Imagine if the writers of a drama series rewrote their
series finale to turn a good character evil just because they were disliked by
fans. Or if a soap used the off screen travails of their actors as part of on
screen storylines. Or if a struggling sci fi show used the studio heads who wanted to cancel the series as characters within their own show and had their fictional characters battle them.
It is almost impossible to conceive of a written show
reactively so dramatically to the whims, preferences and maddening
inconsistencies of their fans. It does, however, exist. In the world of
professional wrestling the fans frequently tell their masters, the writers,
exactly how they expect the product to be produced and, with most the major
shows broadcast live in front of thousands of fans, they have the power to
force their changes. Think for a second on how it would change your viewing
experience if there was a live studio audience on Eastenders that was allowed
to boo, cheer, chant and otherwise disrupt the show as much as they wished.
Which storylines would have been changed, cut, or lengthened on the strength of
their reaction? Wrestling is a merciless
environment that brutally exposes those unable to command an audience and where
the writers are directed by fans.
In recent times the rise of the smart, internet savvy, fan
has made the crowds at wrestling events more mutinous than ever. They cheer who
they want and they boo who they want and there is little that can be done about
it. Frequent champion and consistent good guy John Cena knows this better than
anyone. While he has been presented as a good guy, an all American, morally
straight wrestling fan who succeeds through sheer strength of character, Cena
has entered arenas to walls of boos nearly every night for years. Recently fans
made up a new song. It’s pretty simple, they just sing ‘John Cena Suuuuuccccckkkkks’ repeatedly in time to his theme music. All he can do is smile
a rueful smile and shrugs his shoulders at their antipathy. For a while WWE has
presented this as ‘controversy’ rather than outright rejection, at least in
part because their hands are tied when it comes to Cena. For, while the adult
fans may hate his character, he is the most popular wrestler amongst children
possibly since the days of Hulk Hogan and the Ultimate Warrior. Not only that
but John Cena the man has become so blurred with John Cena the character that
it is impossible for many adults, and nearly all child fans, to unpick the two.
While the character Cena is booed for being an unapologetically nice guy, the
man Cena is universally hailed for his relentless pursuit of other’s happiness,
he remains the most requested, and most prolific wish granter, in the history of
the Make a Wish foundation. He is such a famously good guy off screen that on
screen he has become too predictable one note.
For years the WWE has struggled with this fundamental
question: how do they portray Cena as the hero while thousands of fans vocally
treat him like the villain? They may have finally answered that problem, and
their solution is a character named Bray Wyatt.
Bray Wyatt is a relatively new character, he only debuted
just under a year ago, and yet he is already pushing at the boundaries of the
WWE’s relationship with its fans. Taking the Southern Gothic tradition and
building it into a wrestling character was a risk, in the new WWE world of
blurred realities and shades of grey it could have been too cartoony to
survive. However Windham Rotunda, who plays Bray Wyatt, has chosen to underplay
the hoodoo elements of the literary strand and instead created a wild eyed
preacher like character who is dominant and charismatic but not magical. He
spouts almost idiotic nonsense but with meanings so subtle and conniving that
they can only have come from an intelligent brain. He is teamed with two
hulking power house wrestlers who are in his thrall and fight most of his
battles for him. He often reacts to his opponents’ violence with bursts of
manic laughter, proud at how they cannot counter him intellectually. He
sometimes sings songs at his opponents to put them off their stride, notably ‘He’s
got the whole world in his hands’. At times his character is so on point as to
be mesmeric. The problem for most of his contemporaries is that with great
performance comes great popularity. The more a wrestler tries to get booed the
more they get cheered in appreciation of their attempts. It is a beguiling and
frustrating problem for most wrestlers. Not for Bray.
Bray is a cult leader, he may or may not believe he has a
higher purpose, but regardless he feeds of the adulation of others. He targets
the most popular wrestlers and attempts to expose their hypocritical
relationship with the fans. As he assaulted Daniel Bryan, WWE’s most popular
wrestler of the day, he yelled “Why aren’t you helping him?” at fans held
behind barricades and security staff before ramming their hero into a ring post
again. The commentary team and other wrestler’s portray him as a man corrupting
the fans, and a threat to the very sanity of the WWE.
After defeating Bryan, Bray shifted into a feud with John
Cena. The flagbearer of the WWE and its most hated hero. As their
confrontations built Bray tried to convince Cena that all his good guy persona
and his legacy of good deeds were a sham, that really Cena was a monster, just
like Bray. Cena started the feud his normal cocky, joking self but as Bray
continued his psychological war Cena became more afraid, more conflicted and
more troubled than we had seen him before.
In their match at Wrestlemania, Bray tried to convince Cena
to step over to his side, to the side of violence. Bray begged and begged Cena
to break the rules and bring out his violent side. It felt like Bray could win
by Pinfall, Submission, or Psychological Trauma. However Cena refused again and
again, eventually winning the match. But something else began to happen, not in
the ring but in the crowd. At one point, as Bray had taunted Cena, the fansbegan to wave their arms and spontaneously serenade Bray with their own
rendition of “He’s got the whole world in his hands”. John Cena, the last good
man, may have stuck to his morals and won the match but had he lost something
greater?
This song has now become Bray’s calling card and, in his
feud with John Cena, it has become the sound of lost souls clinging to Bray’s
twisted vision of the world. Being popular doesn’t hurt a villain, like Bray,
who intends to lead us astray. When the fans take his side, over the clean
living dedication of John Cena, it is not the role of villain and hero being
upended but the depredations of a dangerous man pulling an audience down into
his moral decay. This effective reshaping of the booing of John Cena has fixed
his character not as the fan’s favourite necessarily, but as the man the fans know
they should favour. John Cena doesn’t fight Bray Wyatt because he wants to but
because he has to break Bray’s spell over the fans. In the weeks since
Wrestlemania it has become clearer and clearer that he is losing this battle.
Two weeks ago, the fans were given the choice to decide how
many of the Wyatt family John Cena would face in main event match.
Overwhelmingly they voted for him to face a 3 on 1 handicap match where he had
no chance of victory and, in storyline terms, a high chance of injury. Within
the fictional world of wrestling it was the latest injustice heaped upon Cena
in his brave stand against the defiling influence of Bray. It led Cena to
question the fans directly on the next edition of Raw, why had they done this
to him, why did they ignore him when he spoke of the dangers of Bray Wyatt? He was answered by a child choir, his former target demographic now united in tauntingly
singing modified lyrics of the whole world in his hands, mocking his values and
his former fanbase before Bray Wyatt emerged as their leader. It was the
ultimate humiliation for the good guy and it allows the WWE to tell a
compelling story of a man standing up for all he believes in, all we should believe in, even as we turn
our backs on him.
Bray Wyatt only debuted 11 months ago, John Cena has been
booed for years, but WWE is now making a compelling story out of convincing us
we’ve all been deceived. As WWE keeps reminding us, we all know Cena is right,
we all know Wyatt is a false prophet, but we can’t help but boo the boy scout
and sing the preacher’s song. The fans aren’t just part of the story, now we are
the story as Bray and Cena battle for our soul. It doesn’t really matter who
gets pinned and whose hand is raised in victory on Sunday at Extreme Rules. Ultimately,
it only matters who we cheer. Will us fans finally see the light of Cena’s deeds
and cheer for him and his honest faith in hard work, or are we beholden to our
baser instincts and the siren call of Bray Wyatt’s immoral decay?
Now tell me, what other medium could do story telling like
that?
Credit to wrestlingwithtext.com for the gifs.
Credit to wrestlingwithtext.com for the gifs.
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