I'm not entirely sure on what grounds you can claim that professional wrestling exists exclusively to make money.
What other purpose is there? Unlike creating a song or a film, a pro wrestling promotion HAS to make money to continue. If a pro wrestling promotion doesn't make money, they go out of business. Without money, they cannot exist.
The entire point of pro wrestling is to make money. It's just an inescapable fact.
There are a thousand conflicting agendas in every committee driven artistic endeavor. Movies are perhaps the best comparison to wrestling, and in any given movie there are people on both sides of the camera who care about garnering critical acclaim, or resonating with particular sections of the audience, or making a certain artistic statement, or making people smile or laugh, or ensuring that their own contribution to the project meets their own subjective standard of quality... and yes, there are people who just care about the bottom line.
In the movie business, who would you equate to the WWE? The movie studios, correct? Isn't the goal of every movie studio to make money?
You have to compare apples to apples. You're referring to people in the industry, I'm talking about the industry itself. I could host a pro wrestling event in my backyard and take a loss on it, and do so in the name of the "art" of pro wrestling, but I couldn't do it very long before I was out of business. The "art" of pro wrestling is making people care about who you, making them care about your successes and failures. The "art" of pro wrestling will never be the number of moves you do or the amount of flips you can do.
Why then should we apply a totally different standard for professional wrestling? Notions of critical acclaim, niche audiences and playing to your fans are no more alien to the wrasslin' industry then they are to cinema. A movie premiering at Sundance isn't courting mainstream blockbuster success, it's trying to impress the more artsy minded film critic and the people who care about what the more artsy minded film critic has to say. Similarly, your typical Ring of Honor show isn't courting the same audience as your average Smackdown, it's going after the kind of people who use the words "five star match" unironically. If it impresses the people it is trying to impress then it is successful. Guys on the indy scene never shut up about wanting to achieve their own personal interpretation of an amazing match - if their intent is what matters, as you just suggested, then they are almost by definition not unsuccessful.
Tell me, then, what makes a match a 5 star match? What are the alternative ways to for a match to be "5 stars", if not for the way the wrestlers make people care about them, to invest emotionally into the match?
This holds equally true for wrestling promotions. If the entire WWE roster were to all perish is a tragic plane crash and the promotion were forced to promote the entire FCW roster, the company would still outdraw its nearest independent competition several thousand fold. Replace the FCW roster with indy guys and the eventual result changes not one iota; which logically makes saying that a guy is more talented because he is in the WWE transparently flawed.
No one is saying that a guy is more talented because he is in the WWE. What I'm saying is that the talented workers end up in the WWE. A very important distinction. Not all workers in the WWE are more skilled than those in the indys, but the guys who are very skilled in the indys will eventually work in the WWE.
What this means is that, overall, your level of talent in the indys is much lower. If a guy knows how to work, knows how to make people care so much about him they buy tickets to watch him wrestle, the WWE will sign the guy. Because the WWE offers incentives indy level promotions simply cannot match.
The only way this reasoning works is if you infer on the WWE talent relations department a near superhuman ability to judge both a performer's skill and potential, and also remove from the equation every other factor that has an influence on who gets hired (nepotism and backstage personality come to mind). Now we know that the WWE talent relations department, whilst skilled, is not infallible in their hiring procedure - I'm sure I don't need to go trawling back through the archives to find evidence of this.
Of course not, the WWE takes shots on guys all the time who do not work out. As I said earlier in this post, not everyone in the WWE is a good worker. There are some wrestlers who aren't nearly as good, but either show tremendous potential or who serve well in other roles.
But you'll rarely find great workers on the indy level, because if they are great workers, the WWE is going to get them. So the indy guys who are left, since they are not going to be skilled as those who work the big time in the WWE, have to rely on other ways to make fans come to the show. Which is why you see such a premium placed on "technical wrestling" and high spots. That's why the indy level places so much greater of an emphasis on the moves.
And at the end of the day, wrestlers who can do moves are a dime a dozen. Those who can make people care, those are much harder to find.
Your logic is ultimately circular. Guys in the WWE are intrinsically superior to guys on the indy circuit because if the guys on the indy circuit were better then they would be in the WWE. That's a textbook example of a logical fallacy; since I'm feeling nostalgic I might even go so far as to suggest that it's good old fashioned smoke and mirrors. [winking emoticon]
You have me wrong.
The guys in the WWE aren't intrinsically better because they are in the WWE. My statement is that guys who are better will be in the WWE. Being in the WWE doesn't automatically make you better, no more than being in the Major Leagues automatically makes you a better sports player. But the fact is, if you ARE good at what you're doing, you will be in the big leagues, because they offer incentives which the minor leagues cannot match.
Does that make sense?
I hate the indies because they're shit. Their product is painfully bland and so wiped out by the law of diminishing returns that after two or three high profile RoH main events I never feel the need to watch one again.
Why is that? Why do you not care about the "art" they are performing?
Is it because they don't make you care nearly so much about the workers themselves, but rather the moves they are doing? And after you've seen them done, it's no longer special, and thus, no longer worth watching? Honest question, even if it appears leading.
As an aside, this rather shoots your 'guys in the indies are bad because they are in the indies' theory in the foot. Guys like Rollins, Aeries, Cesaro and Ambrose were performing consistently on the indies for years before the WWE snapped them up. They didn't magically get better just before they were signed - in fact history has shown us that if you (personally) watch any of their indy work you will declare them to be talentless hacks despite this now self evidently not being the case.
Except this supposes that wrestlers are incapable of learning and refining their craft.
Take CM Punk, for example. Punk left ROH in 2005. It wasn't until 2011 before Punk truly became a superstar in pro wrestling. That's 6 years of learning, working with other great wrestling minds, honing his craft, etc. As far as guys like Rollins, Cesaro and Ambrose go...who says they are good? I don't know if I've even seen a match with the Shield, and Cesaro is hardly what I would call a top worker. Full of potential? Maybe. Skilled? Not like what you see in the WWE's main-event.
They don't "magically" get better after signing, but neither do they stay at exactly the same skill level either. John Cena as a wrestler today is much better than John Cena as a wrestler in 2005 (and he wasn't a bad worker in 2005). CM Punk is much better now than when he debuted in 2006. These guys get to work with the top minds in pro wrestling every week. They are going to improve.
Austin Aeries was a critical success for half a decade, jumped to TNA and was immediately a big deal.
The second time, you mean. The first time, Austin Starr, was a waste of time. But TNA isn't on the WWE's level. That's why I called them the Cleveland Indians. Yes, they exist on the major league level, but to pretend they are the New York Yankess would be foolish.
And if I could put that into soccer/football terms, I would, but I'm just not familiar enough with the sport to do so.
It's possible for a talented guy to work the indies for quite a long time without the laws of causality forcing him into a mainstream company.
I dislike using the word "talented" in these discussions, because I think it causes a bit of confusion.
It's possible for someone with potential to work the indies for quite a long time, yes. But it's VERY rare for someone with a high level of skill to do so.
So to summarize:
1) Wrestling quite evidently does not exist exclusively to make money.
2) Even is statement 1 is inaccurate, comparing ability between mainstream and indy promotions is illogical.
3) Being in the WWE does not require the same skillset as being an indy darling.
3.5) I probably shouldn't be given time off work.
4) Having the WWE's preferred skillset does not make you an "objectively superior" performer to an indy guy.
5) The person who scrolled past the last six paragraphs so that they could type TL-DR is not, nor have they ever been, funny. They are a moron who finds long words challenging.
6) Assuming that I am right and that Slyfox is wrong; indy wrestling is still total shit.
1) Yes, it does. If it didn't make money, it would not exist.
2) Not at all, because the skill in quality wrestling will always be the same, just as it is in any endeavor. The skills required to be a good actor or a good musician or a good sports athlete will be the same, no matter what level you're performing on.
3) Being a good pro wrestler always requires the same skillset.
3.5) Tell work you're doing something far more important.
4) This is sort of correct. Being in the WWE doesn't mean you are a better wrestler. However, the best wrestlers are in the WWE (or, to a lesser extent, TNA).
5) This should have been 4.5, not 5. Shame on you.
6) You're half right. Indy wrestling is shit. I can never be wrong though.
