Ding_Dong_#2
World of Sport British Heavyweight
It is an interesting point.
I have followed professional wrestling for over thirty years. If you look at the make-up of the crowds in the 1970s and early 1980s, you will see a great many older people, as well as smartly dressed businessmen in the audience a substantially less proportion of women and children.
Obviously Kayfabe was in its heyday, and most of the crowd believed in the Bruno Sammartinos, Verne Gagnes and Harley Races of that era, who they genuinely admired and respected as if they were any other sporting icon. Some knew that it was more entertainment than sport but didnt want to believe it, and there were always a fair share of obsessives that were totally convinced by what they were seeing.
Those fans have gone; when wrestling was replaced by the glitz and glamour approach of Vince McMahon, and the territories were bought up, then the whole public perception of the sport changed. The cartoon era of the WWF made those fans redundant they couldnt honestly buy into the likes of Papa Shango and the Ultimate Warrior this is where young people came in, and this is where the opinion of people who had never seen wrestling in their life, change; Hulk Hogan transcended the sport and hence, if you asked someone in the street, he would have been the first name on the lips of the outsider, the non-fan.
This changed again with the Monday Night Wars and the attitude/NWO years; suddenly, there was a whole, new set of fans it was ok for someone in their late teens, 20s or 30s to walk around with a Wolfpac or Destination X T-shirt, it was relatively cool.
And this is where we are now, in 2013. I wouldnt agree that wrestling is less popular, but it is in terms of support I am friends with dignitaries and members of parliament who have no problem admitting their love for WWE. Now the game is up, and everyone accepts it as entertainment, it has opened the doors for closet fans to come forth and be known.
But it doesnt mean that they actively support it. When tens of thousands were packing out Texas Stadium to watch the Von Erichs week after week, they bought into the dream, they bought into the storylines, they bought into them being clean-cut, all-American boys story-telling and the belief behind it brought the fans back each week, which doesnt really exist anymore.
So, in conclusion, Mr Madden, is both right and wrong it is less popular in terms of support, but there are a lot more people who are aware of it, and appreciate it. This means that the casual fans will only tune in if there is something going on that makes it more than the same collection of tired, stale wrestlers that are patched up and brought out like unwanted Christmas presents year after year. The Nexus did that, Rock/Cena did that, The Shield did for a small amount of time, and the Daniel Bryan saga (despite the storyline being yet another rehash) has certainly helped.
Fans demand more these days; obsessives are happy with anything that is wheeled out in front of them and will support their recreational activity regardless, but with the obsessives/believers gone, you need to keep innovating and drawing in those who sit on the margins. This is not happening at the moment; ok, the IWC more or less deletes the surprise element of wrestling and live events, but there should still be a strong focus on keeping people interested.
I have followed professional wrestling for over thirty years. If you look at the make-up of the crowds in the 1970s and early 1980s, you will see a great many older people, as well as smartly dressed businessmen in the audience a substantially less proportion of women and children.
Obviously Kayfabe was in its heyday, and most of the crowd believed in the Bruno Sammartinos, Verne Gagnes and Harley Races of that era, who they genuinely admired and respected as if they were any other sporting icon. Some knew that it was more entertainment than sport but didnt want to believe it, and there were always a fair share of obsessives that were totally convinced by what they were seeing.
Those fans have gone; when wrestling was replaced by the glitz and glamour approach of Vince McMahon, and the territories were bought up, then the whole public perception of the sport changed. The cartoon era of the WWF made those fans redundant they couldnt honestly buy into the likes of Papa Shango and the Ultimate Warrior this is where young people came in, and this is where the opinion of people who had never seen wrestling in their life, change; Hulk Hogan transcended the sport and hence, if you asked someone in the street, he would have been the first name on the lips of the outsider, the non-fan.
This changed again with the Monday Night Wars and the attitude/NWO years; suddenly, there was a whole, new set of fans it was ok for someone in their late teens, 20s or 30s to walk around with a Wolfpac or Destination X T-shirt, it was relatively cool.
And this is where we are now, in 2013. I wouldnt agree that wrestling is less popular, but it is in terms of support I am friends with dignitaries and members of parliament who have no problem admitting their love for WWE. Now the game is up, and everyone accepts it as entertainment, it has opened the doors for closet fans to come forth and be known.
But it doesnt mean that they actively support it. When tens of thousands were packing out Texas Stadium to watch the Von Erichs week after week, they bought into the dream, they bought into the storylines, they bought into them being clean-cut, all-American boys story-telling and the belief behind it brought the fans back each week, which doesnt really exist anymore.
So, in conclusion, Mr Madden, is both right and wrong it is less popular in terms of support, but there are a lot more people who are aware of it, and appreciate it. This means that the casual fans will only tune in if there is something going on that makes it more than the same collection of tired, stale wrestlers that are patched up and brought out like unwanted Christmas presents year after year. The Nexus did that, Rock/Cena did that, The Shield did for a small amount of time, and the Daniel Bryan saga (despite the storyline being yet another rehash) has certainly helped.
Fans demand more these days; obsessives are happy with anything that is wheeled out in front of them and will support their recreational activity regardless, but with the obsessives/believers gone, you need to keep innovating and drawing in those who sit on the margins. This is not happening at the moment; ok, the IWC more or less deletes the surprise element of wrestling and live events, but there should still be a strong focus on keeping people interested.