10 Lessons WWE Can Learn From Its Audience-Free Shows

5. Move The Hard Cam

Stone Cold Steve Austin Becky Lynch
WWE

WWE has its own specific style, and the location of the hard cam is part of that. However, in a bid to make the show a little more interesting from a visual standpoint, recent episodes of RAW and SmackDown have had that facing not the side of the ring, but the back of it (meaning it faces the stage in the background).

Sticking to this moving forward would achieve a few different things. For starters, it's better than watching fans in the background trying to make the show all about them. However, it also just looks better. Seeing these larger than life athletes battling each other with WWE's often very impressive staging behind them would go a big way in making what's on screen feel like, well, a bigger deal!

It also means that when we get a run in, we see that unfold for ourselves rather than getting a heads up from the fans at ringside standing up and seeing something we're still in the dark about. The best outcome here is that it will make the shows more immersive, and with WWE desperately in need of a fresh coat of paint, that would be no bad thing.

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Contributor

Josh Wilding hasn't written a bio just yet, but if they had... it would appear here.