Opinion
DeMarco: Keith Lee + Santa Hat = Ratings
Keith Lee + Santa Hat = Ratings. It’s simple math!
It’s simple math!
For Christmas day (well, night), WWE put on an edition of NXT that seemed random on paper. Really random. The show featured matches recorded other editions of NXT (Roderick Strong vs. Austin Theory was recorded on December 11, for example), as well as some matches taped in Brooklyn at the Barclays Center before WWE Smackdown aired live from the building.
Here are the full results courtesy of Steven Mitchell’s WWE NXT Report:
- NXT North American Championship Open Challenge: Roderick Strong (champion) beat Austin Theory
- Isaiah “Swerve” Scott beat Jack Gallagher
- Candice LeRae beat Taynara Conti
- Dominik Dijakovic beat Bronson Reed
- Bianca Belair beat Shotzi Blackheart
- Lio Rush & Keith Lee beat Tony Nese & Damien Priest
In addition to that, we got the announcement of the Worlds Collide main event (taking place the night before the 2020 Royal Rumble in Houston), as The Undisputed Era (NXT Champion Adam Cole, NXT North American Champion Roderick Strong, and NXT Tag Team Champions Bobby Fish & Kyle O’Reilly) will collide (literally) with IMPERIUM (NXT UK Champion WALTER, Alexander Wolfe, Marcel Bartel & Fabian Aichner). That match is amazing, but it’s another article for another time.
The show also featured a “Control Center” to direct traffic, with NXT personalities Cathy Kelley, Pat McAfee (IN PANTS!), and Sam Roberts providing the backstory and sending us to our appropriate arenas. In a nice touch, the commentary teams were different for both locations, as Mauro Ranallo and Nigel McGuinness manned the desk in Orlando while Tom Phillips and Beth Phoenix took care of business in Brooklyn. This at least gave off the attempted impression that the events were occurring in real time. It’s the little things that really sets a WWE production apart.
Finally, we had video packages for Arturo Ruas and the Worlds Collide main event.
Because of the pre-recorded nature of these matches, the Christmas night edition of WWE NXT was largely a mid-card spectacular, with Roderick Strong and Keith Lee being the biggest stars on the show (and in opposite matches). Even if you didn’t know the results ahead of time, none of the six matches were ever in doubt in terms of who was going to win, but all six matches were capable of delivering, and they did just that, as Steven himself rated the show an 8.5 out of 10.
Christmas sucks for ratings, right?
Christmas is terrible for ratings, as the performance of WWE Monday Night Raw exhibits (although it was STILL the highest rated show not related to NFL Monday Night Football). It’s understandable, as people are traveling (I was at Disneyland myself), going to the movies, looking at Christmas lights, watching plenty of college football match-ups they wouldn’t care about in September or October, and otherwise breaking from their normal routine. That, for many, includes watching WWE.
But for some reason, more people watched WWE NXT on Christmas night. The show brought in 831,000 viewers, up from the week before (when NXT beat AEW Dynamite in both the viewership and the demographic share, for the first time). NXT still finished at #29 for the night according to Showbuzz Daily (my go to source for ratings, legit), but that’s not really a good indicator of performance.
It’s Christmas night, and I find some interesting things ahead of NXT in the ratings for the night:
- 13 editions of A Christmas Story, presented for 24 hours straight on TBS and TNT (which is also AEW’s home, and the likely real reason why there was no Dynamite)
- 3 NBA basketball broadcasts, along with 2 NBA coverage broadcasts that surrounded them
- 2 Comedy Central holiday stand-up specials
- 2 special year-end editions of Live PD on A&E
So if you account for these 22 broadcasts, WWE NXT now comes in #7 for the night. That’s not an exact extrapolation to make, because there’s almost always sports on, and those other viewers would have gone somewhere. It’s also reasonable to believe A Christmas Story had overlapping viewers as people simply have it on in the background all day. So again, estimating NXT’s true position without those shows airing isn’t scientific, it’s guess work. But we’re wrestling analysts, we do a lot of guessing.
So if you just take out A Christmas Story, NXT still comes in at #16 for the night, a good showing for the Black and Gold Standard. But here’s the real question: Why?
I posed that question to the host of The #Miranda Show here at The Chairshot, Miranda Morales, who knows a thing or two about the wrestling business (she’s in it, as a ring announcer [to the stars] and an interview segment producer [also for the stars]).
Me: “NXT’s ratings went UP on Christmas day. So do the holidays impact ratings, is it competition, or show quality?”
Miranda: “It’s simple. Keith Lee + Santa Hat = Ratings”
That’s inside baseball right there! That’s the kind of in-depth analysis you’ve come to expect from Patrick O’Dowd, Miranda, and myself on the Greg DeMarco Show, and on Miranda’s weekly show.
Seriously though, the show was just fun. The wrestling was good, several beloved talents were featured (Keith Lee, Candice LeRae, Swerve Scott, Roderick Strong), there were two debuts for stars that could be a huge deal in NXT over the next two years (Shotzi Blackheart and future WrestleMania main eventer Austin Theory), and yes–Keith Lee in a Santa Hat.

Keith Lee in a Santa Hat would reemerge later in the match as well, much to the delight of the Brooklyn crowd. The man who I thought needed to turn heel is in fact a big time babyface for the company, proving me way wrong. And I am 100% okay with that. I love Keith Lee, and I love NXT. And THAT is why I think the show performed so well. It was a perfectly places, and welcomed distraction from the holidays. Not too long (2 hours), a fresh format (Control Center and two separate locations), and just some really good wrestling. You can toss in the fact that there was no competition from AEW (although AEW’s replacement for the night, the 7 PM broadcast of A Christmas Story on TNT, drew 1.03 million viewers and finished at #19).
That’s wrestling, a place where sometimes a big dude in a Santa Hat outshines everything else, even research and analysis. And that’s why we love it.
Pro wrestling, along with sports entertainment, is a fun ride. Enjoy it! Follow me on social media @ChairshotGreg and drop me a line at gregdemarco@thechairshot.com.
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Opinion
Chris King: The Wyatt Sicks’ Wasted Potential By WWE
Chris King takes a look at the WWE and their wasted potential of Uncle Howdy and the Wyatt Sicks faction.
Chris King takes a look at the WWE and their wasted potential of Uncle Howdy and the Wyatt Sicks faction.
It’s that time of the year again, folks; it’s unfortunate and downright awful that so many WWE superstars got released today. I’m not going to list all of them, but I am going to talk about one of my favorite factions,
The Wyatt Sicks. Nikki Cross, Joe Gacy, Erik Rowan, and Bo Dallas (Uncle Howdy) were something special. After Bo’s brother Bray Wyatt’s tragic passing, WWE felt like there was a hole that needed to be filled. Wyatt was one of the most creative and brilliant characters, and Bo would be taking over his brother’s concept and bringing it to life. In 2024, at the end of an incredible documentary highlighting Wyatt’s career and struggles, Bo appeared on the screen portrayed as Uncle Howdy. The last time Uncle Howdy was seen on-screen was at the 2023 Royal Rumble, where Wyatt defeated LA Knight in a Pitch Black Match. Howdy jumped off a structure onto Knight.
This post-credit scene sparked so much speculation and excitement that Wyatt’s brother would carry on his legacy and possibly debut the faction that was Wyatt’s concept. On the June 17th episode of Monday Night Raw, The Wyatt Sicks made their dramatic debut ,destroying the backstage area as well as “murdering” Chad Gable. It was such an iconic arrival for Howdy as he made his menacing walk from the back into the audience who were chanting “Holy Shit.” The Sicks and American Made (Chad Gable and The Creed Brothers) battled for months, with The Sicks being victorious. On the September 9th episode of Raw, The Sicks defeated them, with Howdy getting the win with Sister Abigail.
The following year, The Sicks would move over to Friday Night SmackDown, and it seemed like WWE had a plan in place. They would win the tag team championships from The Street Profits and start to look dominant. Now, what should have happened next is Howdy should have won the United States title. The Sicks could have held all the gold over on the blue brand, but it never happened. The Sicks entered into a never-ending feud with The MFT’s (Solo Sikoa, Tama Tonga, Tonga Loa, JC Mateo, and Talla Tonga.) It started off exciting, and the WWE Universe was red-hot for their interactions.
After months of repetitive matches and The MFT’s stealing their lantern, the feud grew tiresome and boring. Even Tama asked Solo why they are still holding onto the lantern, as it was destroying them as a whole. Finally on the SmackDown before Mania, Tama
gave the lantern back to Howdy against Solo’s wishes. Please explain to me why both factions fought almost every single week instead of just having one final blowoff match at WrestleMania.
It should have been either a massive street fight or a falls count anywhere match on the grandest stage of them all. Instead, it turned into a meaningless week-after-week extravaganza that benefited no one. The MFTs won the rivalry, and The Sicks don’t even work for WWE anymore. This was the same criminalized creative process that Wyatt dealt with during his first run in the company.
We’ll never know how much of a dangerous force The Wyatt Sicks could have been in the WWE. For all their careers’ sake, I hope they stay far away from the company for as long as possible. Every superstar that was cut deserves better!
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Opinion
Chris King: Bloodline Saga: Is This the Right Call For WWE?
Chris King questions the WWE’s logic in setting up Jacob Fatu as the next challenger for World Heavyweight Champion Roman Reigns
Chris King questions the WWE’s logic in setting up Jacob Fatu as the next challenger for World Heavyweight Champion Roman Reigns
Roman Reigns is once again World Heavyweight Champion after his dominant win over CM Punk at WrestleMania 42. On the following night on Monday Night Raw, The OG Bloodline came back together as a well-oiled machine as The Usos stood side by side with Roman. With the WWE Universe asking who would be the first to challenge “The Tribal Chief,” Jacob Fatu shocked the world by answering the call.
Fatu is running hot after his impressive win over Drew McIntyre and feels like he is ready to become the new world champion. This bloodline segment ended Raw, and it picked right back up on SmackDown with even Solo Sikoa and the MFTs involved. This is now two shows that have been centered around The Bloodline saga, and it’s made me question whether or not WWE should be retelling this story.
The Bloodline (Roman Reigns, The Usos, and Solo Sikoa) ran WWE for over four years as Reigns’ henchmen, doing his dirty work to retain his title. Even though Roman has declared he doesn’t want Jey and Jimmy to serve him, it sure seems like WWE are spinning their wheels. Fatu could add a whole new chapter into the story, even if he’s not able to beat Roman at Backlash. “The Samoan Werewolf” could be forced to do the same thing as Jey did all those years ago and fall in line.
In my opinion, I feel like Fatu should be challenging for the Undisputed WWE Championship because that’s a title I feel like he should win. I understand standing up to your blood and trying to prove you’re the best, but I don’t think this is the right move. It feels like 2022 all over again, as The Bloodline is the central focus on both shows. If Fatu doesn’t win, what happens to all his momentum he’s been building over the last two years?
Why did WWE make this the best choice for storyline purposes? Why couldn’t creative have come up with a different challenger for Roman? There are so many other superstars that could challenge The Tribal Chief, such as Rusev, Bron Breakker, Gunther, or even a returning Sheamus.
I just can’t help but question WWE’s logic here, and it kind of reminds me of all the times The Shield reunited. Could WWE be pushing the same storyline too many times here? Could the WWE Universe get tired of this rinse and repeat cycle of The Bloodline Saga?
Are we about to see all the weekly episodes solely focused on The Bloodline again? Will it be cinema… Yes. Is there still money in The Bloodline… Yes. Was it the right call? That’s to be determined!
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