A few months ago, in SUPER LUCHAS we reflected on the power that professional wrestling fans have, specifically in WWE, to take a wrestler, a story, or the company itself on the path they want, as they are doing with LA Knight. Or like they did in the past with Roman Reigns.
► London encourages whoever it wants
Now we continue in this company but we are going to London, where Money In The Bank took place this year. Each person is different, so are communities, countries, continents, so WWE did not find the same audience that they had in Indianapoliswhere they made Fastlane.
It is true that there is a general trend in that people let their opinion be seen much more in the arenas, supporting those they want, criticizing what they don’t, than in times past. But speaking of this Freddie Prinze Jr. points out that in the capital of England especially they take this to another levelthe former WWE writer pointing out that Vince McMahon would not like it.
«I think London was the audience that made cheering for villains acceptable and cool. I feel like they started that before AEW, before WWE fans in America started cheering for villains. In London, they were like, ‘Look, we have these guys once a year. Let’s applaud whoever we want. If we like both types, both will receive chants. If not, they will be booed. That’s all. We don’t care how you present them.’ I saw it firsthand when Jeff Hardy and The Undertaker faced each other there when I was in the company. I thought, ‘Man, they’re cheering for whoever they want.’ That bothered Vince. “He didn’t like that.”
2023-10-25 20:30:59
#Freddie #Prinze #London #Vince #McMahon #angry