This year, the Oklahoma State Athletic Commission threatened
AEW with “punitive action” if they dared to use trans wrestler Nyla Rose again.
How did the world find out about this shocking story in pro
wrestling? Real Rasslin, a blog with a few thousand followers, found the agenda
for Oklahoma’s commission meeting in January, which listed the Nyla Rose
incident.
The meeting minutes for the January meeting were not obtained
by a pro wrestling news site or a pro wrestling news reporter. They were
obtained by me, a wrestling fan with less than 1,000 followers on Twitter.
My tweet with the meeting minutes has now been viewed more
than 3.3 million times, and stories have popped up in a multitude of mainstream
outlets, including The Washington Post.
This is a problem
Pro wrestling is a billion-dollar industry, and that’s being
conservative. According to Forbes, AEW and WWE alone combined to gross more
than $1.5 billion in 2023. That doesn’t account for any other US-based
promotions or any foreign-based promotions, such as NJPW in Japan or CMLL in
Mexico. Globally, pro wrestling is easily grossing multiple billions worldwide.
So why does an industry this large have little to no proper
media coverage?
Every other billion-dollar industry has entire media ecosystems
dedicated to covering it, especially in sports and entertainment.
Pro wrestling, though, has only a precious few media members
doing actual, honest to goodness reporting. I’m talking about Dave Meltzer in
the Wrestling Observer, John Pollock with Post Wrestling, and a couple of
others. These are people that do journalism. As a former newspaper reporter, I
am all too familiar with what journalism does – and does not – entail.
In 2024, pro wrestling does not get the coverage it
deserves.
No more dirt sheets
Instead, we have rumor merchants, most notably Sean Ross
Sapp at Fightful Select, who have made careers by passing along rumors and
leaking out internal details before they’re made public. In isolation, there’s
no issue with these type of rumor mills, whether it’s pro wrestling, pro football,
or the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
These rumor sites have no interest or desire in tracking
down true news stories, like state-sponsored discrimination against an AEW
wrestler. That doesn’t make them money. They want clicks and engagement. That’s
why Fightful didn’t track down the minutes from Oklahoma, but they did have
time to transcribe negative comments about AEW from WWE employee Booker T.
It’s a symptom of a larger problem across journalism –
access. It’s infected political journalism. It’s infected tech journalism. It’s
infected sports journalism. And it’s the defining feature of wrestling “journalism”
in 2024.
No one wants to risk losing access. The goal is to keep sources happy, so they’ll continue “leaking” information to you. It’s why the
New York Times has produced about a million “sources close to Trump” stories
over the past 8 years.
At some point since I left journalism, there has been a
shift to access journalism in lieu of traditional reporting. Why chase
something down when someone can simply “leak” the information to you?
There’s no effort
Unfortunately, that has left our journalism severely lacking
across the board. The differences for political, sports, arts, and technology journalism
are those rumor sites are balanced out – at least to some degree – by strong
reporting outside of access journalism that provides a robust picture of the
industry.
Right now, WWE’s efforts to cover up McMahon’s heinous acts
are still being looked into. Did you know the entire company is under investigation for sex trafficking? Because for most pro wrestling media, the removal of Vince
McMahon meant the end of them caring about the victims.
Do you think if the NFL were under investigation for sex
trafficking that every single pro football news site would just…. ignore it
completely?
Fans need to demand more
Nothing is going to change anytime soon because too many
fans have come to accept this reality. For decades, pro wrestling fans have
been told that pro wrestling doesn’t really matter, and they believe it.
They should stop believing.
Pro wrestling is far too popular, making too much money, and
employing too many people to continue operating without a proper media covering
it.
This doesn’t mean waves of negative coverage or publicity.
It means that the industry deserves more than a handful of people covering the
serious issues impacting the business.
It can’t just be me
When I received the meeting minutes in Oklahoma, I instantly
knew that no other pro wrestling reporter had asked for them. Why? Because the
only other person to post the minutes when I received them was a producer for a local Oklahoma tv station.
Like I did, the pro wrestling “media” knew that Nyla Rose
had been targeted by the state of Oklahoma. But none of them cared enough to send
the email I did to receive those publicly available minutes.
That’s not right.
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