WWE Hall of Famer and former WCW President Eric Bischoff took to an episode of his “Strictly Business” podcast, where he talked about a number of topics including All Elite Wrestling not announcing matches for their All In London PPV Event ahead of time.
Bischoff said, โItโs the brand that sold those ticketsโEighty thousand of them, by the way, or more. And I think that is a fantastic accomplishment. And I think, yes, itโs different. I understand that the audience is used to seeing more build. I get that. And what I would love for people to do is wait and see, wait and see how this event comes off before you decide it was done improperly. Right. And I know that sounds weird because anybody thatโs listened to me knows Iโm not shy about being critical of things that I believe are true. Based on experience. Not. That is not my gut feeling. Not my instinct. My experience, the good experiences and the bad, gives me a unique perspective, and Iโm hoping the audience shuts the f**k up and enjoy the show. Television isnโt driving this. Stories are not going this. Those 80,000 tickets werenโt sold because theyโre engaged in the storytelling, which, by the way, I think is almost nonexistent unless you want to really look at some of the things going on there and suggest that itโs a story. It isnโt in my book regarding structure, discipline, and all the other things Iโve talked about too much already. People are buying a ticket to that event because itโs brand new. Itโs an alternative. And they want to see for themselves what it is. Thatโs why theyโre buying tickets, not because of any story or angle. Yes. In aggregate, talent thatโs on the important card. But theyโre buying the ticket primarily because they want to be a part of something big. And if that is, Tony, as a whole, can it out of the park. I. They have an opportunity to take a giant leap forward. Yeah. Amazingly, they also have a chance to shit the bed with 80,000 people.โ
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