas, Gedo gave the gimmick a renewed push, adding Evil and Togo, and giving Yujiro Takahashi a big push for a program with Okada ...

Another notable thing watching the shows. Because people were spread out basically in every third seat, but all over the arena, the place actually looked full on television. The usual idea is to pack a part of the building which leaves a part empty so even a 70 percent full show people knock for not being sold out, even if the crowd is healthy. The 7/11 show drew 3,318 paid fans and $325,000, and the 7/12 show did 3,898 paid and $382,000.

Minoru Suzuki was pulled from both shows this weekend due to running a fever.
Quote:

From a business standpoint, while not yet announced by anyone, the return to action of Bellator on 7/24 indicates a story that has been talked about heavily behind the scenes.

Bellator is not advertising the show for DAZN and those in the promotion noted that the show is not scheduled at the time for DAZN.

The belief within the industry has been that DAZN, with its heavy money problems, will be dropping Bellator when it is contractually able. This would make the first of these pie-in-the-sky deals with combat sports streaming to fall through, although the feeling is DAZN may also have to cut back on money earmarked for boxing. DAZN has added MLW, but that’s at a far lower price point. Some of this would be related to losses and also to issues with the pandemic ending live sports for the last several months, which DAZN’s subscription model is based on.
Between the stuff with DAZN and FOX recently dropped a lot of sports-related programming and PGA deal, could be seeing the start of serious cracks in the sports tv bubble. That could become a very worrying thing for WWE and AEW in a few years if things continue. A few years ago ESPN started cutting back on their own mega sports tv deals but that was more of Disney demanding ESPN to haul in their reckless spending and less due to ratings or ad money issues.

Quote:

The fine system implemented by WWE for not wearing masks came from a conversation Kevin Owens had with Vince McMahon on 7/3 where he told McMahon he wasn’t comfortable returning under what were the current conditions.

As has been noted, Owens’ wife’s grandfather passed away several weeks ago due to COVID-19 and his wife wasn’t comfortable with him returning after the recent outbreak which resulted in between 30 and 40 COVID positives and affected both the roster talent, the extra as fans, and backstage personnel.

Patric Laprade, the author of the recently released Andre the Giant biography, who does French play-by-play for Raw, noted during his Les anti-pods de la Lutte podcast that the fine system in place came from Owens returning to work, noting to McMahon that he wasn’t comfortable with the extras serving as fans and a number of people backstage not wearing masks and of people being too close to each other. He was indicating he would leave but McMahon and him spoke on the subject.

McMahon asked Owens what he thought he should do about it. This was after WWE had reversed its position of masks in the crowd, and it was made clear they expected talent to be masked but a few, the vast minority, probably about ten percent or so, ignored the doctrine. Owens told McMahon that he was the only person the talent in the crowd would listen to, not an agent, not doctors. McMahon brought up the idea of fining people if they didn’t wear masks but told Owens that he didn’t think it would serve as a deterrent. Owens said he thought it would. He noted that he was once fined for swearing on Smackdown, and after being fined, never did it again, noting when you are fined you remember not to do it again. McMahon also asked how much should be the fines and Owens said it should be enough that they get the message, but not so much that they can’t afford it.
Quote:

Raw on 7/13 opened up with scary low numbers, and each hour followed with the record low numbers, but the good news is the 18-49 number didn’t drop nearly as badly.

The show did 1,561,000 viewers and 0.48 in 18-49. The previous record lows, set of 5/4, were 1,682,000 viewers and 0.46 in 18-49, so the 18-49 number was the second lowest in history, and this was for the go-home show for the Horror Show at Extreme Rules PPV.

Raw was 28th overall on cable for the night, and fourth in 18-49. It was fifth in total viewers among non-news shows. It was the highest ranked show on cable in Males 12-17, 18-34 and 18-49.

The show was down 7.4 percent in total viewers from last week, which was previously the second lowest viewer number in modern history. The demo was down 2.0 percent from last week, which was the second lowest demo number also behind 5/4. The drops from last week causing the record low were under 18 and above 50 for the most part.

The good news is that there was very little audience drop. The bad news is that there was little interest going into the show even with the tag of it being “The Night of Grudge Matches” and pushing a Bayley & Sasha Banks tag title defense against Asuka & Kairi Sane all week ...

As compared to the same week last year, Raw was down 36.4 percent in viewers and 40.0 percent in 18-49. n me w

The first hour did 1,580,000 viewers. The second hour grew to 1,599,000 viewers and the third hour did 1,504,000 viewers. The previous least-watched hour in Raw history was 1,546,000 for hour three on 5/4.

As far as first-to-third hour drops, they were barely there which is very different from usual. Basically this indicated that they were down to the hardcores that will watch most of the show, and with a lot tuning in late, they stayed for the finish, aside from teenagers. In women 18-49, it actually drew 6.3 percent. Men 18-49 dropped 6.1 percent. Teenage girls dropped 11.3 percent. Teenage boys dropped 16.8 percent. Over 50 dropped 4.1 percent from the first to third hour, a figure almost unheard of low for that demo.

The show did a 0.22 in 12-17 (down 18.5 percent), 0.29 in 18-34 (down 6.5 percent), 0.67 in 35-49 (same as last week) and 0.74 in 50+ (down 10.8 percent).

It should be noted that in 18-34, Raw was down 52.5 percent from last year, where it did a 0.61.
Quote:

Smackdown on 7/10 did a 1.25 rating, 1,892,0000 viewers (1.25 viewers per home, which may be an all-time record low for the show) and an 0.5 (607,000 viewers) in 18-49.

The key is it grew 9.6 percent in ratings, 6.5 percent in viewers and17.6 percent in 18-49 from the record lows set the prior week. It shows two things. As expected, last week’s number was a fluke because of it being a holiday weekend. But it also shows that the regular number for the show is still low, and this show had advertised a television airing of a former PPV Universal title match with Braun Strowman vs. Bray Wyatt. Granted, it was a nothing match, but it was still a PPV major title match that builds a main event on the upcoming show.

Smackdown finished first in 18-49, but it was also the only first-run show on network television. . ABC and NBC reruns all did 0.4s. In 18-34, it did a 0.2, the same as every rerun show on ABC and NBC and in theory, based on history, Smackdown should dominate in that age group even against first run programming, let alone against reruns. In 25-54, it was second to a Dateline repeat. As far as total viewers, it was the least watched, losing to all reruns, the worst of which did 2,524,000 viewers.

The median viewer age of the show was 56.1, which basically means of the viewers, 50 percent were above that age and 50 percent were below that age.

Last year’s FOX’s reruns on the same Friday averaged 1,457,000 viewers and an 0.3 in 18-49, so it was up 30.4 percent in viewers and 66.7 percent in 18-49.

The Miz TV segment with Miz, John Morrison and Jeff Hardy, -plus Miz vs. Hardy, did 2.00 million viewers. Bayley & Sasha Banks vs. Nikki Cross & Alexa Bliss did 1.86 million viewers. The Strowman vs. Wyatt PPV match and the karaoke deal did 1.95 million. The Naomi vs. Lacey Evans match and New Day vs. Shinsuke Nakamura & Cesaro match did 1.81 million.
Quote:

The most competitive Wednesday night of the year, with AEW and NXT both having competition from UFC and NASCAR, took place on 7/15.

As expected, NASCAR won handily. The expectation is that AEW would be hurt worse than NXT by the competition, since the AEW audience skews younger, but that wasn’t the case.

It also should be noted that starting in two weeks, with the NBA on Wednesdays, the competition will be tougher. ESPN will be airing Wednesday night doubleheaders games starting on 8/5 to where both the end of the first game and beginning of the second game will go head-to-head with wrestling. ESPN will also have Monday night games going against Raw and TNT will have Friday night games going against Smackdown. There will be some Major League Baseball competition as well, which varies by the week.

AEW did 788,000 viewers and a 0.29 (380,000 viewers) in 18-49, for Fight for the Fallen. It was the company’s best number since 5/27.

NXT did 631,000 viewers and 0.14 (186,000 viewers) in 18-49, the company’s worst numbers since 5/20 and the second lowest 18-49 number in the history of the show, doing just under half of what AEW did, largely because of terrible numbers with males under the age of 35.

The NASCAR All-Star Race at 8:30 p.m. did 2,076,000 viewers and 0.35 in 18-49. The NASCAR All-Star Open at 7 p.m. did 1,516,000 viewers and 0.26 in 18-49.

The UFC main show headlined by Calvin Kattar’s win over Dan Ige at 10 p.m., or after AEW and NXT ended, did 536,000 viewers and 0.22 in 18-49, which are the lowest numbers ever on ESPN for a prime time main card show, and probably ever. Running 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. on a Wednesday was not going to do well. The UFC prelims, airing from 7-10 p.m., head-to-head with AEW and NXT, did 434,000 viewers and 0.17 in 18-49, by far UFC’s lowest numbers ever in prime time. With a huge show the prior Saturday and another show the next Saturday, and almost every Saturday, a large percentage of the UFC fan base decided to skip this show.

In the 18-49 rankings, the NASCAR race was No. 3, AEW was No. 5, UFC main card was No. 16, UFC prelims were No. 37 and NXT was No. 49 ...

AEW was up 10.2 percent in total viewers and 4.4 percent in 18-49 from last week. NXT was down 16.9 percent in total viewers and down 29.0 percent in 18-49.

The key to the numbers was AEW doing strongly in males 35-49, and NXT doing disastrous in Men 18-34. AEW won every key demo but women 35-49 was surprisingly close considering the overall disparity in the other three key demos.

AEW did 70,000 in men 18-34 (down 21.3 percent from last week). NXT did 6,000 in men 18-34, which is not a misprint (down 87.2 percent from last week). NASCAR and UFC were both strong in those demos. AEW did 52,000 in women 18-34 (up 23.8 percent) while NXT did 29,000 (down 12.1 percent). AEW did 191,000 in males 35-49 (up 17.9 percent) while NXT did 86,000 (down 27.1 percent). Those were also strong for NASCAR and UFC. AEW did 67,000 in women 35-49 (down 5.6 percent) and NXT did 65,000 (up 1.6 percent).

In the main event segment, AEW with Jon Moxley vs. Brian Cage for the AEW title drew the largest numbers of the night for either show, with 844,000 viewers and 407,000 in 18-49. NXT, with Io Shirai vs. Tegan Nox for the women’s title, did 652,000 viewers and 186,000 in 18-49, so AEW more than doubled NXT in the main demo in the final segment.

The show opened with AEW has 826,000 viewers and 374,000 in 18-49 for Cody vs. Sonny Kiss. NXT had 693,000 viewers and 208,000 in 18-49 for a Keith Lee promo with Dominik Dijakovic to set up their title match, which was the highest viewership and 18-49 numbers for NXT of the night.

Quarter two saw AEW lost 38,000 viewers and gain 6,000 in 18-49 for Pentagon Jr. & Fenix vs. FTR. AEW lost 73,000 viewers and 33,000 in 18-49 for Cameron Grimes vs. Damien Priest.

Quarter three saw AEW lost 22,000 viewers and 8,000 in 18-49 for the ending of Pentagon Jr.& Fenix vs. FTR and the post-match stuff with the Young Bucks & Kenny Omega and Butcher & Blade involved. NXT gained 5,000 viewers and 21,000 in 18-49 for a Timothy Thatcher vignette and Shotzi Blackheart vs. Indi Hartwell.

Quarter four saw AEW lost 1,000 viewers but gain 4,000 in 18-49 for the Chris Jericho interview with the Inner Circle and Orange Cassidy angle. NXT lost 23,000 viewers and 4,000 in 18-49 for a Tegan Nox interview and the beginning of Lee vs. Dijakovic for both titles.

Quarter five saw AEW gained 26,000 viewers and 2,000 in 18-49 for Young Bucks & Kenny Omega vs. Jurassic Express. NXT gained 6,000 viewers and lost 13,000 in 18-49 for Lee vs. Dijakovic. The totals for this battle were 791,000 for AEW overall and 378,000 in 18-49 and 608,000 viewers and 179,000 in 18-49 for NXT.

Quarter six saw AEW lost 48,000 viewers but only 5,000 in 18-49 for a Hikaru Shida interview, a Jon Moxley interview and Allie & Brandi Rhodes vs. MJ Jenkins & Kenzie Paige. NXT gained 33,000 viewers but stayed even in 18-49 for a Dijakovic angle with Karrion Kross and Thatcher vs. Denzel Dejournette.

Quarter seven saw AEW gain 37,000 viewers and 7,000 in18-49 for the Nyla Rose interview introducing Vickie Guerrero and the beginning of Moxley vs. Brian Cage. NXT lot 31,000 viewers and 4,000 in 18-49 for a Robert Stone brand vignette with Killian Dain and the first part of Shirai vs. Nox.

Quarter eight saw AEW gained 64,000 viewers and 27,000 in 18-49 for Moxley vs. Cage. NXT gained 42,000 viewers and 11,000 in 18-49 for Shirai vs. Nox.
The massive advantage NXT had with lead-in programming pretty much has evaporated these past couple weeks since they are no longer are starting with huge leads and also are losing those lead-in viewers a lot quicker. Also the first time in weeks that AEW beat out NXT for the main event which took away another of NXT's big advantages.

Quote:

As expected, the first week of Fyter Fest vs. Great American Bash with DVR numbers saw AEW surpass NXT by day three in total viewers, up 925,000 to 911,000, and since the DVR numbers are fairly predictable, the gap almost certainly widened after day three. It’s a virtual lock the same will be the case for the second week. AEW virtually always has a 100,000 edge in DVR numbers, sometimes more by day seven. People will point to WWE Network but U.S. viewership for NXT is never at that level, plus USA never advertises NXT on WWE Network while the TNT App, a free service in multiple times more homes, airs AEW earlier than WWE Network airs NXT. TNT also advertises AEW on the TNT Drama app constantly. There have been two weeks since the start, 6/24 and 12/18, where including DVR viewership that NXT has had more viewers. There has been one week, 12/18, with DVR viewership, that NXT has won in 18-49. In 18-49, we do have the +7 numbers for the first week of Fyter Fest vs. Bash. In that demo, AEW was up 35.7 percent, normal levels for the show during the pandemic (372,000 to 505,000) while NXT was up 34.5 percent, way up from usual (284,000 to 372,000)
Quote:

This is a two PPV weekend, with WWE’s Extreme Rules, now known as The Horror Show at Extreme Rules on 7/19, preceded the night before by Impact’s Slammiversary.

At press time there are seven matches listed for Extreme Rules, three of which appear like they will be taped in advance. The theme matches are Braun Strowman vs. Bray Wyatt in a Swamp match, to be done on location, Seth Rollins vs. Rey Mysterio in an eye-for-an-eye match and Jeff Hardy vs. Sheamus in a bar fight.
Quote:

AAA: While none of this means much of anything today, the hope is to have a major TripleMania show in October outdoors in Monterrey, at the baseball stadium, the place where they held TripleMania Regia on 12/1. But it’s unknown when they’d be able to get Kenny Omega back in to defend his AAA world title
Quote:

Will Ospreay revealed that a few weeks ago he battled suicidal thoughts. Ospreay has been very open in recent years about his battles with depression and when he did a show in San Francisco last year talked about it in front of the fans in a post-match interview. “Few weeks ago, I came very close to something I know I’d regret. I’m still dragging my feet but I’m getting better. I’m still smiling, barely but a smile nonetheless. Suicide isn’t an option even when you feel like you’ve dropped the world, learning and pushing forward to be better is an option. Thank you to the people that have ever made me smile or laugh and been there to pick me up. Because of you my heart still beats. I love you all.
Quote:

Kyoko Kimura filed a complaint with the Broadcast Ethics & Program Improvement Organization on 7/15 regarding the death of her daughter. It also came out that a third anonymous member of the staff of Terrace House said that Hana Kimura once had to shoot a scene for the show while in a state of shock and hyperventilating. Kimura submitted documents saying the reality show was edited to show her daughter being a violent woman. She also claimed them having her shoot the scene while hyperventilating violated her daughter’s personal and human rights. She also claimed that her daughter followed instructions from the staff on how to act on camera led by vicious cyberbullying. Kai Kobayashi, her short-term love interest on the show who she knocked the hat off his head, said he was mad at the show because one of the staff members told him to grab her boobs while on a date because the date wasn’t interesting enough
Quote:

Vickie Guerrero is now managing Nyla Rose. The most noteworthy thing is WWE didn’t trademark her “Excuse Me” phrase and she can use it. So here’s the deal. Guerrero was great in WWE as an annoying heel. People know her and now that she’s older she’s got the Georgia Hase (legendary Roller Games heel) vibe going or her. So she’ll probably be real good, but obviously it has to play out. WWE hates managers for the most part which is a negative attitude. But they are going so manager crazy here, especially since they are all names from the past and I still think it’s best to be different from WWE and not use too many ex-WWE talents because you don’t want the idea that so many companies have tried and failed with of loading up on ex-WWE people with the idea they’re the ones who have had TV time and are known, because that has never worked. A few is fine, but it should only be a few rather than be a company that people look at as some of my old favorites that WWE has no use for anymore
Quote:

Lesnar is not scheduled for this year’s SummerSlam show. One of the reasons he put over McIntyre so strongly was because he was not coming back any time soon. Heyman has not been brought to television since he was let go as head of Raw creative. Most signs point to McIntyre vs. Orton as the SummerSlam main event
Quote:

The one thing is that a lot of people say and do a lot of things and people forget in time. This being the one year anniversary of Fight for the Fallen, if you recall, WWE Network put on an Evolve show head-to-head. Granted, WWE had talked for years about putting indie shows on the network and has the rights to a number of libraries that it has done nothing with. There were the complaints of WWE counter booking, which is fine, although it also was a charity show. But WWE portrayed the timing as a coincidence, but any study of WWE history would tell you it wasn’t, since in the 80s they did the same thing and also claimed these arenas and dates were booked a year plus ahead and it was a coincidence. But the Evolve show got almost all positive responses, and did well in viewership, and here we are a year later, and WWE never did another show like it again.
Just like with their other partners or affiliates, WWE pretty much never really cared about EVOLVE but had zero shame in using them as a weapon against AEW and letting them take some of the heat for WWE's decision to counter a charity show.

Quote:

The most-watched shows on the WWE Network for the past week: 1. The Best of Women’s Evolution; 2. WWE Chronicle: Jeff Hardy; 3. NXT from 7/8; 4. Backlash 2020; 5. Every Undertaker vs. Brock Lesnar match; 6. Raw Talk; 7. Royal Rumble 2020
2nd week in a row where NXT ranked very well in the Top 10 after having a long stretch of them struggling to rank well.

Emperor Smeat 07-21-2020 09:42 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Raw last night did the second lowest audience in the modern history of the show and tied the May 4 episode for the lowest ever in 18-49.

Overall, this could be considered the most sobering number in show history.

The show averaged 1.63 million viewers and a 0.46 rating in 18-49. Total viewers were up four percent from last week's record low viewer number, and 18-49 was down four percent. Really it was a far worse number given it came a day after a pay-per-view that was designed for curiosity and to build Raw more than usual. It was also heavily built around the Randy Orton vs. Big Show unsanctioned match that had been promoted for weeks. The third hour, with Orton vs. Big Show, did a 0.42 in 18-49, the lowest rated hour in 18-49 in the show's history.

In theory, next week's show with two title matches should do better, but that's a hot shot and even if it helps slightly, the pattern long-term is not good ...

Still, television is changing. Raw was in 21st place overall, fourth among non-news shows. The only shows that beat Raw besides news shows in overall viewers were three episodes of 90 Day Fiance on TLC. The only shows that beat Raw in 18-49 were two of those episodes and Below Deck Mediterranean on Bravo, while the third 90 Day Fiance tied Raw for fourth place in the key demo.

Raw had a stronger first hour audience based on PPV curiosity, likely related to the interest level in the Rey Mysterio match. Once that was covered, the audience first-to-third hour decline was 12 percent, a normal level figure, but higher than in recent weeks ...

A comparison with last year this week is misleading. Last year's Raw this week was the Raw Reunion show with Hulk Hogan, Steve Austin, Ric Flair and Shawn Michaels advertised as all appearing. Raw was down 47 percent in viewers, 60 percent in 18-49 and 76 percent in 18-34 from that show.

The three hours were:
  • 8 p.m. 1.74 million viewers
  • 9 p.m. 1.61 million viewers
  • 10 p.m. 1.54 million viewers

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
There were three demographics that took a major hit this week. Adults 18-34 fell by 31% followed by females 12-34 dropping by 30%, and males 12-34 down by 25%. The rest of the demos lost between 3-7%, except adults over 50 that improved by 8% this week.

There were enormous losses in the third hour despite the heavy promotion of both Orton vs. Show, and the Bayley vs Kairi Sane matches. In the third hour, adults 18-34 fell by 31% compared to the first hour, females 12-34 dropped by 28%, and males 12-34 were down by 27.5% in the closing hour.

The audience that stuck around for the whole show were adults over 50, which only dropped by 2.5% in the third hour. Every other group had double-digit declines in the closing hour.

Thus far, the strategy of putting big matches on television with a week of promotion has not produced results. This past Friday, SmackDown did 1,912,000 viewers for a show featuring AJ Styles vs. Matt Riddle for the Intercontinental title. It was up 12,000 viewers from the previous week but still ranks as the fourth-lowest episode of the series on Fox.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
During yesterday's Ring of Honor Week to Week, Brody King cut a promo that made it clear he had broken off from Villain Enterprises without mentioning the name or even Marty Scurrl, so that's his direction going forward.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Recently on social media, a great deal of wrestling fans showed support for former two-time SmackDown Women’s Champion Naomi by creating the hashtag #NaomiDeservesBetter. This hashtag drew responses from the likes of Keke Palmer and celebrities alike who were made aware of Naomi and her work in WWE. During the Extreme Rules post-show episode of Booker T’s ‘Hall Of Fame’ podcast, he spoke about the recent support on social media for Naomi and explained why he is not a fan of the hashtag that was created in support of her.

“That Naomi deserves a chance… they can go to hell with all these hashtags as far as I’m concerned, but I’m tired of hearing about ‘em. Don’t nobody deserve a chance, alright? First and foremost, you gotta earn your chance, your spot on the roster. This is not some kind of movement just to pull somebody up just because and I hate to sit here and say this, to even talk this way because I like Naomi. But, as far as the business goes, you get it on your merit alone. That’s it. It’s no buddy systems and I know somebody’s gonna hear me and go, ‘Well such and such got a buddy and that’s why they’re doing it.’ Yeah that may be true, but life is not fair. Sometimes, you gotta make your own breaks. Sometimes you gotta go out there and rise to the occasion when no one else thought you could and the thing is, it may not happen overnight. It’s a consistency thing that goes with that. No one expected me, including myself, to become a six-time world champion, but my persistence as far as going out to the middle of that ring and performing better than all those suckers in the locker room and the suckers in the locker room, they knew it, and the fans, they saw something different and the signs were there for Booker T on a nightly basis. That’s why I say the hashtag Naomi Deserves A Chance, whatever deserves better, I just don’t think that will serve her any purpose. People advocating for her in that way. The way that needs to be put out there from a advocating perspective is her advocating for herself when she goes out to the ring and performs on a high level and the world sees it and that right there, when you do that Naomi, you can not be denied. No one will ever say someone gave you anything and if it happened right now, tomorrow, someone blessed Naomi with the world championship, trust me, it would not feel like she did it on her own. It would have to be a movement for something like that to happen. I would’ve never wanted the world title if it was given to me that way. Me personally I wouldn’t have and Naomi, I’ve said it once, I’ll say it a thousand times. Naomi is perhaps more athletic than every female in that locker room and perhaps 99 percent of females in this business. But psychology and working is two different things, and I just hope and wish that I had my hands on her for one month. Naomi would look at this business a totally different way, and that’s just my thoughts on that.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Conrad Thompson and Eric Bischoff broke down Bischoff’s return to WWE in 2019 on the latest installment of 83 Weeks. Towards the end of their three-hour discussion, Bischoff was asked if he thinks WWE Chairman Vince McMahon is “out of touch” and Bischoff says it’s easy to say McMahon has lost touch if one does not understand the complexity of his job title.

“They’ve spent 20 years developing the product and the platform they have that appeals to advertisers. It’s taken them 20 years to get there, or more, and now that they have it, they have to treat it with respect and they have to treat it very carefully and there are things I’m sure the WWE would love to do creatively that they just can’t because they know the blow back they’ll get from advertisers. It’s a little bit like producing an action movie for Disney. You gotta be really careful how you do that. That’s probably the best analogy I can give, and does that mean that he’s out of touch or does that mean he’s catering his business to his customer? The real customer, being the advertiser, because without the advertiser, there are no viewers folks. I know the viewers like to think they’re the most important thing in the world and in some respects they are, because it’s a direct connection to the advertising opportunity, but if the advertising community says, ‘Aht, Aht. I know there’s a lot of people watching your show, but we just can’t have our product associated with it,’ you’re dead. You’re done, and guess what? All those viewers who were so important, aren’t gonna be watching the product because they can’t live without advertising. So it’s easy to say so and so is out of touch, if you don’t understand the complexity of the business as a whole and just how significant those broadcast rights are and those broadcast rights will not exist without a really, really solid relationship and a confidence level amongst advertisers.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
IMPACT Knockouts Champion Deonna Purrazzo joined Bully Ray and David LaGreca on Busted Open Radio. Purrazzo discussed her transition from NXT to IMPACT Wrestling and why she feels that the current version of her on-screen persona was never spotlighted in NXT.

“I think the Deonna that you saw and the world saw at Ring of Honor and NXT [Deonna meant IMPACT] is truly who I am…

The person that I’ve been able to put on-screen is the person I believe in, is the truest form of me, elevated, and at NXT, it was very much a runaround of like, ‘You need a character.’ ‘Okay, well that’s too much character. You have to be the real you, but the real you isn’t believable’ and I had just gotten to a point of there’s nothing I can do right and now I feel defeated in me, and coming here and just being like, ‘Screw what everyone else has said. Screw the connotations that came with me, screw the opinions and screw the negativity that I’ve been through. I’m going to bring out the person that loved professional wrestling, that wanted to be a professional wrestler since I was nine-years old and I’m gonna make that girl proud.’ I don’t care that WWE fired me or didn’t want me or didn’t think I was good enough. I think I’m good enough, and if IMPACT believes I’m good enough, if Ring of Honor believes I’m good enough, if Japan thought I was good enough, I’m good enough, and I just needed to get back to believing in me and believing in the little girl that’s wanted to be a champion her entire life.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
All Elite Wrestling ring announcer/backstage interviewer Dasha Kuret qualified for the regional finals of NBC’s ‘The Titan Games’

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
FOX Sports 1 will continue to air WWE content on their Tuesday night block, as noted in a statement that was issued to POST Wrestling. Tonight, FS1 is airing the 2016 SummerSlam pay-per-view and it was noted in the statement that it will not be their final airing of WWE content in the Tuesday night time slot. They’ll continue to have WWE content in that same slot through at least August 11th.

“Tonight’s airing of SummerSlam will not be FS1’s final airing of a WWE in the Tuesday night timeslot, we will continue to have WWE content on FS1’s Tuesday nights through at least Tuesday, August 11”.

Prior to WWE Backstage being cancelled, retro pay-per-view events would be the lead-in or the follow-up to the weekly one-hour show.

Major League Baseball is returning to FS1 for the start of their 2020 season but their Tuesday slate of games do not kick in until July 28th, with the first game starting at 6:05 PM EST between the Yankees and the Phillies.

PWI initially reported that this week would be the final week for WWE programming on FS1 due to the return of MLB games.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Stu Bennett doesn’t foresee the NWA coming back anytime soon.

Bennett, the former Wade Barrett, recently has been working as a broadcaster for the NWA, but the promotion is currently not running shows due to the ongoing pandemic. In an interview with Chris Van Vliet, Bennett spoke on the future of the NWA and said he believes there won’t be any shows for the remainder of the year, saying it’s not the smartest idea to run events while there are spikes in positive COVID-19 cases and states still not opening up.

“I think we were slowly getting closer to it. I was hearing rumors of kind of looking at October for something if things continue doing well and then suddenly the U.S. had this giant spike. I will be amazed, and this is not coming from someone in management, I would be amazed if NWA puts on a show at any point for the rest of the year just based on how all this stuff is spiking. I don’t think it’s going to be safe for anyone to put on a show and have a crowd out there. Don’t take my word for it. It’s Billy Corgan’s decision, but I would be surprised if something came out in 2020. Of course, I’m hearing rumors that a vaccine is getting closer and fingers crossed that we can get vaccines and things get back to normal as soon as possible. Until that happens, let’s face it, this thing isn’t going to get resolved. This virus is just going to continue spiking,” Bennett said.

The NWA has also been subject to rumors of it either closing down or being on sale. Corgan, the current NWA President, recently shot down those rumors.

The company cut ties with Vice President David Lagana after he was accused of sexual assault and reportedly offered releases to anyone who wanted one. The promotion had gone silent on digital platforms, not tweeting since June 24 and uploading nothing to its YouTube channel since June 18.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
As PWInsider.com reported last night in our Elite section, Vince McMahon was very hands-on with the production of last night's Eye for An Eye match at Extreme Rules featuring Rey Mysterio against Seth Rollins, which Rollins won.

The bout was taped yesterday afternoon at the WWE Performance Center in order for all elements that were needed to be produced properly but one aspect that was taped did not make the final edit, PWInsider.com has confirmed.

Using prosthetic makeup, WWE shot an entire sequence that would have seen Mysterio's eye pop out, which as scripted was the moment that would have "led" to Seth Rollins vomiting on-screen originally. PWInsider.com has confirmed with multiple sources that Vince McMahon hated the look of the effect and the sequence, so it was removed and edited out of the final broadcast of the Rollins vs. Mysterio bout.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
There was a lot of discussion yesterday over whether Extreme Rules would close with the WWE Championship match or the Swamp Fight but in the end, the final decision was made to go with the Swamp Fight. The Swamp Fight was filmed Thursday night in Florida.

The Eye for an Eye match was the only bout from the Performance Center that was not live on last night's Extreme Rules PPV. The match was taped earlier Sunday afternoon with Vince McMahon personally overseeing the proceedings, including picking out the specific weapons that were used in the match. McMahon was very involved with laying out the story of the match itself. Perhaps Vince's involvement explains the vomit as he's certainly not adverse to toilet humor ...

The Raw Women's Championship finish was done specifically to try and drive viewership to tonight's Raw. The finish was changed over the course of the day and at one point, Asuka was scheduled to win via the Asuka Lock.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
The early indications are that Slammiversary was the strongest Impact PPV in terms of online buys in a long time


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 07-22-2020 07:21 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
William Regal tweeted the following:

Serving as the General Manager or #WWENXT has been an incredible honor. To see the men and women of this brand over the last couple of months has been inspiring and invigorating.

Tonight’s major announcement will be yet another step forward for @WWENXT.
— William Regal (@RealKingRegal) July 22, 2020

This is either the announcement of the next Takeover for SummerSlam weekend, the rumored all-women Evolution 2 event, or him stepping down as GM based on how the wording of his tweet feels.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
We are told Cody's Open Challenge will open tonight's AEW Dynamite broadcast. Chris Jericho and Jake Hager vs. Jurrasic Express will main event.

Over the weekend on his Saturday Night Special broadcast, Chris Jericho noted the original idea for the "juicing" of the Inner Circle was for Orange Cassidy to drive an Orange Juice truck in and hose them down but Daily's Place wouldn't lend itself to that happening.

AEW action figures are already popping up on shelves ar Wal-Mart ahead of their 8/3 release. You can order them at www.RingsideCollectibles.com as well.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
FS1 has rescheduled their airing of SummerSlam 1992 from next week until Tuesday, August 4th at 7:00pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Bobby Fulton's son posted the following on Fulton's Facebook page at his request. Fulton, who is currently hospitalized after having surgery to repair a bleeding artery, was misinformed that he had a recurrence of his throat cancer due to the wording that was used in the Emergency Room. He is, thankfully, still cancer-free.

Fulton wrote:

"Two powerful words IS and WAS.

On Sunday morning I woke up and was spitting a large amount of blood out of my mouth. It really scared me, I called Ed Wilson and Josh Hines and they took me to the James Emergency Room. Upon getting back to the room, they gave me a CT Scan, when we got back to the emergency room, I was laying in the bed, and 5-6 people were surrounding me and they said we found the problem. There is an artery in your throat near your nose that the radiation that kind of messed up, and it is finally blown and that’s what’s bleeding, it IS right by where your tumor IS. I asked one of the people standing there does that mean I have cancer, one shook their head up and down yes. They said the artery IS where the tumor IS. They began discussing a plan to take care of this artery, they were going to destroy it and close it down. So I go, and as we’re going the artery IS where the tumor IS. So finally I asked, do I have cancer to another person, and they said we didn’t see any evidence of it (PRAISE GOD!). So I said to another person that they’ve been telling me the artery was near where the tumor IS. That person told me they should have used the word WAS and not IS. And I said, yes it makes a big difference. I’m thankful that at this time, I can say I’m cancer free. I’m thankful for all the prayers and all the love you all continue to show me. That’s why it is always important to choose your words wisely. There’s a big difference between IS and WAS."

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Stephanie McMahon-Levesque spoke with Jeanine Poggi of AdAge on a series of subjects related to WWE’s handling of their business during the pandemic and adjustments they have made since March including testing procedures. She also went into details regarding social changes that the company is addressing internally, below are some notes from the discussion:

-They considered it a responsibility to continue with their programming and brought up their job as “putting smiles on faces”
-Adjustments during the pandemic have included how to shoot from different camera angles and also encouraging their announcers to fill more with their words rather than layout for an audience to react
-They have placed a virtual ceiling into their programming as an example of augmented reality noting that the ceiling fan in the WWE PC doesn’t look the best and enhanced the audio with crowd sweetening and have taken feedback when they’ve overdone it with the canned audio
-She said something very interesting about learning during this period that people want to connect with the individual and see them “less polished”, which has often been a criticism of WWE
-McMahon repeated that the shows are voluntary noting that some wrestlers and crew did opt-out and they support that. They are doing more advanced testing rather than the rapid testing along with pandemic-level cleaning every night as well as mentioning the spray they are using that Paul Levesque brought up recently during a conference call
-After people pass their test, they still have to go through temperature checks and fill out a form before they enter
-She said that 21% of their audience is African-American and mentioned different initiatives that have been launched by talent including New Day wearing armbands, Montez Ford & Bianca Belair launching their site, and other examples adding that representation is important and said 40% of their current champions are African-American across their brands
-They have had examples of African-American talent telling them something didn’t feel comfortable to them and they are willing to have those conversations and take that feedback
-They don’t provide medical insurance for their independent contractors but cover all injuries and take care of those with alcohol and substance abuse issues
-They have experimented with “cinematic matches” and noted that the usage of Metallica for the Boneyard Match was because the band’s music was going to be part of The Undertaker’s entrance at WrestleMania in its original planning
-WWE Network consumption is up 67% during this period and an increase of their YouTube consumption by 70%
-Joked that Vince McMahon was the only one that was still going to the office when discussing employees working remotely
-They delayed the move to their new headquarters and are re-evaluating what they need as a company in this new reality

The stuff about them piping in crowd noise since the Greatest Wrestling Match Ever" confirms the suspension I had about WWE's shows since then since they've done a pretty poor job with it for matches. Feels even more fake or blatant than when they used to do it for taped Smackdown shows.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
ESPN has a feature on Orange Cassidy and his unique connection along with winning over skeptics since joining AEW. The article features comments from Cassidy, as well as Tony Khan, Chuck Taylor, Trent Beretta, and Jim Ross. Khan admitted he wasn’t too familiar with Cassidy and didn’t have big plans for him when AEW until he started spending time with Cassidy after his appearance in the Casino Battle Royal at Double or Nothing in May 2019. Khan added that’s he has become a big merchandise mover and that TNT is big fans of the character. Khan wanted to prolong Cassidy having his first “real” match when he faced PAC at the Revolution event this past February. The piece also discusses how it’s been more difficult for a character like Cassidy without a live audience during the pandemic.

Link: https://www.espn.com/wwe/story/_/id/...ly-even-trying

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
On Tuesday’s episode of AEW Dark, Darby Allin defeated Robert Anthony and was attacked by Brian Cage after the match. Following Cage’s attack, Ricky Starks came out and attacked Allin. Cage and Starks bumped fists after their attack with Taz noting on commentary that it was “business” and he would explain on tonight’s episode of Dynamite.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Sky Sport in Italy has announced that All Elite Wrestling is coming to the network.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
This Friday’s edition of Lion’s Break Collision will feature the following four matches at 10 pm Eastern on New Japan World:
*Jeff Cobb vs. Karl Fredericks
*Rocky Romero & Rust Taylor vs. TJP & Clark Connors
*Misterioso vs. Danny Limelight
*Tom Lawlor vs. Alex Coughlin

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Major League Baseball begins its shortened season on Thursday as several leagues get ready to launch or resume their season.

The NHL is set for a series of exhibition games and then begin its 24-team playoff format on Saturday, August 1st, and immediately go into the Stanley Cup Qualifiers. The Stanley Cup Finals are set to begin on September 22nd and end no later than October 4th.

The NBA resumes its season on Friday, July 30th with 22 teams returning to play with the NBA Finals going no later than October 13th. The first round of the playoffs begins August 17th, the conference semi-finals start August 31st, the conference finals will begin September 15th, and the NBA Finals start September 30th.

To get a sense of the response from advertisers, Fox Sports executive Seth Winter tells SBJ that 90% of its regular-season MLB package is sold. In the piece, Winter noted that they moved a lot of the advertisers who had paid for spots in the spring into the shortened season at the same rate. Among new advertisers, Fox is seeing a 5-10% increase with lots of spending from political parties ahead of the U.S. election, financial services, soft drinks, the retail & tech sectors have also been strong while areas like airlines, casual dining, automotive service, hotel, and travel have been softer.

WWE's (and AEW and Impact to a degree) inability to grow and gain a strong viewership foothold during the coronavirus pandemic is about to come back to bite them very hard.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
On this date in 2001, the WWF presented its most successful non-WrestleMania pay-per-views ever with the Invasion card from the former Gund Arena in Cleveland, Ohio. While the storyline was a disaster both in hindsight and at the time, the novelty of a pay-per-view built around inter-promotional matches was gigantic for the fanbase.

After initially targeting a WWF vs. WCW dream scenario following the former’s purchase of the company in March 2001, it was quickly extinguished with a horrendous main event between Booker T. and Buff Bagwell in Tacoma, Washington on the July 2, 2001 episode of Raw. There was such negativity to the segment that Vince McMahon second-guessed everything to the extent of giving up on WCW as a standalone entity that they had booked tour dates for.

The following week, they rescued the angle by injecting ECW into the invasion with Paul Heyman revealed as the mastermind working alongside Shane & Stephanie McMahon. They blew through months of ideas in one memorable episode of Raw ending with the formation of “The Alliance” as ECW’s intellectual property was not controlled by the WWF this early.

A forgotten aspect to the hype surrounding the pay-per-view was the go-home episode of Raw that built to the climax of Steve Austin coming to the aid of Team WWF and signaling a return to his babyface character after months of forcing his heel persona on television that negatively impacted business without a strong babyface foil. The pop for Austin’s run-in during the final segment of Raw was monstrous and I’ve always credited a portion of the success of that pay-per-view to that closing angle with Austin. Six days later, they turned Austin back as a heel joining The Alliance and the invasion fizzled throughout the summer and fall before finally yanking the plug at that year’s Survivor Series.

The following year, the company tried its own spin of the promotional war by splitting Raw and SmackDown for the inaugural brand split. This concept received more time and patience than the invasion but still showed the weakness in the company’s ability to execute a true split and create their own competition. However, all the key components that would have enhanced the invasion angle slowly made their way to the WWF afterward. Hulk Hogan, Kevin Nash, Scott Hall, Scott Steiner, Eric Bischoff, Ric Flair, and Bill Goldberg would arrive over the next 18 months after ending the invasion. It was part of the problem that WWF didn’t see any big stars on the WCW roster they had at the start with The Alliance propped up by established WWF talent.

The Invasion card featured a five-man Alliance team of Diamond Dallas Page, Booker T., Rhino & The Dudley Boyz vs. Steve Austin, The Undertaker, Kurt Angle, Chris Jericho & Kane. The card drew a reported 760,000 buys and displayed a massive demand from the audience for the concept of WWF vs. WCW, even with a watered-down version of who fans saw as WCW’s franchise stars. The conclusion to the dream scenario of WWF vs. WCW at the Survivor Series in 2001 was 450,000 buys and an Alliance teams consisting of Austin, Angle, Booker T., Rob Van Dam, and Shane McMahon that says everything right there.

Found this article interesting considering the repercussions of WWE's botched handling of the Invasion storyline not only costed them a huge chunk of WCW fans who had crossed over after WCW shut down but also a huge chunk of their own viewership. Think around a third of their overall viewership left for good shortly after the Invasion storyline ended.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
According to multiple SEC filings, Vince and Stephanie McMahon along with Triple H have sold portions of their WWE stock.

The filing notes that Vince, the Chief Executive Officer of WWE, has sold 12,762 shares of class A common stock at $46.26, which is roughly $590,370.

Executive Vice President Triple H sold 10,628 shares at $46.26, which is roughly $491,651 while his wife, Chief Brand Officer Stephanie McMahon, sold 11,167 shares at $46.26, which is roughly $516,585.

Executive Producer Kevin Dunn also sold a portion of his class A common stock, disposing of 21,809 shares at $46.26, which is roughly $1,008,884.

EVP Bradley Bradley Blum (6,735 shares), SVP Brian Nurse (146 shares), and SVP Mark Kowal (2,613 shares) also disposed of portions of their stock, all at $46.26 a share.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Kairi Sane is looking to wrap up her time in WWE, but Monday wasn't the last time that we've seen her. Fightful has been told that Kairi is set for next Monday's Raw as well, but weren't told in what capacity. Both episodes have since been filmed. WWE has made a big effort to retain Kairi, and pitched several ideas to keep her on the payroll, and more specifically, away from other companies. Many of these ideas included her returning to Japan to work in a variety of capacities from an ambassador to a trainer.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Adam Pearce appears to have recovered from COVID-19.

Posting on social media, Pearce tweeted a picture of him holding the NWA title with a drawing that is supposed to reference COVID-19 and had the caption #AndStill. This comes after Pearce announced on June 25 that he tested positive for COVID-19.

Pearce is the latest to have recovered from COVID-19 as Kayla Braxton has also returned to WWE television recently after testing positive for COVID-19 a second time.

Pearce works as a producer for WWE. He was the second person to disclose a positive COVID-19 test since it was reported in late June that multiple people in the company tested positive for the virus. Renee Young disclosed on Wednesday night that she tested positive for the virus. It is unknown the exact number of people who have tested positive in WWE. WWE talent are not required to disclose positive COVID-19 tests.

Link: https://twitter.com/ScrapDaddyAP/sta...50492341866497

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">And the TNA belt Moose is using is a eBay counterfeit made in Pakistan.</p>&mdash; Dan Beltzer (@BeltFanDan) <a href="https://twitter.com/BeltFanDan/status/1285313747326771200?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 20, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 07-23-2020 09:13 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
AEW Dynamite averaged 845,000 viewers for last night's show on TNT, topping the 615,000 viewers that NXT averaged on the USA Network. The gap of 230,000 viewers was the highest since March 18, which was the first closed set broadcast of the pandemic era for either show.

Dynamite was up 7.2 percent in total viewers from last week. In the 18-49 demo, the show ranked fifth on cable with a 0.32 rating, up 10.3 percent from last Wednesday and matching Dynamite's best number since March. The 845,000 total viewers was the best for the show since the March 18 episode, which featured the long-promoted reveal of the Exalted One of The Dark Order and the debut of Matt Hardy.

NXT was down 2.5 percent in total viewers from last Wednesday and had its lowest audience total since May 20. The show was actually up 21.4 percent in the 18-49 demo, averaging a 0.17 rating to finish 35th in the cable rankings for that category.

The combined audience of 1.46 million viewers was up three percent from last week.

AEW dominated the individual demo categories except for people over 50, where NXT had a slim advantage of 0.33 to 0.31.

AEW doubled, and in some cases tripled, NXT in most of the other categories. Dynamite's strongest category was men 18-34, where they had an advantage of 0.44 to 0.23. In the men 12-34 category where NXT cratered last week, NXT was up slightly to a 0.04 rating as compared to AEW's 0.14.

https://i.imgur.com/Y0YSiOQ.gif

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
AEW increased in all but one of the key demographics led by a 40% jump among females 12-34 and adults 18-34 improving by 12.5%. The lone loss was with males 12-34 that fell by 5%.

NXT was all over the place with their audiences dropping last week, so they experienced several rebounds. The largest was with males 12-34 which hit 0.02 last week and were up to a 0.08 rating this week that translates to a 300% improvement. Males 18-49 were up 64% and adults 18-34 were up by 60%. The big losses were seen with females 12-34 that fell by 55.5% and females 18-49 decreasing by 28.5%.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, next month's SummerSlam pay-per-view officially won't be taking place at its originally scheduled location.

WWE posted a statement today confirming that this year's SummerSlam will no longer be taking place in Boston, Massachusetts. It was noted that SummerSlam will still stream live on the WWE Network on Sunday, August 23 and that "information regarding a new location for the event is forthcoming" ...

NXT's next TakeOver special was supposed to take place in Boston on the night before SummerSlam. It will remain on Saturday, August 22 but is no longer being held in Boston. The event is now titled NXT TakeOver XXX.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
PWInsider.com reported several weeks ago that the Performance Center will host Summerslam. However, we were told this morning that the company is "considering" other potential options, including at least one potential outdoor location, so stay tuned.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Despite not having any shows planned for the foreseeable future, Major League Wrestling is still getting things in shape for the future as Jacob Fatu has signed a four-year contract extension.

Fatu had signed a one-year extension in November 2019, but ESPN's Marc Raimondi first had the news that the current MLW World Champion had inked a new extension that will keep him under Court Bauer's employ through late-2025 ...

Fatu has been a pro since 2012 and won the MLW title in early-2019. His father is Sam Fatu, the former Tonga Kid in WWE. He was trained by his uncle Rikishi and his cousins are WWE tag team standouts The Usos.

MLW's next live date is planned for October 3rd in Dallas, Texas, with a December date in Philadelphia two months afterward.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
MLW Champion Jacob Fatu's new deal with Major League Wrestling gives the promotion exclusivity on Fatu through 2025 and would specifically prohibit him from performing for WWE and AEW. The original MLW deals talents signed only prevented talents from working for WWE but with the emergence of AEW last year, all exclusive MLW deals have been re-worked to become more exclusive in nature.

Fatu is among a number of MLW talents who have signed new or re-worked contracts with the company, following MLW National Openweight Champion Alex Hammerstone, Richard Holliday, MLW Middleweight Champion Myron Reed and Salina de la Renta.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
In an interview released Thursday, AEW president and creative lead Tony Khan talked with Sports Illustrated about his decision to bring Sammy Guevera back on Wednesday's AEW Dynamite, ending his 30-day suspension.

Khan confirmed that the suspension was unpaid with his salary being donated to the Women’s Center of Jacksonville. Khan said Guevara had to "earn" his reinstatement by taking sensitivity training.

“I meant what I said about re-evaluating his status with the company based on his conduct. Sammy needed to make a lot of strides to keep his job and make amends for stuff he shouldn’t have said. None of us knew he said those things, and it’s stuff that was years old, but that doesn’t make it right," he said.

The 26-year-old was suspended indefinitely on June 22nd after an inappropriate comment he made on a 2016 podcast regarding Sasha Banks was revived on social media during the #SpeakingOut movement.

Khan said Guevara completed four weeks of "extensive sensitivity training" where he delved into "matters of tolerance, gender, race relations, and why people’s words matter. During his suspension, he was very contrite. I asked him to use that time to try and become a better person, and I think he did."

Guevara returned to TV Wednesday as a surprise to close the show, rejoining his Inner Circle teammates in a beatdown of Jurassic Express. Khan said it was the right time to bring him back "because he’s shown that he’s very sorry and that he can change. He’s spent every day over the past month trying to prove that. I think Sammy was very happy to have an opportunity to apologize, publicly and privately, and do something to turn a terrible comment he made into something positive.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
It appears the expected AEW in-ring debut of Mike Tyson won't be happening prior to Labor Day as as the boxing great and mainstream sports star will instead be returning to the ring against another former great.

Yahoo's Kevin Iole reported Thursday that the 54-year-old will return to action after retiring in 2005 against multi-division champion Roy Jones Jr. in an eight-round exhibition match set for September 12th at Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, California.

The TV distribution platform is unknown at this time, but is likely set for pay-per-view given the names involved. ...

Rumors of a Tyson return started earlier this year when clips of an in-shape Tyson training surfaced on social media. In doing media for an event earlier this year, UFC president Dana White said he heard Tyson was definitely coming back against a big name even though he wished he would stay retired ...

Tyson had appeared at AEW Double or Nothing this May, presenting the first-ever TNT title to Cody Rhodes. The Wednesday afterward on Dynamite, he and an entourage got in a pull apart brawl with Chris Jericho and the Inner Circle which was expected to lead to a singles match at some point.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Eric Young made his first podcast appearance post-WWE on Busted Open Radio. Young acknowledged creative problems within the company, saying “It’s hard to get a word in. Even when you’re doing nothing, it feels like you’re just trying to fix people’s mistakes all day, there is no creativity. They want everyone to do things the same, be the same and bump the same and sell the same. And there’s millions of rules, which I’m sure you guys have all heard and talked about on the show at length, and people talk about on the internet and the secret rules. Those change daily and it’s just really hard to understand what’s going on and why it’s going on. The system is flawed.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Doc Gallows was a recent guest on The Wrestling Inc. Daily podcast. Doc revealed that during the Boneyard match taping between Undertaker and AJ Styles, Undertaker suffered a serious injury in-which he lost a lot of blood and a tendon of his was wounded as well. Undertaker did wear a bandage around his wrist during the airing of the match.

“Man I don’t know. After seeing him there and seeing how tough and how hard he is, he definitely has one more in him. Early on in the shoot, he goes to throw that back-fist and his arm goes through the freaking window. It’s a laceration, there’s tendon, there’s blood and I mean a lot of blood and a lot of swelling, and if it were somebody else, they might’ve stopped that. There might have been serious medical attention but there wasn’t. He wrapped it with a towel, he took a ten second break and he’s back out there fighting and rolling around in the dirt. That’s a bad ass dude. That’s legit. I watched it with my own two eyes so, as far as that goes, in the right setting, I think yeah and I think it was great for those two to do it in that setting because you can’t have WrestleMania with AJ Styles and The Undertaker in a empty Performance Center. That’s a match that deserves — it deserves the crowd reaction that it would get. I said that at Slammiversary too. As much fun as Slammiversary was and as great as it was and as cool as it was and how I really think it was a big shot in the arm, the only thing missing were — when that Motor City Machine Guns graphic showed up at the beginning of that pay-per-view, that would’ve been a hell of a pop and it’s a shame. I told those guys, ‘It’s a shame you didn’t get to get that pop’ so it’ll be fun when the world opens up again to feel those reactions and stuff.”

Gallows was asked about the tag team division in WWE, specifically the Viking Raiders (Ivar & Erik). Gallows believes that the higher-ups in WWE don’t believe that tag team wrestling can draw money and he added that later down the line, he hopes to have a match against War Machine, not The Viking Raiders.

“It used to [bother me seeing tag teams being misused in WWE] but I understand it. I mean, they [Viking Raiders] were a hell of a team. They’re a great team. We’ve had great matches with those guys. But, they’re War Machine-lite. We were Gallows and Anderson-lite. It’s the PG version, it’s the character version. Sometimes, in that company I feel like the people that are making the final decisions don’t have as much as modern touch, especially when tag teams are never a focus there because I don’t think that they actually believe tag team wrestling can draw money which I think has been proven all around the world not to be the case. But, it just is what it is. Those guys are characters. I hope they can make some good money for their families and pay off their houses and do all that stuff that you like to do as a wrestler so you can secure a good future for yourself but, at the end of those deals, there will be a place for War Machine to come and I’d like to stand across the ring from them again. The real War Machine. Maybe not the Vikings, you know?”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
IMPACT Wrestling’s Acey Romero guest appeared on the ‘Living The Gimmick’ podcast. Romero detailed IMPACT’s COVID-19 precautions and said that he’s felt safe at their tapings.

“IMPACT’s been taking extreme measures. For starters, they recommend us two weeks before tapings to self-quarantine and then for tapings itself, we have our own hotel rooms now. Usually, we double up but we’ve been having our own hotel rooms which has been great, and then we get our temperature taken and we get our blood-oxygen levels taken. A bunch of more science-y stuff that I don’t even know about. But they take the measures. Gloves, the anti-bacterial stuff, all that stuff. E.M.T.’s. They take all the measures and they make sure after tapings that they’re checking on people to see how we’re all doing. So I always feel safe. I never felt worried about coming to work and getting… being at risk.”

Romero admitted that IMPACT has not been doing COVID testing but reiterated that they are taking temperatures, establishing social distancing and keeping a limited number of people in the studio where matches are being taped.

“Not full-blown COVID testing, as some would say. But like I said, they are doing their best. There’s only a certain amount of people that can be in the studio at a time while taping. Social distancing has definitely been put in play, and like I said, they’re checking on us as much as they can to make sure we’re doing well and are taking their precautions.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
As first reported by Fightful Select, former IMPACT World Champion Tessa Blanchard is sending back the IMPACT World Title belt. IMPACT and Blanchard cut ties in June. The following note comes by way of Fightful:

“Tessa Blanchard and IMPACT Wrestling are on the outs, and reports have emerged suggesting that she demanded a large sum of money to return the title. Her side of things has disputed that, and mentioned that not only did Tessa not try to hold up IMPACT, but that the company only provided an address to send the belt this week. They claim the title is planned for a safe return.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by PostWrestling
AJ Styles went live on his Twitch channel on Wednesday night and shared his thoughts in-depth about Paul Heyman and why exactly he [Styles] wanted to get away from the RAW brand. Styles added that he’s heard from multiple people that they disliked Heyman and that Heyman was the one who threw Gallows and Anderson’s names to the wolves because he had nothing for them creatively.

“So, it was said that I was so angry with RAW that Gallows and Anderson were released. I was so angry, that I said, ‘I don’t wanna be on RAW anymore.’ That’s not the way it went down, at all. It was the person who was in charge of RAW who lied to me to my face. Just the most believable lie I’d ever seen, directly to my face.

I’m talking about Paul Heyman. Basically said to me — and here’s the kicker to this whole Paul Heyman thing; having put other guys over and Gallows and Anderson were getting beat by one guy and I’m like, ‘What the heck?’ And he’s like, ‘Hey, I need ya. Gotta trust me. We gotta get this guy over’ and of course that’s what you do. You help guys get over and be bigger [a] star of course but also, like hey, you can’t just bury us completely. I don’t mind losing. That’s not even a part of it as long as there’s a good story that comes behind it. But, he would be like, ‘Listen, you guys trust me. Trust me, trust me, trust me, and if you guys — everything I’ve done you wrong, you get on social media and you bury me. You bury me to every social media you can possibly think of.’ He said this to us, so it came down to Money In The Bank, I found out that my guys were getting released. I was upset and I wanted to go talk to Vince [McMahon] and [Vince was like], ‘It’s already in motion. It has already been done,’ and then Paul Heyman pulls me into his office and tells me he had nothing to with it. He knew nothing about it. Had he knew that Gallows and Anderson were gonna get released, he would’ve fought for him and that’s why they didn’t even tell him [they were] getting released. ‘I appreciate that. I understand. That makes a lot of sense. Well, I mean, listen, we understand what’s going on.’ The COVID, you should’ve seen headquarters. It was sad. It’s a huge building and there was hardly anyone there. So it sucks for everybody, I understand. Even Gallows and Anderson understand to a certain extent. I mean you’re talking about two guys who got released when they were in the main event of WrestleMania. At least one of them. Had one of the bigger matches for sure, but, it was later that I told a friend what was said and he told me what he knew was the truth which was basically, Gallows and Anderson weren’t even on the list, but Paul Heyman just spoke out abundantly like, ‘Hey, we gotta get these guys out of here. We don’t need ‘em, they’re getting paid too much,’ all these things, and the one thing Paul Heyman is good at is talking. He’s very convincing, very, and one thing led to another, Paul advocated for Gallows and Anderson to get released. It’s that simple. Their names wasn’t even on the list until Paul brought it up and I think that the reason why he did what he did — well there’s a couple reasons. He’s a liar. That’s what they do, but it was because he knew he had nothing he wanted to do with them, that he didn’t wanna do anything for them, he didn’t wanna help them become bigger stars. He didn’t wanna do any of that. So the best way to do that after everything he said to ‘em was boom, get ‘em out of there. That’s the real story, and the reason I went to SmackDown is because I couldn’t stand looking at him. I just can’t stand a liar. I’m a grown man, you’re a grown man. Why lie? You don’t even have to say anything. So, I just couldn’t stand to look at him and I was just like, ‘You know, if and when the opportunity if SmackDown’s available, I can’t be around Paul Heyman. I just can’t stand him. But if there’s ever an opportunity, I don’t mind coming over. That’d be great. I don’t wanna do anything now because if my son plays football on Friday nights, I wanna be there.’”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Before Sonny Kiss became a star in AEW, he was known as XO Lishus in Lucha Underground. Kiss was apart of season four of Lucha Underground and one of the highlights of the season.

Lucha Underground went through major issues following season four with season five never happening but talent still being under contract. Lawsuits ended up being filed and settled, which allowed the talent to finally get out of contracts and sign elsewhere. Though Kiss was not part of the lawsuit, he did have to deal with his Lucha Underground contract when talking with AEW.

"Brandi slid into my DMs [Laughs]," said Kiss on Talk Is Jericho when asked about signing with AEW. "She messaged me and goes, 'Are you signed anywhere? We'd like you to come to our first show.' I was like, 'Yes, but I can still do other bookings.' [I was signed] to Lucha Underground. Thankfully, we were allowed to do everything but the other company [WWE] so I was able to still do it, but I didn't get my official contract [with AEW] until way after. That contract issue [with Lucha Underground] it was a nightmare. We were maybe making four grand a year. We couldn't sign anywhere else at all. There were times when I couldn't pay my cell phone bill, anything. [Fenix and Pentagon] were one of the first to get out and I was happy for them. I was one of the last. Cody was like, 'Don't worry, we'll still book you and make sure you're still here.' I didn't get my [AEW] contract until TV happened."

Sonny went on to say that he thought Brandi's offer was for All In 2 and didn't realize it would be for an entirely new promotion.

Fortunately, Sonny did get out of his contract and has become a featured star on AEW television.


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 07-24-2020 01:55 PM

The Sheets (Observer Newsletter Edition):

Quote:

Mysterio has still not signed a new WWE contract. At last word, as of a few weeks ago, he was asking for a raise and Vince McMahon was not offering one. That may have changed since the last word is that the sides are not far from a deal and McMahon and Mysterio would be meeting once again soon to try and finalize things.
Quote:

A scheduled U.S. title match with Apollo Crews defending against MVP didn’t happen. They announced that Crews didn’t get cleared due to a bulging disc. In reality, he tested positive for COVID but they must have hoped he’d be okay for the show.
Quote:

With their 90-day non-compete over and no longer under WWE contract, Karl Anderson (Chad Allegra, 40) and Luke Gallows (Andrew Hankinson, 36), the Good Brothers tag team, did a two-hour video interview with New Japan’s Rocky Romero and Ryan Satin that was released on 7/18. The interview focused mainly on their time in WWE and the decision to sign, as well as their firing in April and their future, signing with Impact Wrestling and their expected return to New Japan Pro Wrestling ...

They also talked about being fired by WWE, and how this led directly to A.J. Styles demanding to be moved from Raw to Smackdown saying that he wouldn’t work anymore with Paul Heyman, who Vince McMahon personally told Styles was the person who made the decision to fire Gallows & Anderson. While obviously preposterous, since all cuts were made by McMahon, and reasons for the cuts fit into the categories of the people being cut for McMahon’s perception of not being difficult negotiations that ended up costing the company more than they originally wanted to pay them at a time when the rule was don’t let anyone leave for AEW, and it was those guys as well as the guys McMahon had decided he wasn’t going to use anymore who were cut..

This was the classic story we’ve heard for more than 30 years, when Vince would want someone gone. He’d use his head of talent relations as his buffer, whether it be J.J. Dillon, Jim Ross, John Laurinaitis or others in that role. The idea was that the talent believed Vince loved their work, and liked them personally, but the other person, fill in the blank, didn’t like them and were responsible for them being gone.

After some time, Ross would tell talent that it wasn’t Vince, even though it was, but learned to use the term that creative couldn’t come up with anything for them, thus Ross avoided the heat on Vince or him, and used the nebulous writing crew as the scapegoat. Later he had Laurinaitis make calls, so talent thought it wasn’t a decision from Vince or Ross, but Laurinaitis or creative were the people they had issues with. But in any key decision in the company, it’s always Vince ...

A lot of the reaction to the interview centered on the idea of how could they be so naive to think it was Heyman and not Vince, the reality is Anderson did say he knew it was still Vince’s call. Even Styles, while ripping Heyman publicly, also admitted he knew it was Vince’s call.

Internally both stories have gone around, one that it was Vince’s call but Heyman didn’t fight to keep them, another that Vince had a list of people to cut and they were not on the list, bu after a discussion with Heyman about what he was doing for the future, decided to put them on the list. Some said it was not exactly Ross/Dillon having to play bad cop for Vince’s decision but in the end, everyone said it was Vince’s decision ...

Gallows said when they got the word there would be layoffs, he told his wife he was highly confident they weren’t going to be cut. He said they realized McIntyre beat both of them at the same time in quick fashion on television, but Heyman assured both that doing so wouldn’t hurt them in the long run.

He said as soon as they were fired, Brodie Lee texted them, “They f***ed you guys.”

Anderson said when he got fired, he remembered HHH saying to them when trying to get them to sign,“I look at you and I see your kids. What if AEW doesn’t last? You know WWE will always be here.”

“We had f***ed our friends and we knew that.”

They also noted that some of the guys who were fired have been called about coming back but for much lower money and then turned it down.

Essentially them promising to sign with AEW, and signing with WWE one day before a meeting scheduled with Tony Khan left bad feelings with the company. Another key is that with FTR being let go just before their contracts were to end, and AEW loaded with good tag teams, bringing FTR and Gallows & Anderson in at the same time, was not a move I’d have made even if what happened last summer hadn’t happened.

Impact made them the same strong offer that they made them last summer, and agreed to allow them to work around their New Japan schedule when they made their deal with New Japan, which was pretty much imminent from the day they were let go. The situation isn’t perfect as the pandemic changed their lives.

Without the pandemic, they would almost surely still be in WWE, but even if not, they’d be in New Japan on big shows starting this week. New Japan is expected to bring them back, but they first have to be able to get them into the country without two weeks of quarantine and also get back on their own feet as a company financially, which requires drawing the kind of houses they expected to be doing when they made their budgets. New Japan had a hiring freeze, since those in the administration took sizable pay cuts and the doctrine from the top was that nobody with the company will lose their job during the pandemic unless it’s the last resort ...

Anderson said that in 2016, he didn’t think Levesque really wanted them as much as they wanted Styles. Actually the key is they wanted to stop New Japan from breaking into the U.S. and felt Styles was their key star, a move that kind of backfired since Omega, who ended up being a far bigger star in the spot than Styles ever was, was put in the Styles spot in New Japan and the company grew a lot bigger and more popular. The Young Bucks were very close to coming with them to WWE, but ROH made the Young Bucks the biggest money deal in the history of their company.

Anderson said that he didn’t think Levesque even knew what they had accomplished in Japan, their tag title runs, tournament wins or that he had gone to the finals of the 2012 G-1 Climax tournament. Anderson said at first he didn’t understand WWE style. He also said that a lot of people told him and Gallows that they would get lost in the shuffle in WWE, but they were very confident they’d do well because of the level they had reached in Japan. He joked he would tell people who said they wouldn’t make it to the top in WWE, “Wanna bet?” and then noted they quickly realized they would have lost those bets ...

Anderson noted that AEW had made them a very good offer in 2019, and that Impact also made them a great offer, a lot more than either of them thought they ‘d be able to make. He said the Impact offer for both of them was more than a lot of their friends make in WWE now.
Quote:

There are a few key notes on the ratings from the past week. WWE did three weak numbers overall. Raw and Smackdown were up from the prior weeks with total audience but given the PPV, coming off the PPV, Randy Orton vs. Big Show, it was the most disappointing number really in the show’s history.

AEW had its best numbers in four months, since the debut of Matt Hardy and before the pandemic did a number of viewership.

But what was noteworthy is that Wednesday night was the biggest night for 18-49 viewers, which has happened before but should never happen since Friday has all the advantages of being available in so many more homes and on a broadcast network channel.

It’s more a shift of younger viewers. Also, for the first time in history, AEW was No. 1 for the week in a demo, and it’s one that one wouldn’t guess. AEW, with competition, had 58,000 women 18-34 this past week, ahead of 55,000 for Raw and 43,000 for Smackdown.

In overall 18-34 viewers, AEW had 129,000, slightly below the 143,000 for Raw and 144,000 for Smackdown. But AEW also had head-to-head competition and without it, would have passed up both WWE main shows in the 18-34 demo already.

Including NXT, Wednesday had 183,000 viewers 18-34 and 445,000 35-49. Monday had 143,000 in 18-34 and 455,000 in 35-49. Friday had 144,000 in 18-34 and 457,000 in 35-49.
Quote:

To me, the 7/20 Raw ratings were the scariest in recent history. While overall numbers were up 4.3 percent, ths week’s show should have had a major increase because they had spent weeks building the Randy Orton vs. Big Show unsanctioned match like a major PPV match, and it came the day after a PPV where they pulled out Rey Mysterio’s eye and did a disputed women’s title match finish designed for next-day curiosity.

The results were 1,627,000 viewers, the second lowest in the modern history of the show, above only last week’s 1,561,000 viewers, the record low. It did an 0.46 in18-49 (598,000 viewers), barely ahead of the all-time low (594,000) set on 5/4. The latter number was down 4.2 percent from last week.

The third hour of Raw, featuring Bayley vs. Kairi Sane and Orton vs. Show, did the second lowest total audience for an hour in Raw history, behind only hour three of last week. At 0.42 in 18-49 (542,000 viewers), it did the lowest rating in that demo for any hour in the history of the show ...

The show did 1,740,000 viewers in the first hour, which isn’t good but was well up from last week, probably due to curiosity coming off the PPV on Mysterio, since that angle did tremendous in casual interest by modern pro wrestling standards. But curiosity and controversy if the angle sucks often doesn’t mean much when it comes to ratings themselves. The second hour fell to 1,609,000 viewers and third hour to 1,535,000 viewers.

Orton vs. Show itself did 1,580,000 viewers, just over the average for hour three.

In the key demos, the show did 88,000 in males 18-34, 55,000 in women 18-34, 298,000 in males 35-49 and 157,000 in women 35-49.

The 11.8 percent first-to-third hour drop was normal, but that’s misleading as most of the audience, 50 and up, didn’t drop. It was the younger audience that left during the show. Women 18-49 fell 23.7 percent from hour one to three. Men 18-49 fell 14.1 percent. Teenage girls fell 32.9 percent. Teenage boys fell 41.1 percent. But over 50 only dropped 2.5 percent as the show went on.
Quote:

Smackdown on 7/17 did a 1.24 rating and 1,912,000 viewers (1.28 viewers per home) and an 0.5 in 18-49 (601,000 viewers) for a show built around A.J. Styles vs. Matt Riddle for the IC title.

It was basically the same as the week before with the rating down 0.8 percent), total viewers up 1.1 percent and 18-49 down 1.0 percent.

Smackdown was first in 18-49 for the night, but aside from an episode of 20/20, which did an 0.4 in 18-49, everything else was in reruns. 20/20 did 2,416,000 viewers. Ironically the two first-run shows, which did the best in 18-49, also did worse than all the reruns but one. Smackdown was last among viewers and 20/20 was third to last.

The show did 101,000 viewers in males 18-34, 43,000 in women 18-34, 261,000 in males 35-49 and 196,000 in women 35-49 ...

By segment, the open, plus New Day vs. Cesaro & Shinsuke Nakamura and the beginning of the Alexa Bliss interview segment did 1.95 million viewers. The majority of the Bliss interview segment, plus Asuka & Nikki Cross vs. Bayley & Sasha Banks and a Bray Wyatt interview did 1.88 million viewers. Braun Strowman vs. John Morrison and Naomi vs. Lacey Evans and a Sheamus-Jeff Hardy interview angle did 1.92 million viewers. Styles vs. Riddle for the title did 1.81 million viewers.

The median audience age was 55.4 years old, slightly younger than the past two weeks.

Last year on this weekend the FOX network did 1,310,000 viewers and 0.25 in 18-49 with rerun programming so viewers were up 46.0 percent and 18-49 was up 100.0 percent.
Quote:

On 7/22, AEW did its best numbers since 3/18, finishing in the No. 5 spot in 18-49 and doing 845,000 viewers and a 0.32 (409,000) in 18-49. NXT was No. 35 with 615,000 viewers (lowest since 5/20) and 0.17 (219,000) in 18-49.

AEW was up 7.2 percent in viewers and 7.6 percent in 18-49. NXT was down 2.5 percent in viewers but up 17.7 percent in 18-49.

AEW was third on cable among non-news shows in 18-49 and first with males 18-49. It was third in males 12-34 but won its time slot, as the two shows beating it were a Premier League soccer game at 3:10 p.m. from the U.K. on NBC Sports Network and 12 Oz Mouse on Adult Swim at midnight.

NXT was No. 15 among non-news shows in 18-49, and No. 17 overall in male 18-49.

Last week was hurt by NASCAR and UFC head-to-head which this week didn’t have. In two weeks, with NBA, NHL and baseball, it will be the real test of how it holds up against major sports. Next week has baseball and soccer.

AEW once again won every key demo. In men 18-34, AEW had 71,000 viewers (up 1.4 percent from last week) and NXT had 37,000 (up 516.7 percent from the ridiculously low 6,000 of last week). In women 18-34, AEW had 58,000 viewers (up 11.5 percent from last week) and NXT had 17,000 (down 41.4 percent). In men 35-49, AEW had 210,000 (up 9.9 percent) and NXT had 114,000 (up 32.6 percent). In women 35-49, AEW had 70,000 (up 4.5 percent) and NXT had 51,000 (down 21.5 percent).

AEW did a 0.15 in 12-17 (up 7.1 percent from last week), 0.18 in 18-34 (up 5.7 percent), 0.46 in 35-49 (up 8.5 percent) and 0.31 in 50+ (up 3.2 percent) ...

NXT did a 0.04 in 12-17 (down 33.3 percent), 0.08 in 18-34 (up 54.3 percent), 0.26 in 35-49 (up 9.3 percent) and 0.33 in 50+ (down 8.3 percent).
Quote:

AAA: Dorian Roldan held a press conference on 7/20 to say that the planned TripleMania date of 8/22 wasn’t happening. We pretty much reported that last week. He said he hoped they could do the show before the end of the year, but there is no new date and there’s no way he could know anything. He didn’t say anything about Monterrey but they are hoping to do a big show at the baseball stadium there on 10/10, which may be called TripleMania, or TripleMania Regia, as the big Monterrey show last year was called

Roldan did announce an idea called Auto Luchas, a drive-in wrestling concept at Six Flags in Mexico. The idea is to have people come to shows and park in assigned places and watch from their cars, like drive-in churches and movies. The ring will be put higher than usual and big screens will be put up as well. Tickets will only be able to be purchased on-line, fans would be required to wear masks and stay in their cars. Merchandise will be sold including face masks. Cars will be limited to four people for a regular car and seven for an SUV. They will also broadcast commentary you can pick up via your car radio. They will take place on weekends with multiple shows per day, like a theme park stage show as opposed to a live arena pro wrestling event. There will be mostly singles matches, and some tags, rather than trios, to limit the number of people in the ring at one time. Only wrestlers from Mexico will be used due to travel restrictions. Roldan talked about streaming or airing the shows on television and said talks are positive about doing so but no deal is in place.
Quote:

The Women of Wrestling group that was thought to be dead when AXS canceled the show, considers itself still alive. They are planning fall tapings for a television network and would announce the network at the tapings. Rumor has it as a station that was looking to get into pro wrestling in 2019 but missed out on making the deal
Quote:

[AEW] They announced an eight-team women’s tag team tournament that will take place on Dynamite during the summer called The Deadly Draw. This is not to create women’s tag team champions, although I think women’s tag champions and trios titles make sense, particularly when the second show starts airing. The idea is to do an annual summer women’s tag team tournament, but the first year will be the test marketing and if it goes well, it will be, but if it doesn’t, it will be chalked up to a learning experience
Quote:

Based on YouTube, the biggest [AEW] star is Jon Moxley. Moxley vs. Brian Cage topped 1 million views, which is what a top Raw segment usually does. His biggest segment, when they did the angle where he got his eye taken out, did 6.7 million views. His biggest match on YouTube was the Jeff Cobb match at 1.3 million views
Makes sense since Moxley and other ex-WWE guys have a big advantage of being more recognizable to general wrestling fans than some of AEW's newer stars that simply need time to build up their own name recognition to similar levels.

Quote:

Right now, and this can change 100 times (it seemed television this week along changed that many times), the plan is for Edge vs. Orton in an I Quit match as one of the key matches for next WrestleMania. It was already scheduled for SummerSlam before the Backlash “Best in the World” match took place, but Edge’s injury made that impossible. Edge on Raw and Daniel Bryan on Smackdown both have significant creative influence. The term I was given is they were part of the writing teams of the respective shows right now. McIntyre vs. Orton was as of this past week the new scheduled SummerSlam main event. There have been rumors floating that Orton goes over and leads to a match with Edge, but that seems so counterproductive to take the title off McIntyre for Orton. The audience needs to see new people getting superstar pushes just to have the idea that things can change, because the idea that everything is always the same has been detrimental
Quote:

What is notable is that Vince McMahon actually has said that since Mania is over and with a lot of guys missing due to COVID and other reasons, that this is the time where they have to make new stars, which seems to contradict most of what the actual creative is doing
Probably shouldn't have fired the one guy who was trying to put the pieces in place for the gradual build up of star power for potential new big stars.

Quote:

The night before and all day on 7/20 they were rewriting Raw. The rewriting was such that the show started being taped three to four hours after it was scheduled, although they taped early enough that there were no issues getting it on the air on time. But it was a long day because they were taping seven plus hours, three more hours of Raw for 7/20, three more hours for 7/27, and Main Event shows for both weeks ...

There was an idea for the show to reform the Nation of Domination. Both Ron Simmons (who did appear on the show in a quick cameo for no reason) and Mark Henry (who was not on the show) were brought in to kickoff that angle. We don’t know if they are going to do that or if it was dropped. We do know people who thought from a real life timing situation that redoing the Nation right now would be incredibly tone deaf, so a lot did want it nixedl
Quote:

For what it’s worth, Wall Street estimates for the 7/30 quarterly call for WWE right now look to be $229 million in revenue and $12 million in profits. Keep in mind that all the cuts, because of the talent still being paid for 90 days, doesn’t have any effect and they still are expected to be well up in profits even with no arena events, from the same quarter last year
Quote:

The most-watched shows of the past week on the WWE Network were: 1. Extreme Rules; 2. Undertaker: Tales from the Dead Man; 3. Extreme Rules pre-show; 4. Best of Extreme Rules; 5. WWE Top 10 scariest matches; 6. WWE Now: Extreme Rules post-show; 7. Undertaker’s Last Ride episode five
Not a good sign for NXT to drop out that quickly from the Top 10 after stringing together a few weeks where they were ranking very well. Also mirrors their recent tv issues of not being able to capitalize on the momentum gained from the Great American Bash.

XL 07-25-2020 03:44 PM

Don’t know about anybody else but I could do without half of the news/rumours being more ratings talk.

mike adamle 07-25-2020 03:51 PM

Yeah I always skip over that ratings garbage

Emperor Smeat 07-25-2020 04:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by XL (Post 5361558)
Don’t know about anybody else but I could do without half of the news/rumours being more ratings talk.

Between MMA/Boxing, notable deaths, and ratings stuff, that's pretty much been a huge chunk of Meltzer's weekly Observer Newsletters for almost a year now.

The tidbit involving Gallows and Anderson was the only real meaty section in this week's Newsletter for non-MMA, deaths, and ratings.

If more people are not interested in it being included, I have no issue with not including it for Friday's sheet reports. Saves me a bunch of time from copying and editing the stuff twice, one for the Frontpage's hidden sheets newsletter and one for the forum's weekly post.

mike adamle 07-25-2020 09:50 PM

I mean there's already a ratings thread shouldn't it go there instead of clogging up the interesting news on this page.

Mr. Nerfect 07-25-2020 10:00 PM

Meltzer takes the ratings way too literally, and I wonder if he does this because he can't help himself (an obsessive/autistic thing -- not making fun), or because it's deliberate misrepresentation so that he can create tension so he's always got something to write about.

Emperor Smeat 07-25-2020 10:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mike adamle (Post 5361644)
I mean there's already a ratings thread shouldn't it go there instead of clogging up the interesting news on this page.

Usually kept it separate since its mostly just detailed data on stuff already talked about earlier in the week and quicker/easier to just stick everything in one post than dealing with multiple threads.

Only reason RAW and SD stuff gets included is due to both hitting historic low territory and SD still having some weeks left where it can be compared to whatever FOX had on prior to SD.

XL 07-26-2020 11:36 AM

I mean this in the most polite way possible Smeat, but do you get paid for posting the sheet news?

Emperor Smeat 07-26-2020 03:38 PM

Yes for anything that goes up on the Frontpage.

If I remember, Triple A needed some help with the Frontpage after Ryan Clark left over some personal issues and asked a couple of people if they were willing to help out in return for some money. I was one of the people picked because of all the sheets stuff I already was doing for the forums at the time.

Emperor Smeat 07-28-2020 09:23 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Last night's Raw number, even though there were some bright spots as far as the first two hours not doing too badly, ended up as the second least-watched episode of the show in its history and third lowest ever in 18-49.

Raw averaged 1.62 million viewers, down one percent from last week's second worst number ever. But this show was loaded between the Asuka vs. Sasha Banks Raw Women's Championship match and the Drew McIntyre vs. Dolph Ziggler match which was pushed on television as for the WWE Championship before it was quietly changed to non-title over the weekend ...

In addition, Raw set all-time record lows for the third hour, built around those two matches, which did 1.46 million viewers (breaking the single hour record low of 1.50 set by last week's hour three with Randy Orton vs. Big Show) and 0.41 in 18-49, breaking the all-time Raw lowest hour of 0.42 set last week.

The show averaged a 0.48 in 18-49, the third lowest ever, because the first and second hours were up from last week in the key demo, an overall four percent increase from last week.

Raw finished 19th overall and third in 18-49 ...

Raw is down 30 percent from the same week last year overall, 35 percent in 18-49, and down 52 percent from last year in 18-34.

The bad sign was the 14 percent first-to-third hour drop is more than the show has been doing in recent weeks. The drops were 28 percent in women 18-49, 16 percent in males 18-49, 88 percent in teenage girls (unheard of), and 52 percent in teenage boys (also unheard of) while only seven percent in over 50. There was something in hour two that was as big a turnoff to teenagers as anything in recent memory.

The three hours were:

8 p.m. 1.70 million viewers
9 p.m. 1.69 million viewers
10 p.m. 1.46 million viewers

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Kris Statlander is recovering following surgery to repair a torn ACL.

She posted a picture on her Twitter account this afternoon following her surgery. She had tweeted the day before that she was undergoing surgery today.

Statlander tore her ACL in a match on AEW Dynamite that aired on June 10. The injury happened as she was going for a dive on Kip Sabian to the outside, injuring her knee on impact. It took place during a tag team match where Statlander teamed with Hikaru Shida to take on Nyla Rose and Penelope Ford.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
WWE issued a new storyline update on Rey Mysterio’s status following his Eye for an Eye match against Seth Rollins at Extreme Rules: “WWE Digital has learned that Rey Mysterio’s vision is improving slowly each day, and that his optic nerve is intact, completely secured and back in its socket. A timeline for Mysterio’s return to the ring is unknown at this time.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Oberver
Cody tweeted that the TNT title belt design will be finalized on August 12.

Link: https://twitter.com/CodyRhodes/statu...155670530?s=20

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
After being pulled from Sengoku Lord this past weekend as a precautionary measure, Tomoaki Honma and Yota Tsuji have been cleared to return by NJPW.

NJPW announced on Saturday that Honma and Tsuji would both miss Sengoku Lord due to taping a television show with someone who later tested positive for COVID-19. NJPW wrote that Honma and Tsuji were both in good health and weren't in close contact with the person who tested positive.

Today, NJPW announced that Honma and Tsuji have both tested negative for COVID-19 and will be returning at Wednesday's non-televised Summer Struggle tour show

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
The top two matches for Summer Struggle in Jingu have been announced.

In a press conference held this morning, it was confirmed that IWGP Heavyweight and Intercontinental champion EVIL will defend both titles against Tetsuya Naito ...

Naito confronted EVIL at the end of Sengoku Lord last weekend, setting up the title match for next month.

Hiromu Takahashi will also defend the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship against Taiji Ishimori on this card. It was Ishimori who attacked Hiromu after losing his double title match to EVIL at Sengoku Lord. Naito eventually ran in for the save ...

Additionally, a new championhip, the KOPW 2020 title, will be determined in a fatal four-way match. Four matches will take place on August 26, with the winners advancing into this match. Competitiors fighting for the championship will name their stipulations and will allow fans to vote on the matches they would want to see.

Summer Struggle in Jingu will take place on August 29 at Jingu Stadium in Tokyo.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Betty Gilpin, who plays Liberty Bell on Netflix's GLOW was nominated for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series the 2020 Emmy Awards. This is the second year in a row that Gilpin has received that nomination.

GLOW also received nominations in two additional categories:

*Outstanding Production design for a narrative program (half-hour) for the episode "Up, Up, Up"

*Outstanding Sound Editing for a Comedy or Drama (Half-Hour) for the episode "The Libertines."

These nominations would be for GLOW's third season ...

Overall, the series has won 3 Emmys and has scored 18 nominations total.

Meanwhile WWE has been trying for years to get officially nominated and win an Emmy and has been empty handed for both.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
When ROH begins taping empty arena content for their TV show, it will be in the Maryland area.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
vladTV released his full interview with New Jack. Towards the end of the interview, New Jack was asked if he believes WWE is a racist company, judging by the way they portray black wrestlers. Here was his response:

“Yeah, because they always got the black guy doing stupid sh*t. They come out dancing and tap dancing and wearing dresses and eating cereal and all that silly ass sh*t…”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
The Miz was a guest on the 411 Wrestling Interviews Podcast and stated that he and John Morrison are working a new song.

Quote:

Originally Posted by WrestlingInc
The WWE Women's Tag Team Champions, SmackDown Women's Champion Bayley and new RAW Women's Champion Sasha Banks, have made history and joined an exclusive list of Hall of Famers and Superstars in the WWE history books.

With Banks' title win over Asuka on last night's RAW, Banks and Bayley became the first female Superstar duo, and the 5th pair overall, to join the list of teams who have held singles titles while also holding tag team titles together.

Bayley and Banks are the only female team on the list. The other four teams on the list are Triple H and Steve Austin, Kevin Nash and Shawn Michaels, Owen Hart and The British Bulldog, Ken Shamrock and Big Boss Man.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Bruce Prichard made headlines on his show Something To Wrestle when he said Nick Aldis lacked the "it factor" during his time in TNA. Prichard, who worked as head writer before taking on executive positions, worked with Aldis (Magnus in TNA) during his time in TNA from 2010 to 2013 and again in 2017.

Aldis didn't take kindly to Bruce's comments and addressed Prichard on Busted Open Radio.

"Bruce and I spoke on the phone and Bruce claimed 'I was talking about the Magnus character, I wasn't talking about Nick Aldis.' Well, his team uploaded a video and had a picture of me with the NWA Title and they used my name. So, he's full of shit," stated Aldis. "What he did was expose the fact that he hasn't been paying attention to anything going on. Anyone who has seen any of my shit over the last three years, everyone says 'you present yourself like a real pro wrestler.' For Bruce to say that, it just shows he hasn't been paying attention. Kinda like how when he was running TNA, he wasn't paying attention. He was asleep. He took a shot, gave a half-baked reason as to why he said it, didn't address it, and now he's getting an invoice. He likes to float things out as subjective and present them as facts. He lives in a past mentality where he thinks because he's in WWE, he can say whatever about someone and that's the only thing anyone will hear and that will be the opinion everyone shares. It doesn't work like that anymore."

Aldis continued, pointing to Bruce's ratings failure in TNA and WWE.

"By the time Bruce was relieved of his duties in TNA in 2013, he had viewership down to one million people. By the time I had the World Title at the start of 2014, we had the viewership figures back up to 1.3 million and peaked at 1.55 million, which is just shy of 1.56 million, which is the lowest Raw rating in history, which is the rating that came out the same week he decided to trash me on his podcast. Maybe that extra bit of rating that Raw got, that's the extra 'it factor' that I don't have. It can't be that his entire roster doesn't have the 'it factor,' if only I had the 'it factor' that those guys had, I could have got that extra half a fucking rating," said an agitated sounding Aldis.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
We have a story on the site about Monday’s announcement that DDT and Pro Wrestling NOAH will be merging under a new banner called CyberFight and appears to be a direct response to the effects of the pandemic. The merger takes effect on September 1st with Sanshiro Takagi installed as its president. They explained that they would be separate divisions of the company with the in-ring style not changing and made it appear this was a way to fortify its business structure and make it more efficient rather than sweeping changes to the on-screen content. Takagi added that desire to run a proper Tokyo Dome card and hopes of overtaking New Japan, which are nice goals to have even though both would be characterized as very ambitious.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Earlier this month, WWE held a virtual shareholders meeting involving its executive staff for a company update. Brandon Thurston at Wrestlenomics has a great review of the call and below are some of the highlights:

*Those on the call included Vince McMahon, Stephanie McMahon, Paul Levesque, Interim CFO Frank Riddick III, incoming CFO Kristina Salen, as well as executives John Brody, Jayar Donlan, Brian Flinn, Jim Johnstone, James Rosenstock, Brian Stedman, Michael Weitz, and other directors with the company
*They noted advertising partnerships with Hyundai, Coca-Cola, Mars, Unilever, Microsoft, and KFC.
*Their response to COVID-19 has included shifting its corporate staff to working from home, a reduction in management compensation, lowering its headcount of employees through furloughs, a delay in its new headquarters, temporarily suspending its stock repurchase program, and drawing $200 million from a credit facility
*They have approximately $500 million in liquidity to deal with the challenges
*During the Q&amp;A, Riddick stated the free version of the WWE Network has had “early positive results, but nothing definitive” – last week, Stephanie McMahon had noted network engagement was up 67% and you would have to attribute a sizable portion of that to the opening of the free tier and the promotion they did when the pandemic began where lots of content was made free
*In a major shift from the George Barrios &amp; Michelle Wilson era, Riddick said that they don’t believe a premium tiered system is an optimum approach to maximize the subscription value. Instead, they are going with the free model to bring in new subscribers with the hope of converting them while also developing “local currency pricing in select international markets”
*The WWE UK Performance Center has been inactive since March when the pandemic hit and are seeking out solutions to create new in-ring content from the NXT UK brand
*They are hopeful of running another event in Saudi Arabia before the end of 2020 but cannot guarantee that
*They have a back-up plan in case they were not allowed to run shows in Florida
*The cost-cutting measures in April had nothing to do with the XFL

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
During the shareholders Q&amp;A ...

From Paul Levesque on the role of NXT as either a feeder system or a third brand for the company, as well as its television numbers:

"So I think if you were to look at the NXT brand, it would be both. While it is, as Frank mentioned earlier, a third global brand, along with Raw and Smackdown, and our partners at USA, it is also the place where we make new stars and increase our talent and stars for the future, of both Raw and Smackdown. So that is the pipeline, and that is the — if you wanted to say, ‘the feeder system’, it is that, but it also has become its own third brand.

As far as the ratings go, I’m very happy with them, especially in the current circumstances. Everything is going well. We look at the long-term of that, not the short-term of that. And the long term is very exciting. We have a lot of stars. There are a lot of hungry young athletes, and the pipeline to bring in more as they continue to train and get better is very exciting. The future is very bright in that regard."

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Charlotte Flair was the Queen of WWE television in the months following WrestleMania 36, appearing weekly on Raw and NXT while being sprinkled into SmackDown as well.

Charlotte had already proven to be one of the greatest female wrestlers of all-time when she won the NXT Women's Championship at WrestleMania 36 and she hopes the women in NXT took notice of what you can achieve through hard work and consistency.

"I don't want to say that I've added more to NXT, I just hope the talent in that locker room at NXT go, 'this woman is NXT homegrown and look at what she's done in her career.' That's what I strive for. I don't say, 'do I added to the show, the locker room, am I getting girls over?' There's no right answer for that. My answer is, I hope the women in the locker room look at me and go, 'Damn, she's done it all and I want to do it too. What has it taken her to do that?' For me, the answer is consistency. Whether the storyline is for you or not for you, whether you're apart of it, you shine no matter what. It's not about how many moves, it's the story you portray and how you hold yourself. If you learn anything in a ring with me and we're trying to tell a story; remember the story and who you are as a character because that's what the audience connects with," Charlotte told Pro Wrestling Illustrated.

Charlotte lost the NXT Women's Championship at NXT TakeOver: In Your House. She is currently off television due to complications with plastic surgery.


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 07-29-2020 07:15 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Hiromu Takahashi is off upcoming NJPW events due to a shoulder injury.

NJPW posted on their website tonight that their medical staff has determined that Takahashi has suffered an injury to his left shoulder. As a result, Takahashi is off tomorrow morning’s card in Shizuoka and the July 31 card at Korakuen Hall.

Despite the injury, NJPW wrote in their statement that they are still expecting Takahashi to return for his scheduled IWGP Jr. title match against Taiji Ishimori. That match is scheduled to take place at Summer Struggle in Jingu on August 29.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Variety has a piece today blaming Vince McMahon for WWE's audience erosion for Raw and Smackdown, and backing up their case with data. It covers many of the points that we have covered here on the site. You can read it by clicking here.

Link: https://variety.com/vip/amidst-wwe-r...es-1234712446/

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Lightshed Partners, a top technology, media and telecommunications research firm based in New York City, released a deep analysis on the WWE stock yesterday, citing their belief that unless WWE turns their television ratings around, the company will not be able to maintain the level of rights fees they currently receive from NBC Universal and FOX.

Noting that WWE has “dealt well with the pandemic, managing costs down while fulfilling contractual content obligations,” Lightshed noted that they believed the Raw and Smackdown ratings in June might have been a “ratings bottom" but it has gotten worse since then. A big piece of blame was pointed at WWE Creative and Lightshed’s analysis specifically pointed to the “ousting of Paul Heyman” from his position of Executive Director of Raw as an issue. The analysis points out that WWE’s ratings have declined despite the money being brought in by their current deals and with that pressure, the “margin of error” for the company is smaller than ever. It noted that COVID-19 has impacted ratings for professional wrestling, but both WWE NXT and All Elite Wrestling’s numbers have been up while Raw (10%) and Smackdown (8%) are down from last month and down 15% from April 2020 with Raw hitting all time low ratings multiple times this summer.

On where the blame falls, the analysis notes, “COVID or no COVID, creative appears to be at the center of the issues. Vince McMahon has acknowledged things need to change multiple times. However, while there have been short lived experiments, the content appears to continuously return to a similar formula under his absolute control. McMahon went so far as to hire creative heads for Raw and SmackDown a year ago, with Paul Heyman heading Raw and Eric Bischoff heading SmackDown. Neither are in their roles a year later. Bischoff was fired after four months on the job and Heyman was relieved last month. The role is now consolidated under Bruce Prichard.”

They also stated that one of WWE’s “largest problems” is an “inability to create new Superstars”, noting that WWE has always been defined by its top stars but recent years have not had that star power, noting Roman Reigns has been closest but hasn’t hit on the same level as talents from eras before.

Lightshed noted, “More broadly, there really has been very little younger talent that have broken through at all on their way to replenishing even the middle level of stars in the men’s division. This has made the company more susceptible to injuries / absentees of major stars. Much of the talent with drawing power is aging. And, the big draws for major events have been in bringing back even older wrestlers such as Goldberg and The Undertaker. That is a band-aid, not a long-term strategy" ...

Lightshed pointed out that WWE has a few years before TV rights have to be negotiated again, so WWE has a chance to “fix” the roster and suggested that Paul Levesque could be the one to help right the ship. They suggest the company might need, “A longer-term approach, even if ratings return more slowly, is probably the right prescription" ...

The analysis noted that Lightshed is “torn on the right future for the [WWE] Network. We still believe those companies that can have [Direct to Consumer] relationships are far more better off in the current media ecosystem. Admittedly, though, we have grown more skeptical of the Network with time. It might just be that WWE doesn’t have the DNA to be great at DTC / grow it far beyond what it is today" ...

The analysis went on to state that they cannot recommend WWE’s stock right now because there are “still simply too many critical questions surrounding the company” at the moment, specifically the company’s creative direction ...

Lightshed pointed out that WWE’s main success are their television rights fees and that the stock “crumbled” earlier this year when international rights did not match what WWE garnered from the USA Network and FOX. Lightshed also expressed their doubts that FOX and NBC Universal will want to spend more money on WWE rights when the deals come due given the current environment and how WWE has performed. Pointing out how FOX has dropped sports properties and cut back on WWE programming and how NBC is “backing away” from pay-tv with an eye on streaming success with Peacock, their worry is that the landscape may not be there for WWE to repeat or enhance the success of their most recent deals.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Lightshed Partners, which is a technology, media, and telecommunications research firm, has put out a piece arguing that WWE’s media rights will decline if viewership continues to drop. It’s impossible to predict what the media landscape will be like come 2024 when the rights are set to expire with NBC Universal and Fox.

While viewership erosion is always a concern, it will come down to how valuable WWE is viewed by the players at that time, which may as well be multiple lifetimes from now and again, impossible to predict. If the USA Network falls at the same level and Raw is propping up its prime-time viewership average, then Raw will be considered as valuable as it was in 2018 when they received the enormous contract. Conversely, SmackDown is still #1 most Friday nights in the key demo for a show that runs year-round and at a cheaper cost than a drama or comedy with fewer episodes per year.

As long as USA Network (and FOX) keep failing to find a big hit program(s) that can do better than what WWE generates weekly and consistently for numbers, the amount of pressure on WWE to put in any real lasting effort to improve the quality of their shows will remain low.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
With COVID-19 preventing a stockholders meeting in person, World Wrestling Entertainment held a virtual meeting on 7/16. The video of the meeting was uploaded to WWE’s Corporate site several days ago. This morning, I sat down to listen to the call. Below is my coverage ...

They were asked about AEW taking their market share in ratings. Paul Levesque said there is a moment in time when something launches and it’s exciting and there’s some interest in that. He said it’s a big world and WWE continues to be focused on their product and stars. They have a very long track record of doing this successfully for many years and they will continue to do so.

Almost the same excuse and comments he gave months ago when he downplayed AEW's early success and them being any real threat to both NXT and WWE in general.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Cody was interviewed by ESPN’s Marc Raimondi to promote tonight’s match and discuss numerous topics associated with AEW. He said that he’d have a better answer in 4-6 weeks on the rumored third hour or second show for AEW to add and that it could feature talent both on and off the roster but designed to showcase people that always featured on Dynamite. Regarding Mike Tyson, he said there is a relationship with Tyson and AEW but only said that something would likely happen “if not now, then in the future”. Cody said they were at the finish line to sign Karl Anderson & Luke Gallows last year but the two made a business decision and denied there was any heat with them over what they did. He seemed high on the idea of pushing for AEW to sign Matt Cardona and Rusev noting the two have drawn money and have TV experience but did note the limitations of a two-hour show with so much talent already on the roster. He gave the following cryptic answer regarding the prospect of attempting to sign Rey Mysterio:

"To me, the greatest luchador ever, of all time — hands down — is Rey Mysterio Jr. And he’s got friends here. Jericho and him are friends. Mysterio is not afraid to travel out there, either. He’s not a one-company individual. And I think Rey still has a lot left to give in terms of wrestling. That might be something that someone else is currently discussing with him at this point. You never know."

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Rusev is seemingly done wrestling.

Since being released by WWE on April 15, Rusev has started streaming games online through Twitch. He's grown support with the Handsome Chatters and has become a Twitch partner. Now, it looks like this is his full-time profession.

During a Q&A on his Twitch stream, Rusev was asked if he was done wrestling or if he would go back to WWE. He replied, "I'm done. I'm done, man. I'm just enjoying my Twitch. I'm a professional Twitcher, YouTuber, content creator." Later, when someone said Rusev was his favorite wrestler, he said, "I'm not a wrestler anymore. Can I be your favorite streamer?"

Rusev's non-compete clause expired on July 18 and while many who were released in April have appeared on other programs or have hinted at continuing on with wrestling, Rusev has seemed rather content doing Twitch streams regularly.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Johnny Gargano spoke with Justin Barrasso at SI.com about tonight’s match with Roderick Strong and the competition with AEW for eyeballs on Wednesday nights:

"I am very much a wrestling fan and very much of the belief that competition makes everyone better. I think both shows are great in their own ways, and I’m super happy that there is so much great content out there. As a wrestling fan, it’s a cool thing to be part of.

I know a lot of people are very excited to see me and Roddy one-on-one. We are two guys that have been scratching and clawing for a very long time, and competition is going to bring out the best in us. We’re not tone-deaf, we know the stakes. We want to put out the best product possible, I want to put out the best product possible, and we’re going to go out there and put on a match you want to see."

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Stephanie McMahon was a guest on the Fluid Fan podcast with host Angela Ruggiero discussing her role as Chief Brand Officer and how WWE has responded during the pandemic. This wasn’t as in-depth or newsworthy as McMahon’s interview with AdAge last week. McMahon spoke of her performance background on television as a key to understand what the fanbase wants and made the point repeatedly about listening to its audience through their platforms. McMahon described their “ecosystem” of traditional terrestrial television that builds to their pay-per-view events that are anchored by “the big four” tentpole shows of the year with the ultimate one being WrestleMania. She added that due to the success of “The Last Ride” on the WWE Network, they are exploring opportunities to find a second window for the series, which I’m still surprised an outside network didn’t come and make a deal for that series given the subject matter and the need for fresh content during the pandemic. McMahon said today’s performers don’t always need to stay in-character and fans want to know the people behind the characters and they help the performers grow their brands. She said at the end that they tabled the idea of having their fans appear virtually on the WrestleMania broadcast but the feedback they got was people didn’t want that and shelved the idea and have also taken constructive criticism regarding the crowd sweetening on matches being inauthentic when they have gone overboard with it.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Game Changer Wrestling returns with another card at the Celebration Plaza Amphitheatre this Sunday at 5 pm Eastern airing on Fite TV. The card will be headlined by Joey Janela vs. ACH along with Nick Gage vs. Cole Radrick, AJ Gray vs. Chris Dickinson, Nate Webb vs. Mance Warner, KTB vs. Calvin Tankman, and Tre Lamar vs. Blake Christian. They have also announced that Ace Austin and Kylie Rae will make their GCW debuts on the show.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
WWE’s The Bump held its first-ever “Bumpy Awards” on Wednesday’s show with a long list of awards handed out but they included the following at the midway point of 2020:

*Tag Team of the Half-Year: Bayley and Sasha Banks
*Best Rivalry: The Undertaker vs. AJ Styles
*Best In-Ring Match: Edge vs. Randy Orton at WWE Backlash (the nominees included Charlotte Flair vs. Rhea Ripley at WrestleMania, Seth Rollins vs. Kevin Owens at WrestleMania, Daniel Bryan vs. AJ Styles on SmackDown in June, and the men’s Royal Rumble match)
*Best Cinematic Match: The Boneyard Match (The Viking Profits vs. The Ninjas was actually nominated)
*Superstar of the Half-Year: Drew McIntyre

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Doc Gallows is hopeful that IMPACT could one day work with NJPW.

During an interview with "This is Wrestling" on TSN 1200, Gallows spoke on signing with IMPACT and was asked whether or not this new contract that he signed with the company will be his last one, Gallows said it is not.

"I’m in my prime. I’m not slowing down. I just want to grow this IMPACT brand as big as we possibly can and keep it pushing forward. Yeah, this ain’t my last wrestling contract. Oh hell no! I’m not going to stop," Gallows said.

Now that Gallows, as well as Karl Anderson, have signed with IMPACT, Gallows is hoping that the company could enter a working partnership with NJPW. Both Gallows and Anderson wrestled for NJPW prior to coming to WWE years ago and they even held the IWGP Tag Team titles multiple times during their time wrestling in Japan.

“I think it’s all about keeping momentum. I think there is more tag team championships in the future for us as a team. I think we’ll always be together but we can support each other through a singles run. One for him, one for me. That’s some stuff we’ve been talking a lot about. What we want to do is continue to grow IMPACT. I want IMPACT to continue to grow and get bigger and better so that when our friends are calling us and they got contracts up in other places we can go “hey we can do this for you over here. What do you think? Come jump on board, come have some fun, and come party with us?” I think it would be great. I would love to see New Japan and IMPACT form a working relationship at some point. I think it would be beneficial for both sides and I would really love to see that. Hopefully, (I) can be a part in making that come together," Gallows said.

Considering Impact's parent company kicked NJPW off of US television because of issues with Impact, Gallows probably has better luck hitting the Powerball jackpot than seeing a partnership between those two companies forming any time soon.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
The WWE 2K series will undergo a change this year as the realistic WWE 2K21 game won't be released due to the poor performance of WWE 2K20. Instead, WWE and 2K will release WWE 2K Battlegrounds, an arcade-style wrestling game with over the top action.

Speaking to Sarah O'Connell, 2K Battlegrounds Executive Producer Sean O'Connor provided further details on the game.

When asked about the development of the game, O'Connor said, "It's been in development for just under two years. We originally wanted to make a wrestling game that is accessible and easy to pick-up and play. Less serious, kind of over the top."

He went on to note that there are over 70 WWE superstars, past and present, in the game. Each wrestler will have a different "class/style" that comes with its own advantages and disadvantages. Each wrestler will also have at least one alternate attire.

There will be multiple environments in the game and location-based environments such as New York, Scotland, and the Everglades will have interactive elements.

Jerry Lawler and Mauro Ranallo provided commentary for the game.

There is a "story mode" in the game where the user takes a group of seven superstars led by Paul Heyman and builds them as the next legends. It's not a gauntlet-styles story and does include an overall narrative. Both Create A Wrestle and Create An Arena are present in the game.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Although the NWA has yet to have a new show in months, one of its champions will be defending her title very soon.

Mission Pro Wrestling announced that Thunder Rosa will defend her NWA Women's Title against Lindsay Snow at "Hell Hath No Fury" taking place on September 18 in Texas. Face masks are required and social distancing protocols will be in effect.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Fightful
Ember Moon wasn't a fan of the finish to the Raw Women's Title match on Monday.

Sasha Banks became the new Raw Women's Champion on Raw, defeating Asuka when Asuka was counted out as she went to save Kairi Sane from being attacked by Bayley in the backstage area. As a result of Sasha's victory, she and Bayley now hold the Women's Tag Team Titles, SmackDown Women's Title, and Raw Women's Title.

Taking to Twitch, Ember recapped Raw for her viewers and gave her thoughts on the outcome.

"Why do we need two double champions? Is SummerSlam going to be like low-key Evolution with Sasha and Bayley wrestling for their singles titles and also for the tag titles? Is that a thing? Are we just reliving Triple H [& Steve Austin, Two Man Power Trip] from 2001? Sasha & Bayley have done a great job with a limited roster, but there are too many people sitting at home to tie up all the titles with two people. I was kinda upset -- the match was superb -- I don't like the fact that knowing, it was Kairi's last [appearance], I don't know if that's the way you go. I feel you make it more of a threat than just Kairi getting beat up backstage. I think you have Bayley beat-up Kairi and then have her with a forklift about to drop some cinder blocks. [Asuka] had [Sasha] in the Asuka Lock, all she had to do was sit back. It makes more sense if Kairi is in more of a life or death situation versus her getting thrown into stuff and stomped. I get we're supposed to be angry, and kudos to them for making us angry. No one wanted Asuka to lose, everyone wanted NXT Asuka back and having an undefeated streak. That's what WWE does. I fell for the ploy of 'I'm angry because I saw my friend Asuka lose the title in a crappy way.' Are we gonna have Sasha just lose the title to Lacey Evans or transfer Naomi over? They're building to SummerSlam, right? As a fan, I feel like I got ripped because once again, I don't get Bayley vs. Sasha."

She continued, "I feel like I lost the match I wanted to see two SummerSlams in a row. Maybe they're waiting for a bigger live audience. Maybe it's because Charlotte is gone and Becky [Lynch] is on maternity leave. They're killing me because I really want to see that match. Not only that, but you're sacrificing all of your other superstars for two people. That's what it feels like to me. Maybe I misjudge what's happening. I like to be angry about wrestling. I'm just trying to figure out the next step. Apart of me is like, 'I don't know what's going to happen, 'which is great, but apart of me is like, 'I don't know if that was the right call.' For me to be so upset that I had to turn off Raw because back-to-back-to-back...that first hour and a half to me was infuriating from a professional and fan standpoint."

Ember did clarify that she believes WWE is doing what they can with the circumstances and that she isn't present at the Performance Center, so she isn't privy to the conversations happening inside the PC and behind closed doors.

She does feel that WWE could use this opportunity to have someone like Bianca Belair, Naomi, or a new tag team step up to Banks and Bayley to potentially take one of their titles.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
THE NWO ATTACKS NITRO & TURNS REY MYSTERIO INTO A LAWN DART, FLAIR WINS FIRST U.S. TITLE, SLAUGHTER MAKES WWF DEBUT, HEENAN ANNOUNCES THE 'REAL WORLD CHAMPION' IS COMING TO WWF & MORE: 7/29 THIS DAY IN HISTORY ...

1996 - WCW broadcast Monday Nitro from Disney's MGM Studios in Orlando, FL featuring the following result ...

Sting, Randy Savage, & WCW TV Champion Lex Luger fought WCW US Champion Ric Flair, Chris Benoit, & Steve McMichael (w/ Elizabeth, Woman, & Debra McMichael) to a double count-out at 13:23 when all the participants went backstage after Jimmy Hart came ringside and said Scott Hall & Kevin Nash were backstage ... late in the match, a cameraman showed Hall & Nash, holding a baseball bat, standing over Arn Anderson and Marcus Alexander Bagwell; moments later, Scotty Riggs came out of a trailer and was laid out as well; WCW Cruiserweight Champion Rey Mysterio Jr. then leapt from the trailer onto Nash but Nash caught him in mid-air and threw him head-first into the trailer; moments later, Savage jumped on the Outsiders' limo as they drove off; after the commercial break, ambulances arrived as Sting, Luger, Alex Wright, the Horsemen, Hart, and Eddie Guerrero tended to the injured; during the segment, Mysterio said that there were four attackers; Mysterio was unmasked after he was placed on the stretcher but covered his face with his hands; Wright left with Mysterio, telling Guerrero to stay for his match

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/gdu__J8jTnI" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>


TPWW Frontpage:

Emperor Smeat 07-30-2020 09:13 PM

The Sheets:

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Despite the return of live sports in the form of Major League Baseball as competition, the total Wednesday night wrestling audience was up to 1.48 million viewers last night, 1.5 percent higher than the previous week. AEW Dynamite had the higher viewership this week with 773,000 viewers as opposed to 707,000 for NXT ...

Dynamite's audience on TNT was down 8.5 percent from last week. In the 18-49 demo, the show averaged a 0.30 rating, down 6.3 percent from last week. Dynamite ranked sixth on cable in that category.

NXT on the USA Network was up 15 percent from last week in total viewers. In 18-49, NXT was up 5.9 percent, averaging a 0.18 rating and finishing 28th on cable in that important demo.

The total audience of 1.480 million viewers was higher than the third hour of Raw this week and the combined 18-49 rating of 0.48 beat out the three-hour average of Raw, which was 0.47. Those numbers would've been unthinkable just a few months ago.

The key to the NXT resurgence was in people over 50. After narrowing the gap to 0.02 last week, AEW dropped to a 0.27 in that demo, while NXT drew a 0.37. So the same number of people in that category (0.64 combined) watched both weeks, but almost 18 percent of them switched from AEW to NXT for whatever reason.

AEW won every other category and the gaps were similar to what they've been in previous weeks. One notable category was females 12-34, where AEW averaged a 0.15 rating. Raw this week, in the same category, averaged a 0.14. So even with competition, AEW beat them

https://i.imgur.com/tljwvKN.gif

*** Full disclosure, for the past several months, whenever Bryan Alvarez would post a quick tweet about AEW & NXT's numbers, people would post gifs mocking the loser show or company. Wanted to start including them sooner since I found them pretty funny and creative but when NXT was on top for a few weeks, WWE/NXT fanatics and Anti-AEW trolls didn't supply any notable ones and were mostly boring and plain with their trash talk so I just waited instead. Plus been getting a bit bored with doing sheet reports and wanted to spice things up a bit.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
AEW Dynamite fell 8.5% in viewership with 773,000 viewers tuning and posting a 0.30 rating in the 18-49 demographic, which was down 6.25% this week. Despite the drop, it was Dynamite’s third-highest viewership since May 27th and was higher than both Fyter Fest episodes. It was also the third-highest 18-49 rating for the show since April 1st.

NXT saw increases in both categories with total viewers improving by 15% with 707,000 and a 0.18 rating in the demo that was up 6%. This was the first week that NXT has topped 700,000 viewers since the Great American Bash episodes earlier this month ...

AEW was hit among males 12-34 which dropped 16% this week followed by the over 50 demo decreasing by 13% and males 18-49 dropping by 11%. On the other side, females 18-49 rose by 10% and females 12-34 improved by 7%.

Among the key demos, NXT was up in every category except males 18-49. The biggest jump was seen among females 12-34 that increased by 100% to 0.08, so that category has stabilized after falling badly to a 0.04 last week. Females 18-49 were up by 40% and males 12-34 improved by 25%.

Next week, both episodes will have competition with the NBA resuming play this week.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Coming out of the 7/29 edition of AEW Dynamite, a number of segments and matches were set up for the next several weeks of AEW programming ...

Excalibur was not on commentary tonight and Taz filled in for him. Several videos of Excalibur saying the n-word surfaced and received a great deal of traction on social media.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Observer
Prior to their investors call Thursday afternoon, WWE released their 2020 Q2 numbers which showed a year-over-year decrease but a record year-to-date revenue record, buyoed by theiir TV contracts and some big savings with not running live shows.

This was the first full quarter WWE hasn't been able to run live shows since the pandemic began.

The company saw a year-over-year operating income increase to $55.7 million for the quarter, up from $17.1 million from 2019, thanks to running shows at the Performance Center and as the release said, "to a lesser extent...a decrease in accrued management incentive compensation."

Additionally, net income, adjusted OBIDA, and cash flows were all up.

Revenues for Q2 decreased to $223.4 million, down from 2019's $268.9 million with the company pointing to "unfavorable timing" for their February show in Saudi Arabia. Conversely, yearly revenue hit a company record $514.4 million, up 14% from the prior year.

With both digital views and hours consumed increasing, WWE Network paid subscriber numbers ended the quarter up 6% to 1.69 million while the average for the quarter decreased to 1.66 million. WWE added their long-discussed new free tier over the past quarter.

Another positive: while consumer products were down by roughly $1 million, ecommerce revenue doubled to $12.6 million. They cited new belt sales and video game revenue as helping in that area ...

Other notes from the release and presentation:
  • The lack of live events resulted in a $48 million drop year over year. WWE had to cancel 53 domestic shows and 23 international events in the quarter.
  • The increase in subscribers marks the first time they've seen that since the fourth quarter of 2018.
  • They achieved WrestleMania Week viewership records of just under 1 billion video views across digital and social platforms, up 20% from last year.
  • Core content fees made up $132.9 million of the $200.1 million in media revenue for the quarter, up from $69 million from the previous year's quarter.
  • Raw viewership was down 24% year over year, following USA Network's 26% year over year decrease while SmackDown was up slightly by 4% year over year while Fox's numbers were down 4% year over year.

Notes from the Q&A portion (Vince McMahon, interim CFO Frank Riddick, Michael Weitz)
  • VKM was asked about the "softness" of the ratings. He essentially blamed it on a lack of audience interaction, but said they can have better storylines, more compelling characters and more content that isn't in the ring that is interesting to viewers.
  • VKM asked why NXT and AEW have bounced back from the COVID-19 downtick while Raw/SmackDown hasn't. He said because "they're new" and that it's up to WWE to make Raw/SmackDown more youthful.
  • VKM asked about Heyman's firing from creative, he didn't really give much of an answer. He did say Paul Levesque helps on Raw and SmackDown when asked if he should help more given his success on NXT.
  • They were asked about the EVOLVE wrestling purchase which was said to be a "content purchase deal" in very small size with no merger & acquistion elements attached to it.
  • Asked if there are any options at looking at live shows outside the PC with fans, VKM curtly said they are looking at all opportunities currently.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
While it appears plans for a multi-tiered WWE Network have been paused, perhaps forever, after WWE was initially slated to launch that project several months ago, PWInsider.com can confirm that independent wrestling content is still scheduled to be utilized on the company's streaming network.

Several sources have stated that content involving several promotions is being planned for rollout on the Network. WWE has the rights to Great Britain's PROGRESS and ICW and recently purchased the EVOLVE and Dragon Gate USA libraries from World Wrestling Network. The company also has a strong working relationship with Germany's Westside Xtreme Wrestling, so one would think those libraries are the most likely to be involved.

There is no timetable for when the content will be released, but we can confirm there was work being done in recent weeks to prepare for its incorporation onto the Network, unless of course, there is another change in plans.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
United States District Court of The Middle District of Tennessee Chief Judge Waverly D. Crenshaw, Jr. officially declared a mistrial earlier today in the Jeff Jarrett and Global Wrestling Entertainment vs. Anthem Wrestling (parent company of Impact Wrestling) lawsuit, PWInsider can exclusively confirm.

As reported earlier today, Anthem filed for a mistrial after the verdict came in from the jury, claiming that Jarrett's attorney had prejudiced the jury by noting that Anthem's Ed Nordholm was not present on 7/20 for court proceedings and by bringing up numbers during the liabilities portion of the closing arguments when it had been stressed by the court that those were to be left for discussion when it was time to cover potential damages and punitive damages.

Chief Judge Waverly set a 9/11 status conference to begin the process of setting up a new trial. He also ordered that the GFW Amped! tapes be preserved.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
Q - Whatever happened to Austin Theory?

A - He's still with WWE but has been pulled from TV. No one will confirm why, but his disappearance came after an allegation was made against him during the #SpeakingOut movement online.

From PWI's weekly Q&A articles. The other rumor regarding his absence involved him testing positive for the coronavirus but if that was the case, probably would have been back on tv by now or at least should be very soon.

Quote:

Originally Posted by PWI
For those who asked about Leon Ruff after WWE's Performance Center released a video on him yesterday, he has been signed to a NXT deal, the first of several EVOLVE talents who were signed after WWE acquired that company. WWNLive removed all Dragon Gate USA and EVOLVE content from their website on 7/28. WWE is now in possession of those video libraries.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Ring of Honor’s Kenny King was a guest on The Wrestling Inc. Daily podcast. King was candid and explained in detail about the portrayal of black characters in pro wrestling. King mentioned how black wrestlers are often times stereotyped and pigeon-holed while there are white wrestlers who are allowed to have fully fleshed out, three dimensional characters.

“Well, I think — and it’s part of the roundtable and I said this during the roundtable and I’ll say it again. This is a conversation I had with Vince Russo about black talent and he asked me, ‘Why do you feel there’s been a lack of top tier black talent?’ And I said, ‘The finger goes directly at you Vince. It’s people like yourself who write the shows and you only write black talent from your perspective which is either gangsters or hustlers or pimps or these caricatures,’ right? When you look at Triple H, you look at Randy Orton, these are three dimensional fully fleshed out characters. Triple H can be the Cerebral Assassin, he can be The Game. He can be all these different things which allows you to say, ‘Damn, Triple H can be this main event talent because look how many layers he has.’ When you look at R-Truth who raps and… and if you know Ron Killings like I know Ron Killings, Ron Killings has multiple layers. There’s multiple more interesting things to Ron Killings than R-Truth, the rapper, dapper, dapper guy but we don’t never get to see that, we don’t get to connect with Ron on that level that we need to connect with him on that level that we need to [with] a world champion. You have to connect emotionally. I have to wanna care for your well being if I wanna see you as world champion or vice versa, depending on how it fits. But, if you’re not fully fleshed out, if my character — if I haven’t been allowed to show you all the things about myself that you need to care about or hate me, then that’s why these things fall flat so, where pro wrestling can continue the bridge in the conversation is in that case, right? And they’ve done it in certain cases but you know, why is Titus O’Neil’s — he’s a wonderful father and he’s this wonderful family man but that’s just his off-camera persona, and all these other things. Let’s start giving more detail and depth I think… and this is not just black people. Hispanics are stereotyped as Ese’s and Asians are always Ku Fung masters and all this same nonsense that happens over and over and over so, if we can just give these people characters. ‘This is Ron, and he raps but he also does this and he’s also this other stuff.’ Then I think, wrestling kinda mimics society so if we stop seeing black people as gangsters and thugs in wrestling culture, maybe we’ll stop seeing them as gangsters and thugs in regular culture. All of this kinda subliminal messaging, it all just kinda bounces off one another.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Davey Boy Smith Jr. spoke to Wrestling Inc. and told the publication that his contract with Major League Wrestling expires this December. He was hopeful that MLW could run shows with no fans and make talents take COVID tests but the organization is not running. Smith added that he’s unsure if MLW will be able to bounce back from the COVID-19 pandemic ...

Smith Jr.’s father, The British Bulldog was set to be a part of the 2020 WWE Hall Of Fame class. The last that Smith Jr. heard was that the ceremony was going to take place SummerSlam weekend but the ceremony has been pushed back yet again.

“With my dad going into the WWE Hall of Fame, we don’t know when that is going to happen. The last thing was they were pushing for SummerSlam,” he said of the Hall of Fame ceremony planning. “Now they are pushing that back. Things keep getting pushed back. That’s why I’m hoping MLW is able to survive this. I have my doubts for a lot of companies. It’s going to be a long time. We’re in a marathon, not a race here.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Cody Rhodes and QT Marshall’s ‘Nightmare Factory’ wrestling school will host development camps for those looking to become pro wrestlers starting on September 21st.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Justin Barrasso of Sports Illustrated chatted with Johnny Gargano ahead of the 7/29/20 edition of WWE NXT. Gargano shared that he and Tommaso Ciampa have tried several times to set themselves up to wrestle Shawn Michaels and Paul “Triple H” Levesque in a tag team match.

“If we can still make that happen, I’ll still do it. That would be so great. Me and Tommaso have pushed in the past to wrestle Shawn and Hunter, and that is something that could potentially happen, or maybe something we’re just dreaming. But me and Tommaso against Shawn and Bret would be amazing. That would have been a really fun dynamic.”

Quote:

Originally Posted by Post Wrestling
Ricky Starks was a guest on The Distraction podcast with Fightful’s Jeremy Lambert. Ricky was asked if the reactions from wrestlers in the crowd during AEW shows are organic and Ricky stated that they are not told how to act or react to anything and it’s all a natural flow.

“No, we just go out and we have a natural reaction to what we’re watching and that’s it. I would hate to be told what to say or what to do when I’m out there because I’m trying to watch what’s in the ring. Not really put something in motion.”

Would explain why they've felt or come across different than WWE's shows. Also doesn't help that Fightful and others revealed WWE's been using the PC's PA system to instruct talent for crowd reactions during shows. Based on production miscues, AEW seemly only tells their crowd when they go in and out of commercial breaks.

Quote:

Originally Posted by WrestlingInc
WWE has reportedly added a new pay-per-view to the 2020 schedule.

While no announcement has been made, it was reported today by @Wrestlevotes that WWE has added the Payback pay-per-view to their schedule for this year.

It's interesting to note that Payback 2020 is scheduled for August 30, which is just one week after the SummerSlam pay-per-view.

It's also interesting that WWE has a Payback pay-per-view planned for August 30 as this is the date that the rumored Evolution 2 show may have taken place on. It was reported earlier this month that WWE was considering a second night of SummerSlam or an Evolution 2 special for August 30, the week after SummerSlam.

Quote:

Originally Posted by WrestlingInc
WWE is reportedly delaying an announcement on the 2021 Royal Rumble pay-per-view.

It was reported today by @Wrestlevotes that WWE planned on announcing the 2021 Rumble date and location in early August. However, word now is that the announcement is on hold as details on the event are likely changing.

There's no word yet on if COVID-19 is the reason for the Royal Rumble changes, but it seems likely. WWE has dealt with numerous schedule changes since the outbreak hit in March. There has been hope that WWE will be able to resume normal live events with at least some fans this fall, but that has not been confirmed.


TPWW Frontpage:

Mr. Nerfect 07-30-2020 10:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Emperor Smeat (Post 5362689)
The Sheets:


https://i.imgur.com/tljwvKN.gif

*** Full disclosure, for the past several months, whenever Bryan Alvarez would post a quick tweet about AEW & NXT's numbers, people would post gifs mocking the loser show or company. Wanted to start including them sooner since I found them pretty funny and creative but when NXT was on top for a few weeks, WWE/NXT fanatics and Anti-AEW trolls didn't supply any notable ones and were mostly boring and plain with their trash talk so I just waited instead. Plus been getting a bit bored with doing sheet reports and wanted to spice things up a bit.

HAHAHAHA! They put AEW and NXT over the people because AEW won by a few thousand people! Hahaha! How funny and creative!

:roll:

Yeah, they're the fanatics.

Mr. Nerfect 07-30-2020 10:40 PM

Seriously, this bullshit circle jerk mentality is making me actively root against wrestling. I hope it goes even further into the ground so that the people standing around cheering subpar content are left with each other's flaccid dicks in their hands.


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