Eric Bischoff Shares His Thoughts On AEW Not Having An Exclusive Deal With WBD

WWE Hall of Famer and former WCW President Eric Bischoff took on an episode of his Wise Choices podcast, where he talked about a number of topics including AEW not having an exclusive deal with WBD.

Bischoff said, โ€œNo, that was a head-scratcher for me. Because you know, I think the $170 million is less than what everybody was hoping for and was speculated about a year ago or six months ago. But itโ€™s still a lot of money. And if Iโ€™m spending $170 million with a producer whoโ€™s supplying me with a lot of content, I donโ€™t want that same content on competitive networks. I think for $170 million, Iโ€™m expecting exclusivity. So, the fact that AEW was able to get non-exclusive status is a head-scratcher for me. Look, I know everybodyโ€™s โ€” you know, when you say FS1, โ€˜Oh, itโ€™s FOX.โ€™ No, it isnโ€™t. Well, it is, itโ€™s owned by Fox. But FS1 is a microchannel. Itโ€™s a catch-all. Thereโ€™s so much garbage on FS1, and itโ€™s random. Yeah, itโ€™s just random, almost infomercial-quality s**t. So itโ€™s not a big deal, and itโ€™s not going to be a lot of money. Itโ€™s exposure. And maybe thereโ€™s a strategy. Maybe โ€” again, I donโ€™t know. Maybe thereโ€™s a strategy there, where the idea being that letโ€™s let more people outside of the Turner footprint know about AEW, hopefully to attract some of them over to the Turner network to watch some of the core show. The A-Show and the B-shows. Dynamite, Collision, whatever. Perhaps thatโ€™s a strategy. But anybody who thinks that thereโ€™s going to be any meaningful amount of money associated with FS1, has never done business with FS1. Youโ€™re looking at $50,000 an episode budget.โ€

On FOX paying big money just to put AEW on FS1:

โ€œI donโ€™t know. I havenโ€™t tried to pitch a show to FS1 โ€” I donโ€™t think Iโ€™ve ever pitched a show to FS1. They didnโ€™t have any money when I was producing television, so I never went out of my way to โ€” never took a meeting at FS1 for that reason. They just didnโ€™t have budgets that made sense. Perhaps they do now. I donโ€™t know, thatโ€™s a good question. And unless youโ€™re in the business of selling shows to networks on a day-to-day basis, nobody would really have an honest answer to that, and I certainly donโ€™t.โ€

You can check out the complete podcast in the video below.

(H/T to 411Mania.com for transcribing the above quotes)