10 Most Shameless WWE Promotional Tactics

Dark Side Of The Ring, as seen on the WWE Network on Peacock!

Randy Orton Rey Mysterio
WWE.com

It's a hard list to cut down to just 10, this one.

There's no such thing as a "nice company" regardless of how heavily the corporate world invests in chief brand officers and their ilk, but WWE are fundamentally not a particularly nice company.

Even if you've never read a headline about their business practices in your life, the tone that permeates throughout the television product should make it clear - nobody has friends, nobody can be friends, and nobody gets rewarded for even entertaining the idea of friendship as a concept. The nicest thing anybody ever really says about WWE now is that it's been around ages and not gone away, which is the way people describe their problematic elderly relatives. Who, ironically, make up the company's best demographic.

The fact that it's been part of the pop culture landscape so long is remarkable and somewhat admirable, and allows for a Network full of carefully curated legitimately amazing matches and moments to get endless play forever and ever while the really awful stuff gets buried away and/or completely removed from the Peacock version of the service.

Or, spoken about in lists such as this...

10. Hawk Falls Off The Wagon, The TitanTron And The Map

Randy Orton Rey Mysterio
WWE

What was it about 1998 and promoters having fun with the addictions of others?

Millions of people were tuning in to both Monday Night Raw and Monday Nitro as 90s business collectively boomed, and they were rewarded with both Michael 'Hawk' Hegstrand and Scott Hall's very real personal problems being cheaply exploited for sh*t midcard angles.

Top star Stone Cold Steve Austin drank a billion beers a week, but this was a cake-and-eat-it era for the rampaging organisation. Hawk‘s boozing wasn’t to be celebrated but judged and castigated.

Stumbling over during entrances, being too intoxicated to realise Animal needed to make tags, and slurring his words on commentary, the disparate portrayal of the former tag team icon was too mean-spirited to be entertaining, and never once promoted the tag team nor sell a big pay-per-view or TV match.

Droz shoving a suicidal Hawk off the TitanTron structure to imply he was his 'pusher' was the inciting incident, with the former 'Puke' enabling Hawk's problems to steal his spot in the team. Midcard fluff mining the worst of humanity, all for payoffs that never came.

Contributor
Contributor

Michael is a writer, editor, podcaster and presenter for WhatCulture Wrestling, and has been with the organisation over 7 years. He primarily produces written, audio and video content on WWE and AEW, but also provides knowledge and insights on all aspects of the wrestling industry thanks to a passion for it dating back over 30 years. As one third of "The Dadley Boyz", Michael has contributed to the huge rise in popularity of the WhatCulture Wrestling Podcast, earning it top spot in the UK's wrestling podcast charts with well over 50,000,000 total downloads. He has been featured as a wrestling analyst for the Tampa Bay Times and Sports Guys Talking Wrestling, and has covered milestone events in New York, Dallas, Las Vegas, London and Cardiff. Michael's background in media stretches beyond wrestling coverage, with a degree in Journalism from the University Of Sunderland (2:1) and a series of published articles in sports, music and culture magazines The Crack, A Love Supreme and Pilot. When not offering his voice up for daily wrestling podcasts, he can be found losing it singing far too loud watching his favourite bands play live. Follow him on X/Twitter - @MichaelHamflett