Ask HN: Why does the WWE constantly remind viewers that matches are scripted?
2 amichail 9 5/27/2025, 2:53:26 PM
They do this by having wrestlers repeatedly question whether the champion can carry the company.
This implies that the champion was chosen for their ability to make money for the company.
It's a clear admission that match outcomes are predetermined.
How is that good for business?
Therefore, recent years have seen major promotions recognize that selectively pulling back the curtain on the illusion further by referencing the business itself in a self-aware way allows them some control over that reality while also continuing to build narratives around the characters that the wrestlers and other talent play in these scripted shows. The heightened characters and broader scripted plots that connect matches remain motivating factors, at the expense of chipping away at the traditional concept of "kayfabe".
Professional wrestling is by and large a scripted drama series about athletes, with scenes of interpersonal conflicts connected with stuntwork scenes of simulated competition.
What you're calling out is a plot point, even if it blurs lines with the real world. It's a storytelling property that modern wrestling employs, if not uniquely then distinctly; because the promotion knows that modern fans regularly argue over which wrestlers are most valuable to the promotion, the promotions use that to add heat to the character drama.
From a more bonafide interpretation of their strategy, it is good to remind viewers that these feuds or fights are only for entertainment, not to be taken seriously.
God knows we see meaningless fan fights over pop culture artists, on top of that imagine wwe fans disagreeing with each other and openly jumping over rooftops over their perceived adversary just because someone said their favourite wrestler’s hair colour sucks!
It's no secret that WWE style wrestling is theater rather than an actual competitive sport. The majority of people who follow it are certainly aware of that.
> How is that good for business?
Because it lets them craft more compelling storylines and lore that stretches over years. Since it's a kind of theater, the story is the thing that people are paying for.
Boxing does something different, yet similar, by, rather than looking for opponents of about equal strength, scheduling bouts for upcoming talent that they’re expected to win.