@PitchToJohnny Wait now I realize lol, and honestly as a Clemson man from Arkansas, Oklahoma has held a soft spot from their grittiness in the past, and I’d love to see coach B become a great head coach, so I wouldn’t mind a little boomer sooner
@G1mm1ckMatch@LaRoccaJL Why’s it so bad to have guys with fighin spirit. It adds to the “what’s gonna finish this?” atmosphere that we do enjoy. Part of pro wrestling is the suspense of disbelief, part of it is keeping the audience invested. Stick to your sports entertainment
Watch how he starts with a simple question and builds the pressure with every single verse until the room goes completely silent. This is how you dismantle hypocrisy without ever raising your voice
@Emoney1937@AEW I went to your page to find a post to see if that was you on tv! Love seeing members of the community having such a time, makes me wish I could make more shows
@alexbrasky So it’s up to the league to protect old heads who can’t compete rather than the upstarts that are actively competing? Thought it was up to the team itself to perform, I’ve been in the fog apparently
@TropicalViking0@Fightful So, the king of the deathmatch is only hardcore in wwe cannon? Fuuuck we’re really stretching here. And if he’s a snowflake, you’re a blizzard the way you’re worked up over his opinion
Mick Foley explains why he distanced himself from WWE after their relationship with Donald Trump.
“For me, it was the comments about Rob Reiner. Just heartless. Unbelievably cruel comments coming from the most powerful man in the world finding joy in how somebody died. I don’t want to paraphrase, but belittling the man who just died, somehow tying his death into Reiner’s dislike of Donald Trump. For me, that was the ball-peen hammer tap that broke into the windshield. I just think WWE had a very cozy relationship where there was definitely the illusion of a relationship there. The perception, rather. I think when five different people are posing in the Oval Office and they’ve all received Stone Cold Stunners, that’s a little cozy. I felt like even though I wasn’t technically employed by the company, but because I had a legends deal and because my name’s been associated with WWE for over 30 years, that I was complicit in my silence. So I did speak up. I reached out to the head of talent relations, who I consider a friend, who I still write handwritten letters from Santa to every year… basically, I give up the legends deal. It runs out at the end of this month. I realized that by giving up two very easy, high paying jobs at WrestleMania week for WWE that I had to work 24 hours on my own to make what I could’ve in six, I’m okay with that. So I’m good with my decision. Everyone I think has to make a decision that’s right for them, and in my case, I just didn’t want to be in a position where my grandchildren are asking what their grandfather was doing when things were really tough. I want my children to be able to say, ‘This is what grandpa did.’ So I made the move that I thought was right for me. I love that company. I’m not going to disparage them, but it didn’t seem like a good fit. Didn’t seem like a fit that would allow me to look at myself in the mirror before I went to bed.”
(@arielhelwani)
@jet7111@Fightful From what I’ve seen, the million he donated seemed to be trying to lobby against the travel ban trump had against Muslim countries. Yes it still went to trump, hate that, but I’ll take a 1 mil donation over whatever relationship wwe has going on with that abomination of man
@ClemsonTigerNet@SickosCommittee after a sicko season for us, this transfer news makes perfect since. At least we’ll have good defensive positioning now
@Faldar_Xaring@yassifiedlenin A post, responding to a post asking about people’s story, telling their story. And yet here you are, inserting your opinion which no one asked for, and whining about a LGBTQ story that doesn’t affect you at all. Go solve world hunger and stay out of other people’s shit