Tony Khan Opens Up About Creative Revival & AAA Betrayal

AEW President Tony Khan believes the promotion is currently experiencing its creative peak, a resurgence he attributes to a personal shift in how he books the show. Speaking in a new interview with Q101 Radio in Chicago ahead of tonightโ€™s Dynamite, Khan shared that heโ€™s returned to a more hands-on, solo approach to storytelling, reminiscent of the companyโ€™s early days and its acclaimed 2020 pandemic era.

Khan revealed that late last year he recognized a need to recapture the feeling AEW had in 2019 and 2020. โ€œI had that same realization that I need to do what I did five years ago and just block out everything and just focus on AEW,โ€ he said. โ€œI just decided, okay, Iโ€™m going to scrap the meetings. Iโ€™m going to get a pencil and paper and Iโ€™m just going to get organized by myself.โ€ Khan explained that while he still values the ideas of his creative team, he realized he had to be the final filter. โ€œInstead of trying to take the best ideas from everyone and incorporate themโ€ฆ I basically started writing my own outlines,โ€ he said.

In a moment of humor, Khan compared his approach to an infamous scene from Seinfeld. โ€œItโ€™s like George Costanza said about โ€˜jerk storeโ€™โ€ฆ that was his plan,โ€ Khan joked. โ€œI had to stay focused on the jerk store.โ€

Khan also opened up about a previously undisclosed backstage incident involving Lucha Libre AAA that led to a breakdown in trust. Recalling a moment in December 2022, Khan explained how he felt blindsided when AAA allowed Dragon Lee to appear on AEW television only for WWE to announce his signing just moments later. โ€œIt was really a double cross,โ€ he said. โ€œThat would never happen now.โ€

Khan contrasted that situation with AEWโ€™s current partnership with CMLL, which he described as rooted in trust and mutual respect. โ€œSalvador [Lutteroth] and I are brothers,โ€ he emphasized. โ€œI would never go behind their back and take a wrestler from them.โ€ Khan reaffirmed his commitment to ensuring talent sharing with CMLL is always collaborative.

Reflecting on AEWโ€™s momentum, Khan pointed to the success of All In: Texas as validation for the companyโ€™s direction. โ€œIt was the best show weโ€™ve ever done for the quality of the wrestling,โ€ he said. Held in front of more than 28,000 fans at the Alamodome in San Antonio, the event marked AEWโ€™s largest North American crowd to date and is on track to become one of the companyโ€™s highest-grossing pay-per-views.

Khan also addressed the showโ€™s extended length, comparing the event to a music festival like Lollapalooza. โ€œI wouldnโ€™t run a show that long if it started at nightโ€ฆ it was a day show. It was an epic thing,โ€ he said. He added that a longtime friend told him the payoff of the storylines was the best he had seen since WrestleMania III in 1987.

The showโ€™s main event saw โ€œHangmanโ€ Adam Page defeat Jon Moxley to become the new AEW World Champion, a decision Khan said was planned for some time. โ€œHangman was always the guy,โ€ Khan said when asked when the decision was made. โ€œFor me, thereโ€™s no question Hangman Page was the man to step up and fight Jon Moxley, who had beaten down AEWโ€™s locker room.โ€ Khan praised Moxleyโ€™s dominant reign, calling him โ€œone of the greatest wrestlers in the world,โ€ and emphasized how Moxleyโ€™s run served to unite the fanbase and elevate the next hero. โ€œClearly, Hangman Page was the man to do it,โ€ he concluded.

AEW is currently hosting a three-week residency at Chicagoโ€™s historic Aragon Ballroom, where tonightโ€™s episode of Dynamite will continue the fallout from All In: Texas. โ€œHangmanโ€ Adam Page is set to speak live and also team up with Powerhouse Hobbs and Mark Briscoe in a high-profile trios match against the Death Riders. The event airs tonight at 8 PM ET on TNT and HBO Max.