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16So you want to book some wrestling matches? Okay; however, you should consider that good wrestling booking is a skill set that is both rare and extremely difficult to implement. It used to be a waste of time to publicly entertain the idea of being an assistant booker without fifteen years of working in the business and far more have failed at it[[note]][[Wrestling/{{WCW}} The Hulk Hogan, Vince Russo and Kevin Nash eras of WCW]], Wrestling/HerbAbramsUWF, [[Wrestling/{{FMW}} Kodo Fuyuki FMW]], [[Wrestling/ImpactWrestling the Dixie Carter era of TNA]][[/note]] than have succeeded[[note]]Wrestling/{{ECW}}, [[Wrestling/NewJapanProWrestling Gedo and Jado New Japan]], [[Wrestling/{{WWENXT}} HHH era NXT]][[/note]]. However, there are some basic rules to consider when working as a booker.
17
18!The Golden Rule
19
20You are selling a product. The fans give you money for this product. If the fans are not interested in your product, they will not give you money. Without their money, you are out of a job. Therefore, your first and only responsibility is to the fans. Not your family; not your friends; not your shareholders; not anyone else. This is because only the fans give [[MoneyDearBoy money]] to you.[[note]]In fact, most of WWE's issues stem from the fact that it's ''not'' their fans who provide most of their income, but their massive TV deals with USA and FOX and their massive deal with the Kingdom of UsefulNotes/SaudiArabia, which is why they feel free to snub their audience so regularly, but this is not an indulgence you as a hypothetical small fed booker will have.[[/note]] Failure to follow this rule will result in a failure of your business.
21
22!Business Ethics
23# Never let your own ego get in the way of business. This is seemingly the hardest thing for bookers to do, and it's the thing which damages wrestling most of all. If you put your own ego first and foremost, you will pay for it.
24** This is a mistake that former WWE owner Wrestling/VinceMcMahon committed several times: the most infamous was [[RevengeBeforeReason squandering millions and millions of dollars]] on Wrestling/TheInvasionAngle to humiliate his old rivals, all because he could not accept that a rival promotion had stood its ground against him, and Creator/{{UPN}} execs were so disillusioned by the Wrestling/{{WCW}} brand's hemorrhage of money in its dying days (this page will go into what they did to deserve that, we assure you) that [[ScrewedByTheNetwork they were all too happy to oblige]]. These things cost him millions; if he had put ego and pride aside and convinced the Network he could harness the WCW that kicked his ass for over a year, the Invasion would have rolled on for ''multiple'' years, making all parties money hand over fist. It cannot be overstated how much of a license to print money that angle was.
25** Nearly two decades later, Vince's habit of reluctance to push anything that wasn't "his creation" even at the expense of an obvious moneymaker is also said to be the reason Wrestling/TheShield vs. [[Wrestling/BulletClub OGBC]] never happened despite all three Shield and four major BC members being on his payroll '''for over three years'''.
26** Contrast the above with Wrestling/CodyRhodes returning to WWE at ''[=WrestleMania=] 38'', where, rather than humiliating, squashing, and burying a major incoming talent from a rival promotion to make them look weak and unready for the "big leagues", and their rivals weak as a result (and, of course, to get a bit of temporary catharsis) at the expense of all the money the WWE just shelled out to hire him and attention they gained from the acquisition, he was booked in an ''extremely'' competitive match with [[Wrestling/SethRollins a talented and high-profile heel]], allowed to use his former music and entrance, treated like a star, and ultimately won, all in front of a white-hot crowd and an audience revved up and ready to see what he'll do next.
27# While the fans are the ones that give you money, your wrestlers are the ones that make you money. Each wrestler represents years of training, conditioning, and talent to even work in a ring, and even more so to qualify getting in front of a crowd and live television. Hiring and replacing them is expensive, and without wrestlers, you don't have a show. You MUST take care of them if you really want to be a successful and respected booker. Here are some things to keep in mind regarding wrestler treatment:
28** '''Never''' punish wrestlers for RealLife misdemeanors by depushing, burying, or otherwise harming their {{kayfabe}} talent.[[note]]This requires superhuman continence on the part of bookers considering how desperate for new material they must be (more wrestlers have been reduced to laughingstocks due to [[RealLifeWritesThePlot writer's block]] than any other factor)[[/note]]. If you damage their credibility through a series of protracted losses, you aren't harming them — you're harming your own business, because you have just told the fans that this wrestler cannot be taken seriously, and you send the signal that the rest of your roster are just as easily disposable. To harm a wrestler's aura is to harm the business. Be a professional; do what '''actual''' businesses do; have a disciplinary process. Take the wrestler off-television, dock their pay. Have a legally airtight code of conduct that states in black and white what is expected of your employees so they know, what boundaries they are not supposed to cross and what the consequences are, and for God's sake enforce those rules. Wrestling needs to leave its carnival days behind it, and march into the modern era. [[labelnote:Example from Summerslam 2017]]This is one of many mistakes WWE continues to make year after year. ''Wrestling/SummerSlam 2017'' contained no less than ''four'' examples of wrestlers being intentionally buried because of real-life issues: Wrestling/BaronCorbin (after already having been made to look like a moron by squandering his Money in the Bank briefcase cash-in on a ''spectacularly'' inept failed attempt on Wrestling/JinderMahal) was squashed by good ol' [[Wrestling/JohnCena Big Match John]] as punishment for making a tactless tweet denigrating a detractor he ''did not know was an American soldier'' even though he promptly took back the denigrating parts of his remark after being told such; Wrestling/{{Naomi|Wrestler}} lost her ''Wrestling/{{SmackDown}}'' Women's Championship to Wrestling/{{Natalya}} in a mystifyingly pointless bit of booking that apparently stemmed from notorious bully [[Wrestling/JohnBradshawLayfield John Layfield]] being upset about a misstep she made on commentary with him and complaining to people upstairs; [[Wrestling/EnzoAndCass Enzo Amore]] was thoroughly humiliated during his part in a dull match between ex-partner Big Cass and new ally Wrestling/BigShow, being left lying in the ring in a pool of baby oil, stripped to his underwear presumably as a consequence of backstage heat he'd earned; and Wrestling/{{Rusev|AndLana}} was beaten ''[[SquashMatch with a single RKO]]'' by Wrestling/RandyOrton, supposedly in response to him asking for his release from the company in the wake of horrible booking he'd already received as a result of marrying Lana. While the event overall was saved by a number of big, exciting matches, the booking of up-and-coming talent into oblivion as a result of backstage politics came under considerable criticism.[[/labelnote]]
29** Don't try to work your talent. They're the ones who are putting their bodies on the line for the company, and they deserve your honesty and respect. Be firm but fair, and definitely ''don't'' double-cross them. At ''best'', you're going to get a Wrestling/MontrealScrewjob situation where mutual bad blood simmers for years[[note]]Wrestling/VinceMcMahon managed to turn Montreal around, but only due to a perfect storm of circumstances including the decision to finally rip off the kayfabe band-aid. You will not be as lucky.[[/note]]. At ''worst'', it will kill your promotion. There are many reasons Wrestling/VinceRusso is – to put it lightly – a controversial figure in the industry, and a lot of it stems from the fact that even the wrestlers couldn't keep up with him.
30** Wrestlers are going to leave your promotion for other ones, whether for better pay, better wrestling opportunity, or [[BreadEggsBreadedEggs both]], and this is a fact of life. It's fine to use their last few months in the company to put over new talent, but do not, under any circumstances, bury them on-air for choosing to leave, even if they've done something legitimately underhanded like no-showing. Giving your wrestlers respectable send-offs if they do choose to leave will make sure your promotion is still in the good graces of not only them but the new promotion they choose to go to (see The Product, rule #15), and leaves the door open to them returning to your promotion in the future. As Wrestling/JimCornette has said several times, a wrestler leaving and having success somewhere else is a '''good thing''', because when they come back to work for you they'll be able to draw more money than they were drawing before they left.[[note]]By this same line of thought he also considers [=WWE's=] practice of giving most of the people they sign new names and they refusing to let those wrestlers use those names after they leave to be counterproductive to the entire business.[[/note]] In contrast, treating a long-tenured employee like trash just because they decided to change jobs will do nothing but piss them and the fans off, and all but ensure they will never work for you again. The list of wrestlers who have been buried by Wrestling/{{WWE}} after demanding their releases, and then showed up in another company cutting promos bashing their former employer, could fill a phone book (it's basically a requirement if you sign with Wrestling/{{AEW}}), while Wrestling/BobbyHeenan's respectful and fitting send-off (masterminded by the Brain himself) meant that even when Bischoff or other commentators tried teeing him up to take potshots at the company in wartime, he refused to.
31# [[StuntCasting Celebrities]] should be used carefully; never pay more than they can bring, and remember your core business. This is the difference between Creator/WilliamShatner and Creator/BobBarker producing two of the best ''Wrestling/WWERaw'' guest-host gigs of 2009, and countless other "celebs" like Al Sharpton and Music/ZZTop showing up [[ReadingTheStageDirectionsOutLoud unprepared]], [[INeedAFreakingDrink slightly tipsy]], and merely using the show to shill their latest project. It's all in how they relate to the ''wrestling''.
32** If a celebrity displays wrestling ability, then yes, you can let them wrestle. But bear in mind that having a celebrity wrestle is a double-edged sword. On the one hand, their involvement brings in that sweet mainstream attention and new eyeballs onto your product. On the other hand, getting into a ring requires a lot of skills that even athletes from other disciplines aren't trained or conditioned for. [[labelnote:Example]]The simple act of running the ropes can be surprisingly strenuous, as the bouncing ropes push air from the lungs, and can cause even trained athletes to quickly gas themselves out.[[/labelnote]] But the biggest risk comes from [[MortonsFork deciding who would win in a match]]. If the celebrity wins, you openly admit either your wrestlers or wrestling itself is not worth taking seriously if anyone off the street can come in and beat someone who's supposed to be a highly trained wrestler, or that pro-wrestlers shouldn't be considered 'real' athletes if they're beaten by a combat fighter like a boxer or MMA fighter. If your wrestler wins, then you risk alienating the mainstream audience who came in to see their heroes who just got beaten by a 'fake' wrestler.
33** So if you really, really, ''really'' want to put them in a match, don't have celebrities beat your wrestlers unless you have some way to get the heat back on the talent--perhaps the loss was a dirty finish, or perhaps the celebrity sticks around a little longer to put the other wrestler back over. The only wrestlers who can lose cleanly to non-wrestlers and not be affected are {{jobber}}s and {{joke character}}s who aren't supposed to be taken seriously as wrestlers in the first place. Wrestling/BamBamBigelow may have actually carried [[UsefulNotes/NFLDefensiveAndSpecialTeamsPlayers New York Giants linebacker Lawrence Taylor]] to a pretty good match in the main event of ''[=WrestleMania=] XI'' (and Taylor, himself a wrestling fan who wanted to do the sport justice, put in the work and commitment to pull as much of his weight as he could), but it still damaged the poor guy's career long-term.[[note]]Fun little factoid: even though that was a [=WrestleMania=] main event it wasn't the biggest payoff of his career. He earned $125,000 for the LT match (not at all bad for one night's work, especially when the wrestling business as a whole was in the toilet), but would later receive $250,000 to [[ThrowingTheFight take a dive]] in a worked MMA match against UFC fighter Kimo.[[/note]]
34** And this should probably go without saying, but whatever you do, don’t try to put any championship belts on them unless ''the championship itself'' isn't intended to be taken seriously (such as [[Wrestling/DramaticDreamTeam DDT's]] Ironman Heavymetalweight Championship or WWE's 24/7 Championship). Compare WWE putting its {{jobber}}/lower card division's 24/7 title on New England Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski (or any other celebrity who has held it) to Wrestling/VinceRusso insisting on putting ''[[Wrestling/BigGoldBelt the WCW world title]]'' on Creator/DavidArquette as part of a cross-promotional deal, despite everyone else, including Arquette himself, telling him it was a terrible idea.
35** [[Wrestling/AllEliteWrestling AEW]] did this right at the 2018 ''All In'' show[[labelnote:*]] ''All In'' was technically an independent show. It would from a promotional standpoint be considered a Wrestling/RingOfHonor show, as they provided much of the promotion and technical knowhow, and it was sold as a PPV on their website, but it was booked and constructed by Wrestling/CodyRhodes and Wrestling/TheYoungBucks, who would later be founding members and executives for AEW upon its launch, and over half of the ''All In'' participants would be on the AEW roster within the next 12 months. AEW bought ROH in 2022 (technically AEW booker/CEO bought it, but in practice it's the same thing), kind of making this a moot point[[/labelnote]] with Creator/StephenAmell, known for his role on ''Series/{{Arrow}}''. This worked because Amell is a famously fit individual, he spent much of his free time leading up to the event training specifically in pro wrestling (as mentioned above, you could have abs on top of abs and still be hurt incredibly easily in the ring if you don't know what you're doing), he was a close friend of Cody Rhodes, as the latter had guest starred on ''Arrow'' and the two have wrestled in Wrestling/{{WWE}} once, and his opponent was Wrestling/ChristopherDaniels, a veteran of well over 20 years and possibly the safest worker to ever be placed with in a ring on this good Earth. Daniels won the match, Amell played well the role of precocious rookie, and the whole match became possibly the best worked celebrity bout in wrestling history.
36*** This incidentally set the new standard for celebrity matches in the turn of the decade, with talents as diverse as NFL player Pat [=McAfee=], rapper Music/BadBunny, and even Creator/ShaquilleONeal working their butts off in training beforehand and then again in the ring, either putting the wrestlers they competed against over or winning in a way that didn't make their adversaries look weak. [=McAfee=] in particular enjoyed an intricately booked feud with Wrestling/AdamCole (British commentators with little familiarity with American football pointed out that his presentation made it clear that as a much-lauded punter his kicks were deadly), did a good job playing the arrogant {{heel}} refusing to take wrestling seriously to set himself up for a loss at Cole's hands, maintained kayfabe in ''and'' out of the ring before and after the match, and even signed on to the company long-term as a talent once it became clear he had the charisma to serve as an in-ring performer, stable manager, or commentator, earning the ''Wrestling Observer Newsletter'''s "Rookie of the Year" award. He's currently a color commentator on ''[=SmackDown=]''.[[note]]Except during college football season, when he's an analyst for ESPN's popular ''College [=GameDay=]'' pregame show.[[/note]]
37** While celebrities can wrestle, and can even win matches under the right circumstances, one thing you must never do is allow them to overshadow your full-time wrestlers by showing them up in the ring or doing a bunch of flashy moves; if someone who has never wrestled before is shown to be better at wrestling than professionals with years of experience, it makes the whole business look weak. Despite Music/BadBunny showing a surprising aptitude for wrestling in his debut match, which was overall well-received, one of the most-criticized parts of it was a sequence in which he outwrestled both of ''Wrestling/JohnMorrison'' and ''Wrestling/TheMiz'', making both of them look far more inept than they should have. Contrast his match with Damian Priest at ''Backlash'' in 2023, which not only took place in front of a molten-hot Puerto Rican crowd where both men were AHeroToHisHometown, but had a street fight stipulation, meaning weapon use was in vogue and a wrestler losing to a non-wrestler was somewhat credible, and both men called in backup from a series of Puerto Rican wrestling legends and veterans who did a decent chunk of the damage to both competitors, all of which meant that when Bad Bunny was victorious, it arguably did Damien Priest some good and seems to have netted him a mini push. (In fact, it proved a ToughActToFollow for the main event, but we'll get to arranging a card in time.)
38** However, if the celebrity plans to stick around in wrestling for a while, using their success in other sports is one of the quickest and easiest ways to lend them credibility right off the bat. Wrestling/KurtAngle using his Olympic gold medal in wrestling instantly established that he was a top-tier athlete who could compete in WWE when he debuted in 1997.[[note]]Although his claim to have won "with a broken neck" is untrue - his neck was only sprained, and if it had really been broken he would not have been allowed to compete.[[/note]] Another successful example of a celebrity wrestling is Creator/RondaRousey, who was known not only for her UsefulNotes/MixedMartialArts accolades, but also her acting career. Brought in for a few years to the WWE (and taking a pregnancy leave after her first year in the company), her MMA expertise combined with her wrestling training and solid booking allowed her to [[Wrestling/RondaRousey display her talent]] in many classic matches against the likes of Wrestling/TheAuthority, Wrestling/AlexaBliss, Wrestling/SashaBanks, Wrestling/TheBellaTwins, Wrestling/{{Natalya|Neidhart}} and Wrestling/CharlotteFlair, and her last bout served to put over rising star Wrestling/BeckyLynch as [[TheAce the new face]] of the company. In fact, many news and commentary outlets called her the Rookie of the Year by the time 2018 ended.
39# Wrestlers should be treated well, and should have a solid say about matters relating to their health, jobs and well-being, but ''never'' booking decisions; see Employee Relations, rule #4.
40** A prime source of locker room politics (a poison we'll cover later) can be envy between long-time wrestlers within your promotion and new wrestlers on their way in from other promotions. While some of this is unavoidable (wrestlers' self-interest dictates that they're going to try to push for as much focus as they can get), refusing to give into these kinds of political maneuvers and not playing favorites with the talent will do more to foster good creative growth than taking sides. A major factor in the failure of Wrestling/TheInvasionAngle was not just Vince [=McMahon=]'s own petty spite, but a WWF locker room jealous of "their spots" and unhappy with the idea of new hires making more money than them or getting more screentime than them; if the bosses hadn't listened then the [=InVasion=] might not have flopped before the big WCW names signed on.
41# Wrestling leads to horrible injuries as limbs and bodies wear out. Give your wrestlers ample injury time off; let them return to their position on the card when they come back. But even if they want to (and they often will), never rush an injured wrestler back into the ring before they're medically ready. Creating this kind of a positive working environment is good for the wrestlers' performances and the fans. See The Golden Rule.
42** As a further thought, if you're in the United States, you really should pay your workers' healthcare benefits if you can afford it; keeping them healthy keeps your product healthy. Lose them, and you lose a skill set that is not easy to replace. WWE does not provide its employees with health insurance, claiming they are independent contractors. Learn from their mistake.
43** Remember that while [[RuleOfCool cool spots are great]] for the fans to watch, they should be balanced with their effect on your performers' bodies. A leading theory behind Wrestling/ChrisBenoit's behavior during his family's tragic incident is the fact that he had suffered repeated concussions from years of diving headbutts and German suplexes. [[UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeague The NFL]] has been learning to take brain damage more seriously, with examinations after every serious hit, and ''they'' compete wearing state-of-the-art helmets and protective gear! Only the most ruthless fans would rather see an extra couple feet of elevation on the latest broken table spot ''du jour'' than a slightly less impressive, but much less dangerous maneuver, and these people are ''a dwindling minority''. Even setting all long-term effects aside, dangerous maneuvers mean heightened chances of injury, and injuries mean missed dates, unhappy fans, and less money for everyone involved.
44** Also, as we'll cover under the Product, rule #20, last minute changes to your card already make a lot of your fans very unhappy. Wanna know what a major reason is for lots of last minute changes? Wrestlers simply being unable to compete, either because of substance abuse issues (we'll get to the drugs) or severe injuries that keep them on the shelf. And that's setting aside what having to suddenly do without a major performer will do to your long-term plans! [=AEW=] has suffered from frequent, serious injuries in its main event scene for basically its entire existence as a promotion, partially due to the very creative freedom it promises its performers, often requiring last-minute card changes for big pay-per-view/premium events. (That's not to say WWE has been ''without'' such injuries,[[note]]Wrestling/BigELangston may have suffered a [[CareerEndingInjury career-ender]] during that time in a fairly routine match[[/note]] just that its overall "house style" is much safer.)
45** A special caveat is in order for promoters of {{garbage wrestl|er}}ing. By their very nature, hardcore-style matches are very dangerous to compete in, even if everything goes right. Smaller independent promotions use hardcore matches to display the kind of ultra-violence that would never be seen on nationally televised shows, which builds them a niche, but also paints them into a corner and does little to truly set apart their talent; it doesn't take an impressive physique or a great deal of training to be smashed with a fluorescent light bulb or throw an opponent through a window glass sheet or a table wrapped in barbed wire, after all. Before deciding to book these kind of matches, take special care to weigh the risks[[note]]On top of the obvious extreme injury risk, fluorescent light bulbs release ''mercury'' when broken![[/note]] and benefits to not only your performers, but to the reputation of your promotion.
46** Because of the scripted nature of wrestling, [[RingOldies athletes in good health can continue to wrestle for many more years than those in other sports would be able to]]. The key word here is ''health'', however. If you give your wrestlers enough time to recover and rest from injuries they accumulate over their career, they can easily continue wrestling into their fifties and sixties à la Wrestling/RicFlair or Wrestling/TerryFunk, and make the promotion money for decades. Manage their health poorly, however, and like in the cases of Wrestling/MickFoley, Wrestling/DanielBryan, Wrestling/{{Paige}} and Wrestling/{{Edge|Wrestler}}, [[CareerEndingInjury they'll be forced to retire early for medical reasons]] during what would normally be the prime of their career, or worse. Remember, while you should give them the freedom to lay out their matches and use their moves, stress to them that no amount of wild stunts are worth their safety. [[Wrestling/TheWrestlingObserverNewsletter Dave Meltzer]] came rightly under criticism, even from his coworker Bryan Alvarez, for gushing and giving huge critical ratings to frankly dangerous matches and stunts that can only result in diminishing returns for shortened careers[[note]]Or [[CasualtyInTheRing death]] in the case of Wrestling/MitsuharuMisawa, the man who long held the honor of receiving the most five stars from Meltzer[[/note]]. And even ''Meltzer'' himself ''hated'' the Wrestling/HellInACell match featuring the single most replayed bump in the history of professional wrestling[[note]]Wrestling/MickFoley's headfirst fall through the SpanishAnnouncersTable during his ''Wrestling/KingOfTheRing 1998'' match against Wrestling/TheUndertaker[[/note]]. Make sure your wrestlers understand that you don't want them chasing praise or Internet fame via gifs in exchange for years and years of their careers and lives.
47# [[DrugsAreBad Steroids and drugs are bad.]] This really cannot be stressed enough in a business where entire locker rooms could probably fail a drug test at any given time. It's gotten so bad that a cursory glance at the list of wrestlers who've died in the last twenty years or so shows that a wrestler who began his career after 1995 has a life expectancy of about '''39'''. Drugs are the single biggest threat to the wrestling business and need to be taken seriously. Anyone caught using is a liability at best, and a danger at worst. People will always want to see steroidal physiques, but superior in-ring action, mic work, and overall stage presence will more than compensate. To [[Wrestling/VinceMcMahon the claim that audiences only want to see steroidal physiques]], there is an argument to be made that if more "normal" physiques are made the norm, there would be no demand for the 'roid freaks. If you disagree with this rule, there are only two names that need mentioning: [[Wrestling/ChrisBenoit Nancy and Daniel Benoit]].
48** It is worth noting here that Benoit's problems were much exacerbated by brain damage caused by his diving headbutts from the top turnbuckle and chairshots to the back of the head. One neurologist described his brain as that of a 85-year-old man with Alzheimer's. Know what he could have used[[note]]Besides someone telling him "Hey stupid, stop intentionally giving yourself a concussion in every match with that idiotic headbutt!"[[/note]]? Better and more thorough health care to catch the warning signs of drug ''and'' bodily abuse before they led to catastrophic damage; see Rule #5 above.
49** The name Wrestling/EddieGuerrero comes to mind when it comes health and drugs in wrestling, as well as alcoholism brought on by self-medicating against pain and injuries, another blight in wrestling. He died at the age of 38 due to heart failure[[note]]Eddie died of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, though he was unaware he had the condition. While years of drug abuse (both performance-enhancing and recreational) certainly didn't help they couldn't be conclusively ruled as causing his death[[/note]]. There are dozens of other such names whose lives were cut short either directly or indirectly due to substance abuse, including Wrestling/DaveyBoySmith (dead at 40), Wrestling/RoddyPiper (who correctly predicted he wouldn't live past 65, dying at age 61), Wrestling/MissElizabeth (dead at 43 due to drug habits likely influenced by Wrestling/LexLuger), Wrestling/{{Test}} (dead at 34), Wrestling/{{Umaga}} (dead at 36), Wrestling/BrianPillman (dead at 35[[note]]From the same heart problem as Guerrero[[/note]]), [[Wrestling/TheRoadWarriors Hawk]] (dead at 46), Wrestling/CurtHennig (dead at 45), [[Wrestling/VonErichFamily four out of the five Von Erich brothers]] (David, 25; Mike, 23; Chris, 21; Kerry, 33).[[note]]There were actually ''six'' Von Erich brothers; the oldest, Jack Adkisson Jr., died at the age of six after being electrocuted by a downed power line. By the time Jack "Fritz Von Erich" Adkisson Sr. died in 1997, his only living son was Kevin, who remains alive today.[[/note]] These are not isolated incidents. These are ''patterns''.
50** When they're not affecting the health of your wrestlers, drugs can affect your card, and thus the health of your promotion. Just look at what happened with Wrestling/JeffHardy at Victory Road 2011; his out-of-control drug use led to him showing up moments before his main event match with Wrestling/{{Sting}} visibly drugged to the gills and in no state to safely compete, necessitating that TNA - or at least Wrestling/EricBischoff - cut their PPV's main event short (to less than ''two minutes'') by having Sting forcibly pin Jeff before he got either of them hurt.[[note]]Bischoff stated in a 2021 interview that had Jeff been discovered at least 45 minutes earlier - before most of the other wresters around had changed and showered or left the arena - he could have been pulled out of the match and replaced by someone actually capable of performing. As it happened though, circumstances were simply not that favorable, and with Bischoff being the highest authority around at that moment, he had no choice but to send Jeff out in spite of the condition and then call an audible to practically kill the match.[[/note]] The fans were naturally outraged at this whole mess, and Sting was none too happy either, shouting "I agree!" on camera in response to angry crowd chants.
51** On a more positive note, the modern era crop of popular wrestlers don't tend to be 'roid freaks, instead using enhancements far more sparingly for the most part if at all to begin with. This includes Wrestling/AJStyles, [[Wrestling/BryanDanielson Bryan Danielson/Daniel Bryan]], [[Wrestling/JonMoxley Dean Ambrose/Jon Moxley]], Wrestling/KennyOmega, Wrestling/WillOspreay, Wrestling/KofiKingston, Wrestling/CodyRhodes, and Wrestling/CMPunk. In fact, Punk got quite a lot of mileage from TheGimmick of [[SmugStraightEdge pointedly NOT using drugs]].
52** The rise of female wrestlers, such as Wrestling/BeckyLynch, Wrestling/SashaBanks, Wrestling/{{Bayley}} and Wrestling/CharlotteFlair have pretty much completely demolished the notion that audiences want impossibly muscled bodies, and instead will tune in if there is great wrestling, a procession of charismatic people in addition to the wrestling, and a compelling reason to wait for at least one wrestling match on a later show.
53** Preventing steroid and drug abuse will require you to adhere to point 5. Wrestling is incredibly strenuous to the human body. Wrestlers use steroids as much to recover faster from minor injuries as to build up muscle. Alcohol and pills are used to dull the pain, to keep moving when they're dead on their feet, and to be able to sleep before doing it again.
54# And although it ''should'' go without saying, ''hold yourself'' to a similar standard of professionalism as your workforce and refrain from sexual misconduct. ''Your wrestlers and crew are your employees, '''not''' your toys''. Even setting aside the uncomfortable moral problems with treating people this way, hush money adds up quick, [[ValuesDissonance and we're not in]] TheEighties anymore. In the Internet age, [[StreisandEffect people will find out if you're abusing your power to squeeze the people under you into servicing you]] and, far from celebrating your rock star charisma, [[RoleEndingMisdemeanor/ProfessionalWrestling all but a tiny handful of horrible people will see you for the sleazy creep you are]].
55** In 2018, as part of the [=#MeToo=] movement, several female wrestlers came up front regarding abuses suffered at the hands of co-workers and promoters/higher-ups. This led to several careers ending, and the downfall of Wrestling/CelticChampionshipWrestling.
56** In 2020, widespread outrage and backlash from the [=#SpeakingOut=] movement led to [[RoleEndingMisdemeanor/ProfessionalWrestling the downfall]] of Wrestling/{{Chikara}} and several prominent figures in the international wrestling scene, both at the indie and the national promotional level.
57** And then there's Wrestling/VinceMcMahon. Even after [[KarmaHoudini all the shady things he's done, all the radioactive skeletons dancing in his closet]], he was ultimately brought down by a series of sex scandals involving various members of his workforce. ''Twice''.
58
59!The Product
60# Before ''anything'' else, THE #1 thing you have to remember is the pivotal importance of {{Kayfabe}}. Yes, even though it's dead, it still matters. Wrestling is a staged entertainment, which means that '''''EVERYTHING''''' is dependent on ''presentation'', because presentation guides perception. You can hire the best wrestlers in the entire world, but if you present them as jobbers then the audience will think of them as losers. Conversely, if you present your wrestlers to the audience as a big deal, then the audience will at least give them the chance to become a big deal. Treat your guys like stars and you'll have stars. Treat them like jobbers, and jobbers is all they'll be. Of course, the wrestlers you push do need the actual talent to be able to at least mostly live up to how they're presented[[note]]the list of talentless, charisma-deficient failures massively overpushed solely because of their size and look (and not ''just'' by Vince either) could fill a book[[/note]], but the only way to find the ones that can pull it off is to give them the chance. There's a lot more to it than that, of course, but this is the baseline for how the wrestling industry works.
61** Wrestling/HulkHogan, [[SugarWiki/HeReallyCanAct while much better than a lot of people accuse him of being]], was never the world's greatest wrestler, but Vince [=McMahon=] ''presented'' him as the biggest star in wrestling and America's greatest hero, and that's how he ended up becoming one of the biggest stars the sport has ever seen. Hogan vs Wrestling/AndreTheGiant at ''Wrestling/WrestleMania III'' is, if you watch it with an objectively technical eye, a really, ''really'' bad wrestling match, but because it was treated as the battle of the century, a once-in-a-lifetime clash of two mythical titans, it became one of the most iconic matches in the history of the industry.
62** On the flip side, we have the tragedy of Wrestling/KarrionKross' initial WWE main roster "run". Presented on NXT as an unstoppable juggernaut who murdered everyone who got in his way on his path to winning the NXT Championship, with his BigEntrance making him look like a terrifying monster, when he was called up to the main roster (while still holding the NXT Championship no less) he was stripped of all his flashy presentation, then buried in his debut match in a 2-minute loss by roll-up to Wrestling/JeffHardy who hadn't won a match all year, with the result that audiences were more interested in the fact that Hardy had gotten his old theme music back than ''the main roster debut of the NXT champion!'' Kross continued to be appallingly badly presented afterwards (still bereft of his iconic entrance and then given [[FashionVictimVillain one of the worst costumes any wrestler has ever been forced to wear]]), and consequently nobody gave a damn about him, a potential main eventer reduced to an overpaid jobber because WWE simply refused to ''treat him'' like a potential main eventer. [[DownerEnding And then they casually released him without a second thought in the next round of talent releases.]] Even when [[HopeSpot he was rehired after Triple H took creative control of WWE]], he's been spinning his wheels and going nowhere because [[NeverLiveItDown main roster audiences won't give him a chance after his terrible first impression]].
63# The majority of wrestling should be simple, one-on-one or TagTeam matches with no interference; {{Face}} vs. {{Heel}}. This is the basic product you are selling, and it’s what the audience wants. "Angle" was the preferred terminology over "storyline" among bookers for decades specifically because it was a constant reminder to keep things simple. A match or build up to one rarely needs more than one "hook".
64** One {{gimmick match|es}} can definitely be a good thing, and can easily drum up extra business. Some, like the Money in the Bank Ladder Match or the Royal Rumble, are multi-man special attractions that have a desirable prize to fight for and can sell a whole card just on name value alone, as well as set up an entire program worth of angles and future matches for the forthcoming months. Others, like the Hell in a Cell match, are brutal {{garbage|Wrestling}} matches that can be used as the satisfying capper for [[ItsPersonal blood feuds]]. But the main reasons that GimmickMatches shouldn't be overused is that seeing them too often dilutes the audience's interest. One ultraviolent match a year is truly shocking stuff, but seeing too many of them results in wrestlers doing more and more dangerous stunts to try to get the attention of a crowd that's desensitized to gimmick matches, and see Business Ethics #5 for why that's a terrible idea. Even Wrestling/{{ECW}} and Wrestling/{{CZW}}, ''the'' classic and modern faces of hardcore wrestling, made sure to include different types of matches and wrestling in between its garbage matches so that fans wouldn't get bored.
65*** It's widely agreed that the worst thing WWE ever did to the Hell in a Cell match stipulation was making it a [[Wrestling/HellInACell yearly PPV]] where wrestlers would have a cell match just because it was that time of year again, rather than because the intensity of the feud demanded it, and refusing to allow [=HiaC=] matches at any time ''other'' than the PPV for marketing reasons.[[note]]Wrestling/{{Batista}} wanted his retirement match against Wrestling/TripleH at ''[=WrestleMania=] 35'' to be a Hell in a Cell match, but Vince refused because he insisted that the match only ever be held on the PPV, so they had to make do with a No Holds Barred match instead.[[/note]] Interestingly, once Triple H took over WWE creative in 2022, he axed the annual Hell in a Cell event.
66** Just like regular wrestling matches, the rules of GimmickMatches should be easy to understand. Matches like the ladder match, no-disqualification match, and steel cage match have been contested for many decades because of the simplicity of their rules, whether that be using everything at ringside to hurt your opponent or being the first to retrieve a prize. But when you have a [[ComplexityAddiction Contract-On-a-Pole, Two Out of Three Falls, lumberjack match contested in a steel cage under a time limit]], it gets ridiculous. The more swerves, {{gimmick|Matches}}s, run-ins, etc. you add to a match, [[GambitPileup the more confusing it becomes]]. Confused audiences are bored audiences, and bored audiences don't come back, costing you both fans and money. Just look at WWE's Punjabi Prison match and TNA's King of the Mountain match for examples of overcomplicated gimmick matches that failed to do anything for the companies or angles except earning them places in Website/{{WrestleCrap}}.
67** Another benefit to simple matches and angles? Your ''wrestlers'' don't get confused. Part of the chaos that was Russo-era WCW and TNA was due to the fact that the wrestlers themselves often missed spots, forgot cues, or encountered malfunctions the more convoluted their matches got, which can seriously put their safety at risk. [[labelnote:Example]] Davey Boy Smith took a bad bump on a trapdoor in the ring that he was not informed about, which injured his spine, nearly paralyzed him, and got him addicted to painkillers that eventually took his life.[[/labelnote]]
68** As a side note, it may seem strange, but good taste should generally prevail when it comes to most programs and simple angles. The more [[HilarityEnsues "out-there"]] a program becomes, generally the less interest the fanbase has (because they're interested in wrestling), [[ValuesDissonance the more you make yourself look unpalatable to the mainstream]], and the less business in the long run. There are [[Website/{{WrestleCrap}} too many cases demonstrating this principle to go into detail]]. As a general rule, [[{{Squick}} necrophilia, incest]] and similar themes are the purview of 18 certificate {{Euroshlock}}, not fights between two big angry foes. There is a reason that even mentioning the [[OldShame Katie Vick]] saga will make those fans who remember it feel a little ashamed of their love for the "sport".
69*** It's not even necessarily the audience alone you'll have to worry about; WWE lost Dean Ambrose (likely forever) and their competitors gained Wrestling/JonMoxley because he found the promo material he was given as part of his heel turn (saying truly despicable things about real-life friend Roman Reigns' leukemia) so tasteless and unpleasant that he decided then and there he was leaving for keeps as soon as his contract was up and never coming back.
70** Additionally, an individual wrestler who's tarred with a particularly distasteful gimmick can have his career permanently damaged by association with it ([[Wrestling/ChavoGuerreroJr Kerwin White]], [[Wrestling/NickDinsmore Eugene]], [[Wrestling/MikeShaw Bastion Booger]], and post-Headbangers Chaz Warrington, anyone?). If your promotion gains a reputation for doing this, it becomes that much harder to hire new talent.
71# "Protecting" your wrestlers (that is, to take your franchise players and keep them from losing, or having them lose via outside factors) is something that is a very fine line to walk. One the one hand, Wrestling/NewJapanProWrestling can be very much a crapshoot where even the top tier superstars on the roster can lose clean to a lowly midcard performer at any given event (especially during its round robin {{tournament arc}}s where they don't want someone to go undefeated). On the other hand, WWE takes a lot of flak for booking several matches a card to end inconclusively or with a distraction leading to a quick pin in an effort to keep both sides looking equal in the eyes of the fans, with the end result being a kind of status quagmire where all wrestlers are made to look strong and therefore none of them do. There is no right answer as far as which direction to take things, but keep in mind that fans are very understanding of the "any given Sunday" aspect of matches wherein sometimes, even for a superior wrestler, it's just not their night. When fans can predict a winner of a match because of the wrestlers' relative positions in the company hierarchy, you've gone too far. But if you have a position where the Wrestling/{{John Cena}}s of the world lose clean to the Wrestling/{{Santino Marella}}s without any shenanigans, you've ''also'' gone too far. The lesson is to protect, but not coddle.
72** One way of protecting your wrestlers is to protect their FinishingMove, as these moves must have a reputation of decisively putting opponents down for the 3-count. Not only are they important to signify the end of a match, you can build entire programs out of whether a wrestler can hit them. The [[Wrestling/TheUndertaker Tombstone Piledriver]], [[Wrestling/BaronCorbin the End of Days]], [[Wrestling/BrockLesnar the F5]] and [[Wrestling/AdrianNeville the Red Arrow]] were such [[TheDreaded dreaded moves]] that if they hit an opponent with them, audiences knew it was game over, and so it was a big damn deal if someone (like Wrestling/ShawnMichaels or Wrestling/AustinAries) managed to kick out, or require two or three hits of the same move to put them away (as was the case with Wrestling/RomanReigns, Wrestling/TheUndertaker and Wrestling/SethRollins regarding Lesnar's F5). Wrestling/KennyOmega copied moves of the opponents he defeated in the past as a way of mocking them, and to show his desperation to win the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship; he would also ''flatly refuse'' to perform his finisher, the One-Winged Angel, if the opponent was going to kick out of it (slipping out of the setup or the pin being broken up by someone else would be fine, but nobody is allowed to kick out of Omega's OWA). A finisher that doesn't put away an opponent eventually just becomes a joke move, and no one has demonstrated this better than, of all people, Wrestling/RicFlair, whose Figure Four Leglock has in modern times had {{smark}}s going "Why did [wrestler] apply that move? It ''never'' puts people away!" (Even Flair [[SelfDeprecation has mocked the move]].)
73# Clearly observe your wrestlers, and make a note of their strengths and weaknesses. Play to your wrestlers’ strengths, and hide their [[FiveMovesOfDoom weaknesses]]. Learn who you've got working for you and don't just throw opponents together. This was something that was done particularly well in ECW. Playing to your wrestlers' strengths can be the difference between [[Wrestling/DeanMalenko Malenko]] vs. [[Wrestling/EddieGuerrero Guerrero]] (a feud of two completely evenly-matched technical wrestlers, widely regarded as one of the best sets of matches ECW ever produced) and Wrestling/BigShow vs. Wrestling/{{Batista}} (a WCW giant and a WWE power-face, neither of whom were known for their technical skill, booked as the "best" in ECW).
74# Let the fans' reaction be your guide. The crowd decides who is a face or heel better than any booker. If they cheer for a wrestler, they're a face. If they boo, they're a heel. It is almost impossible to make a crowd cheer for a heel or boo a face (XPacHeat notwithstanding). Bookings should be made according to crowd reactions.
75** A notable example of this being done right is the Wrestling/HonkyTonkMan, who started off with an ElvisImpersonator gimmick that was originally supposed to get him over as a face, but the fans hated it and booed him. Rather than keep booking him as a face and trying to force the fans to accept him as such, the [[Wrestling/{{WWE}} WWF]] turned Honky heel, and he went on to become one of the greatest heels in the history of the promotion.
76** Another notable example is Wrestling/DwayneJohnson. When he first entered the WWF, he played LegacyCharacter Rocky Maivia, based off his grandfather, "High Chief" Peter Maivia. The problem was, this was a bland non-gimmick that the WWF tried to push to the moon, and fans showed their displeasure by showering him with chants of "Rocky Sucks!" and "Die, Rocky, Die!" Dwayne rolled with this, using the heat to his advantage by turning heel and restyling himself as "The Rock". As "The Rock", Dwayne got so far over with the fans that he was able to turn face again without losing the audience... yet still made use of further heel turns at well-timed points to freshen up his act.
77** A third example is Wrestling/TheNewDay, whom Vince [=McMahon=] initially saddled with a black gospel preacher group gimmick before pushing them as faces. Thanks in no small part to it largely being a racial stereotype (which didn't do much for the morale of its members either), the gimmick utterly failed to get over with fans until the group turned heel, treating their overly positive attitudes as obliviousness while dropping the racist undertones of the act. In a touch of irony, this version of the New Day ended up becoming so entertaining and popular, it necessitated a face turn because of how other teams were getting heel heat just by being matched against them.
78** On the flip side, this is the mistake WWE persistently made for ''years'' with Wrestling/RomanReigns. Hand-picked as the next big face by Wrestling/VinceMcMahon and given a monster push after Wrestling/TheShield broke up, crowds roundly rejected Roman when his shortcomings and limitations became apparent, constantly booing him at every opportunity. Rather than turn him heel to play off the crowd's hatred of him, WWE continued pushing Roman as a face harder and harder, giving him more main events, hanging more titles on him and positioning him as TheHero of WWE even as the fans continued to boo. While Roman's abilities and performances drastically improved since his solo career began to the point that all but his most ardent haters had to admit that he's a very competent wrestler, his constant face push is continued to receive a terrible response. Countless people within the industry all but ''begged'' Vince to turn Roman heel and let him work his way back into favor (like The Rock, above), but Vince persisted in insisting that ''he'' rather than the fans decides who is face and who is heel, resulting in Roman becoming possibly [[TheScrappy the most-hated face in wrestling history]]. Fortunes would occasionally change with fan reaction whenever he spent time away from the world title picture and simply focused on being an aggressive fighting badass, though he never fully got RescuedFromTheScrappyHeap because this was almost always followed by a haphazard attempt to push him to beat Brock Lesnar for the world championship in a transparent move to cement him as the company's main guy for years to come.[[labelnote:In particular]]The nadir of this came in 2018, where Reigns, and later Seth Rollins, would repeatedly WorkedShoot on Brock's limited schedule as the apparent result of his laziness, creating widespread fan disdain for Lesnar with the sole interest of conditioning fans to support Reigns being the one to beat Brock. Despite cementing "part-time absentee champion Lesnar" as an acceptable target of collective ire for years to come, it did nothing to get Reigns more over beyond the first two weeks of the build and only added resentment for the whole thing.[[/labelnote]] The one time it wasn't a push to beat Lesnar or win the title... they had him beat and implicitly "retire" Wrestling/TheUndertaker (which was promptly undone in part to keep Reigns from being hated for life). Despite even that, he was eventually rescued, but only after he was diagnosed with leukemia and forced to take an indefinite leave of absence, and it was only upon his return, and his receiving substantially better booking, that crowds became more willing to accept him.
79** Ironically, Roman would ''finally'' get his long-awaited heel turn in 2020 after returning from a sabbatical he took due to the UsefulNotes/COVID19Pandemic, which revitalized his career and caused numerous fans and critics to (at long last) hail him as the best thing in the company. [=WrestleMania 37=] would be the first time WWE performed in front of fans since the pandemic, with Reigns closing out the two-night event by defending the Universal Championship against Royal Rumble winner Edge and inserted entrant Daniel Bryan in a triple threat match. Proving his absolute excellence as a true heel, Reigns was consistently booed throughout the match, goaded and played into "Roman Sucks" chants from grown men in the audience (the same demographic that's been leading the charge in praising his conceited tribal chief gimmick online), and arguably kept Daniel Bryan babyface.[[labelnote:*]]The entire reason the match was a triple threat was because fans reacted controversially to Edge choosing to face Reigns for his championship, with half the fanbase supporting it as the biggest possible match they could produce while the other half objected to the notion of Edge possibly dethroning Reigns and claimed that he should've instead faced Wrestling/DrewMcIntyre for the WWE Championship and allowed Daniel Bryan to take on Roman in a more certain losing effort instead. WWE's reaction to this was to adjust their plans and place Bryan in the same match with Edge. This too was met with derision from half the fanbase, as in kayfabe Edge and his supporters both felt that Bryan was getting too many chances at Reigns' title, undermining the Royal Rumble match, and making the multi-man match solution so comfortable for WWE that it risked depleting the notion of a champion having a #1 contender. The fans at Raymond James Stadium largely sided with Edge, giving him a loud pop as the face of the match, while Bryan was surprisingly booed at first, though he managed to work his way out of it through "Yes!" chants, excellent wrestling, and Reigns clearly presenting himself as the heel.[[/labelnote]] Following [=WrestleMania=], WWE's piped-in crowd recordings used at the [=ThunderDome=] would include that "Roman Sucks" chant during Reigns' heel promos in place of the generic "You Suck" chant.
80** Conversely, don't try to force the crowd to boo someone they really want to cheer, either. When the crowd still cheered for Wrestling/StoneColdSteveAustin after he allied himself with Wrestling/VinceMcMahon in 2001, they transparently tried to get the crowd to boo by having him act completely out of character (crying, tapping out, and so forth). It did not work well. While Bruce Pritchard would later concede that they all knew going in that Austin and [=McMahon=] would be cheered in Steve's hometown, Austin would also admit that, rather that stubbornly moving forward with the heel turn that he himself had proposed, he should've read the crowd the night after and called an audible to stun Vince and claim he simply used him to get to the top.
81** A small appendix to this: Don't confuse loving a wrestler with [[LoveToHate loving to]] '''[[LoveToHate hate]]''' them. This was a mistake Wrestling/VinceMcMahon made during Wrestling/ShawnMichaels' 90's career. The crowd had became so enamored with Shawn's [[MagnificentBastard cocky, over-the-top antics]] that Vince decided to turn him {{Face}}. Of course, this meant losing his heel antics, and thus losing the very thing that was making him popular at the time.
82** Another appendix to this: Don't confuse heel heat with ''[[XPacHeat go-away heat]]''. If the audience boos a wrestler because they want to see him get his comeuppance at the hands of a face, that's good heat. If the audience boos someone because they're sick and tired of seeing them, that's bad heat.
83*** Wrestling/SeanWaltman, the TropeNamer for X-Pac Heat, only ended up with things worse for him because the then-WWF confused the X-Pac Heat he was getting for good heat and continued to have him show up at performances, much to audiences' growing anger and frustration.
84*** Wrestling/BaronCorbin is also an example ever since 2018, with his haircut and subsequent "Constable of Raw" push. He started being crammed down the audience's throat despite constant XPacHeat and abysmal booking. Corbin even managed to get over during ''King of the Ring 2019'' by just cruelly crushing fools, only to crater out again in an endless stream of bad comedy spots and poorly-received matches, including two revolting angles in which Corbin's short jokes towards [[Wrestling/AmericanAlpha Chad Gable]] inexplicably became Gable's new ring name uncontested by anyone including Gable himself, leading to the Shorty G gimmick, and Corbin and his allies' antagonism of Roman Reigns descended to the depths of literally force-feeding Reigns dog food.[[note]][[DontExplainTheJoke Because he's]] [[RedBaron The Big Dog]]. Get it?[[/note]]
85*** In the late 2010s, at the height of Roman Reigns's terrible, never-ending face push, WWE attempted to argue that XPacHeat [[IRejectYourReality didn't exist]] and that any reaction was a good thing because if the crowd is booing they're still invested and if they ''really'' hated someone they'd just remain silent. This couldn't be further from the truth: while a dead silent crowd ''is'' a terrible thing, it's an indicator that a wrestler is ''boring''. If a wrestler (''not'' their character) is genuinely ''hated'', the crowd being forced to watch them despite not wanting to do so ''will'' boo, because there's no way to silence a crowd of unhappy wrestling fans. And while a boring wrestler does nothing for your promotion when you put them in the ring, doing so with one who has go-away heat is ''actively damaging'' to it. Yes, the crowd is invested, but they're invested in telling you to change your booking, and if you ignore them they will leave. If a wrestler is getting "YOU SUCK!" chants, they probably have [[CheapHeat heel heat]], but if the chants are "GO AWAY!" or "FUCK OFF!", you've got a problem.
86# On title (de)valuations:
87** Some championships might be more prestigious or prominent than others due to history and/or card placement. At the same time, ''all championships are equally valid and must be treated as important''. They are your main {{MacGuffin}}s for angles and plots. As a result, a championship belt, a tournament trophy and any other physical prize ''is as important as the one who carries it says it is''. Never forget this. Therefore, ''no wrestler should ever insult a championship''; a championship brings the possessor prestige and respect. Insulting a championship insults your organization. Remember this if you choose to pursue stories where a heel insults a championship; that heel must be publicly destroyed — booked into oblivion — or else you have admitted that the championship (and by extension your company) is worthless.[[note]]A recent example of this being done properly was during the lead-in to AEW's 2023 ''All In'' mega-show, when the newly turned heel Jack Perry stated he would "retire" the FTW Championship. He proceeded to put the belt in the middle of the ring during a promo and prepared to destroy it with a sledgehammer, only for Wrestling/{{Hook}}, the former champion whose father Wrestling/{{Taz|z}} created the title in the first place, to interrupt him and challenge him for the title at ''All In''. Hook went on to reclaim the belt at the event itself. As it turned out, Perry was soon to be written off TV to allow him to take a short break after ''All Out'', which took place a week after ''All In'', though he ended up drawing a longer suspension due to his involvement in a backstage fight at ''All In'' that led to AEW firing CM Punk.[[/note]][[labelnote:Also]]Later in 2023, Wrestling/BulletClub leader David Finlay went one step beyond Perry by taking a sledgehammer to both versions of the United States Championship belt—the then-current holder Wrestling/WillOspreay had been wearing his own belt, calling it the United Kingdom Championship—at ''Power Struggle''. This was used to set up a three-way match involving both men and Wrestling/JonMoxley at ''Wrestle Kingdom 18'' for a new belt, later announced to be the new IWGP Global Championship.[[/labelnote]]
88** It's worth noting that this doesn't necessarily mean that the physical prize should be immune, as long as the champion who possess it still treats having the championship as important. CMLL missed the ball when Perro Aguayo Jr. {{smash|TheSymbol}}ed the [[TournamentArc Leyenda de Plata]] trophy in belief it was beneath him and narrowly managed to escape punishment for it. In contrast, WWE had Daniel Bryan's heel run with the WWE Championship in 2018, where he threw the classic leather and metal belt in the trash and replaced it with one made of kayfabe eco-friendly materials such as hemp and wood from "a fallen tree" as part of his "eco fighter" gimmick. The important thing here was that Bryan did not devalue the championship itself, treating his position as an important platform to espouse his views to the public (plus the replacement belt looked really good).
89** The maxim goes: ''"Championships don't make the man/woman; Men/women make the championships"''. History has shown that even mid-card belts have been given prestige because they were defended by top-tier talent, like Wrestling/RandySavage, Wrestling/RickySteamboat, Wrestling/ShawnMichaels, and even Wrestling/JohnCena, who won the United States Title in 2015 after being a decorated WWE Champion, and then defended it on a weekly basis against other great talents in some of the best-received matches of his career. Similarly, Wrestling/OrangeCassidy's nearly year-long run with the AEW International Championship, during which he defended it more than 30 times, greatly elevated that belt, to the point that he would eventually drop it to an even bigger star in Wrestling/JonMoxley. The WWE and NJPW Intercontinental Titles have both been competed for in the main event of major Pay-Per-Views ahead of the main belts due to the popularity of [[Wrestling/BretHart the]] [[Wrestling/DaveyBoySmith wrestlers]] [[Wrestling/ShinsukeNakamura who]] [[Wrestling/HiroshiTanahashi competed]] for them and the strength of the booking.
90** A great wrestler may elevate a belt, but the reverse however is not true. Obviously unfit performers, those suffering from XPacHeat, and [[CreatorsPet office pet projects]] will not be elevated ''by'' championships, they will devalue them and make them seem less like prizes to fight over and more like props handed out willy-nilly. Poor Wrestling/JinderMahal was one of the worst "beneficiaries" of such an indulgent experiment in 2017, when the WWE Championship was put on him at ''Wrestling/{{Backlash}}'' due to WWE management hoping to tap into the Indian market by giving an Indian wrestler a big push, as well as Vince [=McMahon=] being a fan of his "evil foreign heel" gimmick and his big, muscular body (widely thought to be the result of steroid use). It was not only almost instantly obvious that Jinder was in over his head and could not perform at the main event level, but it resulted in financial disaster. Not only that, but the only way Jinder won his matches was because of his two henchmen screwing his opponents over, meaning he only got and kept the belt due to routinely breaking the rules, which didn’t help his image one bit. The fans never accepted him, the quality and ratings of ''[=SmackDown Live=]'' began to tank, the India market barely responded, and the title's prestige has been tarnished ever since.
91** One thing that you have to come to terms with is that not ''everyone'' is going to be able to get a "turn" with the belt, no matter how talented they are. You'll often hear a lot of talk among fans about how a certain wrestler "deserves" to be champion, and they may even be right based on the talent and dedication of the performer. Sometimes you'll hear complaints about how a wrestler is being "wasted" because they haven't won the big one yet. Unfortunately the painful truth is that there just isn't enough room at the top for everyone, no matter how good they are. For every Wrestling/MickFoley (the underdog who was always told he could never make it who became so beloved that he managed to become a 3-time WWF Champion) there will be half a dozen Wrestling/JakeRoberts (one of the greatest talents of his generation who nevertheless was never able to win a championship in any of the major national promotions). If you pass your top championship around like a party favour, it'll lose all its meaning and cease to serve its real function- to mark out ''the'' top guy in your promotion. Secondary silver (like WWE's and NJPW's Intercontinental or US Championships or AEW's TNT, TBS, and International Championships) can give the wrestlers in the upper midcard their own prizes to fight for and allow for a bit more experimentation with who you give them to, but even these need to be assigned with discrimination to retain their value, and some guys are just never going to get to be champion. It's a sad fact that you're just going to have to accept. Giving in to fan demands for a wrestler to be pushed to the very top and changing your plans to accommodate them can lead to hot-shotting, and you really, ''really'' need to be sure of yourself before you even consider this—not every guy who the fans get behind is necessarily going to be [[Wrestling/BryanDanielson Daniel Bryan]].
92*** With that said, part of this is simply the result of cultural shift around how titles work. In the heyday of the wrestling business, title reigns could last for multiple years, and fans would turn out in droves to see their heroes defeat credible challengers. If you establish that your particular promotion works that way, and therefore that becoming your champion is a rare honor rarely bestowed, then your fans will be generally more understanding about not everyone getting a turn with the belt than if it's been badly devalued after years of being played hot-potato with. Once again (take a shot), after an obviously-unfit Jinder Mahal got the world title out of the blue, it became much, much harder to look at better wrestlers the fans liked more ''not'' getting a "turn" with the belt afterwards.
93*** Also related to Business Ethics #6, carrying your top championship is a big responsibility. The wrestler who has it represents your promotion and its prestige. It doesn't matter how popular, talented, or charismatic a wrestler might be, if they're not trustworthy or stable enough to be entrusted with the company's highest honors, don't make things worse by putting them in that position. Substance abuse and mental health issues are a big part of the reason why renowned master of WrestlingPsychology Wrestling/JakeRoberts, perennially-underappreciated generational talent Wrestling/WilliamRegal, and many other great wrestlers never got a major title run.
94** Finally, this shouldn't need to be stated, but never devalue your most prestigious championship belt. It ''must'' be defended and shown to be important.
95*** WWE made this mistake with the Universal Championship, which had been in a stranglehold by Wrestling/BrockLesnar from 2017 to 2019. Lesnar was champion for around 460 days, and made a grand total of ''ten'' championship defenses. This is like awarding the [[UsefulNotes/SuperBowl Lombardi Trophy]] to a team that's played a single preseason game, as most of WWE's champions defend their belts on average several nights a week.[[note]]By "defend their belts" we don't just mean televised championship matches, but also include nontitle matches (factoring in pro wrestling's natural risk of injury factor which may force a champion to relinquish their belt) as well as, in the case of major companies like WWE, title matches taking place at live event house shows. Effectively, this means Lesnar only wrestled the televised defenses, and did so at a clip of twice every three months.[[/note]] Despite having multiple opportunities to get the belt off Lesnar and onto a popular full-time wrestler, Vince kept the title on Brock all year with the idea of pushing Wrestling/RomanReigns to beat him in order to solidify Reigns as TheFace of the company; thus, Wrestling/BraunStrowman and Wrestling/SamoaJoe's well-received challenges throughout the year all amounted to nothing. Still, at least in 2017 Lesnar was appearing semi-regularly in order to build his programs, resulting in his busiest calendar year in terms of appearances since he returned to WWE.[[note]]While he apparently enjoys collecting celebrity paychecks from both WWE and UFC and can command anything he wants from either company by virtue of his fame, there is some clear measure of willingness to work with talents whose badass attributes Brock respects.[[/note]]
96*** And yet, despite clearly seeing said willingness to work with people, Vince and co. decided to take the opposite approach in 2018. Lesnar would be advertised for an episode of ''Raw'' in which he apparently no-showed, causing Roman Reigns to come out and seemingly shoot on Lesnar, calling him out for not caring about the company. The rare passion and intensity with which Reigns spoke received rave reviews, and this was the point where most fans started to truly hate Lesnar for being a long-running part time champion. Then the same sequence repeated again, and again after that, at which point it became obvious Brock no-showing was a work and he wasn't even being asked to fly in those episodes, as part of a cynical ploy to allow the (understandable) backstage resentment for Lesnar to be aired on television through Reigns and his Shield teammate Wrestling/SethRollins while keeping Brock off the show as much as possible; the clear intent being to galvanize crowds behind Reigns on the back of Lesnar's poor attendance sheet ''then'' have him take the championship. Naturally this fell flat, causing Vince to get cold feet on having Reigns defeat Lesnar twice in 2018, all the while still freezing out all other challengers before finally pulling the trigger at ''Wrestling/SummerSlam''. Reigns still needed the cloaking of The Shield reuniting post-haste to maintain support for his title run, which was cut down anyway two months later when Reigns was diagnosed with leukemia, forcing him to relinquish the belt and publicly reveal that he'd been fighting this cancer for over a decade. Ironically, this revelation as well as the way he handled it drew several orders of magnitude more support for Reigns than Vince's machinations around Lesnar's light schedule ever could.
97*** Through 2019, WWE finally took the belt off Lesnar and on to Rollins twice in a four-month stretch in 2019—first to Rollins at [=WrestleMania=] 35 in April, then to Lesnar three months later in a Money in the Bank cash-in, and finally to Rollins again at [=SummerSlam=] in August. Far from learning the lesson, however, Vince then unbelievably repeated the same mistake ''again'', this time putting the WWE Championship itself on Lesnar so he could defend it against Cain Velasquez in the unpopular ''Crown Jewel'' event in Saudi Arabia, cutting the legs from under popular champion Wrestling/KofiKingston in an ''extremely'' humiliating manner in the process.[[note]]Despite being the reigning WWE Champion, Kofi would still come down to the ring doing the typical happy-go-lucky midcard New Day entrance, throwing pancakes into the audience, with the name graphic on the big screen read THE NEW DAY. Read that. His own name didn't even appear on the tron throughout his entire title reign. He was scheduled to defend against Brock on the first episode of ''Friday Night [=SmackDown=]'' on FOX in October, knowing in advantage that this match would take place; yet he still carried on with that exact same entrance, jumped right into Lesnar's arms at the sound of the opening bell, ate an F5 and a pin to lose the championship in '''eight seconds''', and did not even TRY to keep himself in world title contention afterward, making Kingston and his entire run as champion look like a complete joke.[[/note]] After defeating Velasquez in a match that was a bust due to Cain being both out of shape and injured going in, Lesnar defended the championship against Wrestling/{{Rey Mysterio|Jr}} at ''Wrestling/SurvivorSeries''. Brock then buggered off again for a month before coming back to usher in 2020 and start his next program, entering himself into the 2020 Men's ''Wrestling/RoyalRumble'' match ''as the champion without the title on the line'' (though this did give instant credibility to Wrestling/DrewMcIntyre's ultimate victory when the first thing Drew did was stop Brock's reign of terror over the proceedings and literally kick him out of the match). Perhaps the real lesson here is not to value one performer so much that you let him walk all over you and your promotion even more than he actually wants to, as regardless of how much of a draw Lesnar is, the combined damage his prominence has done to WWE's title scene over the last few years has been incalculable.
98*** And worse still, the bookers of WWE still haven’t learned their lesson, as they proceeded to put the belt back on Lesnar '''yet again''' as a result of Reigns allegedly testing positive for COVID-19- even though Reigns was cleared to wrestle a week later, making many believe that he had never tested positive at all and WWE was lying to swerve the audience. Though Lesnar would drop the belt to Wrestling/BobbyLashley a month later, he would then be booked to win that year's Royal Rumble, essentially guaranteeing him another title shot against Reigns, continuing a feud that everyone is, by this point, sick of. And then they put the belt right back on him again anyway!
99*** All of the above makes the Universal Championship appear meaningless, particularly considering that the prior champions to Lesnar were [[Wrestling/FergalDevitt Finn Bálor]] (relinquished the night he won it due to injury), Wrestling/KevinOwens (a substantial 188-day reign, but marred by Owens' cowardly-heel booking), and Wrestling/{{Goldberg}} (essentially a vanity reign gifted to Goldberg in recognition of his legendary career, with the secondary purpose of getting the belt ''onto'' Lesnar when he finally won the final match in his feud with Goldberg). It's become a long-running joke among fans that the title is [[BlessedWithSuck cursed]].
100*** The TNA brand shot itself in the foot the moment it broke away from the Wrestling/NationalWrestlingAlliance when its replacement World Heavyweight Championship belt was vacated the very moment it was won[[note]]See The Product, rule 16—that would've never had to take place had TNA not neglected showing proper respect to its partnership with the NWA[[/note]]. [[PaperTiger Supposed former NWA World Champion]] Wrestling/{{Abyss}} was booked into midcard oblivion even before the title switch, and while his career would start to recover after nine years, continuously overbooked main events and title reigns ensured the entire company would need [[Wrestling/ImpactWrestling a new name]] before it could draw on the road in the United States again.
101*** Another effective way to devalue a title is to have too many title changes in a short period of time. This is what happened to the WCW world title in 2000. The belt changed hands between wrestlers at a near incessant pace, was vacated six times (including one instance where every single title was vacated), was put on Creator/DavidArquette despite, as mentioned, everyone telling Wrestling/VinceRusso not to do it, and was then put on Russo himself. When it was all over, the belt had removed from a wrestler no less than ''25'' times and the only attempt to salvage it was putting it on Wrestling/ScottSteiner for the remainder of the year, and for pretty much the rest of WCW's existence, for that matter[[note]]He lost it to Wrestling/BookerT on the very last episode of ''[[Wrestling/WCWMondayNitro Nitro]]'' to air[[/note]]. By comparison, that year, the WWE Championship changed hands 6 times, being held by a total of three wrestlers: Wrestling/TripleH, Wrestling/TheRock, and Wrestling/KurtAngle, all three proven draws and main-eventers. So keep title changes at a small pace, don't vacate them simply because you can, and keep them off those who have no wrestling skills whatsoever.
102# All programs and feuds must be logical; wrestlers must have a simple, clear and easily understood reason to be fighting, and which the audience will accept, since there is only so far their WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief can be stretched. There is an old adage that says there are only three reasons for a wrestling match to happen: A fight for a championship title, [[TheRival rivalries]] (e.g. clashes between similar styles, TechnicianVsPerformer, wily veteran vs. talented newbie), or [[{{Revenge}} personal grudges]], or a combination of any/all of the three. Logical reasons ''do not'' include behaviors that don't occur in real life (e.g., fighting over the rights to the name “T”, as Wrestling/BookerT once did).
103** Grudges should be simple to understand, and related to either previous matches, a personality clash or another person (valet, manager, etc...)
104** Cold matches, where opponents wrestle on the card without any special rules, personal issues or extra awards at stake are acceptable. Everyone cannot always be in an angle if you as a booker value your sanity, nor should every match always have one. Remember that cold matches will not sell the most tickets, bring in the most fans on their own, but are a valid tool to start an angle from or to build up a wrestler for something hotter later just by getting some wins, losses or otherwise established in the fans' memories.
105** If two wrestlers do not have a logical reason to fight, it is the bookers’ duty to create one. No wrestler on your roster should be neglected because Creative has no plans for them. A pro wrestler represents years of training and a skill set that is not easy to duplicate, and, unless they're just not any good, they should be put to use whenever possible. This is not to say that a wrestler can't be in the aforementioned cold match, go a few weeks without being on television, or that every wrestler on your roster should be utilized all the time; after all, injuries and [[RealLifeWritesThePlot real life]] happen, and it helps to have a fair number of performers on "standby" at any given time. But when a wrestler goes months on end without work because your creative department can't come up with anything interesting for them to do, that's less the fault of the wrestler and more the fault of your creative team. It's their job to be creative; if they can't come up with any ideas, then ''they'' are the ones that should be [[CatchPhrase future]] [[Wrestling/JohnLaurinaitis endeavored]]. If all else fails, ask the wrestler; after a few months of sitting on their couch, it's a good bet that they're bursting with ideas to get back on screen, some of which might actually be good.
106** Where possible, programs and angles should be respectful and tasteful. Shock storylines lose their power if they happen every week. Say the word [[PrecisionFStrike “fuck”]] once, and it’s a powerful phrase. [[ClusterFBomb Say it 1,000 times, and it’s just a meaningless sound.]] Teach your audience to expect a largely similar product each week; make them feel safe, secure, comfortable... then blow them out of the water with a logically-plotted event (''extra emphasis'' on "logically-plotted" -- poorly-thought-out {{Ass Pull}}s are what torpedoed Wrestling/{{WCW}} and weakened [[Wrestling/ImpactWrestling TNA]] to the point of needing a rebrand) that they'll never see coming.
107** Note that 'illogical matches' don't necessarily mean 'comedic matches' or vice versa. Plenty of wrestlers have made careers out of pure comedic gimmicks, like Wrestling/ColtCabana, Wrestling/ToruYano, Wrestling/SantinoMarella, and Wrestling/OrangeCassidy. Even legends like Wrestling/TripleH, Wrestling/ShawnMichaels, Wrestling/DanielBryan, and even WrestlingMonster Wrestling/{{Kane}} have had stints as comedy acts. The trick to their success here is, like with all great wrestling, not in the goofiness of their gimmicks, but in strong booking. Toru Yano and Orange Cassidy are silly clowns who are [[BewareTheSillyOnes deceptively competent wrestlers]], and in Yano's case, a legit amateur champion who has enough credibility to [[LethalJokeCharacter beat aces when they least expect it]]. [[Wrestling/TeamHellNo Bryan and Kane's]] funniest moments came from being bitter rivals punished with taking anger management class together, forced into a TagTeam, and trying to one-up each other on everything. [[Wrestling/DGenerationX Michaels and H]] kicked ass and stuck it to [[Wrestling/VinceMcMahon the man]] while having fun. Yet these successes mostly came from competing in straightforward matches that resulted from long-term angles with clear stakes and often climaxed in at a pay-per-view. The lesson here: your wrestlers may be goofy, but their matches shouldn't.
108*** It's okay to make your wrestlers the butt of jokes and comedy angles, but it's not okay to damage the credibility of wrestling itself by making it the source of mockery. A wrestler who is humiliated for laughs in an angle should be embarrassed and angry about being humiliated, just as anyone would be if they were in that wrestler's shoes. "Meta" comedy and gimmicks should ''never'' be used; if ''serious'' {{worked shoot}}s are already a bad idea (and see Public Relations #1 for why that is), then comedic ones are a thousand times worse. Having wrestlers who are on the wrong end of comedy angles laugh along with their tormentor instead of trying to get even is the wrestling equivalent of actors suddenly stopping in the middle of a movie to point out how unrealistic the special effects are: breaking the WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief so openly makes it impossible for the audience to get invested in your show, and will do nothing but damage your profits, the wrestlers involved in the angles, and ultimately the entire wrestling business.
109# The relationships on your show exist to further angles. Angles exist to give the fans emotional investment in matches. Matches exist to make the promotion money. Therefore, all relationships on your show must be logical, never ignored, and established inter-personal relationships must be maintained. If people are friends, they must stay friends, unless an event witnessed by fans during a show clearly denotes that the nature of the relationship has changed. Likewise for enemies. Unless there is a plot event that makes wrestlers friends, or turns them enemies, they remain simply indifferent rivals. In this business, the HeelFaceRevolvingDoor is a disaster; wrestlers go from tagging up to hating each other and vice versa while pretending things [[ThreeMonthRule were always this way]] far too often, and the list of longtime rivals whose off-screen friendship is suddenly part of the plot just so one guy can turn on the other and add heat for their fifth feud out of nine (like TNA did with Wrestling/ChristopherDaniels and his constant GreenEyedMonster-based betrayals of Wrestling/AJStyles) has become too long to count in the 21st century. It confuses casual fans and irritates long-time fans. Illogical relationships and foolish stories drive fans, and therefore business, away.
110# Match stipulations should always be honored. If a wrestler or the company can’t keep the stipulation, then it simply shouldn’t be made in the first place. Every match stipulation you ignore insults your audience on a very personal level, and proves your company to be untrustworthy — as well as to prove those employees involved are liars. People (and therefore fans) resent being lied to. As a result, stipulations should only be broken [[RealLifeWritesThePlot due to exceptional outside circumstances (that is, something happens in the Real World that means the stipulation cannot be honored)]]. There should ''never'', '''ever''' be a broken stipulation otherwise. Clearly demarcated boundaries help sustain your integrity without letting the stipulation ruin the possibility of future business.
111** Certain stipulations may be worded in such a way that things can be reset later (e.g: a hair vs. hair match in which the loser stays bald for a year) and fan resentment can be avoided.
112** If [[RealLifeWritesThePlot the worst]] happens and a stipulation must be broken, this counts as a swerve, and should be the main plot event of a given card. If you're going to include them, give them the respect they deserve. Remember, every stipulation you break loses you credibility and thus, in the long run, fans. Every lost fan is lost income. Therefore, every broken stipulation is lost income.
113** Of special consideration are Retirement Matches. Retirement stipulations have been broken so often that fans have now been conditioned to regard it as a DiscreditedTrope. [[RunningGag Terry Funk's "retirement"]] is a joke that was old in ''1999'', and Wrestling/RicFlair's return after his "retirement" clearly demonstrated that no matter [[SugarWiki/HeartwarmingMoments no matter how perfect the send-off]], no matter how appropriate, [[TearJerker no matter how emotional]], [[TenMinuteRetirement it won't stick]]. [[WrestlingDoesntPay Why not]]? [[MoneyDearBoy Unless you're prepared to support them afterwards, wrestlers have to earn money somehow]]. We'll say it again: no wrestling promoter has yet invested in a sound retirement plan for their workers, and it's the exception rather than the rule for a wrestler to wisely invest his own income. Unless you're 100% certain that your wrestler isn't going to be performing ''anywhere'' afterward, don't use the retirement angle; it's always a lie.
114** Another consideration is the dreaded Disqualification. For the love of god, don't use [=DQs=], count-outs, or [[Wrestling/DustyRhodes Dusty Finishes]][[labelnote:*]]a wrestler's win later overturned due to a minor technicality that the audience might not have noticed[[/labelnote]] to end your matches, unless there is a strong emotional payoff or logical story-telling component. By all means, use an illegal weapon or have outside interference, but having a wrestler "win" a match because the referee caught their opponent in the middle of an illegal act isn't a win, it's a technicality. It makes the "winner" look weak because they couldn't win the match by themselves, the "loser" looks like an idiot for giving away the match, the product feels inconsequential because nobody cares about rules or wins or losses, and the audience feels unsatisfied. If you do it too often, your fans can even stop trusting your ability to complete any advertised match.
115** If you use [=DQs=] as a blatant crutch to extend a championship reign to record length, it can tar the perception of said reign and cause question as to whether that title's division is being held hostage for an empty and ironic boast about the superiority of current talent to former champions that left the company (such as Wrestling/NikkiBella's 2014-15 Divas Championship run or Wrestling/TheNewDay's 2015-16 Tag Team Championship reign). In the worst cases, a badly used DQ finish can affect an entire ''card'', which is exactly what happened at ''Wrestling/HellInACell 2019'' with its main event of Wrestling/SethRollins vs. Wrestling/BrayWyatt, where a ref stoppage indistinguishable from a DQ was used in the titular {{gimmick match|es}}... with a core ''No Disqualification'' stipulation!
116** Understand that if a wrestler cheats or needs outside assistance to win, it makes them look weak. We’ve already gone over that this was one of the most damaging factors for Wrestling/JinderMahal during his title run, but Vince still hasn’t learned his lesson. In the ''Clash of Champions 2020'' ambulance match between Wrestling/DrewMcIntyre and Wrestling/RandyOrton, a bunch of legends, including Wrestling/TheBigShow, Wrestling/{{Christian}}, Wrestling/ShawnMichaels, and Wrestling/RicFlair took shots at Orton throughout the match before Drew won it. Despite being portrayed as a very strong babyface (see above for how he beat Wrestling/BrockLesnar), this made [=McIntyre=] seem weak, as if he couldn't put Orton away by himself. Similarly over on AEW, tag-team champions [[Wrestling/TheRevival FTR]] often won matches due to interference by their manager Tully Blanchard, despite being touted as one of the best tag teams in the world and having beaten the very dominant pair of Wrestling/KennyOmega and Wrestling/AdamPage. WWE managed to do this even worse with Wrestling/RomanReigns following his heel turn, ''presenting'' him as bar none the greatest wrestler in the world and an invincible and indomitable final boss with a record-breaking 1000+ day Universal reign... while inexplicably failing to book him to win almost ''any'' of his championship defenses cleanly without interference from his cousins Wrestling/TheUsos and their little brother Solo Sikoa, or the occasional low blow, which fans eventually came to get ''really'' tired of. It got to the point where one match had the stipulation that no one from Roman's family was allowed to interfere… And that's ''exactly what happened anyway'', with no punishments being doled out against the offending Fatus. People only cheat if they know they can't win, a.k.a. they know they're weak, and you don't want too many chickenshit heels on your program.
117** The only time when cheating can be seen as a plus is if the cheater is a clear underdog, but they must only use it as a last-ditch effort. Wrestling/EddieGuerrero was the best example of this in his DavidVsGoliath match against Wrestling/BrockLesnar, and all the outside interference and cheating only came into play towards the end of the match, after Eddie had absorbed a lot of Brock's devastating offense and [[{{Determinator}} refused to quit]]. All that cheating also played into Eddie's LovableRogue persona, where even his theme song proclaimed how he would lie, cheat, and steal, and the crowd loved him for it anyway.
118# Heels vs. Faces.
119** Faces should win the majority of the time, particularly in the ultimate payoff point to a major feud. Fans want to see [[{{Face}} the wrestlers they like]] victorious, and they want to see [[{{Heel}} the wrestlers they hate]] get their comeuppance. WCW gives us a perfect example of how toxic it can be to the fanbase if [[InvincibleVillain the heels always win]]. A heel [[YouCantThwartStageOne having the upper hand for most of a feud]] is fine, so long as there's a payoff to the fans in the end. In fact, this can make it all the sweeter when the face triumphs in the end, as it shows him triumphing over a real threat rather than making the heel seem like a HarmlessVillain. If you still decide to have the heel win his feud for whatever reason, there are two important things you should do.
120*** First, do not have the face dominated by the heel in their final match. Your face will look weak when he finally loses, and it makes the heel come off as more of a bully and less of an actual threat. Don't have the heel dominated by the face either; if the face is just going to be pinned after the heel hits his finisher out of nowhere, then your face will have his credibility damaged as well. Make the wrestlers appear evenly matched, so that the fans will walk away with the impression that it honestly could have gone either way and that if the heel had been a second slower or the face a second quicker, the result would have been different.
121*** Second, if your fans truly hate the heel, seeing him victorious and celebrating will make them unhappy. Don't let them stay unhappy for long; as soon as the heel gets his hard-fought victory, have another face [[note]]preferably one who is perceived to be tougher than the one the heel was feuding with previously[[/note]] show up and let everybody know his intentions to take down the heel. This will give your fans something to look forward to. Just make sure that their patience is eventually rewarded.
122*** Make sure the heel is allowed to win some feuds. If fans begin to realize that a heel always loses the payoff match to a feud, like 2017 Wrestling/BrayWyatt, he still looks weak even if he can win matches during feuds. When a heel loses a feud, he needs a way to get his momentum back so he doesn't end up as a HarmlessVillain that everyone knows poses no threat.
123** However, keep in mind that while it's fine for the heel to have the upper hand in a feud, this does '''''not''''' mean that the ''entire'' build of the feud can be nothing but the heel humiliating, outfighting, outsmarting, and generally making the face look like a weakling fool before the face eventually wins the blow-off match with a suprise roll-up. While this can work up to a point, when overdone (and it does ''not'' need to go on long to be overdone) this doesn't generate "heat" that makes the audience want to see the heel beaten, or "sympathy" that makes them want to see the face triumph, it just makes the face look like a loser who they shouldn't care about and kills all investment in the feud. The [[ArcFatigue comically overdrawn]] 2021-22 feud between Wrestling/{{Naomi|Wrestler}} and Wrestling/SonyaDeville went on for over ''half a year'' with heel authority figure Sonya mercilessly bullying Naomi, denying her opportunities, putting her in matches with herself as the crooked guest referee to screw her, and generally making her life hell for no real reason, while Naomi just stood there and took it for ''months'', making the 2-time [=SmackDown=] Women's Champion look like the most pathetic babyface of all time, and the feud become possibly the worst thing on [=SmackDown=] at the time- but at least the feud had a payoff with DeVille being stripped of her power as an authority figure.
124** [[WrestlingMonster Monster pushes]] (of either heels or faces) are perfectly acceptable. The monster wrestler should be fed a steady diet of {{jobber}}s to destroy; avoid having the monster fight main-eventers anywhere except PPV main events. A monster should be fed mid-carders at PPV before main-eventers. Failure to do so will result in the angle hot-shotting. Mid-carders due to lose to the monster wrestler should be pushed hard for a while before their loss to the monster, which will help the monster establish credibility. The monster’s loss must be used to elevate someone - it is a serious thing to take down a monster.
125*** Poor buildup of a WrestlingMonster was a mistake that Wrestling/AllEliteWrestling made early in its run. The company set Nyla Rose up to be the monster heel of their women's division by having her beat [[Wrestling/KiaStevens Awesome Kong]] and put her into the match to decide the first AEW Women's Champion against Riho, a woman who is half her size and [[OlderThanTheyLook looks about half her age]]... which Rose lost cleanly. It would have been a great way to give Riho some momentum if it hadn't come at AEW's ''first ever episode of television''. Instead of putting Riho over, all it did was bury Rose because she didn't have enough credibility built up as a WrestlingMonster.
126# {{Squash match}}es are perfectly acceptable. Someone has to look at the lights, and if every match is a near-even 20-minute contest no one ever stands out. Be wary of using squash matches too often, though; they're predictable. Use them as the tool they are — they elevate those wrestlers you want to be main-eventers or mid-carders.
127# [[GarbageWrestler Hardcore matches]] should be used sparingly. Beyond overplaying a gimmick, hardcore matches can destroy the bodies of those involved; just ask Wrestling/MickFoley, or look at the gravestones of Wrestling/ChrisBenoit and his wife and son. Another danger is the [[LensmanArmsRace increasingly dangerous stunts]] people will pull to get reactions out of a desensitized crowd. Use them as a blow-off to a bloody feud and promote the hell out of them so your wrestlers won't feel like they're sacrificing a lot for nothing. More harmless stunts like table bumps or blading can be used more frequently. Unprotected hits to the head and Wrestling/NewJack-esque falls from a forty-foot scaffold should ''never'' be used; fans care about the wrestlers, and watching them get crippled will shock and scare away all but the most extreme fans.
128** You must also be aware that in the modern age, fans have also become more knowledgeable about the effects and tragedies that befall their beloved heroes, and are quick to voice their outrage at unnecessary injuries meant to shock the audience. In the early days of AEW, Wrestling/CodyRhodes took a single chairshot to the head, using what was supposed to be a gimmicked chair that was designed to crumple around his head and cause minimal damage. When the gimmick instead accidentally gashed his head open and required Cody to get stitches (but did not sustain brain injury), a veritable wave of internet backlash forced his fellow bookers to immediately break kayfabe afterwards to explain the situation, which still resulted in criticisms for them even tacitly encouraging (or re-encouraging) these kinds of spots, as unprotected chair shots to the head had been banned for years in most major wrestling companies. To their credit, it was the first and last time the promotion ever attempted such a stunt.
129** Another reason why weapon spots and bumps shouldn't be overdone is to protect the impact of them. If wrestlers are constantly taking chair shots, for instance, multiple times each week, then weapons and hardcore spots become less extraordinary acts of violence for feuds that necessitate such a reaction and are folded into the standard repertoire of your matches, which is the quickest way to desensitize the crowd and lead to SerialEscalation as wrestlers move on to more ridiculous-looking bumps that are more dangerous to the athletes as they try to get a rise out of an increasingly jaded crowd. If you make it clear that weapon use is rare and unusual, and only confined to moments that deserve it, your fans will treat even simple spots like big deals. And it goes without saying that the wrestlers themselves should also treat the hardcore spots like big deals--{{no sell}}ing weapon shots is one of the quickest ways to turn a devastating foreign object into a joke. Early in its run, Wrestling/{{AEW}} ''Collision'' did an angle where Wrestling/SamoaJoe slammed Wrestling/RoderickStrong onto a chair in the ring to get inside the head of Wrestling/CMPunk, and the show was brought to a halt as Strong was wheeled out on a backboard and stretcher. While the angle worked fine in isolation, critics pointed out that years of seeing wrestlers Strong's size or smaller, including women, take similar bumps during matches with little lasting effect made the seriousness with which the angle was played come across as a bit silly.
130# When ordering the card, the opening match and main event are always the two most important segments. The opener gets your crowd pumped and sets the bar for the quality of matches they can expect to see. If your opening match is weak, the expectation is that the rest of the card will be too. The main event is what closes out the night and showcases your best performers; you want to finish on a high note. In between, you can utilize other highs and lows (squash matches, promos, mid-card matches, grudge matches, comedy), but the overall feel of the show should be consistent.
131** Extra emphasis on ''"opening match '''and''' main event"'', and ''"the overall feel of the show should be consistent"''. One of the main criticisms of ''Wrestling/{{Backlash}} 2018'' is that it had a strong opener (the IC match between Wrestling/SethRollins and Wrestling/TheMiz) but the rest of the show was extremely subpar, to the point that, when the time came for the (also underwhelming) main event, people were ''exiting the arena''. Putting the opener aside, it was a consistent show, [[GoneHorriblyWrong but for all the wrong reasons]].
132** Another point to bear in mind are the cooldown moments: the hottest points of the card must be followed with either matches or segments that allow the people to vent steam off and prevent boredom before the next hot match. This was a point of criticism of [[Awesome/WWENXTTakeOver the otherwise excellent]] ''[[Wrestling/{{WWENXT}} NXT TakeOver]]'' [=PPVs=], ''NXT [=TakeOver=]: Brooklyn 1'' in particular: having to follow the [[Wrestling/TheWrestlingObserverNewsletter four-and-a-half-star-rated]] match between Sasha Banks and Bayley was [[OvershadowedByAwesome what dragged down]] the also excellent Ladder match between [[Wrestling/FergalDevitt Finn Bálor]] and [[Wrestling/KevinSteen Kevin Owens]], which would normally be a show-stealing match. Another example is 2018's ''NXT [=TakeOver=]: New Orléans'': having to follow the bone-crushingly awesome, [[ToughActToFollow five-star rated]] seven-man Ladder Match for the ''NXT North American Title'' was what dragged down the ''Dusty Rhodes Tag-Team Classic'' final between Roderick Strong/Pete Dunne vs. Wrestling/TheUndisputedEra.[[note]]Some people even joked that the match dragged down the show by [[OvershadowedByAwesome "merely being very good"]].[[/note]] Contrast with the WWE main roster [=PPVs=] and shows, which intercalate minor matches and comedy spots/backstage interviews between the big fights.
133# Authority figures can be done well or badly, whether as heels or as faces.
134** A good face authority figure, like Wrestling/TeddyLong or Jack Tunney, makes fair matches, stays out of the way, and handles stipulations and personnel decisions only when someone has clearly gotten out of hand. This usually benefits the faces by virtue of blocking some underhanded tactic by a heel, but as the figure is not inherently biased towards the faces, it sometimes can go the other way around if the story involves a heel having a legitimate gripe.
135** A bad face authority figure, like Wrestling/TripleH in 2011 or Wrestling/AJLee in 2012, becomes the center of attention and seemingly goes out of their way to stick it to the heels to the point that fans start viewing the heels as sympathetic and the faces as advantaged and opportunistic, or alternatively is so utterly incompetent and commands so little respect that the heels get to walk all over them as if they weren't even there.
136** A good heel authority figure and a bad heel authority figure both have in common that they abuse their power against faces and thus must be taken down a peg or two and, ultimately, either removed from power or have their schemes defeated in order to reel them back in line until the next EvilPlan. The difference between the two is that the good heel boss (i.e Wrestling/VinceMcMahon) is occasionally beaten down, humiliated, called on their garbage, or even strongly opposed enough to represent that the wrestlers they're kicking down actually have a spine, which makes people want to root for said wrestler. The bad heel boss, on the other hand, is one of two extremes: either the humiliation is [[Wrestling/JerryLawler too frequent]] and [[Wrestling/JohnCena too childish]] for them to come off as anything more than [[Wrestling/VickieGuerrero sympathetic bosses]] dealing with popular bullying "faces" who must be kept in line, or [[Wrestling/StephanieMcMahon the opposite takes place]] and they get to freely condescend the roster without blowback, almost always have their way, never take any losses, and have some internal connections or demographic cards they can deploy as a reason to shame their oppressed enemies into compliance and silence, to the point that the show ends up cast in ArcFatigue or even TooBleakStoppedCaring because [[Wrestling/TheAuthority they and their proxies]] [[InvincibleVillain can seemingly never lose]].
137** If you're gonna book yourself as an evil owner, at least try to look like you have money. Unless you're booking the [[FunWithAcronyms Welfare Wrestling Federation]], waddling into the ring in Crocs shoes and sweatpants makes you look like a hobo. This goes a long way toward helping your company's image and maintaining {{kayfabe}}.
138** Regardless of how you book any kayfabe 'General Manager' (BigBad 'Evil Owner', a BigGood face, a ReasonableAuthorityFigure, an ObstructiveBureaucrat or a simple MissionControl), keep an AuthorsSavingThrow in hand by setting up someone who has more kayfabe power than the day to day GM. This can range from the owner of the company, someone who represents the 'Network' if you are televised, or even yourself if you prefer to stay backstage. This should be used extremely rarely and for the most part only when RealLifeWritesThePlot. For example, if you book a long Women's title feud involving your best female wrestlers, your heel DarkActionGirl and the face CuteBruiser, and the women come to you and say they want to work a ladder match, you say fine, the GM announces it and promotes it, only for one of them to get legit injured bad enough that they can't do any of the ladder spots, but not badly enough to stop the match, you use the AuthorsSavingThrow to turn it into another type of match like a Hair vs. Hair match.
139** If the person playing the evil owner on TV is the actual owner of the promotion, that's perfectly fine, as it adds RealitySubtext to the role. But don't acknowledge someone who's a member of the company management in real life as also being so in {{Kayfabe}} unless you plan on doing something with it. There's a reason that Wrestling/DustyRhodes and Bill Watts went out of their way to hide their positions as bookers and part-owners of WCW and Mid-South Wrestling, for instance--in both cases, nothing would kill their pushes as blue-collar babyfaces as quickly as finding out they actually owned the promotion they were supposed to have fought to earn their spot in. Even Wrestling/VinceMcMahon, the TropeCodifier of the evil owner gimmick, didn't acknowledge his ownership of the then-WWF for years before it became necessary to work it into an angle. For an example of how to do this incorrectly, look no further than Wrestling/JeffJarrett in TNA, who was openly acknowledged as the company's owner and therefore had his babyface world title reigns come off as a VanityProject of the highest order, or Wrestling/CodyRhodes, who in 2021 went from one of the hottest babyfaces in the world to one of the most reviled when it started to look like he was winning matches he had no business winning simply because of his power as a founder of AEW. It can even backfire ''if'' you're trying to be a heel about it and [[XPacHeat turn into go-away heat]]; fans who watched during the "Reign of Terror" era ''still'' haven't forgiven Wrestling/TripleH for dominating the company's main event scene for years because he was married to the boss's daughter.
140# If you're a small promotion (and let's face it, if you're reading this it's safe to assume you're not part of the WWE booking team), your options are to try and copy the big promotions (and it's gonna be an uphill battle to try and beat WWE or even Ring of Honor at their own game), or find your own niche by doing something they don't. For example, Wrestling/{{CZW}} specializes in hardcore wrestling that WWE doesn't do in the PG era, while Wrestling/{{Chikara}} went for a more lighthearted, even comedic approach before going under for reasons unrelated to its style.
141# Building good working relations with other promotions is important; it lets you get acquainted with wrestlers that you might want to sign in the future and opens the door for you [[CrossOver to book their wrestlers]] and use them to draw more eyes to your product. The height of the Wrestling/NationalWrestlingAlliance was also the financial height of the professional wrestling industry precisely because of promotional cooperation, shaky as it was, with the WWF and its most famous competitors, [[Wrestling/AmericanWrestlingAssociation AWA]], Wrestling/{{WCW}} and Wrestling/{{ECW}}, all rising up from NWA offshoots to form their own companies. Failure to continue to work together resulted in a monopolized region that only one company really benefitted from.
142** However, you need to remember to use the wrestlers from other promotions to put your own wrestlers over and not the other way around. This means using crossover wrestlers sparingly, and always making sure that your wrestlers look strong against them, whether in victory or defeat. This is the difference between Wrestling/{{WWE}} main-roster talent making unscheduled one-night-only appearances in [[Wrestling/{{WWENXT}} NXT]] and making the developmental wrestlers look like a million bucks with competitive matches, and Wrestling/RingOfHonor, which regularly booked Wrestling/NewJapanProWrestling talent as the focal points of their big events and pushed them so much that it made their own wrestlers come off as second-class by comparison (and ultimately killed that promotion when New Japan decided that they'd rather run their own shows in America than go through a middleman). New Japan's wrestlers dominating the homegrown talent of the Wrestling/UniversalWrestlingFederation made New Japan a lot of money and put the UWF, which had been doing million dollar gates prior, out of business. Remember, while you need to make the borrowed talent look good, they are, at the end of the day, borrowed talent.
143** Another thing of note is that promotional partnerships need to be treated with honor to continue, something that [[Wrestling/ImpactWrestling TNA]] completely forgot within a handful of years of its existence. Their treatment of the NWA, who actually helped establish them in the first place, was especially bad. Originally founded as an NWA offshoot before losing the label in 2004, TNA maintained a five-year deal from the outset of their existence in June 2002 for provisional control of the NWA Worlds Heavyweight Championship and the NWA World Tag Team Championship. When that deal set to come to a close in the summer of 2007, the plan was to vacate the NWA Worlds Heavyweight Championship at May's ''Sacrifice'' pay-per-view through then-reigning champion Wrestling/{{Christian}}'s failure to defend the title against Wrestling/KurtAngle and Wrestling/{{Sting}} (Angle made Sting tap out while Sting pinned Christian at the same time), then activate a brand-new TNA World Heavyweight Championship the following month at Slammiversary to make Angle champion However, rather than protect a good working relationship with the NWA until the very end, which most likely would've included Christian putting over whoever the NWA decided to make its first post-TNA champion, TNA were boneheaded enough to allow/encourage Christian to refuse to defend the title at outside events against challengers from NWA territories during his reign, taking for granted that the NWA wouldn't do anything about it since the deal was almost over anyway. Because of this, the NWA officially declared the championships under TNA's watch vacant ''the day of Sacrifice''. Still, rather than make a surprise reveal, introduce the TNA belts that night and make sure both came away with decisive finishes, TNA were too stubborn to change their plans, opting instead to simply refer to both titles nebulously as the "World Tag Team Championship" and "World Heavyweight Championship" without a company prefix while continuing with the exact same plans, despite it being obvious to anyone working there that the matches would have to be ''de facto'' {{retcon}}ed from being the last NWA title matches in TNA history to the first matches for the TNA championships once those belts were revealed later. While this was fine for the tag titles because [[Wrestling/TheDudleyBoyz Team 3D]] were meant to retain champ status through the transition, the heavyweight title goes down in history as having been vacated for a whole month as a result of its inaugural match having a dirty finish. As elaborated above, this did not help the value of their brand.
144*** There ''have'' been examples in the industry's history, of course, where cruel backstabbing worked out. It's a cutthroat business. But for every Paul Heyman that goes down in history for a sufficiently-spectacular betrayal, as when he and ECW champion Shane Douglas gained notoriety by literally dropping the NWA title to the ground in favor of the ECW title, giving their own promotion cred at the expense of the ailing NWA, there're many others who just out themselves as untrustworthy types. The price of being an outlaw is being outside the law's protection, and if you get a reputation as a slippery customer don't be surprised if other promotions refuse your custom.
145# It should go without saying that you shouldn't put all your eggs in one basket. A single wrestler can be booked as the [[TheAce "top guy"]], but there needs to be other credible challengers for that position. A wrestler can't be taken seriously as the number one in the promotion unless they have victories over credible opposition. Likewise, a midcarder can't be elevated to main-eventer if there isn't more than one top wrestler that can put him over. Having more than one top wrestler also helps with overexposure--if the fans grow tired of one wrestler being booked as number one, another wrestler of similar status can take his place.
146** Wrestling/{{WWE}} has both periods of success and failure at building stars:
147*** On one hand, Wrestling/StoneColdSteveAustin's success as the top wrestler during the Attitude Era can be attributed to the amount of credible wrestlers he fought and defeated, including but not limited to every other name that will be mentioned on this bullet. First, Austin could not have gotten a better launching pad for his top face run than the 21-month period between King of the Ring in 1996 to WWF Champion at the end of [=WrestleMania XIV=] in 1998 featuring victories and defining moments against the likes of Wrestling/JakeRoberts, Wrestling/BretHart, and Wrestling/ShawnMichaels among others. Following that, the depth of the main event scene would blossom to unseen levels, allowing wrestlers such as Austin, [[Wrestling/DwayneJohnson The Rock]], Wrestling/TheUndertaker, Wrestling/{{Kane}}, Wrestling/TripleH, Wrestling/KurtAngle, and Wrestling/ChrisJericho to take turns at being the number one wrestler in the company, while simultaneously putting each other over. Hell, Wrestling/MickFoley, ''the'' guy who was so beloved [[FingerpokeOfDoom he started WCW's downfall]], and Undertaker, whose name is synonymous with the term "LivingLegend", were considered top draws, and they never actually won the big belt that much or held it for very long. This period also had possibly the strongest undercard roster ever, with legends like Wrestling/TheDudleyBoys, The [[Wrestling/MattHardy Hardy]] [[Wrestling/JeffHardy Boyz]], Wrestling/{{Edge|Wrestler}} and Wrestling/{{Christian}}, Wrestling/WilliamRegal, Wrestling/DeanMalenko, Wrestling/ChrisBenoit, Wrestling/EddieGuerrero, and a whole host of Hall of Famers being popular draws and credible threats to give even the top stars a run for their money, and some even replacing them further down the road.
148*** On the other hand, there have been many periods where one wrestler hogs the spotlight to the detriment of the other talent. Wrestling/HulkHogan was such a spotlight hog and so unbeatable in late-[=80s=] and early-[=90s=] WWF that it began to hurt the careers of not only the heels that were constantly losing to him, like Wrestling/TedDiBiase and Wrestling/CurtHennig, but also the other faces like Wrestling/RandySavage who weren't allowed to have sustained runs at the top of the company. WWF put so much faith in Hogan that his 1993 departure resulted in the company entering a sustained financial downturn because they hadn't built any stars that could take his place (see the failures that were Wrestling/UltimateWarrior[[note]]a fine enough superstar, but too eccentric and strange to resonate in the same manner as Hogan[[/note]] and Wrestling/LexLuger[[note]]a man whose entire career as a babyface ranges from "Sting's friend" to "absolutely miscast"[[/note]] to replicate/replace Hulkamania).
149*** Sidenote: History has shown that legends such as UsefulNotes/MuhammadAli and UsefulNotes/MichaelJordan earned their statuses not only through to their own talent, but by the caliber of their competition. Ali had George Foreman and Joe Frazier, and Jordan and his Bulls had UsefulNotes/MagicJohnson's Lakers, Patrick Ewing's Knicks, Isiah Thomas' Pistons, and the John Stockton/Karl Malone Jazz. Creator/MikeTyson has a lesser reputation because despite his technical prowess and power, there was never anyone credible enough to match him in his prime (Evander Holyfield came along, but that was ruined when Tyson bit his ear off). The WWE was at its strongest when the upper-tier roster was packed with talent, and at its lowest when it wasn't (King Mabel vs Savio Vega as your Wrestling/KingOfTheRing tournament final, anyone?)[[note]]The actual main event of that evening, a tag team match where [[Wrestling/KevinNash Diesel]] and Wrestling/BamBamBigelow defeated [[Wrestling/SidEudy Sycho Sid]] and Wrestling/{{Tatanka}}, didn't exactly set the world on fire either.[[/note]] The point here is that the more people you build and sustain to compete for your championships, the more you stand a chance of creating exciting matches, long feuds, and other money-making opportunities. %% Thomas' first name is indeed Isiah, not Isaiah.
150** In the 21st century, WWE returned to a one-guy formula, with first John Cena, then later Roman Reigns and Wrestling/CharlotteFlair being subjected to TheChosenOne status.
151*** While Cena had originally worked his way into part of a one-two formula with Batista and eventually won out due to higher durability, once he became the main man it was made abundantly clear that the product revolved around making him look good at the expense of all else. Feuds and promos were repeatedly marked with moments where Cena discredited his rivals with {{worked shoot}}s and occasionally committed worse acts than the heels he was facing with it all being whitewashed, standing in stark contrast with his [[DesignatedHero "Hustle, Loyalty, Respect" image]], while logical responses and call-outs said rivals could've and did make of both the worked shoot and {{kayfabe}} variety were either shot down by commentary or glaringly not even stated at all. Heel commentators such as Wrestling/JohnBradshawLayfield and 2012 Wrestling/MichaelCole would go out of their way to avoid disparaging Cena like they would other faces, and of his increasingly-rare defeats, more would actually come from a lapse of judgment on his own part which he could later use as an excuse to get his run back than from outside interference which would've justified him regardless.
152*** Reigns was much more obviously hand-picked from the jump, winning most of his matches in FCW, being talked-up as a superstar during his brief run on NXT, being the essential closer for The Shield, and being slated to beat Brock Lesnar for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship less than a year after The Shield's breakup. While the DesignatedHero business was certainly cut down upon since he wasn't as gifted on the microphone as Cena and was carrying a persona that was more fierce warrior than boy scout, his contrived invincibility and inability to project a real persona besides occasional smugness still had a way of putting people off. It didn't help that he was constantly beating guys who were better than him at both cutting promos and working matches in a way that made fans connect with the moves they were doing. The most glaring indication of Reigns' anointed position as The Guy regardless of his readiness or the talent around him was him being repeatedly pushed above everyone who gained a hot hand with the fans over the years as being the one destined to dethrone Brock Lesnar for good to herald the arrival of the new era. This failed every single time, resulting in Vince stalling and going for alternate options, before finally pulling the trigger in the middle of 2018 after months of cynically-conceived worked shoots and false starts due to fear of Reigns getting booed had rendered the whole thing meaningless.
153** Wrestling/NewJapanProWrestling has always had a good track record with building multiple main event stars and using them to elevate new ones. Wrestling/HiroshiTanahashi became the face of the promotion in the mid-[=2000s=] thanks to his victories over Wrestling/YujiNagata, Wrestling/ShinsukeNakamura, and Wrestling/KeijiMutoh, among others. Likewise, Wrestling/KazuchikaOkada made his climb to his current status by beating Tanahashi, Nakamura, and Wrestling/MinoruSuzuki. And following him, Wrestling/KennyOmega became a star by defeating Okada and Tanahashi, as well as ousting Wrestling/AJStyles from his top position in Bullet Club. Wrestling/JayWhite became the most consistent gatherer of heel heat in the business by defeating Omega, Okada, and Tanahashi, as well as significantly shifting the dynamic of all three men's alliances through a long game coordinated with the Tongan members of Bullet Club.
154** Putting all the eggs in one basket nearly killed pro wrestling in the UK for two decades. Joint Promotions, the company behind World of Sport Wrestling in the [=70s=], made the gargantuan Big Daddy the top babyface of the promotion, but his age, weight, and poor conditioning meant he couldn't wrestle long matches. Joint's solution was to have him [[SquashMatch defeat his opponents extremely quickly]], or use him in tag matches where [[RickyMorton his partner would do all the work]], but he would come in at the last second and get the pin. Making him stand head-and-shoulders above all the other wrestlers killed the company, as when he retired the only wrestlers left were heels who had been squashed by him or babyfaces who had played second fiddle to him; most of the wrestlers who Joint could have built the promotion around (such as Wrestling/DaveyBoySmith or Wrestling/WilliamRegal) [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere had already left for greener pastures]].
155# Promos are an important part of even non-staged combat sports like boxing and MMA, and they play an important role in buoying interest in your product. How much control you should exert over them is a bit of a delicate balancing act. On one hand, most of your talents were probably hired for their ability to wrestle rather than improvise dialogue, and might not be able to create entire promos on their own, leaving many excellent wrestlers but poor talkers out in the cold, while talented talkers might try to wrest control of the show by [[WorkedShoot going wildly off-angle]]. On the other hand, WWE is often criticized for having long, dull, repetitive promo segments during what's supposed to be a wrestling show, and for trying to tightly control wrestlers with scripted promos written by people with more experience in soap operas than combat sports, while talents who might be able to get over with their own personalities are stuck woodenly trying to recite bad jokes from a memorized script, and/or all sound alike. The great promo men of yesteryear would be given a list of bullet points to work off, and would use them to get the audience invested in ways that still let them put their own creative spins on the material and show off their own unique personalities and charisma. If they have these natural qualities, giving them the right amount of free will during promos will do more to get them over than any number of staid monologues, and will result in a benefit for both wrestlers (leaving them feeling creatively fulfilled) and the audience (who will be more invested in them), and therefore increasing the chances of giving you money. Refer to Employee Relations, rule 3.
156** If you do have a guy who's good at wrestling but not talking, feel free to put him in a stable or give him a manager or mouthpiece, a guy who excels at talking who can speak for him. This was a time-tested solution for most of wrestling's history, and the only reason the practice is not more prominent on the modern scene is that (you may be sensing a trend here) Vince [=McMahon=] didn't like the idea of paying two guys instead of one once upon a time and convinced himself the whole idea was bad. And even he lets Wrestling/PaulHeyman do the talking for Wrestling/BrockLesnar. This is somewhat pigeonholed as a heel arrangement in modern times, but great face managers have existed in the past, including, sometimes, the late great Wrestling/PaulBearer.
157** Also, remember that the point of the promo is not to talk about how weak or foolish the wrestler's adversary is. The point of the promo is ''[[MoneyDearBoy to sell the show]]'' (remember the Golden Rule). You want the audience to know who is fighting, get invested in why they're fighting, and then you plug the date the match will be held so that people will tune in, buy tickets, or get the PPV. Belittling a wrestler not only damages their aura, not only cheapens the accomplishment of the other wrestler in defeating them, it causes audiences to not care about seeing them fight, which costs you money every time you book either performer ever again. Make sure that the promo puts over an opponent's skill, athleticism, or other qualities, ''then'' assert that the wrestler will win anyway because they're better, and give the opponent a strong comeback.
158*** This is one of the many things Wrestling/VinceMcMahon, an egotistical bully at heart, never liked and phased out during the Attitude Era, where abusive promos were the dish of the day, before abandoning it almost completely after introducing heavy scripting. Predictably, it has resulted in a stale product where no one ever gets over, every single loss feels like a burial, since it typically happens on the heels of weeks of the winner smugly telling the audience that their opponent is a loser. [[Wrestling/DwayneJohnson The Rock's]] "God Spoke to Billy" promo may have been one of the most legendary promos in wrestling, but by casting Wrestling/BillyGunn as an idiot who fluked his way into a Wrestling/KingOfTheRing tournament victory instead of presenting him as an upper-card wrestler on the cusp of superstardom who finally made a name for himself by beating the best the company had to offer, Rock essentially killed Gunn's upper-card push stone dead because no one could take him seriously as a world title contender after that.
159*** With Vince returning the product to its pre-Attitude norm of family-friendly programming and role-model hero babyfaces, this abolition of respect for the enemy in promos clashes so badly with the company's stated values that John Cena would often be accused of hypocritically undercutting his rivals with every Rock-reminiscent barb or Heyman-esque worked shoot he delivered on the mic, especially since he had more creative freedom in his promos than most wrestlers standing across from him with a microphone.
160*** For good examples, ironically, Paul Heyman himself is one of the best there is at this today; despite being most known as the advocate for ''Brock Lesnar'', one of the most freakishly-dominant wrestlers the world has ever seen, Heyman was known for invoking VillainRespect towards Lesnar's challengers, making the case that against anyone else they could be victorious to emphasize exactly how much Lesnar stood apart from everyone else. He even praised the courage of famous jobber Wrestling/HeathSlater when he came out and got in Lesnar's face during Heath's "free agent" storyline, despite Brock predictably squashing Heath flat.[[note]]On the other hand, Paul Heyman can and has been absolutely brutal in his promos. He was the final nail in the coffin of Jinder Mahal as WWE Champion, completely burying him as "not even being a worthy pretender to the throne" and not being anywhere near the same league as Lesnar. However, as the multiple references on this page would support, this was one case where everyone agrees that [[JerkassHasAPoint Heyman was entirely right]], and Jinder quickly losing the title so Brock could face AJ Styles instead was seen as an incomparable upgrade. For Heyman's part, he subsequently returned to his respectful villain form just in time to put over Styles as a worthy adversary heading into the match between Styles and Lesnar.[[/note]]
161*** Roman Reigns and Seth Rollins' Universal Championship feuds with Brock Lesnar suffered from a similar problem, to the point of betraying the very storytelling conceit that should've been the point of Lesnar's long reign in favor of stoking the flames of real-life resentment for him to provoke cheers for Reigns and Rollins.[[labelnote:*]]''"The genetic monster who broke the most legendary streak in history, turned the franchise player of the entire past decade into mincemeat, and is so dominant that if he came around more than once every blue moon there would be no other competition left here, has now established a lengthy conquest over the most prestigious title in the company."'' This should read like a first-class opportunity to choose an already-popular upper-tier player to become a made superstar for life and prove the legitimacy of his entire locker room through a story of ascension concluding with the toppling of this indomitable freak of nature known as The Beast Incarnate. By instead having The Shield constantly drag Lesnar down as being "lazy" because of his lax schedule, Vince [=McMahon=] diminished Lesnar's value as the OutsideContextProblem who's omnipresent even when visibly absent, costing WWE the opportunity to actually use Brock to elevate first that one crowd-approved rising main eventer, then the field of challengers around him, to bonafide household status, and ultimately make the entire roster and product stronger in the eyes of casual fans.[[/labelnote]]
162# Commentators and interviewers are just as important as matches, marketing, and promos. Just like promos, their main role is to get the viewer invested by explaining to them who is fighting, why they are fighting, how they are fighting, and why you should care that they are fighting. The commentator, just like in other sports, is the quickest conduit to explain wrestlers' actions and abilities to the viewer, and to get them over. Having a bloated announce desk of three or more commentators who bicker with each other or hype other segments while a match is going on do nothing for the wrestlers in the ring or the product itself.
163** Your commentators need to know enough about wrestling to call matches, but more important than that is chemistry. Good chemistry with their partner on the desk can effectively cover for a commentator's deficiencies. There is a reason that Wrestling/JerryLawler is much more fondly remembered as a commentator during the Attitude Era WWF than during the PG era WWE--his amazing chemistry with Wrestling/JimRoss on the commentary desk made for some of the most memorable lines and reactions of that decade. In contrast, his tandem with Wrestling/MichaelCole never had the same chemistry and therefore accentuated the negative qualities of both (not helped by the fact that by that time, Wrestling/VinceMcMahon was micromanaging so much that he was literally feeding them lines through their headsets).
164** Speaking of, while passing on the occasional suggestion or instruction to your commentators can be okay, try to avoid getting into the habit of constantly bombarding them with things to say over the headset. Chances are that all this will do is make them flustered and negatively affect their performances - particularly if you can't maintain your composure while speaking to them - and also prevent whatever chemistry and/or talents on the mic they may possess from getting to shine. Alternatively, if you can't shake the need to have your thoughts heard by the audience and/or determine what exactly comes out on commentary, perhaps consider taking a spot on the desk yourself.
165** Heel commentators are a common trope and can be done either really great or really terribly. A good heel commentator, such as Wrestling/JesseVentura or Wrestling/BobbyHeenan in TheEighties, uses eloquent, but ultimately [[InsaneTrollLogic severely flawed arguments]] to justify heel cheating and get more heat on the heels, and can even bring up legitimate cases of MoralMyopia concerning faces. A bad heel commentator, like 2011 Wrestling/MichaelCole, takes the spotlight away from the wrestlers by instead focusing all the attention on him- or herself. Also, as Cole's heel run proved, the heel role should never go to the play-by-play commentator.
166** Your commentators are usually going to be the first people the viewers hear, and will always be the people the viewers hear the most. As such, you should use them to give the viewers a good picture of what to expect from your wrestling: if it's supposed to be taken seriously all the time, then your commentators should attempt to stay professional, and if it's supposed to be a bit more tongue-in-cheek, they should be allowed to show that by cracking jokes and being sarcastic. Your commentators should be guiding the fans' reactions: they should get excited when you want the fans to get excited, get angry when you want the fans to get angry, laugh when you want the fans to laugh, and so on. Having commentators whose style is not suitable for the product being presented in the ring is never a good look. Even a lot of fans of AEW's commentary team do acknowledge that having a dumpy middle-aged man wearing a lucha mask calling matches in the same sarcastic style he used with Wrestling/ProWrestlingGuerrilla sitting alongside [[Wrestling/JimRoss respected]] [[Wrestling/TonySchiavone industry]] [[Wrestling/{{Tazz}} veterans]] who call the matches in the same professional way they did in WWE and WCW comes off as being very [[MoodWhiplash tonally dissonant]].
167** A special caveat goes to the role of backstage interviewers. As they're asking the wrestlers questions during their scheduled interviews, they can provide a very valuable resource for guiding a promo and making sure that the wrestler/manager being interviewed gets across what you want them to get across. Compare interviews with the legendary Wrestling/GeneOkerlund, where he asks wrestlers pointed questions designed to launch them into their promo, summarizes their responses, and even reacts with outrage to heel antics [[EveryoneHasStandards he finds especially distasteful]], to the endless cast of rotating [=WWE=] interviewers, whose role can be summarized as standing holding the microphone while the wrestler recites a scripted promo--or even worse, AEW's "interviews", which usually barely last a second before the wrestler grabs the mic and starts cutting a promo himself while the beleaguered interviewer (usually Wrestling/TonySchiavone) just stands there looking confused. If you're not actually going to ''use'' backstage interviewers, you're better off just not having them.
168** Note that you should not confuse "being professional" with "being bland". Wrestling/BobbyHeenan, Wrestling/PaulHeyman, Wrestling/JesseVentura, and many other color commentators have portrayed gimmicks behind the commentary desk. But all of them treated the wrestling that was happening in the ring as 100% serious and real because that's what WWE wanted them to do. Your commentators should be able to show personality without undermining what's going on in the ring.
169# Unless [[RealLifeWritesThePlot external, important factors force you to do so]] (see The Product, rule 8.2), '''resist the temptation to do last minute changes to your event's card'''. Especially when you decide to [[ControlFreak take control of every piece of your product down to the last detail]]. Last minute changes almost never have worked in favor of any promotion. One of the main criticisms of the WWE in the Reality and New Eras is Wrestling/VinceMcMahon's tendency to scrap entire scripts and redo everything from scratch just as either Raw or Smackdown were about to start. This not only affects your product, but also pisses off both your employees and your wrestlers, leading to bad locker room ''and'' working place morale, which is the last thing you want if you really want to have a successful promotion. There's at least [[Wrestling/RoadDogg one case]] of a former writer [[TakeThisJobAndShoveIt quitting his WWE job]] because of accumulated frustrations over this and other issues.
170** To add on to this, avoid hotshotting angles through hasty rewrites. Giving an EnsembleDarkhorse an immediate push or having a title unexpectedly change hands may draw eyes to your promotion in the short term, but having logical, long-term storytelling will get fans more invested in the angles and make the ultimate triumph all the sweeter, and will make you more money as well. This kind of storytelling was common in the territorial days, and a more modern example is Wrestling/TetsuyaNaito, who took upwards of four years to finally put aside the hate and bitterness he had toward the fans and the promotion he felt had betrayed him and finally become the champion and ace of [[Wrestling/NewJapanProWrestling NJPW]] like he was expected to be. On the opposite side, the first WWE title reign of both Wrestling/KofiKingston and [[Wrestling/BryanDanielson Daniel Bryan]] were due to hotshotting—in both cases Vince [=McMahon=] had to drastically rewrite plans for [=WrestleMania=] and put those wrestlers in to win titles with only a month of buildup. While their coronations were big moments, both of their title reigns afterwards suffered from a lack of fan investment and poor booking because they were not only hotshotted but never supposed to happen in the first place. Another example is the WWE title reign of Wrestling/JinderMahal (yes, it was such an unmitigated trainwreck that we have to mention it yet again)-- Vince saw an untapped market (India) and a wrestler with a good look[[labelnote:*]]''and'' of Indian origin, though born and raised in Calgary, he had never even ''been'' to India before the push[[/labelnote]] and immediately pushed him into a title win without any prior angles or matches to establish his credibility, to disastrous results.
171** That said, while changing short-term plans instead of hotshotting is good advice, changing ''long''term plans to take advantage of unexpected boons in popularity is worth considering, and keeping these flashes in the pan strong to see if they grow into something more is also good advice. Daniel Bryan in particular didn't just get over but ''stayed'' over, years after his initial surge of popularity, and stubbornly and staunchly refusing to capitalize on it (even trying and failing to bury him) cost WWE an awful lot of fan goodwill it could scarcely afford, while Becky Lynch's admittedly-convoluted road to [=WrestleMania=] ultimately made her the face of the company. Indeed, a major factor in the eternal backlash to Roman Reigns and Charlotte Flair was that their big pushes always seemed to coincide with times the fan favorites were being buried.
172** For an example of this done right, consider Wrestling/SamiZayn's storyline around the 2022/2023 Wrestlemania season. WWE was in a quandry, because the plan was for Wrestling/CodyRhodes to win the Royal Rumble and challenge Roman Reigns for the title belts at Wrestlemania, but Sami's lovable turn as part of Roman's Bloodline stable had become the most popular thing in the company, with Sami's charismatic and hilarious promos, coupled with his endearingly genuine personality and talented wrestling abilities, getting huge reactions from the audience. The story was saved by, first, having Roman force Sami not to participate in the Royal Rumble in advance, so that Cody's victory wasn't tainted by the crowd's anticipation of Zayn's arrival or reaction to his defeat, then, after Reigns finally drove Sami to turn against him by cruelly attempting to test his loyalty one time too many, having Cody repeatedly support Sami in the aftermath, first complementing Zayn's abilities and suggesting he would be just as honored to face Sami at Wrestlemania, then by having Sami wrestle a great match against Reigns at a secondary pay-per-view in advance of Wrestlemania in front of a hometown Canadian crowd desperate to see him win, and giving him a good storyline afterwards that complemented rather than competed with Rhodes's coming showdown with Reigns. In fact, Cody Rhodes was actively participated in Zayn's attempts to get his redemption back, something which made Cody look both [[EnlightenedSelfInterest clever and good-hearted]], since Zayn putting in a good showing against Roman's henchmen would be as much a blow against Roman's attempts to cheat as a moral victory. As a result, crowds were completely behind both of them without resenting either, and it was hailed as not only a great storytelling triumph but one of the best ways WWE has handled this sort of problem in its history. While WWE's controversial decision not to pull the trigger at [=WrestleMania=] proper (although Sami and Kevin Owens won the Tag Team titles from the Usos, Roman still wound up beating Cody the same way he always does) overshadowed the win and angered the IWC, the frustration only served to demonstrate how good the build-up really was.
173** And it almost goes without saying, but avoid ''antagonistic'' booking decisions and actively provoking the crowd by burying or damaging their popular flavors of the month, as Vince [=McMahon=] repeatedly did with both, as with the infamous 2014 and 2015 Royal Rumbles, where Daniel Bryan never showed up despite a crowd desperate to see him win, and was eliminated very early right before Goldust's entrance plastered "Shattered Dreams" on the Titantron, respectively. Both times, it instantly turned ugly, with the crowds heaping go-away heat on everyone in the match, especially 2014's final entrant Wrestling/{{Rey Mysterio|Jr}}, 2015's InvincibleVillain duo of Wrestling/BigShow and Wrestling/{{Kane}}, and both Rumbles' eventual winners (Batista and Roman Reigns).
174
175!Employee Relations
176# First and foremost, if you want your workforce to be professional, lead from the front. The history of the wrestling business is littered with criminals and psychopaths whose workforce abandoned them for greener pastures as soon as they could, because no one wants to work for an abusive bully if they can possibly help it. Verne Gagne's [[Wrestling/AmericanWrestlingAssociation AWA]] went from one of the top wrestling promotions in North America to a dying, hollowed out husk despite having arguably one of the greatest professional wrestling rosters of all time (seriously, look it up some time and see because nearly ''every'' major wrestler of the 80s or 90s got their start in the AWA) as much because Verne was, to quote Jesse Ventura, "a yeller and a screamer who didn't treat people right" as anything Vince was doing, and it meant they were all just ''itching'' to abandon him for [=McMahon=]'s federation before and after the [=WWF=] started muscling in on their territory. It also helps to have good overall business ethics in this area; the Gagnes skipping out on paying their wrestlers so they could embezzle the cash to blow on a skiing vacation sure didn't help!
177# Wrestling and circuses have a lot in common (it's no coincidence that wrestling became popular in North America thanks to its inclusion in traveling carnivals and funfairs). Some people go to a circus to see the acrobats; some go to see the animal acts; some to see the freakshows; and some to see the clowns. Similarly, some people watch wrestling for the high-flyers; some for the technical wrestlers; some for the giants and bodybuilders; some for the talkers; some for the comedy acts; and some for the angles. Every single wrestler can be somebody's favorite. Make sure that that somebody gets their money's worth by making their favorite look like they belong and deserve to be there. Give wrestlers ample opportunity with a mic to help them get fans invested, and angles to rope people in. Stories outside the main event may need to be kept simple in the name of efficiency and clarity, but never let this be an excuse to neglect them completely.
178** You might receive complaints about how certain acts, like comedy wrestlers or {{Spot Monkey}}s [[StopHavingFunGuys shouldn't be allowed in the noble sport of wrestling]]. We would like to remind you that wrestling almost always involves [[HoYay two or more people grappling and lying on top of each other in very colorful underwear]], [[ChairmanOfTheBrawl the folding chair is the most ubiquitous melee weapon in the ring]], and the progenitor of the [[TheGimmick/ProfessionalWrestling modern wrestling gimmick]] was a [[Wrestling/GeorgeWagner flamboyant, effeminate pretty boy who spritzed audiences with perfume]]. Wrestling is, has been, and always will be inherently silly, and there will always be people who like the flippy or silly acts, while some will like the technical and hard-hitting violent stuff, so if you want to diversify your portfolio to accommodate a wider audience, don't be afraid to do so.
179** In fact, there is historical precedent that emphasizing too much on 'realistic' wrestling can have detrimental effects on a wrestling company, and it was no less than the legendary Wrestling/AntonioInoki who fell victim to this. Due to the rise in popularity of MMA in Japan in the 2000s, Inoki's NJPW brought in legitimate MMA fighters and made them instant champions by beating their existing stars in shoot fights. Unfortunately, this led to [[MasterOfNone MMA that wasn't MMA enough, and pro wrestling that wasn't pro wrestling enough]], and a lot of their wrestlers became extremely disgruntled at being forced to work a legitimate style which they were not trained for while getting buried by a bunch of newcomers. The company would lose their [[Wrestling/ShinyaHashimoto top stars]] and bleed audiences due to this trend until they reverted back to their signature strong style before they could go bankrupt.
180*** An earlier comparable example was the rise of "shoot style" in New Japan in the 1990s, which was inspired by Wrestling/KarlGotch's catch-influenced style of pro wrestling and presented matches as being as close to shoot fights as possible; the downside was that a lot of wrestlers with no background in MMA became convinced that they could use this style to win legitimate fights, entered PRIDE and ended up being beaten humiliatingly by Rickson Gracie, undermining the "legit tough guy" image they had cultivated in pro wrestling. [[Wrestling/KazushiSakuraba The wrestler who did beat Gracie]] may have saved pro wrestling in Japan, but the fact he had been a jobber further exposed the shoot style ''stars'' as broken down old men carefully protected to extend their careers. Sakuraba enjoyed a push on the account of his MMA victories, but remained a mediocre worker. A little legitimacy can always bring a wrestling promotion a little more money, but it is a tool that can just as easily lose money if mishandled.
181# In regards to wrestler input into the booking process:
182** Wrestlers should have broad creative control of their appearance, moves they are allowed to do and performance[[note]]Unless you have something like a [[YouGetMeCoffee Young Boy]]-[[{{Jobber}} Young Lion]] situation, in which case it should be communicated to fans in a way that allows this section of the locker room to save face[[/note]]. Bear in mind that this is ''not'' the same as [[WagTheDirector letting them book their own matches]]. Think of a booker like a director at a movie set, and a wrestler is an actor. The actor worries about their own performance, while the director works on the big picture by managing all the other actors and performances. You, the booker/director, have your eye on the big picture, and should ultimately be the one deciding how the program flows and who should go over. By all means, take input from your wrestlers, but if you let them book the show, nine times out of ten they'll book themselves to win, no matter how magnanimous they proclaim to be, or how much they profess to make up for it later, because [[MoneyDearBoy wins mean TV time mean merch sales mean money]], and nobody would stupid enough to give up money. [[Wrestling/ImpactWrestling TNA]] [[Literature/TheDeathOfWCW and]] Wrestling/{{WCW}} are two examples of what happens when you delegate too much booking power upon a certain group of wrestlers: the undercard is stifled, programs are driven into the dirt, and your product dies a slow death.
183** A good modern example of wrestler input being taken seriously would be Wrestling/{{AEW}}, which has a roster full of young talent plucked from the indie scenes, but who were allowed to keep their silly and diverse gimmicks. So you have the goofy, kid-friendly Jungle Boy, Luchasaurus, and Marko Stunt, the egotistical asshole Wrestling/{{MJF}}, the emo, nigh-suicidal Wrestling/DarbyAllin, and the supremely lazy Wrestling/OrangeCassidy, all of whom, despite their bizarre personas, put on solid, competitive matches against veterans like Wrestling/CodyRhodes, [[Wrestling/AdrianNeville PAC]] and Wrestling/ChrisJericho. In contrast to this, WWE has a habit of constantly ignoring their wrestlers' established gimmicks (see [[Wrestling/FergalDevitt Finn Bálor]] and 'Broken' Wrestling/MattHardy), retooling their recruits into totally different packages that are more in line with their branding, and thus created a roster of samey, cookie-cutter wrestlers. Any popular outliers, like [[Wrestling/BryanDanielson Daniel Bryan]], Wrestling/{{Rusev|AndLana}}, or Wrestling/TheNewDay, are often popular ''despite'' WWE's attempts at losing them in the shuffle to suit corporate branding. As a quote floating on message boards says, "AEW focuses on the wrestlers, WWE focuses on the ''brand''".
184*** Never give your wrestlers too much control over their own matches and angles, but always, always, ''always'' be willing to listen if they come to you with ideas on how to put someone else over. Despite the views of old school wrestlers and promoters, superstardom is not a zero-sum game. The happiest problem a promoter could have is having too many talented, charismatic athletes in his employ. Just because fans cheer loudly for one guy does not mean they won't cheer just as loudly for someone else. Encourage this type of thinking and go out of your way to reward selflessness. Get your wrestlers out of the mindset of asking, "What can I do to help myself?" but "What can I do to help the company?" and "What can I do to help my fellow wrestlers?". If the company does well, then everyone wins. Wrestling/{{ECW}} went from a glorified indy promotion to the verge of joining [[Wrestling/{{WWE}} multinational billion-dollar federations]] because its owner and a strong core of talent went out of their way to build an us-against-the-world team mentality. This is also the reason that Wrestling/ChrisJericho is the absolute MVP of Wrestling/AllEliteWrestling as it was getting established, as during both his inaugural championship reign and after it he's intensely focused on building as many new stars as possible, such as Darby Allin, Jungle Boy, Scorpio Sky and Orange Cassidy.
185** Wrestlers who have charisma and other talents, but only FiveMovesOfDoom should be booked in matches where this lack of working ability should be obfuscated. For example, Wrestling/JohnCena should not be booked to throw punches, and the only time Wrestling/BigShow should be booked against a high-flyer is for the point of the match to be Big Show throwing the high-flyer around and nothing else.
186** Wrestlers who routinely stink up the ring and/or draw XPacHeat without making any effort to improve should be dropped without consideration. No matter ''who'' they are, or who they are friends with. Your business will be better for it.
187** While you should let wrestlers decide their movesets for themselves, you need to put your foot down when it comes to matters of safety. If a wrestler has proven that they can't perform a move safely, do not allow them to perform that move in the ring. Not doing so usually leads to injuries, and it's already been shown how deadly those are for your promotion. One major criticism of AEW has been their large amount of botches and injuries, which are usually caused by wrestlers being unsafe in the ring and performing flashy moves that they don't know how to give or take safely. Let your wrestlers wrestle like themselves, but, in the words of the great Wrestling/DustyRhodes, do not let them do shit that they don't know how to do.
188# Related to the above topic, [[SmallNameBigEgo backstage politickers]] [[FingerpokeOfDoom are the death of your business]]. Nothing will destroy morale and work ethic like politics backstage. Find out who the politickers are, and then find reasons to fire them. If you cannot fire them for legal reasons, then book them into oblivion; if they have no marquee value, then they have no power over you at all. If the wrestler is a drawing name and they leave you for the competition, fair enough--let them eat your ''opponent'' up from the inside. As the booker, you have personal responsibility for defining how much politics exists. Make it as low as possible, preferably zero. Good locker room morale means wrestlers who are happy to work for you, which leads to better performances, pleased fans, and more money.
189** As is true in any organization, wrestling or otherwise, politics in the workplace come into play when some workers believe (or want others to believe) that they know more than everyone else and want to spread that around. Open and honest communication is the key to curbing these tendencies. Many of Wrestling/{{WCW}}'s backstage problems were caused by secretive angles between a handful of people meant to fool other wrestlers backstage just as much as the fans, which caused trust in management to plummet. A tight lid should be kept on some angles if surprise value is a key component, but otherwise everyone should have an idea what's going on with the company.
190** Finally, if your family and friends are good at wrestling or on the mic, good! Many wrestlers come from [[WrestlingFamily dynasties that cultivate and polish talent]]. But only push them if they're getting over, not ''to'' get them over. This is the difference between the Wrestling/VonErichFamily forming the solid backbone of World Class Championship Wrestling or the Hart family doing the same for Stampede, and the WWE's use of its powerful production engine to try to get over various members of the [=McMahon=] family or how Wrestling/AllEliteWrestling constantly undermined its already shaky women's division with lots of screentime for the poorly-received Nightmare Collective because Brandi Rhodes was fronting it (even the AEW backstage realized they had a turkey on their hands with that one and quietly canceled it by putting Brandi back in her husband's feud with MJF, which actually ''was'' over). Refer to Business Ethics, rule #1, the Product, rule #4, and the Golden Rule. This is obviously emotionally hard when they are people you share a personal as well as professional relationship with, but it is important that your pushes come as a result of business rather than nepotism, cronyism and political clout in the back. Nothing attracts [[XPacHeat go-away heat]] like the belief that the recipient is only getting a push because of their relationship to you, and indulging them may actually hurt their careers long-term.
191** In the worst cases, nepotistic pushes can end up tanking a whole promotion.
192*** Nick Gulas's successful Nashville wrestling territory in TheSixties died as soon as he started pushing his obviously unfit son George as the top babyface; pissed-off wrestlers and fans left in droves for Jerry Jarrett's USWA, which eventually bought what was left of Gulas's promotion.
193*** The beginning of the end for the [[Wrestling/AmericanWrestlingAssociation AWA]] was when Verne Gagne booked his son Greg as the number one babyface (compounded by the fact that Verne never actually put the belt on Greg, which just made him look even weaker) which caused the promotion to bleed money and eventually shut down soon after.
194** Being known as a booker who will push your family members over talent that deserve it will not only greatly damage your reputation, but that of the family members who were the recipient of nepotistic pushes as well. Just look at Erik Watts, who despite being a solid tag team wrestler was never able to find steady work because he was the recipient of a massive singles push in Wrestling/{{WCW}} early in his career when he was green and botch-prone because his father was head booker.
195** There are plenty of behind-the-scenes arrangements in AEW. Many friends of the Rhodes family are (or have been) coaches, agents, managers, or producers, such as Wrestling/ArnAnderson; Tully Blanchard; Wrestling/JakeRoberts; QT Marshall (who helps run Cody Rhodes' Nightmare Factory wrestling school alongside [[Wrestling/{{Goldust}} Dustin Rhodes]]); and Wrestling/BillyGunn, whose sons Austin and Colten worked their way up the ladder to become AEW tag team champs. Perennial {{Jobber}}s Brandon Cutler and Michael Nakazawa are old friends of Wrestling/TheYoungBucks and Wrestling/KennyOmega respectively, with Cutler working as a content producer. Enlisting old acquaintances, especially ones you know who have a long track record of doing reliable, good work, is not always a bad thing. Also note that these these acquaintances and their children, such as the younger Gunns and Wrestling/{{Hook}} (son of Wrestling/{{Tazz}}), have not been given gigantic pushes, and instead have to work their way up or around the roster just like everyone else.
196** While the friendly arrangements in the back seem to have worked out well for the most part in AEW, the actual politickers themselves eventually became poisonous to the locker room, with the company ultimately feeling the absolute business end of this in the year's length of time since CM Punk finally returned to wrestling by signing with AEW. First, Cody Rhodes left the company and returned to WWE at [=WrestleMania=] 38, amidst months of rumors that he and the rest of the [=EVPs=] were at the very least no longer friends, with cryptic comments in interviews prior to his departure hinting that he foresaw an ideological clash soon hitting the locker room. During and after this came Wrestling/JayLethal's nonexistent booking and subsequent FaceHeelTurn along with Wrestling/ColtCabana's disappearance from television and reassignment to the Khan-purchased ROH, fueling rumors that Punk was using his leverage to hurt the careers of both his wife's ex-boyfriend and his former best friend. This was the backdrop of worked shoot promos from Wrestling/AdamPage towards Punk which added unnecessary acrimony in their program where Punk defeated Page for the AEW World Title, as well as Punk's retaliatory public shoot campaign against Page months after the program had ended. In the media scrum following his win over Jon Moxley at the 2022 All Out event in September, Punk continued to excoriate Page for various reasons, and even accused Omega and The Bucks of using their well-known relationships with dirt sheet journalists such as Dave Meltzer to try and sabotage him as the company's top babyface by creating the rumors that he went after Cabana's job. This led to The Elite, who, remember, are the company's ''Executive Vice Presidents'', confronting Punk and Ace Steel in the locker room, setting off Punk to spark a shoot fight backstage that ultimately saw all parties suspended and stripped of their championship titles.[[labelnote:*]]The Elite had become the inaugural AEW Trios Champions earlier that same night.[[/labelnote]] With wrestlers starting to choose sides backstage, many of them publicly, it would fall on Chris Jericho, Jon Moxley and Bryan Danielson to ensure the locker room didn't fall into chaos. This is widely seen as proof that criticism of Tony Khan as a "money mark" who seeks to befriend his favorite wrestlers and holds little to no promotional authority as a result, and that this is merely the opposite extreme of Vince [=McMahon=]'s control freak tendencies rather than a preferable alternative to such, is absolutely merited.
197# No wrestler comes into the business as a ready-made main event player. All wrestlers have to start in the lower card, and some never make it out of there. It's your job as a booker to ensure that the audience knows each wrestler's status on the card and has a reason to care about them, especially when it comes time to start elevating their position. Increasing a wrestler's status on the card is called building them because just like building anything else, it takes time and it must be done step-by-step. Wrestlers, just like any other athletes and sports teams, can only increase their profile by showing themselves to be consistently better than others that are perceived to be around their level. You cannot instantly get a wrestler over; if a {{Jobber}} has a 20-minute [[DownToTheLastPlay wire-to-wire]] match with a main eventer, it looks like a fluke that only hurts the profile of the upper-card wrestler, and even casual fans can tell it's a blatant hotshot designed as a futile attempt to make the jobber seem suddenly relevant (see The Product, rule #19 for why that's a bad idea). But if an upper-midcarder who's on the verge of breaking out takes the main eventer to the limit, then you have a new star. Building wrestlers up the right way results in a sustainable promotion full of credible wrestlers that are able to get new talent over when the time is right. You need wrestlers at every level of the card for your promotion to succeed, so make sure you give all of them the respect they deserve.
198** Treat your {{jobber}}s well. Their self-sacrifice is the cornerstone of your business, and without them looking at the lights, your main-eventer will never get over. They are brave men, willing to sell their own glory to create yours; you, your performers, and your company owe them ''everything''.
199** Guard your [[EliteMooks mid-card workers]]. Remember, their purpose is to establish the credibility of your [[SpotlightStealingSquad top-card performers]]. As a result, they get to beat {{jobber}}s, and their losses should generally be protected to ensure they can continue to build future top-stars. They should never descend to the level of jobbers. Your mid-carders should be those talented workers whose mic skills are essentially non-existent, or those who can talk a good fight, but not wrestle.
200** Crowd reactions mandate which wrestlers you choose to push: you can build up a wrestler as meticulously and carefully as possible, but if they are getting no reaction from the crowd, they're not a star or anything other than a CreatorsPet. Likewise, not pushing a lower-card act that's gotten over will only make the fans angry because they feel like their voices don't matter. Don't repeat the mistake WWE made with Wrestling/RusevAndLana over the years, an [[EnsembleDarkhorse increasingly popular]] act which never reached the heights they could've because management wasn't convinced Rusev could be worth anything more than a ForeignWrestlingHeel. He only won the United States Championship so he could put over John Cena and trade wins with Shinsuke Nakamura, was never allowed near the WWE Championship besides being a one-time transitional challenger to AJ Styles, was broken away from Lana in demeaning angles twice, and even when the Rusev Day gimmick and TagTeam with Aiden English became insanely popular nothing was done with it.
201# There is no such thing as "too old" in the wrestling business. As mentioned above, wrestlers can easily have [[RingOldies careers that span decades]]. Just like with any other job, longevity in wrestling brings with it experience and skills that are not easily replicated. Even if a wrestler is too injured or broken-down to be credible as an in-ring talent anymore, they can fulfill other on-screen roles such as manager, referee, or commentator, or they can use their knowledge to help the business as a booker, road agent, or executive, just to name a few. Never bury a wrestler for their age; implying that one of their respected leaders is a dinosaur and a relic of a bygone era will do nothing but piss the entire locker room off. Don't make the mistake of thinking that a wrestler is too old to get over and draw anymore like Vince [=McMahon=] did with Wrestling/RandySavage in the late [=80s=], or like Jim Herd did with Wrestling/RicFlair in early [=90s=] WCW. This is another thing AEW does exceptionally well, as they've brought in a number of elder statesmen of the wrestling business to play important non-wrestling roles in the company, such as Wrestling/ArnAnderson, Tully Blanchard, Wrestling/JakeRoberts, and Wrestling/{{Tazz}}, who manage or coach younger talent. Their general wellbeing is protected by not participating in actual matches, while on the rare and special occasions they do get physically involved (such as Arn hitting his iconic [[SignatureMove spinebuster]] on someone) it still [[StillGotIt generates a colossal pop]] from the pure nostalgia, while if they take a carefully-planned and protected bump (such as when Wrestling/EddieKingston knocked down Jake during a confrontation with his client Lance Archer) it can generate ''ferocious'' heat.
202** However, there is one thing you '''MUST''' remember with this: while bringing back legends of yesteryear can bring a huge nostalgia pop and a great deal of credibility by drawing on their experience, they're still the stars of ''yesteryear,'' and they should be used to help ''build'' the stars of the present, not undermine them. When WWE brought back Wrestling/{{Goldberg}} in 2016 to reignite his feud with Wrestling/BrockLesnar, [[SquashMatch squashing the Beast in 86 seconds and three moves]] at Wrestling/SurvivorSeries, the positive reaction was spectacular. When Goldberg squashed Universal Champion Wrestling/KevinOwens at ''Fastlane'' the next year, winning the Universal Championship so he could go into the rubber match with Lesnar at ''Wrestling/WrestleMania 33'' with gold on the line, the fans turned on him ''hard''. Goldberg beating Lesnar was great because both men were part-timers whose matches were special attractions, but Owens was a hard-working full-time star in the prime of his career, and Goldberg ending his championship reign (in [[SquashMatch his usual style]] too) undermined him badly. WWE ''repeated'' this mistake (arguably even ''worse'') in the build to ''[=WrestleMania=] 36'', having Goldberg squash [[Wrestling/BrayWyatt "the Fiend" Bray Wyatt]] for the Universal Championship again at a Saudi Arabia show so he could drop the belt to Wrestling/RomanReigns (which ended up being all for nothing when Roman was forced to pull out of [=WrestleMania=] by the UsefulNotes/COVID19Pandemic, forcing WWE to glibly change plans at the last second and have Goldberg lose to Wrestling/BraunStrowman instead, since they couldn't ''keep'' the belt on him any longer). Goldberg's reputation, already damaged by an atrocious match he'd had the year before where he nearly killed Wrestling/TheUndertaker (because ''both'' men were frankly too old to keep performing), was almost ruined among the IWC, but that was ''nothing'' compared to the near-crippling effect it had on "The Fiend", once the most interesting wrestler in the company, booked as an invincible monster, made to look like a joke[[note]]It didn't help that Goldberg underperformed even in the short SquashMatch, being unable to execute his Jackhammer finish and only managing to pull out a rather ordinary-looking suplex instead[[/note]]. Old wrestlers can be a valuable asset, sometimes they can even wrestle to great effect, but be very, ''very'' cautious about letting them ''win''.
203*** For a couple of quick examples of WWE doing this ''right'', in the build up to the 1000th episode of ''RAW'', mouthy heel Wrestling/HeathSlater acquired a gimmick where he'd repeatedly call out retired legends by [[BorrowedCatchphrase stepping on their catchphrases]], leading to him getting brutally squashed by Wrestling/{{Vader}}, [[Wrestling/SidEudy Psycho Sid]], Wrestling/BobBacklund and others, including ''Wrestling/{{Lita}}'' at the end. He only managed to win one match (against Wrestling/DoinkTheClown) and even then he got blindsided by Wrestling/DiamondDallasPage afterwards. Heath was chosen for this because not only is he an exceptionally safe worker and fantastic seller, able to make the legends look great while minimising any risk of injury to them, but he was also a total {{jobber}} who wouldn't be harmed by the losses (in fact, despite how weak it made him look, getting to work with so many legends arguably did his career profile some good). On the flip side, at ''Wrestling/WrestleMania XXV'', Wrestling/ChrisJericho challenged a team of old legends (Wrestling/JimmySnuka, Wrestling/RoddyPiper and Wrestling/RickySteamboat, wrestling on behalf of the retired Wrestling/RicFlair) to a 3-on-1 elimination handicap match, specifically to prove that their time was past. While Snuka and Piper sadly weren't really able to perform any more, Steamboat gave Jericho a ''huge'' [[StillGotIt run for his money]], looking like he could have credibly beaten the younger man. Steamboat's nostalgia-inducing performance impressed so much that he went on to have a short feud against Jericho, culminating in another solid match between them at ''Wrestling/{{Backlash}}'', but despite Jericho being the heel, Steamboat was still unable to beat him[[note]]except during a house show match in Greenville, South Carolina, an old NWA territory, where Jericho called an audible to put Steamboat over in front of a crowd to which he was a HomeTownHero[[/note]]- which was the correct decision, as no matter how much Steamboat had left in the tank, Jericho losing to him would have badly damaged his credibility[[note]]as it arguably did when, after winning the WM XXV match, Jericho called out actor Creator/MickeyRourke, who was seated at ringside, who proceeded to knock Jericho out, which was ''not'' a smart booking move[[/note]]. Finally, WWE managed to get it right with Goldberg on their 3rd attempt when he challenged WWE Champion Wrestling/DrewMcIntyre at the 2021 ''Wrestling/RoyalRumble'' and, after a typically short but solid match, [=McIntyre=] defeated Goldberg cleanly to retain, bolstering his credibility.
204# If you have a developmental territory, '''treat your future stars well''' and go out of your way to push them as the future of your company once they're ready. Future stars represent the future of your company, as you can't rely on your older/more experienced wrestlers forever. Do NOT make the mistake WWE has made with [[Wrestling/{{WWENXT}} NXT]] and [[Horrible/{{WWE}} several of the callouts to their main roster]], which were treated as afterthoughts after their initial runs, and some of them were treated like trash even during their first appearances. This led to the company to rely on the same old wrestlers in order to keep any semblance of cash flow. Conversely, the way the stars were treated in NXT serves as an example of what to do: in spite of the many roster cuts due to promotions/releases, NXT has managed to keep the consistency that made it one of the most well-received wrestling shows ever thanks to its booking and treatment of up-and-comer stars. The lesson here is clear: burying young talent can ''end careers''.
205** While this treatment of developmental callups only became obvious thanks to NXT's greater visibility, this sort of thing has been happening for a while. For every Wrestling/{{OVW}} success story such as Wrestling/BrockLesnar, Wrestling/{{Batista}}, Wrestling/RandyOrton, or Wrestling/JohnCena, there were many more forgettable call-ups that got buried thanks to bad gimmicks/booking, such as Wrestling/RobConway, [[Wrestling/NickDinsmore Nick Dinsmore/Eugene]], René Duprée, Wrestling/MuhammadHassan, Doug Basham, The Damaja, and every member of the Spirit Squad save [[Wrestling/DolphZiggler one]]. In a lot of cases, these wrestlers ended up so damaged by their booking on the main roster that following their departures from WWE they were stuck working small indie shows or out of wrestling altogether.
206** Conversely, if you run a developmental promotion, remember that your role is to prepare young wrestlers to work for another, larger promotion. Make sure they get trained to work the same way that they would on the main roster. Don't push wrestlers you know that the boss isn't going to like: if your parent promotion favors large power wrestlers, for instance, don't book a bunch of small technicians as the focus of your developmental territory. One reason why so many NXT callups ended up buried in TheNewTens is because Wrestling/TripleH attempted to book the brand like an independent territory, pushing wrestlers who not only didn't have the sort of look or age that Wrestling/VinceMcMahon liked, but in the case of [[Wrestling/TommasoCiampa three]] [[Wrestling/JohnnyGargano consecutive]] [[Wrestling/AdamCole champions]] had publicly expressed the desire to stay on NXT permanently and never get called up to the main roster (and by that point Vince had made such a habit of abusing, bullying, and ruining even the called up NXT stars who ''did'' fit his image of what a WWE talent ought to be once they got onto his roster, let alone those who didn't, it's hard to blame them). While NXT was still critically well-regarded for much of this time, this ended up getting Trips ousted in 2021, when Vince took over the booking of NXT himself, and led to its bizarre and much-mocked “2.0” incarnation under first Vince and Bruce Pritchard, then under Shawn Michaels.
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208!Public Relations
209# Don't have wrestlers break {{kayfabe}} under any circumstances. The same goes for you; don't ever create an angle based on [[InspiredBy real-life events]] if that story would contradict a previously established narrative. This is for the same reason that halfway through ''Film/{{Blade}}'', Wesley Snipes doesn't stop using his silly rusty voice. It breaks the WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief a story needs to work! {{Worked shoot}}s have almost never made big money. Even Creator/AndyKaufman's famous feud with Wrestling/JerryLawler initially drew less people to the arenas than usual. Nobody wants to see it; the casual fans will be horribly confused, and the {{smark}}s, the only guys who would actually be able to follow what is going on, would really rather you drop the nonsense and just put people in the ring anyway. It makes no money, and serves no purpose other than damaging your credibility with the fans. This is wrestling, not [[UsefulNotes/UltimateFightingChampionship UFC]]. While there's no need to insist that wrestlers maintain kayfabe ''outside'' of the job, as was done for much of professional wrestling's history, the fact that almost everybody knows it's a work doesn't mean that you should call attention to the fictional nature of your programs and angles. Everything that happens inside the arena and/or on camera should be treated as if it were completely real.
210** Worked shoots rarely ever make big money, but they do occasionally catch headlines in the wrestling world. Wrestling/CMPunk and Wrestling/AJLee both successfully redefined themselves off the back of worked shoots, with Punk both building his career on the independent circuit and catapulting himself to the hottest man in WWE for over a year. Unfortunately, this and the "Reality Era" branding that would kick in in subsequent years has caused everyone and their grandmother to try and strike gold with worked shoots. John Cena was infamous for using worked shoots to cut down the value of his rivals despite respect being part of his Cenation mantra, and the oft-aforementioned debacle of Roman Reigns and Seth Rollins' long-standing rivalry with Brock Lesnar over the Universal Championship is also an example of a badly-placed worked shoot angle hurting the perception of the company and its talent.
211** As if proving the point, over in NJPW, [[Wrestling/AdamPage Adam "Hangman" Page]] made an attempt to spin [[Wrestling/JayWhite "Switchblade" Jay White]] as someone unwilling to consistently defend the IWGP United States Championship across the United States... which spectacularly backfired when White responded by verbally cutting through Page and his allies within Bullet Club Elite with pinpoint precision. Hitting at every dysfunctional point in The Elite's relationship both to each other and to the larger Bullet Club as seen though NJPW, ROH, and ''WebVideo/BeingTheElite'' storylines, White gave a textbook presentation of how a well-constructed fully-immersed in-universe promo will shred apart any emotional worked shoot based on flawed logic. What's more, he seamlessly summed up the entire justification for Bullet Club's core members to mutiny against The Elite, as though he had intimate knowledge of the group's inner workings despite supposedly being part of an enemy faction. In hindsight, this foreshadowed not only the Firing Squad arc of the Bullet Club Civil War, but also his emergence as its leader once The Elite were kicked out. While Page was thinking about popping the crowd by accusing his opponent of holding a championship hostage, White was thinking ten steps ahead, feeding into not just the angle he was working at the time, but where he would be for the next two years of his career. This demonstrated the attention to detail paid by NJPW and its trueborn professional wrestlers into long-form storytelling, thus aiding both the consistency of the product and the reputation of the company.
212** Funnily enough, it would be none other than CM Punk and Adam Page themselves who would provide Exhibit A of how destructive worked shoots can be when not managed correctly. With Cody Rhodes returning to WWE amidst problems with The Elite and Jay Lethal and Colt Cabana's piss-poor booking following Punk's arrival, the locker room atmosphere had been poisoned even prior to Punk and Page's feud for the AEW World Title. Page peppered his promos with thinly veiled references alleging that Punk had intentionally sabotaged Cabana's career, which Punk took umbrage to and retaliated to with shoots of his own months later, claiming Page was a disrespectful idiot being used by executive vice presidents who go behind people's back to their friends in the wrestling media and create BS rumors to try to undermine people they don't like. This ultimately led to said executive vice presidents having a locker room fight with Punk and his trainer Ace Steel on a night when Punk and The Elite had all won championships, leading to suspensions all around including the stripping of said championships, sending the company's booking and backstage environment into a barely-salvageable tailspin.
213** There is one major exception to this rule: when dealing with very serious real-world issues. Paying tribute to dead wrestlers is a common example; the tribute shows for Wrestling/OwenHart, Wrestling/EddieGuerrero and [[Wrestling/LukeHarper Brodie Lee]][[note]]and yes, even Wrestling/ChrisBenoit before the full details on his death came to light the following day[[/note]] WWE (or, in Brodie’s case, AEW) put on after their tragic deaths were cases where stories and face/heel alignments were put aside out of respect to the departed because attempting to make a worked story out of them would be considered horribly tasteless (as it eventually was after Guerrero's respectful tribute show when WWE couldn't help itself and engaged in [[Horrible/WWEGookerAwardWinners the appalling "Eddiesploitation" angle]], considered to this day to be one of the worst things Vince [=McMahon=] ever did, and ''think'' of the ground that covers). [[ViewersAreMorons Don't treat your audience like they're stupid]]; they ''know'' what's happened in real life when the news is big enough so attempting to muddy a serious issue with kayfabe will only insult their intelligence and make them resent you.
214*** In the worst cases, the {{heel}}s who get ordered to bring up serious real-life issues can end up suffering from major consequences [[{{Misblamed}} even though they didn't come up with the lines themselves]], such as when Wrestling/{{Paige}} insulted Wrestling/{{Charlotte Flair}}'s dead brother, Wrestling/CMPunk brought up Wrestling/JerryLawler's heart attack and Wrestling/PaulBearer's death within four months of each other, or Wrestling/RandyOrton told Wrestling/ReyMysterio that Eddie was "in hell".
215*** A milder example came when Wrestling/MattHardy appeared on the fallout episode of ''AEW Dynamite'' following the PPV ''All Out 2020'', where he took a ''horrifically'' botched bump that injured him badly, and which garnered the company massive criticism for allowing the match to continue afterwards. Matt delivered a sincere shoot promo where he assured the fans that he would fully recover, apologised to both them and to his family for frightening them as well as for the match itself not living up to expectations, and told everyone that he would be back once he'd made a full recovery with the intention of focusing on his singles career. He was entirely out of character, did not attempt to work any elements of his AEW programs, angles or gimmicks into the promo (aside from assuring people that the feud with Sammy Guevara was definitely over now), and nobody ran in to attack him to "write him off" with a fake injury to let him recover, because everyone already ''knew'' why he had to take time off. After the dark shadow Matt's accident had cast over the entire ''All Out'' PPV, most people found being addressed so directly very reassuring.
216# The Internet Wrestling Community is not a HiveMind, and will complain about everything you do. [[FanDumb This is acceptable]] and [[InternetJerk their complaints are to be largely ignored]]. After all, [[UnpleasableFanbase it is impossible to please everybody]], and, unless ratings, buyrates, and live attendance plummet, then there's no reason to believe you are doing a lousy job. We are well into a millennium where most fans can be expected to find access to online devices of some sort and wrestlers promote themselves through services like the world wide web. This has resulted in a lot of people writing about wrestling on the internet, each with completely different tastes, most of them of loud and opinionated. You will piss ''somebody'' off. Accept this.
217** Now, having given you ''that'' caveat, it is also worth remembering [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wisdom_of_Crowds the Wisdom of Crowds]] — many fans want to contribute to your business being successful (that's part and parcel of being a fan!), so do not ignore them entirely. Instead, if you can afford it, have an office they can contact (preferably via email) with suggestions and feedback. Legally speaking, soliciting creative ideas from people outside the organization is a bad idea, and you should never actually use a fan's idea wholesale as part of your show (unless you like courtrooms and being forced to pay royalties, anyway), but keeping up on this, and noticing general trends in the messages received, can help you determine which angles are working and which wrestlers are getting over. Plus, having a point of contact for fans to write to goes a long way to improving public relations, and helps you avoid looking like {{real life}} {{heel}}s in the process.
218** Always remember that wherever the internet is concerned, there will always be leaks. Unless you take absurd lengths to keep ''everyone'' in the dark about your booking plans except for the wrestlers involved, and only for their own matches, you have to expect that someone, be it a performer, referee, security guard, or ring crew member, will be willing to sell out the day's planned events to some website or other just for the notoriety value. In a perfect world, it would be nice if spoilers could be kept under wraps, but it is not your responsibility to take draconian measures to make it so. As long as fans are willing to scour the web for the latest dirt, someone will be willing to provide it. In the end, they're only ruining the experience for themselves. Do not book plans at the last minute or engineer an AssPull just to blindside this one sub-group. They being who they are, there's a better than even chance they'll catch wind of it anyway, and the product will be damaged for the vast majority of your fans, who are now watching something that doesn't make thematic sense because of the haphazard change.
219# If the crowd reacts to a rivalry, it should be milked further. An interesting rivalry can lead to a series of angles that become a program in their own right. Failure to capitalize loses fan interest. If the fans are not interested in a rivalry, it must be dropped. Failure to do so will bore fans and lose fan interest, besides the fact that there's nothing fans hate more than being force-fed a rivalry they don't care about week after week. It's generally a cue for changing the channel.
220** As an extension of this, if the crowd reacts to anything hinting at a future rivalry based on a combination of talent that has presented itself, make note of this and gauge the possibility of using it in future plans. If it seems like a logical money angle, or if it causes a stir whenever you do anything that even hints at it becoming closer to a reality, USE IT.
221*** This advice seems to have gone unheeeded through an entire over-'''three-year period''' from Wrestling/KarlAnderson and Wrestling/LukeGallows’ arrival on April 11, 2016 to [[Wrestling/JonMoxley Dean Ambrose]]’s departure on April 30, 2019, during which four early pioneers of the Wrestling/NewJapanProWrestling-based yet globally-infamous Wrestling/BulletClub were all under the same payroll as the three "hounds of justice" that comprised WWE's hottest act in years in Wrestling/TheShield. While yes, the original leader of Bullet Club had to clear up all business on NXT and the traitor of The Shield couldn't turn face again until a good while after their breakup was resolved, these were things that could've been taken care of by ''[=WrestleMania=] 33'' at the earliest (using the brand split instituted in 2016 as a vehicle to buy more time if needed). This would clear the path for Bullet Club[[labelnote:*]]under whatever off-brand name WWE would have to use, such as Bálor Club, The OC, OGBC, etc.[[/labelnote]] to unite and launch a siege angle, which would eventually provoke the reunion of The Shield to feud with them, creating the closest thing WWE could produce to both NJPW vs. WWE and ''Series/SonsOfAnarchy'' vs. ''Series/AgentsOfSHIELD''. Instead Wrestling/AJStyles and [[Wrestling/FergalDevitt Finn Bálor]] were always kept on separate brands, with Anderson and Gallows only ever teaming up with one of them at a time and being booked like utter chumps when neither of them were around; whereas Ambrose and Wrestling/SethRollins would take their place next to Wrestling/RomanReigns only as clear and blatant heat [[IncrediblyLamePun shields]] with their opposition being [[PsychoRangers disparate individuals coming together to mess with them]], and the justice/military agent motifs that made them cool to begin with were reduced to a nickname and vests. Then Ambrose had a heel turn in late 2018 that was so horribly bungled up in questionable segments that all reservations Dean had had about his decision to leave WWE ceased to exist, closing the book on something that could've been a huge money maker.
222# Unless you have no plans to grow your promotion beyond a certain size, PanderingToTheBase should be avoided. While the Internet Wrestling Community and other hardcore fans will make up a vocal and important part of your fanbase, [[SilentMajority don't make the mistake of thinking all your fans are like them]]. At the very least, your wrestlers' gimmicks, motivations, and programs they're currently participating in should be understandable to those who are new to the promotion. Confining the motivations behind feuds or explanations of gimmicks to Internet videos with a fraction of the reach and interest of your product will frustrate and drive away people who aren't already fans interested your promotion, while explaining them properly and simply during the show will create a story to draw new fans in. And more new fans means more growth for your promotion, and more money for you.
223** This has been a frequent major criticism of Wrestling/AllEliteWrestling since its TV deal started. ''Wednesday Night Dynamite'' tends towards being match-heavy and promo-light. This results in wrestlers having matches or feuds built entirely on plot points from the promotion's web series, like ''AEW Dark'' or even ''WebVideo/BeingTheElite''. A TV viewer who is unfamiliar with the product, having only just tuned in or has returned to wrestling after a long absence in the excitement around a new major promotion opening up might not know these shows exist, and using them as a crutch for building their angles on the actual ''Dynamite'' television program -- as opposed to, y'know, [[ComplexityAddiction airing some of these "web segments" on]] ''[[ComplexityAddiction Dynamite]]'' [[ComplexityAddiction itself]] -- has been considered a major factor in its ratings decline after the initial surge of interest.
224** In another example of how PanderingToTheBase can hurt a product, WWE from 2014-2019 was notorious for debuting ''[[Wrestling/{{WWENXT}} NXT]]'' talent to the main roster by just having them show up without any introductory vignettes, and just assuming that the fans would be familiar with them and their gimmicks--the problem was, at that time NXT was exclusive to the subscription-based WWE Network, which many fans didn't own. Worse, many gimmicks that worked well with the small and notoriously smarky Full Sail University crowd in NXT didn't translate well to the mainstream audience, or were poorly understood and badly mishandled by Vince [=McMahon=], which, combined with bad booking, resulted in many wrestlers flopping and being pushed down the card soon after their debuts. Two extremely notable examples below:
225*** The push of [[Wrestling/FergalDevitt Finn Bálor]] at the start of the reinstated brand split. Finn made his debut in the 2016 edition of the ''WWE Draft'' and was pushed immediately into winning the Universal Championship a month after his debut. However, with no debut vignettes or promo time, and little time to establish his ability to the main-roster fans, they were just left sitting confused at to who he was and why he deserved a title shot over their favorite wrestlers. And then he gave up the Universal Championship the very next night, having suffered a shoulder injury in the match where he won it, with his return just seeing him come out for a match. With very little fanfare, his push grew cold after that for years to come. To truly regain his steam, he had to return to NXT and become a heel following his real-life wedding and honeymoon in late 2019.
226*** This arguably culminated in the lead-up to [=WrestleMania=] 35, where four popular NXT wrestlers, Wrestling/JohnnyGargano, Wrestling/TommasoCiampa, [[Wrestling/TrevorMann Ricochet]], and Wrestling/AleisterBlack were called up to try to shore up the roster's star power, to a completely dead crowd who didn't know who any of them were. Within the year, Gargano and Ciampa quietly made their way back to NXT after injuries, Aleister Black was stuck doing rambling and widely-mocked promos in a dark room because Vince [=McMahon=] didn't understand his gimmick, and Ricochet was, while moderately successful, mired in the same midcard as everyone else, and eventually got fed to [[Wrestling/BrockLesnar The Beast]] and was buried, like so many other promising talent.
227# [[AmazonBrigade Women can wrestle]], so take advantage of this. And those who aren't good wrestlers can still be interesting in other ways not exclusive to their bodies. [[{{Fanservice}} Lingerie matches and their ilk]] should be used sparingly; they're fine as a once-in-a-blue-moon BreatherEpisode type segment, but making them a staple of your product insults 51% of the population, and can therefore hurt 51% of your potential sales. [[ThereAreNoGirlsOnTheInternet Don't make the mistake of thinking your demographic is entirely either men or thirsty fangirls who only care about the men.]] Thinking long term, more female wrestling fans (especially young ones) means more girls [[AscendedFangirl wanting to become wrestlers]], which means more depth of talent in the future. Wrestling/AllJapanWomensProWrestling's incredible depth of talent in the 90s was due to hordes of Japanese schoolgirls who idolised the Crush Gals in the 80s, and before them, the Beauty Pair in the 70s.\
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229Remember rule one — you're here to sell a product to the ''fans''. If you hire good female wrestlers, and then book them like proper wrestlers, the fans will treat them like proper wrestlers. If you hire ''great'' female wrestlers and give them the green light, they may even steal the show and get a standing ovation, or even become the face of your entire company, as Wrestling/BeckyLynch was during 2019 in WWE. If you hire anyone who looks great but ''can't'' wrestle well, rather than throwing them in the ring and booking them to win matches, try hiding their weakness, possibly with a bodyguard, valet or manager role that fits their personality and range. You'll find that opens them up more to fan support as well. Wrestling/SashaBanks and [[Wrestling/RusevAndLana Lana]] can exist favorably in the same world, just as Wrestling/{{Lita}} and Wrestling/TerriRunnels did, or Wrestling/AJStyles and Wrestling/PaulHeyman do. Most fans ''want'' to see good female wrestlers and support them, and are also pretty good about interesting female non-wrestlers as well. Play to the strengths of those you book and things should work out, male or female.
230** If a non-wrestling woman decides she'd like to become a wrestler, allow her plenty of time to train and actually get good before fully transitioning her. Much of this is the difference between Wrestling/TrishStratus, who went from a model with a gift of gab and a scandalous talent scout gimmick to one of the most legendary women in WWE history, and most of WWE's manufactured attempts to reproduce Trish in later model-turned-wrestlers whose results varied from barely memorable to utterly disastrous, the most infamous example being Wrestling/EvaMarie's debacle of a career. Even good wrestlers can sometimes benefit from being introduced in a non-wrestling role and transitioning into an in-ring one after getting over, as it happened with Wrestling/{{Rosemary}} at Wrestling/ImpactWrestling.
231** In either case, don't be afraid to let the women be sexy or romantic. If they're not interested, don't try to force it (refer to Employee Relations, rule #3). Some are better at just kicking ass, some shine using guile and wit, some as innocent maidens, some in a pompous bitch role, and yes, some are better as the sexy one. Know what works for your talent, as well as the lower and upper limits of your content rating and target audience. (Wrestling tends to court a big 18-to-49-year-old demographic, so there will be room for everything. The question, of course, is how much of what.) And for God's sake, while it is important to put your talent over, do not have your [[Wrestling/{{Paige}} bab]][[Wrestling/{{CharlotteFlair}} yfa]][[Wrestling/BeckyLynch ces]], or worse, [[Wrestling/StephanieMcMahon an untouchable female authority figure]], lecture the audience about your women's division being some sort of revolution — especially if the same arena you're in [[Wrestling/SashaBanks gave a women's match]] [[Wrestling/{{Bayley}} a standing ovation]] [[Wrestling/{{WWE NXT}} within the past three days]]. People in TheNewTens and beyond are very much aware that female athletes are a thing, both inside and outside the wrestling business. Sexism and misogyny limits your audience, but so does preachy corporate {{straw feminis|t}}m (which, on top of throwing unnecessary shade at those of your fans who ''are'' men, often becomes the same thing anyway via "bigotry of low expectations").
232** On that note, if you let women compete directly with the men, ''let them get hit — '''but don't overdo it'''.'' Contrary to what many fanfiction authors believe, the day a woman who's not a WrestlingMonster, even a powerfully built one like Wrestling/BethPhoenix, beats one of the most renowned male wrestlers and badasses in the world, Wrestling/ShinsukeNakamura for example, for a World Heavyweight Championship, the match is going to be scrutinized half to death. If the man brutalized the woman and she took his every blow but beat him with FiveMovesOfDoom Wrestling/JohnCena-style, or if he didn't touch her at all because the network won't allow man-on-woman violence, you will get torn asunder and accused of unrealistic pandering to identity politics. And while it was trendy at the time for [[Wrestling/{{Umaga}} monster]] [[Wrestling/TheGreatKhali heels]] or [[Wrestling/KurtAngle jerk heels]] to beat up small-statured [[Wrestling/MariaKanellis babyface]] [[Wrestling/AshleyMassaro Divas]] (usually as a set-up for a [[Wrestling/JohnCena babyface]] [[Wrestling/JerryLawler save]]), ValuesDissonance makes it no longer acceptable to do so. Treat it like you would any other match - let both wrestlers have their ups and downs, and make it feel like both the man and the woman actually put effort into their fight.
233*** For a quick case study in booking a woman winning a traditionally male championship, look at Sexy Star winning the Wrestling/LuchaUnderground Championship in Season 3.[[note]]It was originally supposed to be Wrestling/IvelisseVelez, but she was unfortunately injured, forcing a chance in plans.[[/note]] LU had always been an intergender promotion that presented its female wrestlers as equal to the men (they weren't as ''strong'' as the male wrestlers, but were just as skilled, the same principle that gave the legendary Wrestling/{{Rey Mysterio|Jr}} a multi-decade career), but all the champions for the first 2 1/2 seasons had been male. Going into the Aztec Warfare III match, [[WrestlingMonster the unstoppable Monster Matanza]] had had a deathgrip on the title for an entire year, and absolutely ''nobody'' would believe Sexy had any chance of beating him, but Aztec Warfare was a battle royale-type match where they were able to remove the Championship from Matanza while protecting him by having about half the roster gang up on him and wear him down, eventually having him eliminated not by Sexy, but by Rey Mysterio (who Matanza then destroyed in revenge to get his heat back). However, to legitimise her win, Sexy Star had to finally overcome the ''other'' WrestlingMonster on the roster, [[TheDreaded Mil Muertes]], after he eliminated her friend and ally The Mack, leaving them the last two standing. The final sequence of the match was booked ''very carefully'' to make Sexy's win seem plausible. The sadistic and overconfident Mil Muertes passed up multiple opportunities to simply pin Sexy and win, preferring to try and brutalise her more, eventually introducing two tables and a steel chair, both of which [[HoistByHisOwnPetard Sexy was able to turn against him]], delivering several brutal headshots with the chair[[note]]This was probably the most-criticised part of the match, as headshots are dangerous and most fans no longer approve of them, but it was certainly effective[[/note]] and putting him through the tables from the top turnbuckle before hitting him with her finisher. Through a combination of Mil's overconfidence and Sexy's determination and initiative, a woman was able to win her promotion's top belt by defeating one of the biggest and most-feared men on the roster, without it seeming utterly ridiculous.
234** Female authority figures are just like male authority figures. They can be face, or they can be heel, and either one can be done very well or very badly; see The Product, rule #14. Here are a couple of suggestions to avoid going badly with it. First off, never [[Wrestling/AJLee put a woman using insanity as a gimmick]] in charge as a babyface authority figure. The gimmick, especially if popular to begin with, will take over the role and cause her to abuse her power just as badly as any heel boss would, only towards the heel side — which normally would be fine if that didn't include being their ''female boss'', emphasis on both terms. Unless the heels are trying to take over the company, you're creating a case of TheUnfairSex. Also, if a woman planned to appear in an authoritative role has a relationship to either you or the owner of the company both inside and outside {{kayfabe}}, reconsider the idea now because it is a giant red flag. The combination of being of the fairer sex and of having that relationship may cause you to protect her to the point that she can be the hypocritical babyface or condescending tyrant heel who gets away with almost everything with little to no comeuppance (whether physical or simply professional) and can even cut down and weaken the wrestlers through dominating her promos with them and constantly mentioning her sex and family ties to shut them up. No matter how good the woman is with her promos and facial expressions, this will get the company itself side-eyed. In fact, if she's too good at it, it might make it worse and cause people to believe this is the way she is in real life, which ultimately hurts your company's image. Has anyone noticed how Wrestling/StephanieMcMahon has to say in almost every press interview and stockholder meeting that she is "portraying a villainous character" almost as if she's trying to distance her business personality from her WWE kayfabe as much as humanly possible?
235** Long story short: there's a lot of room for return on investment in female talent, but that investment must be wise if it is to be made at all. If you want to throw that money away wasting and misusing your women, you'd be better off not hiring them in the first place.
236# Finally, a booker should cultivate interests outside of wrestling, specifically mainstream interests that have nothing to do with wrestling or other manly pursuits. If you become too obsessive about wrestling, you will be unable to see the forest for the trees, and your booking skills will decline. [[Wrestling/VinceMcMahon You will become convinced that certain actions are completely the right ones to take, simply because you lack the perspective.]] In the same way that you must be ruthlessly honest about your workers' abilities, you must be honest with yourself about your own. Both arrogance and excessive humility lead to errors of judgment. Just try to see the truth (and don't rely on others to provide it; have trusted advisors -- preferably ones with no conflicts of interest regarding angles -- but always follow your own vision). It is your job to be enthusiastic, but not blinkered, and it's very easy to get lost in the minutiae of a thing. Ultimately, and as with so much in life, everything in moderation.
237** And as Wrestling/VinceMcMahon has also taught us, just because you ''have'' interests outside of wrestling does not mean you should try to use your wrestling business-savvy to try and become [[OldShame say, a football or a bodybuilding promoter]]. Stick to what you do best, and maybe hire other people to run your attempts at branching out.
238** To add to this, try to keep up on what's popular with your target demographic at the moment. Use this as fodder for angles and gimmicks, and to determine which celebrities might draw attention to your product (but always make sure they will actually contribute to your core business; see Business Ethics, rule #3). For example, if pirates happen to be popular at the moment, try packaging a wrestler in a tongue-in-cheek pirate gimmick; if they can get the gimmick over, it will draw attention immediately, and if they really make it their own, it will remain over long after the fad has passed. Examples:
239*** From Western morticians to zombies to gothic warriors to demonic monsters to real fucking dudes, Wrestling/TheUndertaker from 1990 to 2003 cycled through a number of different fads, all the while coming back to a single unifying theme of vengeance and death. From 2004 on, he became a well-blended pastiche of all these fads that ultimately formed a [[TheCowl champion of cause from the shadows]] with a [[{{Psychopomp}} grim reaper image]] and occasional [[WhatTheHellHero dangerous tendencies]], much like Wrestling/{{Sting}} since 1997 but far more solitary than Sting was even then. His ability to adapt to the times both in his look and in his wrestling style ended up creating a legend that far outlives his previous aura of invincibility or any one of the appearances he took on, and those have all been memorable.
240*** Another successful example is Wrestling/TheShield: when superheroes and agent soldiers like ComicBook/TheAvengers and ComicBook/{{SHIELD}} started spiking in popularity again thanks to the Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse, what better way to debut [[Wrestling/SethRollins three]] [[Wrestling/RomanReigns solid]] [[Wrestling/JonMoxley athletes]] than to have them wreck shop dressed in riot gear declaring they're about justice and calling themselves "The Shield" while doing [[JitterCam impromptu mission reports]] instead of standardized interviews for their backstage promos?
241*** The pirate example is an example of what happens when a gimmick is either too stuck to its fad or isn't given a chance to breathe beyond it. Vince [=McMahon=] didn't understand Paul Burchill's pirate gimmick, so he had it axed within the year — right before [[Film/PiratesOfTheCaribbeanDeadMansChest the second]] ''Franchise/PiratesOfTheCaribbean'' release.
242*** [[Wrestling/DavidHeath Gangrel]] is also another such "bust": between being used ultimately as a vehicle to push Wrestling/{{Edge|Wrestler}}, being on [[Wrestling/AttitudeEra a roster]] stacked with absolute superstars including [[Wrestling/StoneColdSteveAustin two true]] [[Wrestling/DwayneJohnson franchise players]] at the same time, and the uptick in that period of the vampire genre ''not'' reaching peak territory yet (which Vince couldn't have known at the time even if he had understood the vampire thing), he never stood a chance at becoming a top star. However, as the archetype of an almost friendly yet truly menacing vampire with one of the coolest entrances of all time, with said gimmick being serving as a launching pad for several of the greatest wrestlers in his era and beyond, Gangrel has managed to attain a fairly decent cult following.
243*** It's also important to note that wrestling eras are often wildly different from their predecessors, represented most clearly by the top stars of those eras. Wrestling/BrunoSammartino was a powerhouse who appealed to Italian-Americans, Wrestling/BobBacklund a small-sized amateur legend, Wrestling/HulkHogan a cartoon, monster-slaying superhero, Wrestling/BretHart a realistic technical master, Wrestling/StoneColdSteveAustin a counter-culture, boss-fighting rebel, Wrestling/JohnCena a kid-friendly PG product, Wrestling/CMPunk a cult hero who aired real-life criticisms of WWE, [[Wrestling/BryanDanielson Daniel Bryan]] a spirited underdog from the indie scene, and Wrestling/BeckyLynch an ass-kicking, anti-authoritarian [[DistaffCounterpart female version]] of Steve Austin. The lesson here is that times always, ''always'' change, often in revolution or rejection of the previous era, and a promoter must be able to adapt with the times, or risk alienating their audiences (see, again, Wrestling/UltimateWarrior, Wrestling/LexLuger, and Wrestling/RomanReigns failing to imitate the same success of their predecessors).
244
245! A Final Note
246You might have noticed the laundry list of examples on this page pointing out all the ways WWE has ignored (and indeed is continuing to ignore) this advice. You might also think, "Well if Vince [=McMahon=] can do whatever he likes and still manage to own the biggest wrestling company in history, surely it can't be ''that'' important, can it?"
247
248First of all, you are not Vince [=McMahon=] and never will be. WWE has managed to remain uncontested at the top of the wrestling world ever since the end of the Wrestling/MondayNightWars because WCW and ECW closing down gave it a near-monopoly on the Western wrestling landscape, and monopolies are self-sustaining. Regardless of how bad its content gets, the majority of casual audience members will continue to watch WWE not because they like it, but because it's the only game left, and the only show that they know about. You do not, will not have that kind of luxury, as you almost certainly do not have the kind of established brand to tank glaring creative mistakes. During the 1980s when the NWA was still a visible presence and all throughout the Monday Night Wars in the 90s, Vince was just as beholden to the guidelines laid down here as anyone- if he had tried pulling the kinds of stunts he does today (ignoring or deliberately provoking the audience, burying crowd favorites to push his own personal picks, micromanaging every aspect of his guys' performances) back then, his company might have been the one that went out of business. It's also important to note that even back then, when Vince ''did'' put his thumb on the scales, it often cost him real money, or even caused tragedies like Wrestling/OwenHart's death due to a stupid gimmick.
249
250Secondly, even with their effective monopoly, WWE has been running into constant financial trouble over the last decade or so, with ratings and profits both falling as fans tire of his declining product quality (RAW ratings during the Monday Night Wars was usually above 4.0, but rarely cracked 3.0 in the 2010s). For every obligatory "okay, see you next week" line stating how "the angry smarks" will threaten to cancel the Network or quit watching WWE only to come back anyway out of habit and hope, millions upon millions over the past two decades have skipped right past complaints and threats and just plain tuned out of wrestling forever. The primary thing keeping the company solvent are a billion-dollar business deal with FOX that is already causing some problems as ratings slump and fail to deliver on the investment, and a particularly controversial and massively-criticized deal with the Kingdom of UsefulNotes/SaudiArabia to run propaganda shows for the regime. These things are doing long-lasting damage to the company's image and brand, even as his stubborn insistence on ignoring criticism and pushing forward on a blinkered course drives ever-more-erratic attempts to gain short-term profits at the expense of long-term stability.
251
252Thirdly, Vincent Kennedy [=McMahon=]'s creative talent is more evident as a promoter than a booker. Before his megalomaniacal micromanaging urges became irrepressible, [=McMahon=] tended to hire other men to handle the booking for the same reason he hired people to hold the cameras, play the music and wrestle the matches. He never did stop hiring good bookers altogether, but did become increasingly resistant to the word "no". While Wrestling/TheGobbledyGooker was hated by the fans, [=McMahon=] did manage to keep them interested before TheReveal and did listen when told not to give TheGimmick to anyone he actually wanted to get over (thus saving Wrestling/TheUndertaker). Contrast that with Katie Vick, which [=McMahon=] was convinced would make Wrestling/TripleH and Wrestling/{{Kane}} as big as The Rock and Steve Austin, and his decline becomes obvious.
253
254In fact, there are already two prominent examples of people who ignored most if not all of the guidelines listed above, which led to toxic locker room morale, the promotions' reputations run into the ground, and money hemorrhaging from every orifice due to bad business and booking decisions. The first was, at one time, the biggest promotion in the world and WWE's greatest threat, Horrible/{{WCW}}, whose bosses did everything they could to provoke their audience, bury favorites, and mismanage performances. They were on top of the world for two years mostly due to [[Wrestling/NewWorldOrder one great idea]], and with unlimited funding from their patron Ted Turner, they could afford to make all sorts of idiotic mistakes without worrying about the cost [[note]]Wrestling/EricBischoff chased after TV ratings by giving up big matches that people could watch for free, but eventually killed live shows and Pay-Per-Views, a.k.a. how most wrestling promotions made money. Their 'compelling storylines' were also full of cheap swerves, no satisfying payoff, and the nWo repeatedly stomping its rivals into the dirt for nearly two years, which drove TV audiences away. See ''Literature/TheDeathOfWCW'' for a comprehensive list of other mistakes WCW made that led to its downfall.[[/note]]. But when Turner could no longer fund them, and they suddenly had to actually create a good product to compete with WWE and justify their pay, the [[Wrestling/VinceRusso bookers]] went with even stupider, even crasser, even more illogical ideas, and the company very quickly died an ignoble death. The second example, and SpiritualSuccessor to WCW but without the clout or brand recognition, was [[Horrible/ImpactWrestling TNA under former boss Dixie Carter]], which went on to repeat the same, if not commit even worse, acts of idiocy.
255
256And even if, after all this, you still want to emulate Vince [=McMahon=], you should be aware that the same fate that befell WCW and TNA is catching up to WWE as well. December 2018 was the month where, RAW ratings finally fell into the previous record lows achieved by the late-1996 offerings of December 3 (1.60) and December 31 (1.50), leading to worked shoots by Seth Rollins and the [=McMahon=] family flatly admitting the product has gone bad. Still, things only continued to get worse, to the point where every few months or so you would hear about RAW hitting its lowest rating of all time. One of those cases happened in 2020, where RAW ratings fell to an abysmal 1.527 on December 14, and, most importantly a 0.41 in the key demos of 18-49, a demo that was beaten by AEW with a rating of 0.45. While sycophants might give excuses that this was a result of that night's RAW being aired opposite a major football game and the UsefulNotes/COVID19Pandemic, it still does not explain how a 40-year old company, with a long-running staple of Monday night television, and what many consider to be the largest and most talented roster in the history of wrestling, could lose to a company that was barely over a year old at this point and operating at a budget 10 times smaller.
257
258Not to be outdone in ''The Death of WWE'' pre-production material department, 2021 saw not one, not two, but ''three'' massive "Black Wednesday" roster and personnel cuts in the immediate months following a Wrestling/WrestleMania that had seen the first live gate in over a year. These releases included talents any company worth its salt would've pushed as top tier. The first round of cuts, which included the likes of Wrestling/SamoaJoe, Wrestling/MickieJames, and [[Wrestling/BillieKay The II]][[Wrestling/PeytonRoyce conics]], took place less than two weeks after [=WrestleMania=] and narrowly preceded the first teaser vignette for Wrestling/EvaMarie's return. This caused fans to bitterly assume WWE's "budget cuts" were made so they could rehire Eva, cratering any chance she had of getting over as an inspirational model-turned-wrestler babyface (despite the fact that news of her rehiring was reported as early as October 2020). The second round of cuts, headlined by Wrestling/BraunStrowman, Wrestling/AleisterBlack, and [[Wrestling/RusevAndLana Lana]], took place less than 48 hours after the May 31 episode of RAW, which had hit a non-December record low rating of ''1.41''. In response to this, the speculation bubbling underground as to whether Vince was looking to sell WWE to the highest bidder suddenly burst to the surface as the primary point of conversation about the company, completely dwarfing even the career-defining championship heel runs of Wrestling/BobbyLashley and Wrestling/RomanReigns. The third round of cuts on the 4th of November saw them dropping another 18 wrestlers, including Wrestling/KeithLee, Wrestling/KarrionKross, Wrestling/NiaJax, Wrestling/EmberMoon and, ironically, Eva Marie.[[note]]As of 2024 Samoa Joe, Aleister Black, Lana, Keith Lee, and Ember Moon are all in AEW (and Joe is their world champ), Braun Stroman, Karrion Kross, and Nia Jax have returned to WWE, Mickie James runs Ohio Valley Wrestling's women's division, The Ilconics were last seen in TNA, and Eva Marie has tried to become an actress, with little success.[[/note]] The release of Jax in particular shocked fans, who had assumed that she had a permanent position because of her family ties to Wrestling/DwayneJohnson, and proved that almost ''nobody'' on the roster was safe, driving locker room morale and faith in the company to an all-time low. (Scuttlebutt suggests that all three firings were ''intended'' to make their workforce feel unsafe, to display management's power over their workforce, but it's backfiring hard.)
259
260This, '''this''' is the result of WWE (and Vince [=McMahon=]) screwing with the fans and being so out of touch that people simply do not want to tune in anymore, and are quitting in droves. It took Vince's retirement/[[KickedUpstairs sidelining]] and HHH taking control to even begin to restore his promotion’s credibility! And if this is what happened to ''the all-powerful WWE with [=Vince McMahon=] in charge''... what do you think will happen to you and your small company?

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