AEW star discusses whether wrestling is hotter than ever right now

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An AEW star has discussed whether wrestling is hotter than ever right now.

Whether it’s WWE breaking records everywhere or AEW selling nearly 80,000 tickets for Wembley Stadium, many fans and pundits are arguing that wrestling is hotter than it has ever been right now.
With WWE TV ratings growing all around and All Elite Wrestling premiering a third television show in AEW Collision, it is hard to argue that business is booming.

Speaking on the latest edition of The Extreme Life of Matt Hardy, the AEW star gave his thoughts on the ongoing discussion on the wrestling business. He said:
“During the Attitude Era in the late 90s, compared to now, the early 2020s, wrestling is really, really good now, beyond a shadow of a doubt. It’s just, I think it’s very different, the way you judge the parameters of the entire wrestling industry.”
“I think if you look back to the Attitude Era, it was more engrained in pop culture. I think that people in America, you might even say North America, we’re much more aware of pro wrestling, and it was cool, it was trendy. But it was very different.”
“Now, it is so much larger on a larger scale. Sure, we’ve got huge numbers, whether it’s seven million, eight million, nine million, however many people would watch wrestling on any given Monday night back then. But it was very different.”
“There was only 40 television channels then or whatever. It was much, much smaller, as far as the things you could watch and your choices. But if you fast-forward 25 years later, now you have thousands of channels, just on cable.”

Hardy continued on to explain how the landscape of content is completely different than what it was during the Attitude Era, saying:
“You have all these streaming services, Netflix, Hulu, whatever it may be. There’s so much content out there. Now, wrestling is also taken in and absorbed in such a different way. It’s consumed now in so many different forms.”
“Some people watch it on live TV. A lot of people solely watch it on DVR. A lot of people stream it on whatever their device is. There are many different ways to watch it, and I think right now, compared to then, it isn’t as engrained in pop culture as it was in the late 90s.”
“But it’s also much more well-received and much more known about, and people are aware of pro wrestling currently around the globe because so many people sit here and they look on their devices, and this is where they watch their pro wrestling.”
“They watch WrestleMania here, they watch All Out here. They watch all their events right here on their smart device.”

When directly asked whether wrestling is hotter than ever right now, Hardy answered:
“I don’t think wrestling is hotter now than it was in the late 90s, but I do think wrestling has a much more sprawling impact around the globe, and I think it has the chance and ability to become hotter now than it was back then.”
“I think that’s where we’re at right now. I think many more people consume pro wrestling in this day and age, in so many different ways, and you can’t keep those numbers.”

Hardy continued on to explain why the Attitude Era just has the edge due to the fingerprint wrestling left on pop culture at that time, saying:
“But back then, it was just a little bit hotter at that time because it was truly a part of pop culture. That is something is really hard to do. Now it’s much more of a niche industry, as most everything is.”
“There’s so many things out there. There’s so much entertainment to choose from. Everything is almost niche and has a very certain audience. That’s why I am a huge advocate of saying, ‘We have to appeal to more casual fans.’”

On why growing the casual fans will result in the business being even hotter than the Attitude Era, Hardy said:
“I think casual fans are the way to grow pro wrestling in the big scheme of things. I mean, the people that are wrestling fans, they’re gonna tune in and they’re gonna watch wrestling because they love it.”
“They can complain and they can b***h, they can moan, but they’re gonna tune in and they’re gonna watch it because they love pro wrestling and they have to get their fix.”
“But I think we need to continue to try and build people that are crossover stars that appeal to the casual audience, especially speaking about AEW.”
“WWE, obviously they’re taking some great steps in the way they’re doing the thing with Logan Paul, the way they’re doing stuff with Bad Bunny because that does cross over and they get casual fans to tune in. I think they have a really successful formula going on.”

Matt Hardy will reunite with his brother Jeff to compete in the Tag Team Eliminator Battle Royale on tonight’s July 28 edition of AEW Rampage.
For all the latest AEW news, click here.

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