Quote:
Originally Posted by Ultra Mantis
So then you should know not every case is exactly the same and you know the meds aren't a 100% guarantee you'll be fine.
You are not Mauro Ranallo, you are not a "celebrity" and you don't have a predisposition for working in entertainment. The traffic on his twitter is likely huge, and anyone in the public eye gets hateful shit sent to them on a daily basis. This isn't "can't see what his friends are up to on Facebook because he'll get upset" situation.
Why didn't he listen to his friends? Maybe he really wanted to work for WWE as his dream job and didn't want his illness to stop him giving it a shot? Again, we can only speculate, but going after him because he didn't hole himself up at home in the first place is a bit ridiculous.
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No, I'm not Mauro. I'm not a celebrity who gets paid to talk about pro wrestling. I just took calls from people all day long who need help, had to listen to entire families get burned alive on the other end of the line, listen to people get shot, raped, deal with parents who just found their children face down in the pool, etc....all under threat of jail time and ridiculous monetary fines if I ever fuck up and make a mistake. Nothing so stressful as commentating wrestling. Like I said, my comparison there was entirely subjective, but if you want to get down to the bones of it.....
I'm also not suggesting he hole himself up at home and not be a commentator. I'm suggesting that maybe the WWE wasn't the place for him because it is widely known to be an extremely toxic environment and he had to know it wasn't good for his mental health given the supposed severity. He weighed his options, he made the decision, and now we see the supposed consequences. I don't feel sorry for him; he knew the risks involved and he deemed the reward to be worth said risk.