with the 2.6 rating im glad and sad, I dont ever want to see WWE get into a bind they cant get out of, but I hope it teaches them a lesson to start taking better and different approaches.
Ok. building new stars, touchy subject
its what WWE "USED" to be good at doing, especially around the 1963-2000 era(yep a 40 year time span without a hitch), but since then, theyve made Cena and Orton and thats about it
now I know i will get some heat and arguments for these statements but i was thinking long and hard about the many problems in WWE and this is a big one
WWE seems to be trying to push young early 20's talent, but it seems that these days no one is "truly" "getting over".
heres my big point-you look at the success of WWE from whenever it came into popularity (1963) until about 2000 they built stars who were great ring generals, great on the mic, and looked the part of an intimidating guy and were 30 or older
it seems the problem nowadays is that they are pushing nothing but early 20's guys who:cant wrestle (they can only do glorified spot fests), are horrible on the mic, and dont look intimidating or like a wrestler whatsoever
now with the exception of the Rock and Randy Orton (and thats because there good in the ring and on the mic and Orton rubbed off from older talent) no one this young has ever gotten beloved by the fans
heres a list of everyone from the glory days of wrestling that were over as hell and, you guessed it, over 30 years old
Bruno Sammartino
Harley Race
Ric Flair
Hulk Hogan
Stone Cold
Bret Hart
Kurt Angle
Sting
RVD
Triple H
Batista
Cena
Jake Roberts
Macho Man
DDP
Mick Foley
Shawn Michaels
Chris Jericho
Bob Backlund
Ultimate Warrior
The bottom line is everyone whose ever made it big, was over 30, didn't look like a little kid who didnt look like he belonged in a wrestling ring, didn't do 30 flips off the top rope in every match, told stories and were great on the mic
this is an art form WWE is losing and they're replacing it with younger "more capable talent"

Ok. building new stars, touchy subject
its what WWE "USED" to be good at doing, especially around the 1963-2000 era(yep a 40 year time span without a hitch), but since then, theyve made Cena and Orton and thats about it
now I know i will get some heat and arguments for these statements but i was thinking long and hard about the many problems in WWE and this is a big one
WWE seems to be trying to push young early 20's talent, but it seems that these days no one is "truly" "getting over".
heres my big point-you look at the success of WWE from whenever it came into popularity (1963) until about 2000 they built stars who were great ring generals, great on the mic, and looked the part of an intimidating guy and were 30 or older
it seems the problem nowadays is that they are pushing nothing but early 20's guys who:cant wrestle (they can only do glorified spot fests), are horrible on the mic, and dont look intimidating or like a wrestler whatsoever
now with the exception of the Rock and Randy Orton (and thats because there good in the ring and on the mic and Orton rubbed off from older talent) no one this young has ever gotten beloved by the fans
heres a list of everyone from the glory days of wrestling that were over as hell and, you guessed it, over 30 years old
Bruno Sammartino
Harley Race
Ric Flair
Hulk Hogan
Stone Cold
Bret Hart
Kurt Angle
Sting
RVD
Triple H
Batista
Cena
Jake Roberts
Macho Man
DDP
Mick Foley
Shawn Michaels
Chris Jericho
Bob Backlund
Ultimate Warrior
The bottom line is everyone whose ever made it big, was over 30, didn't look like a little kid who didnt look like he belonged in a wrestling ring, didn't do 30 flips off the top rope in every match, told stories and were great on the mic
this is an art form WWE is losing and they're replacing it with younger "more capable talent"
