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handsofthedevil

(15 posts)
Sat Oct 6, 2012, 09:35 PM Oct 2012

Former WWE employee BURIES Linda McMahon.

Just a note, I used to be employed by the WWE as well. Nothing important or big and I had virtually no contact with Linda McMahon whatsoever, but I think this speaks volumes and should be plastered all over Connecticut.

It’s time for me to weigh-in on the Connecticut Senate Race in which Linda McMahon is challenging Representative Chris Murphy. If you are a Connecticut voter I hope you will hear me out, and if you find my comments interesting I hope you will share them with your friends and neighbors. I live in Vermont now, but for about 14 years I worked for Linda McMahon at WWF/WWE (1987-2001). She has done well as the CEO of a professional wrestling company, and Linda is nice enough in person, but based on my direct and personal experience I think she would be a terrible selection as a United States Senator. Please let me explain why.

First, we need serious people in the U.S. Senate who have legislative experience and an ability to work quietly to craft compromise legislation. Linda has no such experience. She has worked exclusively as a chief executive at her own company where she is accustomed to telling subordinates what to do, and always getting her way. Compromise is simply not part of Linda’s experience set, and she has made no effort to gain that needed skill and experience. She could have served as a state senator for a few years, or even served as an elected city or county level official, but she doesn’t seem to have an interest in the nitty-gritty skills required of a successful legislator.

Second, we need quiet Senators who have a demonstrated ability to work with others, and not seek personal glory. The United States Senate already has an abundance of famous rich people stoking their egos and unable to get along, or to even try to reach consensus. Linda McMahon is a self-styled celebrity executive worth hundreds of millions of dollars, and that is exactly what we don’t need any more of in Washington.

Third, Linda McMahon has twice sought to purchase the Senate seat by using her extraordinary wealth to buy name recognition and organizational support. In her 2010 campaign she spent a reported $50 million, and she’s spending lavishly again now. In every state there are outstanding legislators who have distinguished themselves over many years, but these experienced and successful legislators have been dissuaded from running for national office by the need to raise vast sums of money to compete with millionaire wannabes. Linda’s approach is troubling because she is using money in place of experience, but also because it intimidates good citizens with relevant experience, driving them away from politics and inflicting long term harm on the democratic process itself.

Forth, Linda McMahon has shown very little business success beyond the wrestling world, and in the wrestling world her success is as much a credit to the creative enterprise of her husband as it is to her own business dealings. Linda’s flagship company, WWF/WWE, has excelled in recent years, but most of her business interests beyond wrestling have failed miserably. WWF/WWE tried to move into professional football by launching the XFL, but even with the buy-in of NBC Television that effort fell flat. She tried to develop a franchise around professional bodybuilding with a company called World Body Building Federation (WBF), but after two years and many millions of dollars, the effort was shuttered as a failure. Part of the bodybuilding project was a TV show called Bodystars and a nutritional supplement called ICOPRO, but both of those side efforts quickly collapsed in an embarrassing pile of financial rubble. Linda also made an effort to break into the National Hot Rod Association (NHRA) with two cars and a professional support team, but that lasted just a couple of years before the company slammed head-first into a marketing and financial crash-and-burn. Linda tried to redevelop a hotel complex in Las Vegas as a WWF themed attraction, but there too the company was in over its head, and when the project bogged down Linda shrugged and silently walked away from the expensive fiasco. And Linda took a very hands on approach to creating a restaurant franchise with a splashy flagship in Times Square, but it was an abysmal failure wrought with poor management and embezzlement, and it imploded with a balance sheet dripping brilliant red ink. Linda has even tried to muscle the company into Hollywood movies, but hasn’t had much success in that venue beyond the occasional film driven by wrestling talent and promoted on the existing wrestling programs. In short, Linda McMahon has shown financial success with the core wrestling product, but just about every time she has stepped outside of the wrestling business she has failed miserably. That’s a bad record to bring to the management of the United States of America.

Fifth, WWE has faced near-bankruptcy on several occasions and only made it through the periods of collapse by blind luck, and with the hard work and sacrifice of its staff. It might be alright for an executive to risk the bankruptcy of a business, but we need Senators who won’t risk the bankruptcy of the nation. Linda has shown time and again that she is willing to risk it all, and too often that risk has ended in failure and ruin.

Sixth, when Linda ran for the Senate in 2010 she proudly boasted to her corporate shareholders of slashing the company workforce, while at the same time the company was swimming in profit and the McMahon family was extracting dividends worth tens of millions of dollars. Her long standing loyalty to wealthy shareholders above hard workers is deeply disturbing, and not the kind of leadership that will serve the interests of most Americans.

Seventh, when WWF/WWE shifted from private ownership to a public company valued at more than a billion dollars, Linda granted free stock to family friends, but provided her long time employees with worthless ‘offering price’ options that granted no value whatsoever for their years of hard work. It was those workers who struggled through one downturn after another, and who helped the company claw its way from near bankruptcy to a billion dollars in value, but Linda kept the profits for her own family and gave the workers no piece of the enormous value they had created. Linda has consistently enriched herself at the expense of the workers, and has consistently failed to pass along meaningful value to the line-workers who create that wealth. We need United States Senators who recognize the contributions of workers, and who understand the importance of rewarding work over wealth. Linda is demonstrably not that person.

I could keep going with paragraph after paragraph critiquing Linda McMahon’s lack of appropriate experience, lack of a relevant skill set, and lack of meaningful support for the workers who have made her very, very rich. But I won’t.

Look, Linda McMahon is a pleasant person and I enjoyed working with her, but her business experience is limited; she has failed at just about every enterprise outside of the wrestling industry; she has hoarded vast profits for her own family while shutting out her workers; she has slashed the company workforce even while rolling in profits; and, in spite of a lifetime of opportunity she has failed to gain any direct relevant government experience that will translate to success in the United States Senate.

When voters go to the polls in Connecticut they need to play the role of a Human Resources Hiring Manager. From that perspective Linda McMahon is a fine person and she certainly has a nice professional presentation, but her resume is completely lacking in the relevant job skills, and her experience is heavy on failure and light on success. She has had ample opportunity to gain the requisite experience but hasn’t made any effort to do so, and clearly doesn’t deserve to waltz into the United States Senate simply because she is a passable actress with a nice smile and a fat checkbook.


http://www.twnpnews.com/2012/10/former-tenured-wwe-employee-slams-linda-mcmahon-in-lengthy-facebook-post/
13 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Former WWE employee BURIES Linda McMahon. (Original Post) handsofthedevil Oct 2012 OP
I support the wrestlers. Panasonic Oct 2012 #1
Yes they should. Dawson Leery Oct 2012 #2
Not an option. The WWE is virtually the only game in town johnlucas Oct 2012 #9
Vince fires people who try forming unions Prophet 451 Oct 2012 #11
Thanks for posting! TroyD Oct 2012 #3
This is a glorious, detailed smackdown. Indpndnt Oct 2012 #4
In a way, this is exactly why business owners do not make good politicians. SheilaT Oct 2012 #5
Thanks for this, handsofthedevil! May it go Cha Oct 2012 #6
Not to mention all the wrestlers who are dead Jennicut Oct 2012 #7
I'm a wrestling fan & this post is accurate johnlucas Oct 2012 #8
this is all great stuff renate Oct 2012 #10
Can I add a few? Prophet 451 Oct 2012 #12
Well written nt voteearlyvoteoften Oct 2012 #13
 

Panasonic

(2,921 posts)
1. I support the wrestlers.
Sat Oct 6, 2012, 09:36 PM
Oct 2012

I think they should form an union and start getting the necessary benefits and go on strike until the McMahons identify that their franchise is about to collapse until they agree to a collective bargaining event.

Dawson Leery

(19,348 posts)
2. Yes they should.
Sat Oct 6, 2012, 10:02 PM
Oct 2012

The McMahon's are "severely" cheap. Linda and Vince fired 8% of their workforce in 2009 to rake the profits to pay for Linda's political aspirations.

 

johnlucas

(1,250 posts)
9. Not an option. The WWE is virtually the only game in town
Sun Oct 7, 2012, 03:12 AM
Oct 2012

11 years ago the most major competition to the WWF folded.
That company was WCW—World Championship Wrestling—run under Ted Turner & later AOL TimeWarner.

Once that happened the only major league to go in America was the World Wrestling Federation.
The only place with national TV exposure & historical preeminence.
Not to mention decent paychecks.

Wrestlers could do what they always did & work in the smaller minor league independents but they would probably struggle to pay the bills should a sleazy promoter stiff them on payment—payments like $200 a show.
And if they GOT that $200 how is that making a living? Especially with the physical punishment wrestlers put themselves through in the ring (mental punishment is a whole 'nother ball of wax).

In the small independent leagues, there's little to no TV exposure so no lasting glory.
You're doing your best stuff & nobody even knows who you are except the handful of people who come to those shows.
Those shows staged in high school gyms & such.

Wrestlers work the independents for many reasons but the most ambitious ones do it so they can get called up to the big leagues.
But now there is basically only ONE big league. The WWF (I still hate saying WWE) holds all the cards.

Sure there's the TNA—Total Nonstop Action—which also has TV exposure. But they're a distant second.
They're making many of the same mistakes WCW made against the WWF.
They have lots of good talent but they can't capture the weight & gravity that WWF has on people's hearts & minds.
They haven't quite made the breakthrough in their 10 years of existence.

And besides the TNA is no closer to allowing a wrestling union either.
The wrestling business pretty much exploits the wrestlers.
The best the wrestlers can do to ensure their longevity is to make an impact on the fans that can last beyond their wrestling spotlight.
Mick Foley (Cactus Jack/Mankind/Dude Love) damn near killed himself in the ring to become a hardcore legend & then switched that over into writing books.
Now he gets to make cameo appearances on wrestling shows WITHOUT busting up his body all the time.
He can make appearances at comic book conventions & the Daily Show because his fame exceeded his wrestling spotlight.

The legend known as Abdullah the Butcher runs a restaurant in Atlanta.
ALL wrestling fans know about the infamy of Abdullah the Butcher in the ring & now his stagename can carry weight beyond wrestling.

The Rock is probably one of the best examples.
He made sure to make big impact while in the wrestling world.
He did it in a VERY short amount of time becoming a living legend 4 to 5 years into the business.
He used Vince McMahon's (owner of WWF) seeking of the mainstream spotlight to showcase himself on Saturday Night Live & the Democratic/Republican National Conventions then turned that into a movie role (as the Scorpion King in The Mummy Returns).
He turned that movie role into a movie career & LEFT the WWF.
Now he's known simultaneously as The Rock AND Dwayne Johnson.
The Rock comes back to the WWF years later (now WWE) as a bonafide movie star who can wrestle on HIS terms not Vince's terms.
He can maintain his wrestling fan base & mix it with his movie star fan base.

But if Rock DIDN'T do this he would probably have gotten injured & be forced to grind through Vince's schedules to hang onto his spot harming his health.
And when his body gave out on him he would have little to show for it but a bunch of uninsured pain.
Which leads to painkiller abuse & other drug abuse for the emotional pain.

It's all about getting an opportunity for a spotlight then maximizing your time in that spotlight hopefully extending the spotlight's time then transferring that spotlight to worlds outside of wrestling.
That's the only thing wrestlers got going for them in this business.

Another problem is the only way a strike will work is if the Top Guys go along with it too.
If John Cena, the current face of the WWF, stands solid with the lowest jobber, THEN you may have a chance.
Vince would fire the lower rung dudes for striking but he can't fire his entire league especially not the dude who's been the marquee guy for the past decade.
I say a CHANCE because Vince has PROVEN that he can lose his top guys & go on to succeed.
He survived after Hulk Hogan left, he survived after Bret "The Hitman" Hart was pushed out, he survived after "Stone Cold" Steve Austin & The Rock left.
There's always somebody willing to fill the top spot if the top guy leaves & that's why you'll never see a union in wrestling the way the current business is set up.
This all assumes the top guy would go along with the lowest jobber to begin with which is unlikely to happen from jump.

Supply & Demand. Too many wrestler demand to be part of the WWF's supply for Vince to be worried about a wrestlers' union.
John Lucas

Prophet 451

(9,796 posts)
11. Vince fires people who try forming unions
Sun Oct 7, 2012, 05:49 AM
Oct 2012

Because the wrestlers are employed (falsely) as independent contractors, they have no rights whatsoever and the McMahons have a history of firing anyone who starts talking about forming a union.

 

SheilaT

(23,156 posts)
5. In a way, this is exactly why business owners do not make good politicians.
Sat Oct 6, 2012, 11:17 PM
Oct 2012

"She has worked exclusively as a chief executive at her own company where she is accustomed to telling subordinates what to do, and always getting her way. Compromise is simply not part of Linda’s experience set, and she has made no effort to gain that needed skill and experience. "

This is, in my experience, the way most chief executives are. Again, many are nice enough human beings, and not all of them enrich themselves and their families while treating their employees so shabbily, but the need for compromise that is at the heart of legislation just doesn't exist for most business executives.

Heck, while I don't run a company, I am also very bad at compromise, which is why I would make a terrible elected official.

Jennicut

(25,415 posts)
7. Not to mention all the wrestlers who are dead
Sun Oct 7, 2012, 01:38 AM
Oct 2012

because of Linda and Vince. Owen Hart is just one of many.

The McMahons are not good people and step on anyone who gets in their way. A lot of people learned that the hard way. They are insanely greedy. I do NOT want this woman as my Senator.

 

johnlucas

(1,250 posts)
8. I'm a wrestling fan & this post is accurate
Sun Oct 7, 2012, 02:36 AM
Oct 2012

Linda McMahon = Linda & Vince McMahon.

Vince is running for U.S. Senate through Linda to seek new power that will help his business interests.
The whole family is a team, a tandem.
Both Vince & Linda made the WWF/WWE what it is today—good AND bad.

And they have NEVER been able to step outside of that wrestling zone to make their success.
I remember the WBF, the XFL, the restaurants, & all of that.
Their wrestling success—as it is for every other enterprise—comes from the hard work of their wrestlers & supporting staff.
And the wrestlers rarely get the real fruits of their labors.
There's a reason why The Rock got out & went to Hollywood. I don't blame him one bit.
Now he can come back on HIS terms. Now the WWF is lucky to have HIM not the other way around.

The fact that she's a Republican already disqualifies her in my book but she's the living embodiment of the money-laden plutocratic Republican. The lords & the peasants—and she believes herself to be in the lord category.
That's how the wrestlers kill themselves for a little bit of glory & a lifetime of pain.
That's why there's no wrestlers' unions or health care protections for wrestlers busting their bodies in the ring everyday.

I love to watch the show of wrestling—the performance art of it all. It's fun & it has shaped my life tremendously.
But I know the dark side of that business too.
If Linda gets in, then so does Vince & he can further entrench his power while disempowering others.
I rather the McMahons stick to the world of wrestling where they can only inflict their power on those who volunteer to join their world.

ALL wrestling promoters are shady & devious. Vince & Linda are not the worse of these (there are some much worse than they are).
They just had the most success. The McMahons need to stay in their lane.
Don't let them win.
John Lucas

renate

(13,776 posts)
10. this is all great stuff
Sun Oct 7, 2012, 05:41 AM
Oct 2012

Number seven seems, to me, to say the most about her as a human being. If it's true that WWF employees stuck with the company during bad times and weren't rewarded during good times... well, the parallels with the 99% vs the 1% are pretty obvious. The rich get richer and the non-rich do not, and that's true across the country, and it's against the core value of capitalism that hard work brings commensurate rewards.

Thank you for posting this, and welcome to DU!

Prophet 451

(9,796 posts)
12. Can I add a few?
Sun Oct 7, 2012, 06:03 AM
Oct 2012

- WWE wrestlers are falsely classified as independent contractors despite WWE controlling everything about them, right down to their haircut and whether they get a tattoo. That means they have no rights at all. Talent get no holidays, have to pay their own travel, accomodation and expenses (Randy Orton estimates this at $75-100k a year) and can be fired for getting injured on the job (which has happened numerous times).

- The McMahons have a record of firing any wrestler who starts talking about forming a union. Jesse Ventura and Sgt. Slaughter were both fired for that reason.

- The WWE drug policy has holes you could drive a bus though. And if I, a former low-rung indie wrestler, can spot those holes, you can be damn sure they're there for a purpose. Drugs are absolutely rife in wrestling (contrary to popular belief, narcotic painkillers are even more epidemic than steroids). Once you learn the details of Vince's trial on steroid distribution in 1992-94, there is every reason to believe that Linda was, at best, turning a blind eye to rampant steroid abuse. This has a bodycount associated with it.

- WWE has a habit of stopping royalty payments when a talent leaves the company. The courts told them to knock it off when Jesse Ventura sued over it in the late Eighties but, according to Jeff Hardy, they were still doing it in 2002.

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