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Jared's avatar

Thoroughly enjoyed this; it's nice to read a measured and researched peice from an actual writer as opposed to the weaponized engagement blast-of-the-day emanating from the Twitter void. Something used to happen in pop culture or sports and I'd read a fun article about it the next day on Grantland or somewhere and feel better for it. Then Twitter became the place that seemingly enhanced my pop culture and later pro-wrestling-watching experience, but now is a toxic cespool that I can't seem to stop scrolling. I find myself thinking more about how things like "AEW airing the Punk video" will be eviscerated by the trolls/blue checkmarks and shape public perception of the company for the worse rather than what my own opinions are. Do I still have them? Can I just watch Dynamite or order the PPV and enjoy it or not enjoy it without turning to my phone to see if the "masses" thought something was "good" or not? "What have I become?" to quote the coldest of the cold AEW stars... Thank you for writing this, calling Punk out on his b.s. and getting me to put some of my own nonsense into perspective, I am a fan.

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Hank Kingsley's avatar

I don't think Punk really believes in anything, he gloms onto phrases and buzzwords and has a magpie's eye for things he can take and pass off as his own. Currently he seems to be going through an 'old school' phase, for whatever that's worth. He's giving Cornette attention and in turn getting lovebombed by that particular segment, in the run-up to his AEW return he did the Steven Keirn foreword and regurgitated one of Keirn's anecdotes about Lawler settling a backstage feud as being a sign he was ready to do 'business' and 'make money'. That's the phrase he used when he came back to WWE looking like a haunted methadone clinic, I'm here to 'make money'.

Because old school guys were all about making money, not chasing acclaim right? Punk needs to reframe himself as an old school soldier because the acclaim for him wasn't there anymore. He was still a fine promo, but younger guys like MJF more than held their own. His matches were often quite enjoyable, but he couldn't hold together physically (or keep up) and it got to him psychologically.

Funnily enough I think going back to the WWE, and hanging around the performance center in particular, is going to end up costing him money in the long run. People aren't blind, they know what Punk is like, but I don't think anyone has considered what midlife crisis Punk is going to be like. He's resident in California, right? That could wind up being very expensive!

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