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Crowd Reactions
Has anybody else noticed the decline of and beyond lackluster crowd reactions the last several years? I was watching some old DVD's this week and noticed that the crowds back in the day were way louder and more into everything, even some clearly not so great matches. And I'm not talking just about the Attitude era, I'm talking consistently 80's, 90's and early 2000's. I know part of it has to do with the change in the audience's age/target market, but I think that it is also a reflection on how much of a clusterfuck the writing and star development for both WWE and TNA has been the last several years. It seems like there's no direction or consistency. Push a guy, feud or story one week and then bury or almost ignore it the next. Any thoughts?
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The being dead during the Bret/Vince thing pretty much convinced me they don't actually respect the product like before. They're too cool to get hype, I guess.
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Pretty sure it's got alot to do with soap opera writers instead of people that know how to book wrestling.
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That's assuming the average wrestling fan knows the difference.
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Or cares.
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It doesn't matter if anyone even realizes it's happened. There is a difference, whether the average fan realizes it or not. My proof? Listen to the crowd, and look at the decline of the product.
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One of the biggest pops ever came "Canadian Stampede" PPV when The Foundation came out.
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So you think the degradation of the product came before the fans became shitty? That's a fine stance, I suppose, 'chicken before the egg' and all that. I just don't agree, which is fine as well.
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Totally agree with you on the to each his own thing, but to me. I got sour on the product as a whole after the invasion thing. It was a result of the WWE toning it down due to the fact that they didn't have to try to grab the ratings anymore. Problem is, not only did they fail to grab up WCW's viewers, the decline in the product and the invasion clusterfuck led to them losing alot of their own viewers as well. Like a tobacco company, they looked to replace those viewers wherever they could. Presently this has lead us to the TV-PG era, which is all good, with the exception of the fact that the fans in the stands have no passion for the product anymore. A ten year old that's been watching for five years could never even hope to out pop a 35 year old who's been a fan of x wrestler for longer than the 10 year old has been alive.
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I think fans need to be weened back into what makes pro-wrestling great. I remember an initiative for longer matches that they experimented with an HBK/Cena program, which they quickly dropped.
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Take Bret Hart for example, his return and Mania match should have gotten a huge reaction. His return got hardly any reaction compared to past standards, and the Mania match got nothing at all basically. The lack of reaction honestly made me ALMOST wish he hadn't returned. Don't get me wrong, I'm glad he was able to return and get some closure with Vince, Shawn and HHH, etc. I man of his legendary status and history should have gotten a much bigger pop, especially since it had been 13 years. Not to sound like an old man but, "DAMN KIDS!" |
I think we know this already, doesn't need to be discussed. Bloody newbie's.
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Rather talk to newbie's, than IWC snobs like you. Get off your high horse.
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...we are in 2010...everything's "digitalized"...Digital TV's, High Definition, enhanced audio...everything has to be seen and heard more clearly...is it possible this is the reason why the pop's aren't heard as loud on tv as the 80's and 90's?
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Also, if Bret had pulled the stick out of his ass five years ago, he might have gotten the reaction everyone was looking for.
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...I guess he still can go with The Hart Dynasty. |
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...also, I dont know...maybe the consensus was that a loud crowd on tv bothered some people so they minimize that...I dont know. I DO know that it probably has something to do with the fact that pops aren't as loud...too bad I know NOTHING about audio and...crap. |
I meant live, bro... there's a noticable difference when you're in the arena.
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There's also the reality that us fans in 2010 are a little more "business smart" than those of 1980 or 1990. We know more "backstage stuff" than those fans EVER did, we have spoilers, which take away the "surprise" element from the equation, and quite frankly, we have seen ALOT...it takes ALOT to surprise us nowadays, and it takes ALOT to hype us up and get us excited, because something happens, and it's like "Aww, i KNEW that was going to happen...I read it at TPWW", or, "Aww...THAT AGAIN?! That happened 3 years ago".
...it's tough. Alot of things have influence over the "2010 crowd". |
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Does anybody else find it odd that we're arguing about how the fans don't care anymore even though they plopped a couple hundred bucks down for tickets to the show?
It's definitely something else. It could be the new audio, but that doesn't explain something like the Royal Rumble this year where the Detroit crowd was super hot and it came off as one of the old school crowds. I think whoever said something about the IWC might be onto something. We have way more cynics in the audience now. Cheering is usually a mob mentality and if you've got fans who think they're above cheering wildly, then that attitude can spread. |
Exactly. People are too afraid to look like marks and just sit there instead of actually enjoying the show.
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Not every seats a couple hundred bucks, and the front rows are often rowdy for the camera and the closer interaction with the superstars. But yeah, nobody wants to 'mark out' anymore. Getting hype has a bad connotation. It's not even wrestling fans, it's the whole generation people who like whatever. Everybody's a fucking know it all critic who's entitled to being impressed. Fuck off.
/Rant |
I just think that we as fans should just watch the product and become FANS once again...and stop trying to worry about EVERYTHING else. Stop dissecting everything.
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I agree with you, but...
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Even the biggest marks on the planet can't avoid the cynicism. Some 10 year old goes to youtube to look at videos of his favorite wrestler John Cena and what is he gonna see? 50 comments that Cena's a fag and his fans are faggy little bitches. That's fucked up.
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Haters gonna hate.
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Everything was better in 1995 when a guy who had a truck horn as theme music and "Diesel" as a name could become World Champion and people wouldn't hate.
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Also, from an entirely different angle, it's hard to cheer and boo for people you just don'r care about. The character development has been atrocious in the WWE since about 2004, the year Eddie and Benoit finally got their due. It's pretty damn difficult to truly get behind a guy when the minute he starts to garner a reaction, the booking blows their load and pushes straight to the top. Cena is a good example of this. He started getting great reactions with the rapper gimmick. Then they turned him face, had him pandering the crowd more and more, and a year after winning his first singles title, he's given the top belt in the company. Everything these days seemes so rushed. I like the MITB concept, and it worked the first time when Edge won it. Well, for me atleast. He deserved the win. Guys like Cena, Batista, Swagger, hell, even Punk had no buildup to their win. One minute, they're in the midcard working with midcard guys, then they're all of sudden thrust into the main event and we're expected to all of sudden pop. I don't think it is supposed to work that way. /rant |
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April 29, 1996, Tokyo Dome: The fans' pops for The Road Warriors (Hawk, Animal, and Power Warrior) and Shinya Hashimoto were really out of this world, especially for Hashimoto, as he would win the IWGP Heavyweight Championship from Nobuhiko Takada.
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I have been to a number of live events in numerous cities around the US over the past few years - and the crowds are no where near as loud as they used to be back in the 1990's.
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