Category: Featured

Featured stories and must-read content from BodySlam.net.

  • WWE Under TKO – Scale, Control, and the Insulation of Power

    WWE Under TKO – Scale, Control, and the Insulation of Power

    An institutional autopsy of structural dominance, moral hazard, and the accountability deficit in professional wrestling.

    Rationale – Necessity of Structural Analysis

    This inquiry intentionally departs from the traditions of the personal wrestling editorial or event-driven critique. In the post-2023 climate, WWE no longer operates as a mere sports-entertainment promotion; it functions as a sophisticated, vertically integrated conglomerate within the TKO Group Holdings framework. Consequently, traditional narratives focused on ‘creative quality’ or fan sentiment are insufficient to map the entity’s true impact.

    We adopt a forensic institutional lens for three specific reasons:

    1. Objectivity over Affect: By utilising institutional terminology—such as ‘Yield Optimisation’, ‘Institutional Decoupling’, and ‘Narrative Capture’—we move the discourse from the subjective (how the product feels) to the objective (how the system functions).

    2. Synthesis of Disparate Risks: A standard editorial often fails to bridge the gap between ticket pricing, sex trafficking litigation, and federal policy. This format allows for a synthesis of interdependencies, demonstrating how these seemingly unrelated factors interlock to form a protective shield for the corporation.

    3. Governance as a Primary Metric: In any high-performing organisation, accountability and internal controls are the primary drivers of long-term health. When these are bypassed in favour of algorithmic success, it signals a systemic transformation that demands a rigorous, evidence-led diagnostic rather than an editorial opinion.

    Abstract

    In 2025, WWE achieved record revenues of £1.37 billion ($1.709B)—a 22% increase—coinciding with the strategic migration of Premium Live Events (PLEs) to ESPN’s new streaming platform and the global consolidation of content onto Netflix. This fiscal ascent exists in stark contrast to deepening legal risks, including the April 2026 Janel Grant affidavit and ongoing Delaware Court of Chancery litigation. Through vertical integration, geopolitical site fees, and unprecedented political proximity, WWE has transitioned from a market-dependent promotion into a sovereign corporate entity. This system effectively converts commercial scale into structural immunity, insulating the platform from fan backlash, leadership scandals, and traditional market feedback.

    I. The Streaming Duality: Privatising the Audience

    The 2026 media landscape marks the end of WWE as a public-facing ratings entity and its birth as a proprietary data asset. By migrating its global library to Netflix and its domestic PLEs to ESPN’s direct-to-consumer platform, TKO has rendered the ‘Fan Referendum’ invisible. Public dissatisfaction no longer translates into visible ratings declines; it is buried within opaque proprietary data sets, allowing the company to dismiss localised apathy as algorithmic noise. Furthermore, as a core pillar of the Disney-backed sports bundle, WWE operates akin to a SaaS (Software as a Service) model. This integration into the ‘Disney Defence’ ensures that recurring revenue remains functionally decoupled from the immediate creative or ethical quality of the product.

    II. Yield Optimisation and the Gentrification of Extraction

    WWE’s 2025–2026 strategy prioritises inelastic equity extraction over audience cultivation. Average domestic ticket prices reached £95 ($118) in 2025, a real-term doubling since the merger. While WrestleMania 41 achieved a £53 million gate, WrestleMania 42 shows a 19.3% lag in distribution as of April 2026, suggesting the system has reached a utility ceiling. This aggressive pricing constitutes the deliberate gentrification of the live event, pricing out the core fan base in favour of a corporate-tourist demographic. To compensate for the resulting sterile atmosphere, the system relies on crossover celebrities like Logan Paul to generate viral digital impressions—a cycle that further alienates the core audience whose vocal energy historically constituted the product’s primary aesthetic value.

    III. Labour Integration: The ‘UFC-isation’ of Talent

    Standardised TKO master agreements, implemented following the 2025 UFC antitrust settlement, have codified a new era of labour subjugation. Contracts now routinely include clauses for AI-generated digital replicas, ensuring the ‘Superstar IP’ can survive the biological ageing, injury, or termination of the human actor. This technological moat serves as the ultimate corporate contingency against individual talent leverage or public cancellation. Simultaneously, through the acquisition of AAA and the ‘WWE ID’ programme, TKO has restricted competitive mobility. Independent wrestling no longer functions as a competitor but as a subsidised farm system, ensuring WWE dictates the macroeconomic terms of entry and exit for the entire industry.

    IV. Governance Continuity and the Moral Hazard

    The system’s resilience in the face of the Janel Grant litigation is a critical indicator of its structural insulation. The April 2, 2026, affidavit alleges that current President Nick Khan and former COO Brad Blum were aware of and facilitated a documented culture of misconduct. This joins ongoing Delaware Chancery litigation regarding deleted Signal messages involving Paul ‘Triple H’ Levesque, suggesting a culture where the destruction of evidence is calculated as an acceptable operational cost. TKO has gambled that its £16 billion ($20B) internal valuation provides enough financial gravity to deter structural regulatory intervention, prioritising revenue continuity over the leadership resets typically required by a functional governance framework. This represents a profound moral hazard: the enterprise is now too profitable to be disciplined.

    V. Geopolitical and Institutional Buffering

    WWE’s revenue is increasingly anchored by immovable macro-economic forces that provide reputational buffering. The expansion to four Saudi PLEs in 2026 provides a non-negotiable nine-figure revenue floor entirely immune to domestic consumer boycotts. Domestically, the company enjoys unprecedented political proximity. Linda McMahon’s 2026 ‘final mission’ to dismantle the U.S. Department of Education—having already terminated nearly half the department’s staff—provides a level of institutional legitimacy that severely complicates traditional regulatory or journalistic scrutiny. This proximity functions as a reputational detergent, laundering the corporate image through the highest corridors of American power.

    System Synthesis

    The mechanisms of TKO-era WWE—the Netflix/ESPN distribution duality, the SaaS-style revenue model, the gentrification of live events, and its geopolitical anchors—interlock with total coherence. The system is no longer a promotion competing for fans; it is an integrated fortress. By leveraging informational capture—utilising a proxy press and credentialed talking heads to pathologise legitimate criticism and destabilise competitors—the company has constructed a multi-dimensional shield. This shield protects the executive layer from the consequences of misconduct, the financial layer from fan apathy, and the market layer from genuine competition.

    Conclusion – The Sovereign Verdict

    The forensic evidence suggests that WWE has achieved the ultimate corporate objective: the perfection of a closed-loop monopoly. Through the strategic use of global streaming algorithms, geopolitical guarantees, and political proximity, TKO has successfully neutralised every traditional mechanism of accountability. The fans have lost their vote through aggressive repricing; the talent has lost their leverage through synthetic rights; and the executive leadership has lost its liability through the sheer, unassailable scale of the merger.

    As the company proceeds through 2026, it exists as a perfected commercial vessel—one that can absorb sex trafficking affidavits, federal investigations, and the alienation of its core audience without a single tremor in its stock price. The softening of WrestleMania 42 sales is not an indicator of a failing business, but the final symptom of a completed transformation. The ‘Fortress’ is finished; WWE has outgrown the necessity of the people it was built to entertain, evolving instead into an immutable infrastructure of modern institutional power.

    References (Harvard style)

    Delaware Court of Chancery (2026) In re World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc. Shareholder Litigation.

    Grant v. McMahon et al. (2026) Affidavit of Janel Grant, April 2, U.S. District Court (CT).

    TKO Group Holdings (2026) Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2025 Results.

    U.S. Department of Education (2026) Secretary McMahon statements on ‘Final Mission’ and Departmental Dismantling.

    WrestleTix / Pollstar (2026) Comparative Analysis: WrestleMania 41 vs. WrestleMania 42 Ticket Velocity.

    CNBC / ESPN (2025) WWE Domestic Streaming Rights Agreement: 2026 Transition.

  • BodySlam: A Fresh Coat of Paint

    Now is no time to think of what you do not have. Think of what you can do with what there is.”

    — Ernest Hemingway, “The Old Man and the Sea (1952)

     

    In December 1922, a train robbery at the Gare de Lyon train station in Paris, France, changed the life of future literary giant Ernest Hemingway. Hadley Richardson, his first wife, was en route to meet him in Switzerland when a suitcase full of his short stories and carbon copies was lost in the chaos. 

    Instead of giving up, Hemingway resolved to recreate what he could of his missing work. He had time, but needed to make up for what was stolen from him, so he pivoted. His writing style changed; the sentences became shorter, the paragraphs less messy, and the prose became easier to digest. A personal disaster became a revelation, begetting much-needed upgrades.

    BodySlam, for the uninitiated, was funded by Cassidy Haynes. Our platform has seen many put fingers to keyboard from photographers, writers, interviewers, podcasters, and scoopsters. Our work is sourced by many, and its contributors have collaborated, even worked for other outlets. It was BodySlam that broke the news that Bryan Danielson would join AEW in 2021. If you’ve come across witty pieces about people with bad takes like Disco Inferno, odds are you have visited our site. Articles recapping incredible matches, profiling wrestlers, or giving biting commentary on the wrestling scene, we’ve been there. 

    BodySlam.NET logo from the 2010s
    Classic BodySlam logo. Good times, am I right?

    Recently, BodySlam has undergone something similar. In the first week of April 2026, the server for the website’s previous iteration had been deleted. Some of the work had been saved, but not all of it. Years upon years upon years of work, gone. Yes, even mine.

    That sucks. Plain and simple, it’s heartbreaking that the work of BodySlam contributors has vanished. Yet, there’s hope. Our writers are hungry and ready to start again. We know it’s a long road back to where we were. Online web traffic will be a fight. Ranking high in search results. All of that jargon. 

    While some were sadly unable to save backups, others did. Bittersweet silver lining as it is, it won’t replace the time it took to deliver news, education, or hard-hitting narratives. Time we won’t get back. But inevitably, it is what it is.

    Speaking for myself, I’ve taken those precautions before I even joined wrestling media. Word Docs. Google Docs. Flash drives. Hard drives. Sony PlayStation’s Test Drive 6. 

    I won’t state what began this. Instead, I’ll nudge you to Cassidy Haynes and Cory Hays’s layout of what happened. (Shameless plug below.)

    I’d like to take this moment to promote an incentive to keep your eye on BodySlam’s new content: I’ll be revisiting my previous works that were lost in the shutdown.

    What does that mean? For readers of my work specifically, especially what I’ve contributed to BodySlam, they can expect the classic Corey Michaels style, but with all the improvements I’ve made during my growth as a writer. I won’t go into much more detail here, so stay tuned.

    More importantly, what does this mean for BodySlam readers?

    Previously, the old way had some hiccups. Ads that would interrupt the reading flow. Short-form articles filled with keywords and buzzwords without much material to provide needed context. Compromised integrity and the struggles in communications. There was a lack of focus, chaotic and wildly so. We made do with what we had. Then, a play forced BodySlam’s hand, and ultimately, it will be for the better.

    How so?

    Well, as you’ve likely noticed, the website is sleeker and wayyyy more reader-friendly. The design is responsive and easy on the eyes, providing helpful scannability. Our new server is more secure, and we’ve tailored the search engine so readers can eventually find our stuff more easily. Additionally, this means longer-form content, so you get more substance to chew on. Our post-shows may receive an uplift in graphics as well.

    The new homepage for BodySlam as of Spring 2026
    Look at this homepage. Doesn’t it look so clean? – Credit: Danny Bennett, Bodyslam

    Fewer obtrusive ads will be present going forward, leading to a less broken site experience. Furthermore, we’re relocating premium access from our Patreon to the BodySlam+ tier on the site, to avoid ads and include exclusive content not found in the free version.

    We’re serious about earning trust and building stronger brand recognition, so expect that integration across our media channels. We aim to improve our public relations with outlets and creators both inside and outside of BodySlam. 

    Most importantly, we aim to be a place where wrestling fans can be themselves and represent the wide array of fans who enjoy this compelling medium. That goes for anyone in any walk of life; wrestling media’s seen an influx of diverse voices, not just of straight white cisgender men, but anyone willing to share their insight into the industry through their voice. Pro wrestling transcends race, nationality, gender, and sexuality. We haven’t forgotten that.

    Contributors, both past and present, made BodySlam what it was through undying passion and fiery dedication. That will never change. The heart of BodySlam will pump that same blood, and you can feel its pulse with the other publications in wrestling media. 

    It’ll be a long road back. We’ll face challenges and make mistakes, but rest assured, BodySlam will be the best it has ever been and will get better. Not just today, but all the days to come.

    We have a vision. The old way doesn’t work anymore. Therefore, folks, our current motto is this:

    BS is back, this time with no more BS.