Excellent! Sounds kind of interesting, at least some new ideas. $25 for a large pizza could be a problem, but sounds like something you have to try once.
-------- interesting....
The workers compensation lawsuit filed by Shannon Spruill (Daffney), 37, was settled on 3/8, which was almost a given considering Spruill in the suit was going after a court ruling on whether wrestlers really were employees rather than the independent contractors they are classified as. There is far too much money for TNA to lose with a reclassification. Spruill, who hasn’t wrestled in a few years due to the effects of multiple concussions, was seeking $26,000 to cover her medical bills from three incidents. The first was from the 2009 Bound for Glory show where Abyss choke slammed her off the top rope to the floor through a barbed wire table filled with thumb tacks. She claimed she was hesitant to do the spot, but was convinced by Terry Taylor and Vince Russo how important it was going to be for her career as well as to the storyline. She agreed to do it, only to find out after being hurt that Spike TV refused to allow it to be replayed on Impact because of their standards of men-on-women violence. She suffered a broken arm and a concussion in taking the fall. The second was in late 2009 during the December TV tapings where they were doing multiple tapings and she suffered a concussion. She was booked for matches the next few days and was told she should wrestle her scheduled matches over the next two days and rest. She wouldn’t wrestle due to the concussion. She was also scheduled for a photo shoot during those days, and when she didn’t wrestle, was pulled from the photo shoot. The third was doing a tryout match with the short-lived Rosie Lottalove, where she also suffered a concussion. She claimed from those incidents she suffered three concussions, a stinger, a broken arm and a bruised sternum. She wrestled with TNA until the end of 2010. She filed suit in early March of 2011, and then, when her contract expired in mid-April of 2011, she was not signed to a new deal. Due to the effect of the multiple concussions, she retired as a wrestler. There is a report that she wrestled an independent match in October 2011, but aside from that, there are no records of her wrestling after her final matches with TNA. TNA at first paid a $600 hospital bill but then stopped paying for her medical costs, even though the injuries took place while she was working on the job for them. She claimed Terry Taylor, who was then head of talent, had told her TNA would pay her medical bills. But later she got a letter from TNA declining paying the rest of her medical bills because they noted she was an independent contractor. TNA later did pay $8,000 more than a year later for the first incident, and $9,556 for medical treatment after the third incident. Terms of the settlement were sealed and TNA also worked into the settlement that Spruill couldn’t say there was a settlement, only that the case was closed amicably. The belief is the settlement was for significantly more than $26,000. Her vague Twitter post after the case was closed was, “I’d like to take this opportunity to sincerely thank everyone for all the love and support over the past two years. I appreciate so much that you recognize the huge injustice that is being done to professional wrestlers throughout the industry. I hope my case has opened up a few blind eyes and maybe now we, the wrestlers, who put our bodies on the line every time we step in the ring, are one step closer to being provided with medical coverage and all the benefits that go along with being a true employee and not an independent contractor.”
This has been a controversy in pro wrestling since wrestlers began signing exclusive contracts in the 80s. This has been an issue with TNA because some wrestlers have had their injuries taken care of, and others haven’t. In the case of WWE, while the wrestlers are independent contracts, the company does take care of all in-ring injuries and rehab from those injuries. In 2008, Scott Levy (Raven), Mike Sanders and Chris Klucsaritis (Chris Kanyon) sued WWE on the issue, but the case was thrown out the next year because the legal statute of limitations for such a lawsuit had expired on many of their claims by the time they filed the suit. The court also ruled that they were not financially harmed by the classification as independent contractors and that they all signed contracts with specific language that they were independent contractors. The actual merits of independent contractor vs. employee were dismissed because the court ruled they weren’t personally harmed and they knew what the terms were when they signed the deal. Outside entities have not gone after pro wrestling, likely because the industry is so small and you become a laughing stock if you take seriously something “fake,” that even in Connecticut where Linda McMahon ran against the Democrats and people made noises about investigating the classification, nothing has ever gone anywhere. When you look at employee vs. independent contractor status, modern pro wrestlers with exclusive contracts, being told where they are booked, not having the option to turn down dates on their schedule, being told how to perform, what gimmick to use, would appear to be employees. Wrestlers of the past would be more independent contractors. In TNA, because there is some ability to book your own independent dates, the case wouldn’t be as strong as WWE.
There has been a lot of locker room unhappiness when word got out that for the TV tapings, they would be paid as if it was one show, even if they appeared on both shows taped. Most wrestlers in the company are on per-show deals, and since they rotate people at house shows and run limited crews, the only shows that the full crew, or at least the main crew, is consistently on would be the TV’s. Before they were mostly taping one show at a time in Orlando, whether live or on tape. Now, they are taping two shows starting this week in Chicago, but the vast majority will be getting paid for one show and thus make half as much over the course of a year for television shots.
It was interesting RVD was kept off the Lockdown show since he had been on TV regularly in the buildup, and King vs. RVD was the match that would have made the most sense as the X title match, given RVD had three wins over King and one fluke loss. RVD’s contract expires very soon and he’s something like $2,500 per appearance. He and Ken Anderson both signed very good contracts because both were considered big signings for the company when they got them. But both really don’t mean much right now.
For TNA January numbers, live attendance went from 1,200 (not including the U.K. tour) in January 2012 to 550 in January 2013 (down 54%). Impact in January 2012 averaged a 1.15 rating and 1.61 million viewers and in January 2013 it averaged a 1.12 rating (down 2.6%) and 1.53 million viewers (down 5.0%).
A lot of Hulk Hogan’s financial details were hacked and put on a web site, which has since been taken down. The Los Angeles Police Department, whose head, Charlie Beck, was among those whose bank records were hacked, is going after whoever it is that hacked the financial records of Hogan, Donald Trump, Kim Kardashian, Britney Spears, Michelle Obama, Jay-Z, Hillary Clinton, Beyonce, Paris Hilton, Mel Gibson, Ashton Kutcher, Joseph Biden, Attorney General Eric Holder, Sarah Palin and Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Bubba the Love Sponge was on Howard Stern’s show this week talking about the Hogan sex tape. He’s no longer being sued by Hogan, who still has a suit out against Heather Cole (Bubba’s ex-wife who was the woman Hogan was having sex with in the video) and Gawker media. Bubba didn’t say much on the case, other than claiming he never watched the tape, that he no longer talks to Hogan but he still considers Hogan a friend, and isn’t sure if he’ll ever talk to him again. He clearly wanted to open back up the relationship because he talked about how much he helped Hogan during a bad time in his life. Regarding sleeping with his wife and the tape, Bubba only said that everyone was on the same page on that one and then said he can’t legally say more than that.
There was a USA Today interview with Christopher Daniels talking about his promo style. “The things we’re doing on television now, that’s the way Frankie and I are backstage. We’re very snarky guys. Our sense of humor is a little bit cutting. It’ll get you at the kneecaps. We took that ball and ran with it. And they’ve been very happy and supportive in terms of getting us out there and letting us have opportunities on the microphone and doing the silly stuff that has sort of become our trademark. That satire has become our staple. They’re basically throwing underhand pitches to us at this point. A lot of our stuff comes out of, `Wouldn’t it be funny if? or `Do we have the guts to do this on television?’ Just him and I brainstorming and trying to think of ways we can get under the fans’ skin and ways we can get people to talk about this the next day around the water cooler.” Daniels said he’s patterned himself after the comic book character’s like Magneto in X-Men, bad guys who in their heart believe they are right (that’s actually been a historically effective heel character) and the faces are wrong.
The company canceled its 4/6 house show in Atlantic City over Mania weekend. They are still running a 4/5 show in Westbury, NY, with Hogan appearing on the show since he’ll be in town to do the WrestleCon autograph show. They are running a 3,100-seat arena and given everyone in town for Mania and promoting it as a loaded show, should sell it out. The main event will be Sting & Jeff Hardy against the reformed Bully Ray & Devon with secret stipulations that will be announced live by Hulk Hogan, plus Bobby Roode vs. James Storm in a street fight, Christopher Daniels vs. Samoa Joe, Velvet Sky vs. Gail Kim for the Knockouts title, Kurt Angle vs. Wes Brisco and Robbie E vs. Joseph Park. The show will go head-to-head with TNA’s first taped PPV show.
The upcoming TV taping schedule after Chicago is 3/28 in Jonesboro, AR, 4/11 in Corpus Christi, 4/25 in Indiana, PA, 5/9 in Tupelo, 5/23 in Tampa at the University of South Florida Sun Dome and 6/6 in Duluth, GA at the Gwinnett Arena.
Chicago tickets went well and Jonesboro is off to a good start. The one thing about TNA is they can make 3,000 in the building on TV look good because they shoot really smart and also because people don’t expect to see thousands in the stands for TNA, so when they do, it makes for a good visual. Unlike last year when they tried this, it was dipping their toe in the water and giving up quickly, this time by canceling the lease with the Impact Zone, they’ve made a clean break. The difference is right now they are so much more valuable to Spike than ever before because of Bellator.
The P.R. department is pretty much non-existent with Chris Thomas having given notice and Jules Wortman, who was VP of Public Relations, being dropped after Lockdown.
An update on Jesse Sorensen. He was brought to Lockdown. He is close to being in cosmetic shape, but he is leery about wrestling given he was immobile for three months after his injury. Last year’s plan was to give Sorensen a big push on his return. The idea was to keep him alive with updates on TV, but as is usual when it comes to long-term plans, they forgot. The original idea was for him to beat Austin Aries for the X title when Aries had the long run, instead of having Aries vacate it. The thing is, Sorensen was told about all these major plans for himself and what shows he was supposed to get his return in while he was still paralyzed. When Jeremy Borash got the word he was coming to the ballroom, he led the fans in chanting for him.
The company is right now asking for $25,000 for sold shows. They can get casinos but it’s a tough nut for anyone else because you have to pay that price to TNA, pay renting and marketing as well, so break-even is going too be well ahead of 1,000 tickets, and TNA house shows are rarely hitting that mark these days.
Lisa Varon’s (Tara) new restaurant, “The Squared Circle,” opens 3/14 in Chicago. One of the plans is for them to show all the TNA and WWE PPVs.
Kia Stevens (Awesome Kong) and Nicole Raczynski (Roxxi) were contacted about appearing on the 3/17 all-women’s taped PPV show from Orlando and both turned it down. Stevens mentioned it on twitter. I would presume Lauren Williams (Angelina Love) would have also been asked but that’s not confirmed. A lot of the former women in the company, because of the pay scale and in many cases, the way they were let go or what led them to quit, didn’t leave with the best of feelings for the company.
On a UFC TV show, they were advertising a Hooter’s Dream Girl deal in a crawl, and the person they were pushing this week was Brooke Adams, aka Miss Tessmacher. No mention of her being a pro wrestler or her stage name .
_________________ Drop In wrote: I'm picturing a 12 year old Bob Loblaw bitching out a Randy Savage Wrestling Buddy for botching his finisher. Also envisioning Bob Loblaw getting bitched at for lighting the living room table on fire for said finisher.
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