Chris Benoit wasn't a bold splashy cartoon character either. Neither was Bruno Sammartino. Neither was Bob Backlund. They all proved you could ALSO make your mark as a great wrestler and you didn't have to be made in the same cookie cutter WWF mold of "gaga at the expense of in ring talent"
It is about being a great and interesting character but people CAN get by with other things if they are good enough.
The Ultimate Warrior is the flaw in the opposite end of the spectrum.
He was HUGELY popular character. A hell of a lot more over than that goof the Miz. At his peak Warrior was probably more popular than Cena on on a level with Hogan. But the Warrior DIDN'T LAST. IF what you say is true why couldn't he sustain it?
Warrior couldn't bring it in the ring and his 2 minute matches just didn't cut it in the long run. Character is probably THE most important thing but if a guy can't wrestle worth a sh** or work eventually the audience won't buy into him.
While Benoit had his share of success and was over really well at one point, he was hardly one of their "build the company around him" guys. He had his success, his little run and that was it. He was never a top guy to carry a company.
He was also one of the best "non-character" characters in my entire time of wrestling. Even though he didn't have one of those larger than life characters, he had the character of being a truly dangerous and viscous fighter in the ring. He was presented as someone who was truly dangerous to step into the ring with, and that, in it's own way, made him "larger than life" in a way. But he was still mostly an upper mid-carder who paid his dues and got a shot as a champion, but was never a TOP guy in the company.
Most other companies would never ALLOW the stuff McMahon has in the past or they certainly wouldn't make things WORSE for themselves by screwing up in public and causing a PR nightmare. When Vince McMahon PHYSICALLY threatens a reporter what the hell would you call it?
What does that have to do with what I was talking about??? I was talking about companies firing employees for badmouthing the company publicly. ANY company would do the same. Vince isn't a saint. Last I checked, I never said he was? So what exactly is your point, again?
Oh yes, that's right, your never ending crusade to badmouth Vince McMahon every opportunity you get.
When Vince McMahon publicly goads the government what would you call it? He's a egotist who thinks he can get his way because he lives in a bubble where nobody keeps him in check.
Sounds like the CEO's of LOTS of successful companies. What's your point again? How does that address my point that pretty much ANY company would terminate or discipline employees for publicly speaking out negatively against the company?
When your guys are dropping like flies from steroid related deaths I'd say its pretty f***in STUPID to fire a guy like Piper for speaking out. It only added fuel to the fire. And just to set you straight Nell Piper never really admitted WWE was SPECIFICALLY at fault. He mostly talked about promoters in general. So how was be badmouthing the company?
If the company is already in enough hot water from guys "dropping like flies", as you say, then you're going to want to avoid anything that stirs the pot. Piper may have had pure intentions, but that's the kind of topic that WWE was trying to avoid altogether.
A SMART business would have tried to address the issue from a PR standpoint because by that time there was NO WAY WWE could deny the problem of steroids and recreational drug use in wrestling. Everybody knew it and now people were dying because of drug use. Vince almost went to prison ten years before because of steroid allegations.
K? The point? I wasn't passing judgement one way or another on the quality of Vince's decisions. I was saying that ANY company would discipline employees who publicly spoke out bad against the company. I didn't say one way or another whether Vince was a good, or bad, business man. You're just stuck on your anti-Vince rant again.
Evey other sports league took action YEARS before WWE did and WWE only did because they were FORCED to. The Wellness program should have been in place by 2004. THATS what a smart company would have done but Vinnie Mac thinks he can bully anyone and still tries to halfass run his publicly traded company like some yokel outfit from the 20's in a lot of ways.
Okay, but WWE isn't a sports league. So comparing it to the action taken by NFL, MLB, etc... is false from the get go.
Again, I'm not saying whether Vince is good or bad at what he does. You're the one who has to take it personally whenever anyone halfway implies something positive towards Vince and go on your crusade.
Bret Hart said wrestlers were treated like circus animals for years but thats just part of the conspiracy right?
Owen Hart, since you didn't do this affair storyline with Debra we (WWF) are going to force (PUNISH) you to to wear this stupid Blue Blazer outfit in a desperate attempt to make fun of Hogan and WCW in a childish spiteful way.
We aren't going to let you out of your contract to join your brother. Whats that? No, you can't quit because you just bought this huge brand new house for your family that you still have to pay off. Well you gotta stay and work for us while we hang you 70 feet from the ceiling of arenas for no good reason except our own personal amusement at making fun of WCW. People love you for just being you, Owen? We don't give a sh** about that just go our there and do it.
Its all part of an IWC conspiracy though.
Again, that all sounds like any company.
Don't do what we say? Insubordination. No we won't let you out of your contract. Why? So you can go make money for our competition?
Go work for ANY company, badmouth them publicly, and refuse to follow through on their requests of you, and see what happens. Come back and let me know.
It may be wrong, it may be right, but none of that matters because we live in a CAPITALIST society and that's the way it IS. It's the same reason why the NFL cracks down on young, black, not well known athletes for getting into the slightest bit of legal trouble, but Brett Favre gets away with sexually harassing team employees. It's not about right or wrong, it's about business. Brett Favre is good for business regardless of his legal troubles. Pacman Jones making it rain at a strip club? Not so good for business.
And since you're going to flip out on me and TRY to (unsuccessfully) reverse my "it's not a sports league" argument on me (even though I'm talking about the BUSINESS of it), let me give you another example from a regular everyday American company:
My brother works for Bridgestone, and often times is traveling around the country for big company meetings and stuff. The big motto that the company has at these meetings is that "Nobody ever gets promoted at these parties - but plenty of people get fired"
Fine employees who are fine otherwise, get to one of these parties, get drunk, and make an idiot of themselves end up losing their jobs because it's BAD FOR BUSINESS. How many *teachers* lose their jobs nowadays because something comes out in their *PERSONAL* life that has nothing to do with their abilities as teachers, and they get fired because they made a personal sex tape with their spouse? Or went out to a bar and got caught on a camera phone having a drink? It's enough that it's a main point of the education courses I've taken for my teaching credential program.
Vince may be an idiot. He may be an egotistical *******. But he's also a businessman. And people coming out and bad mouthing the company, or refusing to do what their EMPLOYERS told them to do, are bad for business and will be punished.
And no, Owen Hart didn't deserve to be "let out of his contract" because his brother went to WCW.