The 1-2-3 Killam
Mid-Card Championship Winner
Alright folks, it's been awhile since I made a non-spam thread, so let's see if I still remember how to do this...
At the start of 2013, TNA Wrestling announced their intent to reduce the number of pay-per-views from 12, the standard monthly format, to only 4. The remaining pay-per-view events would be, in order: TNA Genesis, TNA Lockdown, TNA Slammiversary and Bound for Glory.
TNA also recorded a series of One Night Only pay-per-view events, all of which were recorded in a matter of weeks, that are still being released almost 9-10 months later. Those events cut massively into the payroll, costing them a lot of money to bring in a lot of names, and haven't panned out for the company, as hardly anybody is buying them.
My question is simple: has the cut back on monthly pay-per-views killed TNA's overall product?
Since cutting down to only four major shows, I really feel like Impact Wrestling has lost its focus. Before, there was a big event every month. There was a focus, and something to drive towards. You started an angle, and you had four weeks (sometimes more or less) to build it up before the payoff. If an angle did well, sometimes it went on for two or three months. This is the modern traditional wrestling format.
Obviously there are ways to make good weekly TV without having PPVs every single month. WWF did it for a very long time; granted that was before Monday Night Raw. I still think giving TNA monthly, or maybe bi-monthly goals to work towards, is best for the product as a whole. TO me, they've seemed really disjointed and out of focus this year. Their feuds come and go, sometimes they have no payoff, sometimes the "payoff" lasts way too long and you get sick of the feud. But the bihg thing is, I've lost interest because I'm used to seeing, "Ok, this is the feud, there's four weeks of TV" or "there's only one more show left to build this up, I want to see what's going to happen."
The way it is now, they have a lot of open-ended feuds, and without certainty that they will blow off at a definite, defined point, it's hard to remain interested. It's like, if your girlfriend says "we're definitely going to have sex for the first time" after a month of fooling around, but then she follows up with, "but we don't do it until I say, and I'm not going to tell you when it's going to be." After a couple weeks, you start thinking, is this shit actually going to happen!? Maybe you lose interest. Maybe you get frustrated. MAYBE YOU GO HAVE SEX WITH ANOTHER WRESTLING COMPANY!!

TL;DR - I think the lack of structure caused by an absence of PPVs is killing the overall product of TNA Wrestling.
At the start of 2013, TNA Wrestling announced their intent to reduce the number of pay-per-views from 12, the standard monthly format, to only 4. The remaining pay-per-view events would be, in order: TNA Genesis, TNA Lockdown, TNA Slammiversary and Bound for Glory.
TNA also recorded a series of One Night Only pay-per-view events, all of which were recorded in a matter of weeks, that are still being released almost 9-10 months later. Those events cut massively into the payroll, costing them a lot of money to bring in a lot of names, and haven't panned out for the company, as hardly anybody is buying them.
My question is simple: has the cut back on monthly pay-per-views killed TNA's overall product?
Since cutting down to only four major shows, I really feel like Impact Wrestling has lost its focus. Before, there was a big event every month. There was a focus, and something to drive towards. You started an angle, and you had four weeks (sometimes more or less) to build it up before the payoff. If an angle did well, sometimes it went on for two or three months. This is the modern traditional wrestling format.
Obviously there are ways to make good weekly TV without having PPVs every single month. WWF did it for a very long time; granted that was before Monday Night Raw. I still think giving TNA monthly, or maybe bi-monthly goals to work towards, is best for the product as a whole. TO me, they've seemed really disjointed and out of focus this year. Their feuds come and go, sometimes they have no payoff, sometimes the "payoff" lasts way too long and you get sick of the feud. But the bihg thing is, I've lost interest because I'm used to seeing, "Ok, this is the feud, there's four weeks of TV" or "there's only one more show left to build this up, I want to see what's going to happen."
The way it is now, they have a lot of open-ended feuds, and without certainty that they will blow off at a definite, defined point, it's hard to remain interested. It's like, if your girlfriend says "we're definitely going to have sex for the first time" after a month of fooling around, but then she follows up with, "but we don't do it until I say, and I'm not going to tell you when it's going to be." After a couple weeks, you start thinking, is this shit actually going to happen!? Maybe you lose interest. Maybe you get frustrated. MAYBE YOU GO HAVE SEX WITH ANOTHER WRESTLING COMPANY!!


TL;DR - I think the lack of structure caused by an absence of PPVs is killing the overall product of TNA Wrestling.