7 Tips For Interacting With WWE Stars On Twitter

How to avoid being RKO'd on social media!

twittertwitterIn today's social media world, Twitter is a very important tool for every WWE performer or just anybody associated with wrestling in general. It's a way for regular people to interact with celebrities, to get their news at the click at the button, to look at pictures, watch videos and everything else that we've gotten used to in this technologically heavy world that we're living in. My name's John and I'm a Twitterholic @johnreport. It's been about five years since I started using it and here I am 72,000 tweets later enjoying it as much as ever. When I first started using it one of the main purposes was simply to interact with other wrestling fans. At the time I was writing at a number of sites (not as big as this one) and just trying to grow as a writer. People meet on there that would have had no other way of meeting before. That's the best thing about it. This is not about me, though. It's about you, the wrestling fan, and trying to help you interact with superstars in WWE. Maybe you can get a reply or a retweet (RT) or something to make you happy that they acknowledged you. As wrestling fans, we are able to contact people in the wrestling business that we admire simply by using Twitter. We don't know if they're going to reply or if they will even read it, but it's sure better than mailing a letter right? Like with anything in social media, there are right ways and wrong ways to go about how we interact with people in the wrestling business. Lucky for you, I'm here to give you this crash course in what you should and shouldn't do when you interact with wrestlers on social media.
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John wrote at WhatCulture from December 2013 to December 2015. It was fun, but it's over for now. Follow him on Twitter @johnreport. You can also send an email to mrjohncanton@gmail.com with any questions or comments as well.