We are dreamers as wrestling fans, constantly imaging the way things should be, often decrying the reality of what things are. It can be frustrating, we have definite ideas of how the WWE should script their stories, then it turns out to be something loathsome. All too often fan expectations do not match up with WWE's creative destinations. Recent notable examples would be Dave Batista winning the Royal Rumble and The Undertaker's streak ending to Brock Lesnar. It isn't what we wanted, yet WWE did it anyway. It's an endemic problem throughout the product all year. Admittedly, part of this problem is our own arrogance. We feel we know better than professionals who have been doing this business day in day out for three decades. It's also as if the internet magnifies our voice to become louder than it actually is. It feels like the Internet Wrestling voice is a major thing. It isn't. The fact is that WWE's main audience isn't the internet wrestling fan, when we read something online it isn't actually too representative of general consensus. We're all caught up in thinking we know best, and often that means something different entirely to what WWE end up presenting.