The internet is currently a war zone regarding the Jake Doyle experiment

Grab your favorite stiff drink because we need to talk about what just went down on Dynamite. For those who somehow missed the broadcast, Andrade El Idolo went through the meat grinder with Jake Doyle, and the post-match discourse on the forums is already reaching levels of toxicity typically reserved for console wars. Some folks act like Doyle getting fifteen minutes of TV time is a personal hate crime against the sanctity of professional wrestling.

Then you have the other side of the aisle, the group that treats every fresh face like the second coming of Bret Hart. It is the classic AEW civil war: the hardcore purists who want technical brilliance versus the chaotic energy fans who just want to see something, anything, that feels different. The reality is usually somewhere in the middle, but fans rarely do middle ground.

The "He Doesn't Belong" camp is firing on all cylinders

If you head over to the live threads, the skepticism is loud. The argument from the Doyle-haters is pretty straightforward: he lacks the polish to hang with a worker as crisp as Andrade. Watching Andrade execute that spinning back elbow into a hammerlock DDT is a reminder that we are dealing with a top-tier athlete, and seeing him paired with someone clearly still finding their footing in the ring rubs people the wrong way.

When you have Wrestling Inc reporting on the gritty details of the booking, it forces a moment of reflection on what the product is actually for. Is it for the vets who have paid their dues, or are we auditioning new blood at the expense of the main event quality? That is the real tension here, and it is bubbling over on every social platform worth checking.

The contrarians are just here to watch the world burn

Then you have the people who honestly do not care about ring work and just enjoy the spectacle of the Don Callis Family causing chaos. They are the ones posting in the threads saying that Doyle is exactly what the faction needs—a heat magnet who doesn't need a five-star rating to be effective. It is the wrestling equivalent of saying a movie is a "fun summer blockbuster" while everyone else is complaining about the plot holes.

Honestly, the contrarians usually have the upper hand when the crowd is actively booing. As we know, reaction is the only metric that matters at the end of the day. If half the audience is furious that he is there, he is doing his job. Getting people to actually care about a non-title television match in the middle of a July heatwave isn't nothing.

My take: Stop acting like the sky is falling

Here is my read on this disaster-class of a discussion: everyone needs to touch grass. Watching Andrade work is always a treat, and the guy carries the load so well that he makes almost anyone look like a professional in that ring. Was the match perfect? Absolutely not. It had a few clunky transitions that felt like a freshman trying to recite Shakespeare.

The criticism regarding the booking is valid, though. Putting an unpolished performer in the marquee spot of a two-hour show when you have a stacked roster is a choice, and it is one that will be scrutinized every time they step through the curtain. It is not necessarily ruining the industry, but it is certainly a bump in the road for a promotion that prides itself on high-end work rate.

We are looking at a 6.5 out of 10 on the entertainment scale, folks. It wasn't the technical masterpiece some were hoping for, but it wasn't the total train wreck that the Reddit doomers are claiming it to be. Let the guy work his way through the ranks, keep Andrade in title contention, and maybe just enjoy the fact that we have wrestling on a Wednesday night. If you’re truly miserable about it, maybe take a week off and stop letting a mid-card match ruin your serotonin levels.