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Bronson Reed On Rumors About Triple H & Vince McMahon, Talks Wednesday Night Wars

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Jonah Rock recently appeared as a guest on the Wrestling Inc. Daily podcast for an in-depth interview covering all things pro wrestling.

During his appearance on the popular pro wrestling program, the former WWE NXT Superstar known as Bronson Reed spoke about growing frustration backstage during his run with the company, if there was tension between Vince McMahon and Triple H regarding the brand, as well as the impact that NXT losing the “Wednesday Night Wars” to AEW had.

Featured below are some of the highlights from the interview.

On whether or not there was backstage tension between Vince McMahon and Triple H regarding WWE NXT and the growing frustration backstage: “At first, no. The time I came in, we were still doing just tapings at Full Sail, and then it ended up getting its USA Network deal and going on cable. So they really did push it, and it did seem like we were a third brand. That’s what Shawn, that’s what everyone was saying. ‘This is a third brand. You don’t need to go to RAW or SmackDown anymore. We’re going to focus on this being a big third show,’ obviously, given that we have TV time. For that first year of TV time, I think everyone backstage saw it as ‘hey, we’re NXT. We’re something different. We’re still part of WWE but something different. But we’re focusing on trying to make this great,’ and it seemed like that’s what it was. It seemed like Vince didn’t really care so much, and it was just Hunter’s baby. But in this year, these last six months or so, I think that’s all changed and some frustration definitely has grown backstage. I’ve seen it firsthand.”

On the impact of NXT losing the “Wednesday Night War” and WWE revamping the brand: “I’m not 100% too sure. I know Hunter and some of the top guys would say, ‘We’re not in direct competition. We’re focusing on our own thing. We’re just trying to make our own product as good as possible.’ There always was that bit of competition, and I don’t know what the higher ups thought of that, thought of us, obviously, losing to AEW week in and week out. But we were still putting on great TV. And I don’t know if they just thought, maybe we weren’t, but my whole thing is, they didn’t watch the product, so how did they know? So to then completely revamp it, how do you know that this is now going to be successful if you didn’t watch what was happening before?”

Check out the complete interview at WrestlingInc.com.