- MJeff
- Jun 2, 2011
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THE LIAR
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A bunch of WWE employees went on shows owned by other WWE employees to talk about AEW, and they also use the airtime of their own pre-shows to talk about AEW, but they didn't do it between 8:02 and 8:04 on their main TV during the Dude Wipes Moment Sponsored By Dude Wipes, so this is meaningfully different, somehow. I am extremely intelligent.
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Apr 11, 2024 04:09
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- Adbot
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ADBOT LOVES YOU
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Jun 6, 2024 05:03
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- Gumball Gumption
- Jan 7, 2012
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A bunch of WWE employees went on shows owned by other WWE employees to talk about AEW, and they also use the airtime of their own pre-shows to talk about AEW, but they didn't do it between 8:02 and 8:04 on their main TV during the Dude Wipes Moment Sponsored By Dude Wipes, so this is meaningfully different, somehow. I am extremely intelligent.
It's really simple. HHH can call Will a little bitch for not signing with his company. It's totally cool. What is not cool and is very petty is responding to him and making him look dumb. Bragging about choking out a coworker? Normal, healthy. Showing what actually happened? Shook baby. It's always been part of the fight game that swinging back and hitting harder makes you look like a total loser.
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Apr 11, 2024 04:12
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- MJeff
- Jun 2, 2011
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THE LIAR
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It's really simple. HHH can call Will a little bitch for not signing with his company. It's totally cool. What is not cool and is very petty is responding to him and making him look dumb. Bragging about choking out a coworker? Normal, healthy. Showing what actually happened? Shook baby. It's always been part of the fight game that swinging back and hitting harder makes you look like a total loser.
Okay, let's not go crazy here. I don't think anything resembling choking "out" happened.
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Apr 11, 2024 04:13
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- Endorph
- Jul 22, 2009
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the cm punk footage was an extremely dumb idea that does nobody any favors. nobody will care about it in a month. aew was never going to destroy and overtake wwe and if you thought it ever had even the remotest chance of doing that you're a mark. this makes cody rhodes a mark, as proven by wrestlemania 40. aew will continue to exist because its a nepobaby's pet project and there is no particular reason that it couldnt find some tv station willing to air it in perpetuity because it still gets pretty good ratings relative to most other TV these days, and it doesnt lose the amount of money 2000s WCW did and it has money backing it beyond the tv station it airs on, unlike WCW.
you are all freed of hope and despair. it is a wrestling show. sometimes its good, sometimes its dumb. there was never a utopia waiting for you, no matter how much you wish there was
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Apr 11, 2024 04:14
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- CarlCX
- Dec 14, 2003
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I mostly apologize on behalf of the MMA community that we let ariel helwani escape containment and now wrestling has to deal with him instigating this poo poo
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Apr 11, 2024 04:14
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- Endorph
- Jul 22, 2009
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wtf is this av
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Apr 11, 2024 04:14
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- Gumball Gumption
- Jan 7, 2012
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Drain gang
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Apr 11, 2024 04:15
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- Cavauro
- Jan 9, 2008
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av courtesy of aew utopia
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Apr 11, 2024 04:16
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- STING 64
- Oct 20, 2006
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i dont think that was anyone here
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Apr 11, 2024 04:16
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- Gumball Gumption
- Jan 7, 2012
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No, they're not wrestlers. Get into any arguments about modern lovely internet trap rap?
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Apr 11, 2024 04:17
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- C. Everett Koop
- Aug 18, 2008
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I didn't watch (because lol at watching AEW) but I can't believe the thing that everyone said was a bad idea turned out to be a bad idea. The only person who benefitted from this making TV was CM Punk and the only way he could have benefitted more was if the tape showed him getting Tony in mount and crushing him with a ground and pound for fifteen minutes.
Let me place something into context: I used to work in sports, spent a lot of time in and out of locker rooms. Once you reach a certain level of competition, where there's actual stakes to what people are playing for, there's almost always some kind of confrontation at least once a season. Sometimes it's pushing and shoving, sometimes someone grabs another person and they wrestle for a second, sometimes punches actually get thrown. It may be during practice, it may be in the locker room, once for me it happened on the bus back from a game right after we all stopped at a gas station at 2 in the morning. It lasts for maybe one to two seconds before everyone rushes in to break it up. The end result is laps for those involved, fines if those involved earn money, the coach gives one of those serious talks to the whole team afterwards, and everyone moves on. 99.9% of the time it doesn't go public because it ends up not being a big deal, and part of what makes it a big deal is that it happens somewhat regularly. I've seen it bring a team together, I've seen it finish a bad team off, I've been around teams where the tension is so thick people start wondering who's going to be the first one to start a fight. It's a thing that happens in locker rooms.
"This can't happen in a professional workspace" is what people say and I would agree. If you did this in an office or a worksite or a classroom you'd be disciplined and probably fired. But this isn't your normal workspace. Your job doesn't depend on you slamming into other people for several hours a day, either in practice or in the games themselves. You don't have to look over your shoulder for someone wanting to take your spot and your playing time and your position and your paycheck. When lives are at stake, conflict inevitably arises, the question is how do you deal with it when tensions finally reach a boiling point. A lot of it comes down to good leadership and as we've seen time and time again with Tony, even bad leadership is beyond him.
I know no one's going to read this and are instead going to tell me to shut up and go gently caress myself and eat a bullet or whatever, but that's the honest truth. Leak this footage to TMZ the day after firing Punk if you want to win an online PR slapfight, but this poo poo was embarassing and the only person who comes out looking good is the person this was supposed to embarass.
Also Shang Tsung is far better than Quan Chi, Quan hasn't won a single fight in MK while Shang Tsung nearly overook Earthrealm, plus Shang was the villain in the one good MK movie since we don't talk about Armageddon and the new one was mid at best and furthermore I
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Apr 11, 2024 04:18
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- xbilkis
- Apr 11, 2005
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god qb
me
jay hova
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I haven't read that post beyond the first line but I can authoritatively tell you it sucks rear end...hmm maybe your logic is sound
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Apr 11, 2024 04:19
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- Happiness
- Oct 10, 2004
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I didn't watch (because lol at watching AEW) but I can't believe the thing that everyone said was a bad idea turned out to be a bad idea. The only person who benefitted from this making TV was CM Punk and the only way he could have benefitted more was if the tape showed him getting Tony in mount and crushing him with a ground and pound for fifteen minutes.
Let me place something into context: I used to work in sports, spent a lot of time in and out of locker rooms. Once you reach a certain level of competition, where there's actual stakes to what people are playing for, there's almost always some kind of confrontation at least once a season. Sometimes it's pushing and shoving, sometimes someone grabs another person and they wrestle for a second, sometimes punches actually get thrown. It may be during practice, it may be in the locker room, once for me it happened on the bus back from a game right after we all stopped at a gas station at 2 in the morning. It lasts for maybe one to two seconds before everyone rushes in to break it up. The end result is laps for those involved, fines if those involved earn money, the coach gives one of those serious talks to the whole team afterwards, and everyone moves on. 99.9% of the time it doesn't go public because it ends up not being a big deal, and part of what makes it a big deal is that it happens somewhat regularly. I've seen it bring a team together, I've seen it finish a bad team off, I've been around teams where the tension is so thick people start wondering who's going to be the first one to start a fight. It's a thing that happens in locker rooms.
"This can't happen in a professional workspace" is what people say and I would agree. If you did this in an office or a worksite or a classroom you'd be disciplined and probably fired. But this isn't your normal workspace. Your job doesn't depend on you slamming into other people for several hours a day, either in practice or in the games themselves. You don't have to look over your shoulder for someone wanting to take your spot and your playing time and your position and your paycheck. When lives are at stake, conflict inevitably arises, the question is how do you deal with it when tensions finally reach a boiling point. A lot of it comes down to good leadership and as we've seen time and time again with Tony, even bad leadership is beyond him.
I know no one's going to read this and are instead going to tell me to shut up and go gently caress myself and eat a bullet or whatever, but that's the honest truth. Leak this footage to TMZ the day after firing Punk if you want to win an online PR slapfight, but this poo poo was embarassing and the only person who comes out looking good is the person this was supposed to embarass.
Also Shang Tsung is far better than Quan Chi, Quan hasn't won a single fight in MK while Shang Tsung nearly overook Earthrealm, plus Shang was the villain in the one good MK movie since we don't talk about Armageddon and the new one was mid at best and furthermore I
i benefitted because it was funny
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Apr 11, 2024 04:20
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- Skeezy
- Jul 3, 2007
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I didn't watch (because lol at watching AEW) but I can't believe the thing that everyone said was a bad idea turned out to be a bad idea. The only person who benefitted from this making TV was CM Punk and the only way he could have benefitted more was if the tape showed him getting Tony in mount and crushing him with a ground and pound for fifteen minutes.
Let me place something into context: I used to work in sports, spent a lot of time in and out of locker rooms. Once you reach a certain level of competition, where there's actual stakes to what people are playing for, there's almost always some kind of confrontation at least once a season. Sometimes it's pushing and shoving, sometimes someone grabs another person and they wrestle for a second, sometimes punches actually get thrown. It may be during practice, it may be in the locker room, once for me it happened on the bus back from a game right after we all stopped at a gas station at 2 in the morning. It lasts for maybe one to two seconds before everyone rushes in to break it up. The end result is laps for those involved, fines if those involved earn money, the coach gives one of those serious talks to the whole team afterwards, and everyone moves on. 99.9% of the time it doesn't go public because it ends up not being a big deal, and part of what makes it a big deal is that it happens somewhat regularly. I've seen it bring a team together, I've seen it finish a bad team off, I've been around teams where the tension is so thick people start wondering who's going to be the first one to start a fight. It's a thing that happens in locker rooms.
"This can't happen in a professional workspace" is what people say and I would agree. If you did this in an office or a worksite or a classroom you'd be disciplined and probably fired. But this isn't your normal workspace. Your job doesn't depend on you slamming into other people for several hours a day, either in practice or in the games themselves. You don't have to look over your shoulder for someone wanting to take your spot and your playing time and your position and your paycheck. When lives are at stake, conflict inevitably arises, the question is how do you deal with it when tensions finally reach a boiling point. A lot of it comes down to good leadership and as we've seen time and time again with Tony, even bad leadership is beyond him.
I know no one's going to read this and are instead going to tell me to shut up and go gently caress myself and eat a bullet or whatever, but that's the honest truth. Leak this footage to TMZ the day after firing Punk if you want to win an online PR slapfight, but this poo poo was embarassing and the only person who comes out looking good is the person this was supposed to embarass.
Also Shang Tsung is far better than Quan Chi, Quan hasn't won a single fight in MK while Shang Tsung nearly overook Earthrealm, plus Shang was the villain in the one good MK movie since we don't talk about Armageddon and the new one was mid at best and furthermore I
Quan this poo poo wtf
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Apr 11, 2024 04:20
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- Joey McChrist
- Aug 8, 2005
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i aint reading all of that dogshit part deux
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Apr 11, 2024 04:21
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- STING 64
- Oct 20, 2006
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I didn't watch (because lol at watching AEW) but I can't believe the thing that everyone said was a bad idea turned out to be a bad idea. The only person who benefitted from this making TV was CM Punk and the only way he could have benefitted more was if the tape showed him getting Tony in mount and crushing him with a ground and pound for fifteen minutes.
Let me place something into context: I used to work in sports, spent a lot of time in and out of locker rooms. Once you reach a certain level of competition, where there's actual stakes to what people are playing for, there's almost always some kind of confrontation at least once a season. Sometimes it's pushing and shoving, sometimes someone grabs another person and they wrestle for a second, sometimes punches actually get thrown. It may be during practice, it may be in the locker room, once for me it happened on the bus back from a game right after we all stopped at a gas station at 2 in the morning. It lasts for maybe one to two seconds before everyone rushes in to break it up. The end result is laps for those involved, fines if those involved earn money, the coach gives one of those serious talks to the whole team afterwards, and everyone moves on. 99.9% of the time it doesn't go public because it ends up not being a big deal, and part of what makes it a big deal is that it happens somewhat regularly. I've seen it bring a team together, I've seen it finish a bad team off, I've been around teams where the tension is so thick people start wondering who's going to be the first one to start a fight. It's a thing that happens in locker rooms.
"This can't happen in a professional workspace" is what people say and I would agree. If you did this in an office or a worksite or a classroom you'd be disciplined and probably fired. But this isn't your normal workspace. Your job doesn't depend on you slamming into other people for several hours a day, either in practice or in the games themselves. You don't have to look over your shoulder for someone wanting to take your spot and your playing time and your position and your paycheck. When lives are at stake, conflict inevitably arises, the question is how do you deal with it when tensions finally reach a boiling point. A lot of it comes down to good leadership and as we've seen time and time again with Tony, even bad leadership is beyond him.
I know no one's going to read this and are instead going to tell me to shut up and go gently caress myself and eat a bullet or whatever, but that's the honest truth. Leak this footage to TMZ the day after firing Punk if you want to win an online PR slapfight, but this poo poo was embarassing and the only person who comes out looking good is the person this was supposed to embarass.
Also Shang Tsung is far better than Quan Chi, Quan hasn't won a single fight in MK while Shang Tsung nearly overook Earthrealm, plus Shang was the villain in the one good MK movie since we don't talk about Armageddon and the new one was mid at best and furthermore I
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Apr 11, 2024 04:21
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- MJeff
- Jun 2, 2011
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THE LIAR
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When lives are at stake, conflict inevitably arises, the question is how do you deal with it when tensions finally reach a boiling point.
Trauma response 😢
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Apr 11, 2024 04:21
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- Cavauro
- Jan 9, 2008
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Roaming the lively streets of Berlin, Bladee has a clear mind. “I feel like you can think better when you walk,” he tells me over FaceTime. Behind him, motorbikes roar past, and a group of strangers drunkenly stumble by, all laughing about something in German. It seems like a peaceful evening in the city; there’s the comforting low hum of activity and anticipation that comes with the beginning of a Friday night — at least until the explosions start. Sounding off car alarms, the inexplicable detonations are deafening and confusing, until Bladee explains that they’re fireworks. “Here, do you want to see them?,” he asks, turning his phone towards the bright lights in the darkness. Through the five-inch screen of my iPhone, we both watch the sky fragment into colorful bursts of green and red.
There’s something uncanny about being on FaceTime with Bladee. The 25-year-old Swedish artist is notoriously enigmatic; his lyrics are abstract (“Eat the night, I feel like Kirby, I'm burning”), his visuals cryptic (just watch the music video for “For You”), and his social media presence is perplexingly arcane (he recently tweeted, “Chapter 1; A trash star in a trash world”). He’s refused to do virtually any press in the past; quite fittingly, it took multiple attempts for me to schedule this call with Bladee. But once we finally got on the phone, he began to open up. “I’m a private person,” he explains. “It’s hard because I really don’t like to talk about myself. I find it weird.”
Born Benjamin Reichwald, Bladee grew up in the Skanstull neighborhood in southern Stockholm; his mother was a school teacher and his father worked in restaurants. When he was 11 years old, he formed a punk band with his childhood friend and frequent collaborator ECCO2K. “We were just basically making noise,” Bladee remembers. “We didn’t know how to play music at all.” As he got older, Bladee distanced himself from the punk scene and turned to graffiti instead. It was around this time when he met producer whitearmor and rapper Thaiboy Digital through mutual friends. “We were just freestyling on [whitearmor’s] beats for fun,” Bladee says. “Some of us took it more serious than the others, so we went to the side and recorded.” After one long night of partying, Thaiboy and whitearmor brought forward the idea of forming a musical collective where they were “just going to sing in Auto-Tune.”
They changed their name various times: first they were Gravity Boys, then Gravity Boys Shield Gang, followed by Shield Gang. Now calling themselves Drain Gang, their style is singing depressive, often hedonistic lyrics over atmospheric production. They soon realized that another group in Stockholm — Yung Lean, Yung Sherman, and Yung Gud of Sad Boys — were creating similar music; after hearing Lean’s track “Greygoose,” Bladee and whitearmor reached out, resulting in Bladee’s feature for “Heal You // Bladerunner,” the penultimate track on Yung Lean’s 2013 mixtape Unknown Death 2002. It began a close working relationship between Sad Boys and Drain Gang, who, to the listening public, became intermeshed as the rest of the internet tried to make sense of the Scandanavian teenagers rhyming about their malaise in heavily Auto-Tuned accents.
i think this mf did it
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Apr 11, 2024 04:22
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- JUNGLE BOY
- Sep 23, 2019
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didn’t read that post but i can’t believe the post written by the poster who posts bad turned out bad
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Apr 11, 2024 04:24
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- fez_machine
- Nov 27, 2004
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I know no one's going to read this and are instead going to tell me to shut up and go gently caress myself and eat a bullet or whatever, b
the only correct thing in the post
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Apr 11, 2024 04:25
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- Endorph
- Jul 22, 2009
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No, they're not wrestlers. Get into any arguments about modern lovely internet trap rap?
the only soundcloud rap i listen to is hatsune miku
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Apr 11, 2024 04:25
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- beepo
- Oct 8, 2000
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Forum Veteran
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Jungle Boy had a weapon hidden in his hair so Punk had no choice but to attack
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Apr 11, 2024 04:27
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- post hole digger
- Mar 21, 2011
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I didn't watch (because lol at watching AEW) but I can't believe the thing that everyone said was a bad idea turned out to be a bad idea. The only person who benefitted from this making TV was CM Punk and the only way he could have benefitted more was if the tape showed him getting Tony in mount and crushing him with a ground and pound for fifteen minutes.
Let me place something into context: I used to work in sports, spent a lot of time in and out of locker rooms. Once you reach a certain level of competition, where there's actual stakes to what people are playing for, there's almost always some kind of confrontation at least once a season. Sometimes it's pushing and shoving, sometimes someone grabs another person and they wrestle for a second, sometimes punches actually get thrown. It may be during practice, it may be in the locker room, once for me it happened on the bus back from a game right after we all stopped at a gas station at 2 in the morning. It lasts for maybe one to two seconds before everyone rushes in to break it up. The end result is laps for those involved, fines if those involved earn money, the coach gives one of those serious talks to the whole team afterwards, and everyone moves on. 99.9% of the time it doesn't go public because it ends up not being a big deal, and part of what makes it a big deal is that it happens somewhat regularly. I've seen it bring a team together, I've seen it finish a bad team off, I've been around teams where the tension is so thick people start wondering who's going to be the first one to start a fight. It's a thing that happens in locker rooms.
"This can't happen in a professional workspace" is what people say and I would agree. If you did this in an office or a worksite or a classroom you'd be disciplined and probably fired. But this isn't your normal workspace. Your job doesn't depend on you slamming into other people for several hours a day, either in practice or in the games themselves. You don't have to look over your shoulder for someone wanting to take your spot and your playing time and your position and your paycheck. When lives are at stake, conflict inevitably arises, the question is how do you deal with it when tensions finally reach a boiling point. A lot of it comes down to good leadership and as we've seen time and time again with Tony, even bad leadership is beyond him.
I know no one's going to read this and are instead going to tell me to shut up and go gently caress myself and eat a bullet or whatever, but that's the honest truth. Leak this footage to TMZ the day after firing Punk if you want to win an online PR slapfight, but this poo poo was embarassing and the only person who comes out looking good is the person this was supposed to embarass.
Also Shang Tsung is far better than Quan Chi, Quan hasn't won a single fight in MK while Shang Tsung nearly overook Earthrealm, plus Shang was the villain in the one good MK movie since we don't talk about Armageddon and the new one was mid at best and furthermore I
Oh yeah?
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Apr 11, 2024 04:27
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- MediaPlayerClassic
- Aug 24, 2012
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https://youtu.be/-PVCiaQ-_mY?si=mlhz42ppAMQVEWEu
I think this counts as WWE programming
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Apr 11, 2024 04:27
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- Gumball Gumption
- Jan 7, 2012
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I didn't watch (because lol at watching AEW) but I can't believe the thing that everyone said was a bad idea turned out to be a bad idea. The only person who benefitted from this making TV was CM Punk and the only way he could have benefitted more was if the tape showed him getting Tony in mount and crushing him with a ground and pound for fifteen minutes.
Let me place something into context: I used to work in sports, spent a lot of time in and out of locker rooms. Once you reach a certain level of competition, where there's actual stakes to what people are playing for, there's almost always some kind of confrontation at least once a season. Sometimes it's pushing and shoving, sometimes someone grabs another person and they wrestle for a second, sometimes punches actually get thrown. It may be during practice, it may be in the locker room, once for me it happened on the bus back from a game right after we all stopped at a gas station at 2 in the morning. It lasts for maybe one to two seconds before everyone rushes in to break it up. The end result is laps for those involved, fines if those involved earn money, the coach gives one of those serious talks to the whole team afterwards, and everyone moves on. 99.9% of the time it doesn't go public because it ends up not being a big deal, and part of what makes it a big deal is that it happens somewhat regularly. I've seen it bring a team together, I've seen it finish a bad team off, I've been around teams where the tension is so thick people start wondering who's going to be the first one to start a fight. It's a thing that happens in locker rooms.
"This can't happen in a professional workspace" is what people say and I would agree. If you did this in an office or a worksite or a classroom you'd be disciplined and probably fired. But this isn't your normal workspace. Your job doesn't depend on you slamming into other people for several hours a day, either in practice or in the games themselves. You don't have to look over your shoulder for someone wanting to take your spot and your playing time and your position and your paycheck. When lives are at stake, conflict inevitably arises, the question is how do you deal with it when tensions finally reach a boiling point. A lot of it comes down to good leadership and as we've seen time and time again with Tony, even bad leadership is beyond him.
I know no one's going to read this and are instead going to tell me to shut up and go gently caress myself and eat a bullet or whatever, but that's the honest truth. Leak this footage to TMZ the day after firing Punk if you want to win an online PR slapfight, but this poo poo was embarassing and the only person who comes out looking good is the person this was supposed to embarass.
Also Shang Tsung is far better than Quan Chi, Quan hasn't won a single fight in MK while Shang Tsung nearly overook Earthrealm, plus Shang was the villain in the one good MK movie since we don't talk about Armageddon and the new one was mid at best and furthermore I
The guy couldn't follow the "don't fight your coworkers or you're fired at fault" clause and then tried to sound like a tough guy from it
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Apr 11, 2024 04:28
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- Gumball Gumption
- Jan 7, 2012
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Also do those locker room fights go well when the fight starts with a sucker punch? Does everyone think they're super cool for it?
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Apr 11, 2024 04:30
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- Dango Bango
- Jul 26, 2007
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I haven't seriously watched the WWE since like WrestleMania 30. I thought AEW would get me back into wrestling and for the first couple years it did but I fell off a little after I went to Forbidden Door 2 live. Hope that helps.
It wasn't FD2 that made you fall off, right? I'm curious because that was one of the best shows of 2023
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Apr 11, 2024 04:30
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- Skeezy
- Jul 3, 2007
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I didn't watch (because lol at watching AEW) but I can't believe the thing that everyone said was a bad idea turned out to be a bad idea. The only person who benefitted from this making TV was CM Punk and the only way he could have benefitted more was if the tape showed him getting Tony in mount and crushing him with a ground and pound for fifteen minutes.
Let me place something into context: I used to work in sports, spent a lot of time in and out of locker rooms. Once you reach a certain level of competition, where there's actual stakes to what people are playing for, there's almost always some kind of confrontation at least once a season. Sometimes it's pushing and shoving, sometimes someone grabs another person and they wrestle for a second, sometimes punches actually get thrown. It may be during practice, it may be in the locker room, once for me it happened on the bus back from a game right after we all stopped at a gas station at 2 in the morning. It lasts for maybe one to two seconds before everyone rushes in to break it up. The end result is laps for those involved, fines if those involved earn money, the coach gives one of those serious talks to the whole team afterwards, and everyone moves on. 99.9% of the time it doesn't go public because it ends up not being a big deal, and part of what makes it a big deal is that it happens somewhat regularly. I've seen it bring a team together, I've seen it finish a bad team off, I've been around teams where the tension is so thick people start wondering who's going to be the first one to start a fight. It's a thing that happens in locker rooms.
"This can't happen in a professional workspace" is what people say and I would agree. If you did this in an office or a worksite or a classroom you'd be disciplined and probably fired. But this isn't your normal workspace. Your job doesn't depend on you slamming into other people for several hours a day, either in practice or in the games themselves. You don't have to look over your shoulder for someone wanting to take your spot and your playing time and your position and your paycheck. When lives are at stake, conflict inevitably arises, the question is how do you deal with it when tensions finally reach a boiling point. A lot of it comes down to good leadership and as we've seen time and time again with Tony, even bad leadership is beyond him.
I know no one's going to read this and are instead going to tell me to shut up and go gently caress myself and eat a bullet or whatever, but that's the honest truth. Leak this footage to TMZ the day after firing Punk if you want to win an online PR slapfight, but this poo poo was embarassing and the only person who comes out looking good is the person this was supposed to embarass.
Also Shang Tsung is far better than Quan Chi, Quan hasn't won a single fight in MK while Shang Tsung nearly overook Earthrealm, plus Shang was the villain in the one good MK movie since we don't talk about Armageddon and the new one was mid at best and furthermore I
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Apr 11, 2024 04:31
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- C. Everett Koop
- Aug 18, 2008
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Also do those locker room fights go well when the fight starts with a sucker punch? Does everyone think they're super cool for it?
It usually ends with the person who threw the punch under a pile of about a dozen people.
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Apr 11, 2024 04:34
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- Le Saboteur
- Dec 5, 2007
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I hear you wish to ball, adventurer..
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It wasn't FD2 that made you fall off, right? I'm curious because that was one of the best shows of 2023
No it was the Dynamite I attended after Forbidden Door in Hamilton. Just realized I didn't actually care about what was going on and checked out on it after the Ishii/Moxley match.
Forbidden Door 2 absolutely had some excellent matches though, was a fun show.
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Apr 11, 2024 04:35
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- Gumball Gumption
- Jan 7, 2012
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It usually ends with the person who threw the punch under a pile of about a dozen people.
Legit question, in that context of this is normal where do you put the fight when you remember that Punk, the guy who moaned about the biggest house AEW had being jeopardized by empty headed Hangman Page, went and did exactly the same thing with a sucker punch and a lovely guillotine?
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Apr 11, 2024 04:37
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- Endorph
- Jul 22, 2009
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if punk tried to put tony khan in a guillotine then hes truly a real leftist
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Apr 11, 2024 04:38
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- apophenium
- Apr 14, 2009
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Cry 'Mayhem!' and let slip the dogs of Wardlow.
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yea ok would be so happy about the STARDOM partnership 😔
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Apr 11, 2024 04:41
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- SyntheticPolygon
- Dec 20, 2013
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The video?
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Apr 11, 2024 04:43
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- Glass Punkbull 141
- Jan 9, 2008
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This is the face of a winner. This is what winning looks like.
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PSP is all right. I really like you guys.
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Apr 11, 2024 04:44
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- Shard
- Jul 30, 2005
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Apr 11, 2024 04:50
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- Adbot
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ADBOT LOVES YOU
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Jun 6, 2024 05:03
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- Shard
- Jul 30, 2005
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give it time i'm sure wwe can introduce a character called tiny tony who cowers in the corner of every backstage brawl segment
They did introduce a Tony proxy in nxt years ago he's gone now I think
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Apr 11, 2024 04:53
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