Audioslave
Pre-Show Stalwart
Just because both men made their mistakes doesn't mean that their comments have no merit. In fact, they're pretty spot on. And if anyone has a place to talk, it's two men who've experienced successes and failures. They have a perspective on what to do and what not to do in pro wrestling.
And both of their failures are pretty similar. Bischoff had too MUCH money and overspent. Heyman had too LITTLE money and lost his big stars. Creativity and promotion-wise, they were damn successful. Bischoff diversified the wrestling on his brand and got the right combination of stars to form a knock-out punch to McMahon for 80+ weeks and the promotion still put up a fight a couple of weeks past that. Heyman, promoting-wise, got creative and carved out a unique identity for ECW. It was that niche, adult rogue promotion for those that were tired of WWF and WCW. He also created many great or unique characters and gave others a platform to do whatever they could do best.
Point is, neither of their problems had to do with promoting or creativity. They either bought the stars, created them or innovated the existing ones. Their problems were financial. TNA's happens to be in the promoting and creativity department. Even guys on their own roster have talked about how when people see them at airports, bars or whatever they wonder what they've been up to and why they're not wrestling anymore.
They've got young stars with potential, but how are they going to turn them into superstars and promote them as big deals when they can't even promote the established stars on their roster? When you've got people oblivious to the fact that certain superstars are still wrestling, there's a problem. It's both a promoting and creative thing. If they had a solid creative department, who had a vision and a good deal of talent then their problems would be solved. The right guys getting pushed, with the right angles and stories. And it'd create a buzz, potentially snowballing into more. That's not happening. TNA's operating as if they had been an existing promotion with many, many years behind them. And it seems that although they've got some stuff rolling on their show, it's still not cutting it.
For what it's worth, although I don't really watch the show at all. I caught the first hour of that one Impact the other day was pretty entertaining. The whole NWO takes over Nitro retread. The one with Booker and Nash basically joking and burying the whole roster, along with Steiner as ring announcer. That was pretty good. Didn't do anything for anyone, but it was pretty entertaining nonetheless.
And both of their failures are pretty similar. Bischoff had too MUCH money and overspent. Heyman had too LITTLE money and lost his big stars. Creativity and promotion-wise, they were damn successful. Bischoff diversified the wrestling on his brand and got the right combination of stars to form a knock-out punch to McMahon for 80+ weeks and the promotion still put up a fight a couple of weeks past that. Heyman, promoting-wise, got creative and carved out a unique identity for ECW. It was that niche, adult rogue promotion for those that were tired of WWF and WCW. He also created many great or unique characters and gave others a platform to do whatever they could do best.
Point is, neither of their problems had to do with promoting or creativity. They either bought the stars, created them or innovated the existing ones. Their problems were financial. TNA's happens to be in the promoting and creativity department. Even guys on their own roster have talked about how when people see them at airports, bars or whatever they wonder what they've been up to and why they're not wrestling anymore.
They've got young stars with potential, but how are they going to turn them into superstars and promote them as big deals when they can't even promote the established stars on their roster? When you've got people oblivious to the fact that certain superstars are still wrestling, there's a problem. It's both a promoting and creative thing. If they had a solid creative department, who had a vision and a good deal of talent then their problems would be solved. The right guys getting pushed, with the right angles and stories. And it'd create a buzz, potentially snowballing into more. That's not happening. TNA's operating as if they had been an existing promotion with many, many years behind them. And it seems that although they've got some stuff rolling on their show, it's still not cutting it.
For what it's worth, although I don't really watch the show at all. I caught the first hour of that one Impact the other day was pretty entertaining. The whole NWO takes over Nitro retread. The one with Booker and Nash basically joking and burying the whole roster, along with Steiner as ring announcer. That was pretty good. Didn't do anything for anyone, but it was pretty entertaining nonetheless.