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Full Podcast Summary & Notes (Timestamps Included):
00:00 – Intro, Community Vibes, Savannah Bananas Storytelling- Coach welcomes everyone, sets the new live taping schedule, and credits Producer Man’s hustle.
- Vince delivers entertaining banter about hats, July 4th weekend, and Producer Man’s Savannah Bananas adventure, including a hilarious story about twerking and pro wrestlers as cheerleaders.
- The Coach highlights how their show is distributed in over 100 million homes (Stadium Network, Prime Video, DirecTV, YouTube TV, LG, Vizio, and more).
- Vince acknowledges Coach’s relentless energy and love for the game, and both celebrate the show’s fast growth across platforms.
- Russo addresses being called a “hate watcher” in the wrestling podcast world, equates WWE’s formulaic writing to the Jurassic World franchise, and pleads for innovation.
- Coach agrees, sharing his own gripes with recycled storytelling across wrestling and Hollywood.
- The duo run down WWE and AEW’s packed weekly event schedule, discuss burnt-out fans, and analyze why even Goldberg can’t sell out in Atlanta.
- Vince uses Seinfeld as a parallel: more isn’t always better.
- Evolution 2 is only set up for 6,000 seats but can’t even sell 5,000.
- Vince and Coach break down how WWE creative routinely lets the women’s division down by refusing to craft compelling storylines or invest in female writers.
- Discussion of how past stars like Sable and Chyna got treated like stars vs. today’s afterthought mentality.
- Coach and Vince react to Jay Uso and Karrion Kross outselling Cena & Cody in June merch, yet not being pushed or written for.
- Insights on WWE’s outdated narrative (“he missed his window!”), the dangers of writers not understanding “cool,” and how great characters get lost on Main Event instead of spotlight TV.
- Extended, candid chat about Randy Orton’s openness regarding his mental health struggles and the need for institutional support for wrestling talent.
- Vince shares his personal battle with depression, and both agree on the urgent need for backstage psychologists and life guidance in pro wrestling—not just physical trainers.
- Vince defends Kevin Nash’s right to an opinion after Nash’s controversial July 4th tweets spark online attacks.
- Coach offers insight into the phenomenon of wrestling Twitter, putting character critiques in context, and the echo chamber that plagues social channels.
- Discussion of Dominik Mysterio’s surprising “good guy” reputation backstage and his growing mainstream appeal, including a Wingstop ad deal.
- Coach and Vince roast WWE’s chaotic creative after Alexa Bliss revealed she found out about her Royal Rumble spot only hours in advance—despite public claims of “long-term planning.”
- Insight on the real-world consequences of last-minute booking.
- Coach and Vince field live questions on Seth Rollins as a heel, memories of Stevie Night Heat, why Hollywood writers struggle in wrestling (Freddie Prinze Jr.), top entrances, and the best way to incentivize SuperChatters.
- Names like Sasha Banks, Black Sabbath, and Jon Bon Jovi pop up alongside jaw-dropping personal anecdotes.
- A dive into the storytelling side: favorite beginnings to rivalries, writing impactful moments, and why simple, character-driven conflicts resonate.
- Coach celebrates making it to a Times Square ad, Vince shares his own social media antics involving Tony Khan, and both reminisce over band and karaoke memories in the wrestling world.
- Comparisons between wrestling and live NHL playoff games, complaints about modern ticket prices, and WWE’s “evolved” creative (or lack thereof).
- Closing thoughts on Dave Meltzer’s influence and “Street Fighter” casting for Cody Rhodes and Roman Reigns.
- Coach thanks the community for its unmatched support, previews Thursday’s taping, and wraps up another marathon fan-first episode.
161 episodes