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We all know WWE sucks right now and if they would listen to what we want and not worry about stockholders attempts at global branding so much they wouldn’t. Look at the stable “The New Day” made up of often misused superstars Kofi Kingston, Big E, and Xavier Woods. They were supposed to be an edgy, disgruntled anti-authority group, but now they are a gospel type group full of butterflies and rainbows, and fluffy little teddy bears. There’s a reason.

Apparently WWE has some cockamamie test that they give their top superstars to determine their worth, or ranking for lack of a better term. WWE has literally become a machine with no real leadership churning out mind numbing miss after miss. I’m talking to you Adam Rose, Fandango, and a whole host of others.

All of this was based on questions about Vince McMahon’s “Brass Rings” comments during an appearance on Stone Cold’s podcast. Vince essentially said that the millennials had no ambition and no drive to be the best. Well, Vince you keep packaging them with stupid gimmicks and you keep crapping on people who we want to see dummy.

AlternativeNation.net recently spoke with Daniel Bryan in advance of the WWE Royal Rumble. The full interview is available at this link. Check out what Bryan revealed about Vince’s brass rings and the odd test they have to take.

You know it’s funny, because one of the things that he had mentioned was, he said something about the Millennials not having any ambition, right. It’s funny, because the WWE does this personality test with some of their more successful superstars, where they rank you on all of these scores, like your desire for power, and your personality, and all that kind of stuff. One of the things they ranked was ambition, and it’s funny, because in this personality assessment, I got the lowest score for ambition that the lady had ever seen. So they do it on a percentile basis, so from 0 to 100, I was in the bottom 1 percentile of ambition.

It’s funny because the lady )administering the test) was like, ‘How on earth are you so successful given that you seem to have no ambition?’ I said, ‘Well, that’s where there’s a flaw on the test. I have no ambition for what society says is important as far as things like money, and all that kind of stuff.’ What I am ambitious about is I want to be the best wrestler that I can possibly be, and I think there’s some sort of mistake in generations, as far as what he thinks as far as our generation lacking ambition. Our generation just wants different things than what his generation wants, and I think that’s a societal thing as well. There’s an older generation of people who say, ‘No, you guys should want this, you guys should want this, you guys should want this.’ Whereas our generation, a lot of us say, ‘No, we don’t want that, we want something different, and a lot of the things that you guys wanted, are the reason that the world is messed up. We need to change our value system.’ So that’s it, that’s a very different take on what’s going on.

Bryan finished with:

But people do need to stand up and say, ‘No, this isn’t what I want, I want to do this. This is me, this is how I want to present myself on television. This is how I want to be within WWE, this is how I view professional wrestling, this is what I would like it to be.’ People have to have the courage to come up and say that. But the hard thing is, he was talking about the Attitude Era and how things were different, well things wouldn’t have been that much different if there wasn’t a WCW. Like guys could say, ‘Hey, I don’t want to do this. If you want to fire me fine, because I’m going to go to WCW and make just as much money.’ That doesn’t exist right now. It’s people who are okay with like, ‘Hey, my life without WWE, is as good as my life with the WWE.’ They have to be able to say, ‘Okay, if I’m going to say this is what I want to do, or else I’m taking my ball and going home.’ They have to have some sort of plan for when they take their ball and go home, they have something else to do, which is hard, especially when you have a family, and all that kind of stuff. So yeah, I have very interesting thoughts on that whole podcast. It’s a very interesting look into the mind of Vince McMahon, so it was fascinating.

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