From his CVV appearance…
“When you watch a wrestling television show, not anyone in particular, just a wrestling show, the best way to put this would be the rhythms of what people like in pro wrestling, in my opinion, have never changed. They haven't changed in the last 40 or 50 years. it's not a mysterious science of trying to figure out what works and what doesn't. Everybody knows what works to some degree and what doesn't work because it's never really changed. We have our champions and we have our contenders. And the show to some degree should be built around creating contenders, going up to fight the champions. When you're building contenders, the contender has to win. And the people they're competing against have to lose so they can make it to fight the champion, and either they win or lose. if there's a champion who is a heel, the functionality of the heels in the program are going to wind up more than likely being shining up that contender so he looks as dominable and formidable as possible to go face that champion, whatever happens, happens. If that champion was a baby face, the contender that they're creating is more than likely a heel, he's gonna start chopping up all the baby faces in the way to go up.
So a lot of people like online will say, ‘oh, they're pushing him finally, or they're pushing her’ or, ‘oh, they're burying him’ and there's only 2 people getting pushed in a wrestling program. I don't know how this has become lost upon people. The only 2 people being pushed in a wrestling program are the champion and the contender.
So people think someone gets a few wins, they're being pushed, someone thinks they get one loss or a series of losses, they're being buried. It's not true. I don't know where or how that got lost in everything, especially too, because even with our company, we produce a lot of behind the scenes stuff. People love it.
They get to see how we're preparing and what the ideas were behind things and stuff like that. There's so much access to, um, behind the curtain. I don't know how that whole thing got lost in translation. So I think people see it as like, ‘I haven't seen this person on TV in a while, and now I'm seeing them every week, and they're winning a lot or they're getting a lot of TV time or a lot of promo time.’ I think that they'd say that's a push. It’s not a push.”
“When you watch a wrestling television show, not anyone in particular, just a wrestling show, the best way to put this would be the rhythms of what people like in pro wrestling, in my opinion, have never changed. They haven't changed in the last 40 or 50 years. it's not a mysterious science of trying to figure out what works and what doesn't. Everybody knows what works to some degree and what doesn't work because it's never really changed. We have our champions and we have our contenders. And the show to some degree should be built around creating contenders, going up to fight the champions. When you're building contenders, the contender has to win. And the people they're competing against have to lose so they can make it to fight the champion, and either they win or lose. if there's a champion who is a heel, the functionality of the heels in the program are going to wind up more than likely being shining up that contender so he looks as dominable and formidable as possible to go face that champion, whatever happens, happens. If that champion was a baby face, the contender that they're creating is more than likely a heel, he's gonna start chopping up all the baby faces in the way to go up.
So a lot of people like online will say, ‘oh, they're pushing him finally, or they're pushing her’ or, ‘oh, they're burying him’ and there's only 2 people getting pushed in a wrestling program. I don't know how this has become lost upon people. The only 2 people being pushed in a wrestling program are the champion and the contender.
So people think someone gets a few wins, they're being pushed, someone thinks they get one loss or a series of losses, they're being buried. It's not true. I don't know where or how that got lost in everything, especially too, because even with our company, we produce a lot of behind the scenes stuff. People love it.
They get to see how we're preparing and what the ideas were behind things and stuff like that. There's so much access to, um, behind the curtain. I don't know how that whole thing got lost in translation. So I think people see it as like, ‘I haven't seen this person on TV in a while, and now I'm seeing them every week, and they're winning a lot or they're getting a lot of TV time or a lot of promo time.’ I think that they'd say that's a push. It’s not a push.”