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Don't believe the hype
Posts: 640
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Shawn Daivari on the importance of perception outside ALLAYLAHAYYLAHAYYLA
http://www.tpww.net/2012/08/shawn-da...so-hogan-more/
There were a few things of interest in his interview, but the below caught my interest: Would he got back to WWE and TNA and the importance of perception on the indy scene: “Oh, yeah, I think so. I’d be surprised if this last TV run was my last one. But when I go back I can’t be misused. I have to be booked correctly because I can’t jeopardize my career on the independents. If you looked at my calendar April through mid June, I haven’t had more than three days off in a row and when you think about it my last prominent TV run was in 2008 with WWE, if you don’t count TNA, whereas I know guys that have been on TV more recently, won more belts than I have that can’t buy a booking now. That’s something I’m really aware of. “Tyler Reks is an example. Next year he’ll have been there one more year than I had. I was there four years. He’ll have been there five and when they let him go, nobody’s gonna give him a substantial booking of a plane ticket, a hotel room, food expenses and promote him. They’d rather get a Hacksaw Jim Duggan or Chris Masters. If you hang on for too long when your wheels are spinning, you might make a bit more money in WWE, but when you leave you won’t get another booking in this business. When you become shit on TV, that’s what you’re perceived as. “Drew McIntyre is getting dangerously close to that point. If he hangs on another year and doesn’t do anything worth a ****, I’m gonna see a hard time for a promoter to call him and offer him a $1000 dollar booking, $400 plane ticket, $100 hotel room, [and] advertising. You’re talking almost a $2000 investment hoping that say 200 people at $10 are gonna come out to see Drew and that’s not including the cost of the building, paying the other talent. When you render yourself invaluable, its hard. Whereas if he’d seen the writing on the wall after the stuff with Vince McMahon on TV, and quit then, he could go places and people would remember him as the Scottish guy on SmackDown that did all the good shit, Vince’s chosen one or whatever.” Do you think this is true, that wrestlers need to be aware of their marketability outside of WWE/TNA? And who do you think is getting close to that point, along the lines of Drew? Last edited by Autobahn; 08-28-2012 at 09:09 AM. |
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