AEW Dynamite 5/12/2021

Bringing the golden days of wrestling and reality-based storylines of the Monday Night Wars – to current generations

AEW is in a way serving as the company to bridge the Attitude Era of the late 1990’s and early 2000’s into the present day. Tony Khan and the rest of the company are bridging these two generations through creating transparent, three-dimensional, forward-thinking characters that the audience can relate to on a profoundly simple and human level. The characters in this company are focused on revealing wrestlers’ humanity characteristics first and foremost because fans tend to find that most believable in this day and age of no real privacy.

A perfect example of this occurred on May 12 when Chris Jericho and The Inner Circle sprayed a hose on The Pinnacle – bringing back memories for many fans of the late 90s when Stone Cold Steve Austin did the same thing to The Rock and Vince McMahon in pursuit of a title match (only his was the beer). Chris Jericho serves as the perfect bridge for this because he was a part of both eras.

Miro wins the TNT championship in a total surprise

Darby Allin’s run with the TNT championship lasted for a solid seven months and he defended the title on numerous occasions which will increase his stock exponentially in AEW at just 28 years old. Miro sort of came out of left field and surprised everyone when he won the title this past week, but now that he is champion a kind of feels right. After debuting in AEW nine months ago in September 2020, the 35-year-old has finally captured a title – he struggled to gain momentum in his first six months in the company but found his way.

The lowest point for Miro since arriving in the company was right around February when Charles Taylor was serving as Miro’s butler (Orange Cassidy got involved in the story as well), but it all came full circle on May 12 when he became TNT champion (that title now has an established reputation as the workhorse belt, so Miro will have a heavy responsibility placed on his shoulders (the legacy of Cody Rhodes “twice”, the late Brodie Lee, and now Allin).

Kenny Omega will be defending his AEW world championship against both PAC and Orange Cassidy at Double or Nothing on May 30 – the company is having its cake and eating it too

To my knowledge the AEW world championship match at Double or Nothing will be the first world title match in AEW history involving three men. I could be wrong, but I don’t think there has ever been a 3-way world title match even on television, but certainly not on Pay-Per-View. There was Chris Jericho –Hangman Page, Jericho – Cody, Jericho – Moxley, Moxley – Mr. Brodie Lee, Moxley – MJF, Moxley – Eddie Kingston, and Omega – Moxley. Now it will be Omega – PAC – Orange Cassidy.

This was a Revolution 2020 rematch from February 29, 2020 between Orange Cassidy and PAC that took place on May 12, 2021. Standard 50/50 booking (as is common in WWE) would ordinarily indicate that because PAC got the victory over Orange 15 months ago, Orange should get the nod this time around. But to the contrary, AEW fortunately does not necessarily abide by this mentality, which can be rather strict and inflexible at times, thus preventing many favorable matchups.

AEW is abiding by the elected “moments” ability in which everyone feels out the situation and decides what is most favorable given all circumstances as opposed to a model that is somewhat antiquated. For example, through Kenny Omega defending his title against both Orange Cassidy and PAC at Double or Nothing on May 30, AEW takes full advantage of the popularity of Orange currently as well as capitalizes on the benefits of the long-term storyline between Omega and PAC (this is extremely typical of Kenny, and the last time these two faced each other in a one-on-one encounter was in early 2020 in a 30-minute Ironman match which Omega won).

The Young Bucks split SCU – and essentially retire Christopher Daniels in the process – with no nostalgia involved whatsoever

SCU – Christopher Daniels and Frankie Kazarian – are officially finished as a tag team – which theoretically makes sense because Daniels is getting old into his 50s. Daniels is about ready to bring his in-ring career to a close while Kazarian probably has a minimum of five good years left in him as a singles wrestler. The Bucks were the perfect team to bring SCU’s career as a team to a close (even though it was Scorpio Sky – not Daniels – who won the first ever AEW world tag team titles with Kazarian) because they don’t rely on nostalgia at all (much like Chris Jericho).

It makes sense that Nick Jackson looks energetically older than he is. This is only because he began his professional wrestling career at age 14 (because his brother Matt was four years older) so he got to experience the ups and downs of the business before most get the opportunity. The Bucks were wrestling incessantly from the time they were young kids and had a ring assembled in their backyard by their father. Nick is only 31 years old (almost 32) but has experienced many of the joys of life for a long time already – he got married at just 21, has made numerous trips to Japan, and already has three children.

Then there was the moment in the match when Matt told Christopher Daniels, “I’m sorry, I love you” right before a superkick – making fun of the heartwarming moment from WrestleMania 24 in 2008 when Shawn Michaels was about to deliver sweet chin music to Ric Flair in his retirement match. The Bucks make fun of virtually everyone – it’s a good way to bring the wrestling business forward and train people to become not so hung up on nostalgia as is common for fans.

May 12 was also the first time – at least to my recollection – that Matt and Nick publicly acknowledged their Christian upbringing. This makes sense, however, because they already have a book out so people can learn about it if they buy the book. They are willing to use any and all aspects of their life to further their characters in wrestling, which they have been brave enough to do. It takes audacity to be utterly transparent about all aspects of your life, but there are always unexpected positive surprises along the journey of life – you just need to be brave enough to make that choice and stick to it, which requires integrity.

Back on the Road

The global pandemic has continued to impact us for the past 14 months. The last AEW Dynamite in front of a life audience at full capacity was on March 11, 2020. Blood & Guts was originally scheduled to take place just two weeks later but was ultimately delayed for over a year (the event finally took place on May 5 the following year). AEW ran shows out of QT Marshall’s for a few months before moving to Daily’s Place almost a year ago (which is directly connected to the Jacksonville Jaguars’ stadium. Tony Khan, the CEO of AEW, is a co-owner of the franchise along with his father Shad).

AEW began allowing fans to attend Dynamite in a limited capacity starting in June 2020. Apparently that will come to a close in July 2021 as AEW will begin traveling again starting on July 7. The first show will be in Miami. And the company will be headed to Texas in Cedar Park on July 14 and Garland on July 21. All events will obviously follow COVID safety protocols. Tony Khan clarified that Miami, Austin, and Dallas are the first three of many cities the company is planning on traveling to.

Florida and Texas are two of the looser states when it comes to these pandemic protocols for whatever reason. Not necessarily good or bad – just different. That’s probably why WrestleMania 37 was moved to Tampa Bay, because it was originally scheduled to be held in Los Angeles. But California has been tight with their restrictions.

A new TV show my also come to fruition on TNT for AEW by the end of this year. The company now has a solid base with Dynamite having been around for 1.5 years.

Transparency

Paul Heyman is absolutely right when he calls the Heel / Babyface dynamic in WWE “antiquated.” This is without a shadow of a doubt an outdated concept – WWE is still in 2021 trying to recapture the magic of the 80s with guys like Hulk Hogan and Randy Savage. This old-school “superhero” mentality behind WWE’s character development lasted through the mid-90s until Stone Cold Steve Austin cut his Austin 3:16 promo at King of the Ring in June 1996. This was most likely not the case of Vince McMahon telling Steve to cut a promo this derogatory toward Jake “The Snake” Roberts but rather a case of Steve just by chance having the audacity to cut a promo like this – probably being aware that he would get reprimanded.

In 1996, the promo happened to strike the right chords with the audience and WWE slowly started to adopt a more attitudinal mentality which began to fully resonate with the audience and become embedded in the minds of WWE fans about a year and ½ after this (about the time of the first Hell in a Cell match involving Shawn Michaels and The Undertaker – and the debut of Kane. This strategy worked extremely well until the end of 2001, and WWE even attempted to carry on that mentality to a degree with the Ruthless Aggression era.

WWE has been treading water for the past 12 years since the Ruthless Aggression era ended. That is very evident now with characters like Braun Strowman and Randy Orton. I am not referring to the character of these men off-screen, because thank God there have been documentaries about these men telling the complex layers to these individuals’ characters as people.

Where is the depth in Strowman’s character? Who is this guy behind The Monster chasing titles? WWE may want to explore this on television. And most people are aware that Randy Orton is not a sociopath in reality. The later years to these guys and girls as people my need to be explored.

John Cena was WWE’s top dog during this time, and it carried the company extremely well, but Roman Reigns wanted to take the company in a different direction by pushing it forward rather than relying on what worked in the past. Roman had to pay his dues and earn his respect with everyone in the locker room as well as the higher-ups in the company for several years first. The company had already been around for about 30 years (under Vince McMahon) so Roman knew he would have to earn trust in order to take the company in the direction he ultimately envisioned.

Now The Tribal Chief has finally accumulated the trust from WWE to integrate what the company should be about from this point forward: present the human being first and the good guy – bad guy thing will be secondary. This is the model AEW is following – incorporating many different layers and nuances in wrestlers’ characters – and this is one way the why AEW is becoming so successful and regularly averaging over 1 million viewers on TNT every week. This company is being fully transparent with its audience and they appreciate the honesty.

Reigns’ character is extremely relatable because his downfall – like nearly all human beings – will be primarily because of his own insecurities. Roman feels the need to be acknowledged and this will most likely get the best of him eventually and ultimately bring the title reign of The Tribal Chief to an end within the next few months. This is so relatable because the primary downfall of most human beings is their own insecurities which most of them do not want to admit.