Posted 08 March 2019 - 01:04 PM
I've sort of lost track with WWE, bit on a wrestling fatigue streak. I did watch the Rumble and NXT Takeover but nothing much since.
Rhonda Rousey is awesome, she is a natural for the WWE. Obviously her MMA skills are a given, but she has really impressed me with how she transitioned her move set to work within WWE without crippling half the roster around her. Her ring work still looks vicious and convincing, but as far as I know she hasn't actually injured any fellow wrestlers so far.
But her mic work is where she has truly come on in leaps and bounds. When she first appeared on the scene it wasn't all that great, but within 1-2 months she was throwing out awesome promos. I would say that she has currently firmly established herself as the postergirl for women's wrestling.
I'm actually following the indie scene more of late, especially the development around the new AEW brand. They might be the first genuine competition for WWE since the days of the Monday night wars. They got the money (Khan family who also own the Jacksonville Tigers and the British football club Fulham), they already have some seriously big names on the books (Kenny Omega, Cody, Young Bucks, Chris Jericho, Pac, Christopher Daniels, Pentagon Jr, Kylie Rae, Bea Priestly, etc), they are forging clever alliances with big wrestling organisations outside of the US to achieve a global profile, and they are using modern media interaction. Currently mainly through YouTube (Being the Elite), but talk is that they are trying to sign a deal with Netflix. That would be stellar. Their worker policy is way better than any other in the business as well. Some of their main selling points:
- better and more secure salaries instead of appearance-based payment
- equal pay for their male and female wrestlers based on performance
- all their wrestlers get health insurance
- match results actually mean something and can/will have longer term implications for storylines etc
- big platform for different styles of wrestling, e.g. they have already announced close collaborations with the Chinese OWE and the Mexican Lucha Libre AAA worldwide; and i suspect they are trying to get NJPW on board as well, as a lot of their current talent has history with that brand
So the expectation is that we will see a significant flow of (underused) talent from WWE to AEW in the coming months.
Yesterday, upon the stair, I saw a man who wasn't there. He wasn't there again today. Oh, how I wish he'd go away.