How much of the Goldberg hate is because he was a WCW guy, and was only a legit superstar for a year or two (1998-2000)? I think if it were Stone Cold Steve Austin, or The Rock, or Samoa Joe or Kurt Angle or Dean Ambrose who marched into the ring and squashed Lesnar, a lot of the Goldberg haters would be marking out instead. You'd still have the argument that it should be a young guy in a star-making moment, but there wouldn't be as much heat.
What the Goldberg marks don't understand is, if you weren't watching WCW in 1998, it can be hard to take Goldberg seriously, as anything but an undefeated-streak gimmick, a less incoherent, less self-destructive version of the Ultimate Warrior.
Goldberg on Youtube or the WWE Network isn't much to see--no great promos, no great matches, just the same squash over and over. His WCW heel turn flopped, his RAW run never quite worked with the audience. His WM match vs Lesnar was legendarily bad, and was crapped on by the arena crowd. Without the undefeated streak, you've got a guy who's not great on the mike and a one-trick pony in the ring.
Vince's job isn't fundamentally to make sense, or tell good stories, or make us happy. It's to make money. Yes, in the long term, making sense and telling good stories and making us happy should slowly-but-surely grow the audience and make him money.
I think Vince's strategy has been to use LEsnar to bring in the UFC/MMA crowd. If that hasn't worked by now, it's not going to work. If UFC fans who were never WWF fans or who drifted away haven't signed up for the WWE Network to see The Beast "Eat. Sleep. Conquer. Repeat." they're not going to.
Goldberg is an attempt to reach the old Nitro fanbase that Vince was never able to bring in after WCW folded. I don't know if it's going to work financially or not.
What the Goldberg marks don't understand is, if you weren't watching WCW in 1998, it can be hard to take Goldberg seriously, as anything but an undefeated-streak gimmick, a less incoherent, less self-destructive version of the Ultimate Warrior.
Goldberg on Youtube or the WWE Network isn't much to see--no great promos, no great matches, just the same squash over and over. His WCW heel turn flopped, his RAW run never quite worked with the audience. His WM match vs Lesnar was legendarily bad, and was crapped on by the arena crowd. Without the undefeated streak, you've got a guy who's not great on the mike and a one-trick pony in the ring.
Vince's job isn't fundamentally to make sense, or tell good stories, or make us happy. It's to make money. Yes, in the long term, making sense and telling good stories and making us happy should slowly-but-surely grow the audience and make him money.
I think Vince's strategy has been to use LEsnar to bring in the UFC/MMA crowd. If that hasn't worked by now, it's not going to work. If UFC fans who were never WWF fans or who drifted away haven't signed up for the WWE Network to see The Beast "Eat. Sleep. Conquer. Repeat." they're not going to.
Goldberg is an attempt to reach the old Nitro fanbase that Vince was never able to bring in after WCW folded. I don't know if it's going to work financially or not.