Wrestling has come a long way the past 20 years--the post-WCW era. There was the rise of the independent scene, which created a new generation of wrestling stars, and in turn, those wrestlers populated some of the more popular promotions like Ring of Honor and Pro Wrestling Guerrilla, creating this bustling underground scene throughout the 2000s and 2010s. However, in 2019, a few of New Japan's and ROH's most-popular wrestlers left their companies to create something new: All Elite Wrestling.
While AEW isn't on the same global level as WWE, it's still competition in the United States. Both shows have large followings and their PPVs (or Premium Live Events (PLEs) as WWE is trying to rebrand it) are must-watch events for fans. Both of these companies feature something very similar at each PPV: a pre-show you can watch for free. Typically lasting about an hour, these two companies have vastly different preshows for their PPVs, and they're both entirely missing the point of what a preshow should be.
Let's talk about the most recent Kickoff Show for a WWE PPV--Money in the Bank. Over the course of an hour, there were zero matches. There was a panel featuring Kayla Braxton, Booker T, JBL, Peter Rosenberg, and Kevin Patrick. Throughout the hour, the four discussed each match of the evening, which are sandwiched between video promos for the matches themselves--ones everyone will see again during the PPV. The Kickoff Show used to have matches, but that has been phased out of the vast majority of these events.
On occasion, superstars will pop by and talk about their upcoming match--or why they aren't in the PPV at all. In the case of 2022's Money in the Bank, the Street Profits showed up to talk about their match with The Usos, and Montez Ford stood on the Kickoff Show table while the commentary team was very nervous it was going to break. It was the only interesting part of the hour-long show.
Additionally, if you want to showcase anything, give people something new, like interviews with superstars that are only on the Kickoff. That Montez Ford moment from MITB was fantastic, so why can't we have numerous moments to know these wrestlers better that aren't the same video promos we see over and over again? We've seen the same package of The Miz time and time again for what feels like years now. It's stale. Give us more interviews and more matches.
All Elite Wrestling's preshow is called The Buy-In and features primarily wrestling matches. Taz, Excalibur, and Kevin Kelly called the matches for Forbidden Door's preshow and of course, there are video packages for every match on the main card, so you know what you're getting into.
For the most recent PPV--Forbidden Door--the Buy-In featured four matches--three of which were tag matches--and one interview with Clark Connors about filling in a vacant spot in the All-Atlantic Championship match on the main card. It was non-stop action for an hour with video packages for the main card matches set as transitions between bouts.
Keeping in mind that AEW tends to over-stuff their cards with plenty of matches, the Buy-In feels the same. As someone who attended Forbidden Door live, the second you enter the arena, you're getting wrestling, which is great, but by the time you get to match four of the preshow--realizing there's nine more matches coming--it can be a bit too much wrestling, which sounds wild. While this is certainly one way to get the crowd amped up for a night of wrestling that is to follow, by the end of the main card, you're tired, exhausted, having watched roughly six hours of just wrestling. It's a cornucopia of your favorite thing, which becomes a challenging gauntlet by the end.
Back in the late-90s, there was Sunday Night Heat. It was a weekly WWE program that many times aired before PPVs, and during those evenings, it would leave you with a cliffhanger, like a giant brawl. The only way to see what happens next is to buy the PPV. Considering modern TV relies so heavily on the cliffhanger to keep people invested in programming, why isn't this technique used more in wrestling?
Yes, this call to action is saying that WWE and AEW need to have similar preshows using a format that introduces viewers to the match structure, the characters via interviews, and those pesky video packages. But both of these companies having similar structures for their preshows isn't a bad thing. In the long run, it will help wrestling fans both, new and old, find the promotion that works best for them.
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