The internet is processing the Big E news

Big E has officially dropped his book details, and the timeline is currently a disaster of pure, unadulterated emotion. If you were searching for a place to find cynical hot takes this Monday morning, you picked the wrong thread. It seems like the entire wrestling community has collectively decided to put down their pitchforks and just admit they miss seeing the man throw people across the ring.

The announcement regarding his upcoming project has triggered a massive wave of nostalgia. People aren't arguing about work rate or booking decisions for once. They are genuinely reflecting on how a guy who used to yell about breakfast foods became one of the most beloved figures in the entire business.

The enthusiasts vs the skeptics

The enthusiasts are out in full force, treating this announcement like a holy relic. You have people digging up clips of his 2021 Money in the Bank cash-in, reminding everyone that the atmosphere in the building that night was unlike anything else. The general sentiment is that Big E was the rare performer who could transition from comedy bit player to legitimate world champion without losing a shred of his natural charisma.

Then you have the skeptics, because of course they exist. Some corners of the internet are already grumbling about whether a wrestler should be spending time on literary endeavors when their physical presence is so desperately needed on television. One vocal user on a prominent sub-forum argued that unless this book details the intricate psychological damage of years of high-impact chair shots, they aren't interested in the fluff. It is a harsh take, sure, but it perfectly represents the segment of the fanbase that views every career move through the lens of pure wrestling output.

Is the nostalgia blinding us?

Here is where things get messy. There is a glaring issue that some people are choosing to ignore, and it involves the way we romanticize the past to cover up the gaping holes in the present day product. We are so starved for the chemistry that The New Day brought to the screen that Big E writing a book feels like a proxy for the void he left behind. It is easy to shower an absent star with praise, but it serves as a blunt reminder of how many current acts are struggling to capture even half of that authenticity.

My take? The enthusiasts have the upper hand here. People are looking for a connection to a performer who felt like a genuine human being rather than a polished corporate statue. While the skeptics make a valid point about our unhealthy obsession with retired antics, they miss the forest for the trees. The guy built a brand on being himself when most everyone else was reciting scripts written by middle-aged dudes in suits who haven't stepped in a ring since the nineties.

The legacy problem

Is this book going to be a masterpiece of literature? Probably not. It is going to be standard autobiographical fare filled with behind-the-scenes stories we have half-heard on podcasts already. But that does not matter. The fans need this because the current booking of the mid-card has been wandering through a desert of uninspired feuds for the better part of this quarter.

When you have guys trading wins without a coherent reason, you start looking back at leaders who understood the assignment. Big E didn't just understand the assignment; he rewrote the syllabus. The fact that he can pull this much attention just by hinting at his story is a indictment of the current creative output. It turns out that when you write actual characters instead of generic brawlers, people stick around even after the bell rings.

Ultimately, the reaction to this news proves that the fans are just looking for a reason to care about a human story again. I expect the sales to be through the roof, mostly because people are going to read it hoping to find some secret formula to why the modern era feels so sterile by comparison. Whether he delivers that reality check or just gives us a fun memoir is irrelevant. The buzz alone has already done more for his brand than a random tag team match in the under-card ever could.