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wildturkey
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I don't want to put words in your mouth so let me know if this is correct..
You think AEW partnered with TNT not because it's the most high profile option or because they gave them the best financial deal but to hurt WWEs pretaped developmental brand that first airs their on demand internet show on Wednesday? They went with TNT to have an excuse for airing on Wednesday? If AEW picked another major network that gave them a Tuesday or Thursday timeslot you honestly dont think that would have become NXTs cable TV day?
And you think I'm an AEW apologist?
I suspect that there are people in this thread younger than I am who grewup on the idea that WWE as a company is synonymous with major prowrestling and feels an intense brand loyalty as a result. There's nothing wrong with it. I'm not AEW apologist or a WWE brand loyalist
I don't understand your issue with tickets. There's an excessive demand for their shows right now because of the novelty factor and their low prices. It was impossible to get WWE tickets for major shows in the late 90s and early 00s. They didn't owe anyone an apology and neither does AEW. The Boston venue was sold through Ticketmaster who handles 90 percent of the major sporting events and concerts in the US.
I don't understand your issue with tickets. There's an excessive demand for their shows right now because of the novelty factor and their low prices. It was impossible to get WWE tickets for major shows in the late 90s and early 00s. They didn't owe anyone an apology and neither does AEW. The Boston venue was sold through Ticketmaster who handles 90 percent of the major sporting events and concerts in the US.
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Are you even remotely aware of the complaints with ticketing? Judging by your 2 replies to me on this, I'd say no.
Also have you looked at the Boston venue and what Ticketmaster is asking for tickets? Once again the answer appears to be no.
My whole point was they could've put out some bullshit press release or tweet saying they'll work with (insert company here) to make it easier for fans to get tickets. Even if they had zero intention of following through on it, they could appear to be sympathetic to those fans who were "royaly screwed". I would list myself among those fans, but I didn't see any on-sale date for Boston or Philly and even if I had, I was working and didn't have access to a computer/phone.
Your analogy is poor.
That was a different time time and Ticketmaster has had many differnet iterations of online ticketing sales since then.
Oh noes. WWE is going to go down in flames because of this!! They can't claim moral superiority, or something!!
If NCAA football started putting some of their biggest games of the week on Sunday afternoon it would be suicide. They would be hurting themselves and the NFL financially for no reason. If the NFL returned the favor and started putting a few of their biggest games on Saturday each week they would be completely justified.
I honestly think it was in everyone's best interest for AEW to work as an alternative and not compete directly with the WWE. The WWE has made it direct competition. That's the "moral highground" being lost. AEW is now justified putting a show on Friday night.
Maybe football was a bad analogy because of the gentlemen’s agreement. So let’s use a better one. So if any of the major networks have a really popular tv show is immoral for the other ones to put a show on that same time? I’m not trying to really defend the WWE I just don’t think it is immoral whatsoever and it would actually be a terrible business decision to not to try flex their muscle. Sitting by and allowing another company to try to gain viewers who normally watch your product IMO is a terrible business decision.
The term moral might have been a poor choice in words. I dont mean it in some philosophical or religious sense. My general take is that its in the interest of both companies to run parallel to one another rather than head to head.
Lets say Smackdown is getting disappointing ratings on Fox and AEW returns the favor with a show on Friday nights on the bleacher report app.
I liked comptetion in the sense of a second major company but I think they both should have avoided head to head programming. I would have been just just as critical of AEW if they choose to air on Monday or Friday. Who knows? These companies are run by people much more knowledgeable about TV than I am and maybe the controversy is good for ratings on both sides
But I think you keep missing the fact that an NXT was already on Wednesdays and in the timeslot that AEW now has. You can’t say AEW should’ve avoided going head to head programming when that’s exactly what they were doing it’s just they were on a big channel and NXT was on the network and taped.
Just because NXT was on the network and only one hour didn’t mean AEW didn’t know what they were doing chose that timeslot and that day of the week.
The term moral might have been a poor choice in words. I dont mean it in some philosophical or religious sense. My general take is that its in the interest of both companies to run parallel to one another rather than head to head.
Lets say Smackdown is getting disappointing ratings on Fox and AEW returns the favor with a show on Friday nights on the bleacher report app.
I liked comptetion in the sense of a second major company but I think they both should have avoided head to head programming. I would have been just just as critical of AEW if they choose to air on Monday or Friday. Who knows? These companies are run by people much more knowledgeable about TV than I am and maybe the controversy is good for ratings on both sides
The ticket prices are for the remaining select platnium tickets. Almost everyone in the entertainment industry (including WWE) sells platnium tickets for in demand events. Is that the complaint? If so that's an industry wide policy. It's a safeguard against scalping.
What is there apologiy supposed to be? "We'll never sell out a venue too quickly again." I wouldn't advise any entertainment company to make that promise to fans.
What's different about online ticketing now then 20 years ago? More people can buy on their smartphones rather than having to sit at a desktop computer to order over the internet? It's the same thing.
Their company's not going up in flames. Business is booming actually.
They simply wont be able to complain if AEW finds themselves in a position of power and can counterprogram against them without being completely hypocritical.
The complaint is that tickets are made available on the resale market one nanosecond after the event sells out. If, as you claim, Ticketmaster has safeguards designed to prevent scalpers from getting their hands on tickets....they're doing a piss-poor job at it.
What I'm saying is that AEW put out a tweet or press release saying they'll work with Ticketmaster to insure that fans and not scalpers get tickets to their show(s). They don't even have to do such a thing. All they have to do is say they will.
You mean like the company you claim you aren't a fanboy of...AEW?
They have sub-standard safeguards against scalpers putting tickets out on the re-sale market.
They do 90-95% of their sales online.
They have sub-standard safeguards against scalpers putting tickets out on the re-sale market.