I've been a wrestling fan ever since I was 5 years old when my dad ordered Wrestlemania 2 on pay per view. Oddly enough, the only match I have memories of watching was the twenty man battle royal ending with Andre eliminating Bret Hart(I believe this was when I became a Bret Hart fan growing up). I still laugh when I think about Andre grabbing Neidhart's goatee and smashing his head into Harts. Enough reminiscing.
Back then and for many more years to come, we as fans only knew what we watched on television each week or on pay per view. Unless you were close to someone in the wrestling business, you only knew what they wanted you to know. Wrestling hotlines popped up, but what kid could afford those? As time progressed, wrestling evolved, and the internet started to find it's way into everybody's household. Then we started to learn more about behind the scenes. Kayfabe would eventually be broken.
The more we learned about wrestling, the real vs fake, how moves were performed, how they protected each other in the ring, how they communicate in the ring, what certain gestures by referee's meant, heels, faces and tweeners...the more wrestling lost it's mystique.
I'll get to my point. Do you feel that we, as fans, know too much about the wrestling industry? Granted...most of it may be second hand, questionable knowledge, but it's more than we had several years ago. Do you feel it skews our perspective of the product, of the WWE's goals or objectives? Do you feel it makes us unappreciative of what they do day in and day out? Do you think that knowing about faces, heels, tweeners, how story lines are constructed, changes how difficult or easy it is for them to entertain us?
Do you feel it was better...when we knew less?
Back then and for many more years to come, we as fans only knew what we watched on television each week or on pay per view. Unless you were close to someone in the wrestling business, you only knew what they wanted you to know. Wrestling hotlines popped up, but what kid could afford those? As time progressed, wrestling evolved, and the internet started to find it's way into everybody's household. Then we started to learn more about behind the scenes. Kayfabe would eventually be broken.
The more we learned about wrestling, the real vs fake, how moves were performed, how they protected each other in the ring, how they communicate in the ring, what certain gestures by referee's meant, heels, faces and tweeners...the more wrestling lost it's mystique.
I'll get to my point. Do you feel that we, as fans, know too much about the wrestling industry? Granted...most of it may be second hand, questionable knowledge, but it's more than we had several years ago. Do you feel it skews our perspective of the product, of the WWE's goals or objectives? Do you feel it makes us unappreciative of what they do day in and day out? Do you think that knowing about faces, heels, tweeners, how story lines are constructed, changes how difficult or easy it is for them to entertain us?
Do you feel it was better...when we knew less?