Thank the gods for the little time I have to write this. I never thought I'd find a bright side to the 30 or so cheap cell phone sale representative to constantly shuttle to a steak house for a Christmas party in the midst of an inevitable winter storm.
I fear I did not learn from history (maybe that qualifies me for WWE creative) because I should have known the forecast could only be accompanied by independent Verizon scammers (if that Bo Dallas gimmick gets dropped, how about IVS? Tablets are big enough to use as a weapon). Screw Africa in terms of who needs to know when Christmas is.
The lack of time means I have a greater amount of time to think about a tenth chapter for my "No Holds Barred" themed Tumblr. Since the wrestling industry (can we really call the indies industrious? I'll buy a lot of stock if PWG or AAW goes public), is in a worse shape than the World Television Network, would my scarred mind allow for anything else?
So, hopefully Mr. Austin can remedy some of my mental anguish. If he wants to try and take care of all it, which I think showing some support for my wrestling zombie/comedy "Main Event of the Dead" may help, he can e-mail me at russthebus07@gmail.com. If Mr. Austin or any of my readers want a screenplay treatment to look over to truly know what I need help in promoting, feel free to use the same e-mail address.
Dear Steve,
Thank you for the opportunity to submit this question for your live podcast with Triple H. You have one of the most giving podcast when it comes to entertaining your listeners. It may be said that no one can make audio chicken salad out of chicken scratch better than you do.
My question is:
Why is the WWE offering the Network free for new subscribers in February when they are not the ones who had to endure the train wreck that was the Royal Rumble match? It seems that WWE has no respect for those that stuck around to allow the company to announce one-million subscribers. Is there no plan for retaining the current offended consumers of the product.
If a cable company provides poor or overpriced service, there is a retention department to come to terms on how they can keep their customer. Providing a free month after a debacle to those who did not go out of their way to be slapped in the face by WWE seems like an insult to those you have already insulted.
I do not have cable or satellite television, so I do not get to keep up on the current product in a, pardon the pun, Raw capacity. If the direction seems awful, and at this time the main event at Wrestlemania is, why would I watch the current product? To this point, NXT talent from the WWE Network era seems to be underutilized when they are called up to the main roster, so the flagship looks to be sinking. Why should we believe that will change? The current consumers need encouragement, otherwise, why am I paying an extra $2.00 for the WWE Classics OnDemand's archive?
Thank you for your time and for providing the best podcast offered by a WWE Superstar.
Russ Stevens
@MainEventZombie
http://maineventofthedead.com
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