AlwaysHasBeen
Occasional Pre-Show
With the exception of Randy Orton (when he was the Legend Killer), it seems like every heel in the WWE within the last half-decade fits the same cowardly bill: Whiny, complaining, gets their butt kicked every week by the good guy then runs away and demands vengeance in a match at the PPV or the following week whereby their lackeys interfere in the match which hurts their credibility even more, and the mess continues...
Now I know that it is a heel's job in pro wrestling to be annoying and get a cheap win from time to time. But, man, what happened to the days when heels actually could get the job done, and convincingly?
When I think about it, most of pro wrestling's greats in the last two decades (I can only vouch for 1992-onward) have started out as heels (HHH, Austin, Rock (Rock's a minor exception as he was able to use his cheesy Miavia character to fuel his Nation of Domination heel Rock persona, when he REALLY took off), Undertaker, the Macho King, Shawn Michaels (post-Rockers when his “Boy Toy” solo career took off), Diesel, Razor Ramon, Bret Hart (Hart Foundation w/ Jimmy Hart), Kurt Angle, Brock Lesnar, Edge, Christian, and so on and so forth.
Basically every big money-drawing superstar, with the exception of Hogan and Cena- who IMO are only adulated because they were honed and molded into WWF/E posterboys through good marketing and TV time, had started out their careers as the bad guy and gradually worked their way into the hearts of many fans.
What is lacking in the WWE right now (one of many things) are heels who we actually want to pay (or tune in) to see. Heels who we want to see taught a lesson because we passionately despise them,, and not merely because they talk trash about the city they are in or badmouth a face, which is just cheap heat.
What revitalized (lengthened) the careers of those listed above was their successful transitions from heel to face. If Swagger, Miz, Dolph Ziggler, Wade Barrett, or any other heel in the WWE today turned face, they would not generate any further interest in themselves or any career momentum because their stint as heels generated more sympathy than hatred or ambivalent feelings from fans.
Don’t get me wrong and confuse liking the bad guy simply because he’s not a happy-go-lucky face with liking the bad guy because he’s just downright talented and you WANT to boo him…
I'm sure that there is a bigger problem here that I should be getting at (i.e. WWE's creative team making characters/gimmicks bland and homogeneous, the ambiguous manner in which storylines/feuds are put together nowadays, etc.), but I guess what I want to open up for discussion is, does anyone else feel a big void in the longevity and potential of the heel division in the WWE? If so, what’s your reason?
Now I know that it is a heel's job in pro wrestling to be annoying and get a cheap win from time to time. But, man, what happened to the days when heels actually could get the job done, and convincingly?
When I think about it, most of pro wrestling's greats in the last two decades (I can only vouch for 1992-onward) have started out as heels (HHH, Austin, Rock (Rock's a minor exception as he was able to use his cheesy Miavia character to fuel his Nation of Domination heel Rock persona, when he REALLY took off), Undertaker, the Macho King, Shawn Michaels (post-Rockers when his “Boy Toy” solo career took off), Diesel, Razor Ramon, Bret Hart (Hart Foundation w/ Jimmy Hart), Kurt Angle, Brock Lesnar, Edge, Christian, and so on and so forth.
Basically every big money-drawing superstar, with the exception of Hogan and Cena- who IMO are only adulated because they were honed and molded into WWF/E posterboys through good marketing and TV time, had started out their careers as the bad guy and gradually worked their way into the hearts of many fans.
What is lacking in the WWE right now (one of many things) are heels who we actually want to pay (or tune in) to see. Heels who we want to see taught a lesson because we passionately despise them,, and not merely because they talk trash about the city they are in or badmouth a face, which is just cheap heat.
What revitalized (lengthened) the careers of those listed above was their successful transitions from heel to face. If Swagger, Miz, Dolph Ziggler, Wade Barrett, or any other heel in the WWE today turned face, they would not generate any further interest in themselves or any career momentum because their stint as heels generated more sympathy than hatred or ambivalent feelings from fans.
Don’t get me wrong and confuse liking the bad guy simply because he’s not a happy-go-lucky face with liking the bad guy because he’s just downright talented and you WANT to boo him…
I'm sure that there is a bigger problem here that I should be getting at (i.e. WWE's creative team making characters/gimmicks bland and homogeneous, the ambiguous manner in which storylines/feuds are put together nowadays, etc.), but I guess what I want to open up for discussion is, does anyone else feel a big void in the longevity and potential of the heel division in the WWE? If so, what’s your reason?