The internet is losing its mind over a training facility

So, the latest conversation piece rattling around the wrestling boards involves a couple of WWE heavy hitters taking a pilgrimage to the Hart family's spiritual home. Liv Morgan and Jacob Fatu have been making noise about their time at the modern version of The Dungeon, helmed by TJ Wilson and Natalya Neidhart. Everyone on the internet suddenly acts like they have an Ivy League degree in Canadian wrestling history because of a few social media posts.

The believers are out in full force

You have the purists, the ones who probably own a Bret Hart jacket from 1994, acting like this facility is the Vatican of grappling. If you spend time reading the threads, you see people claiming that the mere existence of this gym is why the current product has higher technical ceilings. One user argued that watching Fatu work a basement dropkick after a week with Wilson felt like watching a guy who just downloaded the entire mat-wrestling database into his brain.

It is genuinely wild how much weight we put on where a guy works out. We went from wondering if talent was being pushed solely based on their promo skills to analyzing the floor mats and the specific shoulder-lock mechanics taught by guys who spent years on the road. It seems fans are starving for some kind of tangible proof that their favorites are putting in the work.

The skeptics aren't buying the hype

Of course, the contrarians are sitting in the corner throwing shade at everyone’s good time. There is a very vocal contingent that thinks the rebranding of the Hart family legacy is just good marketing for a gym that charges per session. One poster remarked that seeing stars promote their training partners feels less like a documentary and more like an Instagram ad campaign.

As WrestleTalk reported, Liv Morgan and Jacob Fatu have shared high praise for Nattie and TJ Wilson’s training facility, The Dungeon, and its legacy.

These skeptics argue that calling a place the most pure spot in wrestling is a bit rich when the industry is built on elaborate character work and television spectacle. They have a point, strictly speaking. Can a gym really fix a stale character or a botched finish? I have my doubts, especially when the booking is being cooked up in a boardroom two time zones away.

Where my head is at on this nonsense

Look, I love the history here. TJ Wilson is essentially a genius when it comes to the logistics of putting a match together. If you want to know which wrestlers are actually sharpening their tools, the results in the ring during live events are the only metric that matters. I do not care about where the drills happen; I care about the execution when the red light hits the camera.

My biggest gripe? The obsession with the legacy of the original Dungeon is bordering on unhealthy. The original site in Calgary was a literal basement where guys went to get their spirits broken. The modern version is a professional, safe, and highly efficient gym. These are not the same things, and treating them like they are cheapens the genuine grind those original guys had to endure. Stop trying to turn every training session into a mythological event.

The argument for the facility being a holy site falls apart once you look at how quickly these wrestlers move on to the next storyline. At the end of the day, it is a gym. If Morgan or Fatu improve their technical output at the next PLE, fine, give credit to the training. But let us stop pretending that working out in a room named after a legacy makes the industry any more pure. Pro wrestling is a carnival, even when it is a high-budget one.

I will admit, watching the praise for Nattie and Wilson shows the level of respect veterans have for their peers, which is a rare commodity in this business. Just keep it grounded. We want cleaner sequences and sharper storytelling, not more press releases about how hard a workout was on a Tuesday afternoon. Save the adoration for when the bell rings.