WWE is playing a dangerous game with the ghost of Vince McMahon
If you spent more than three minutes on Twitter or r/SquaredCircle these last 24 hours, you know exactly what’s happening. Vince Russo, the man who brought us the Judy Bag on a Pole match, is out here shouting into the void that WWE is clearing a path for a Vince McMahon return. Naturally, the wrestling world has collectively lost its damn mind.
Some fans are treating this with the same seriousness they afford legitimate reporting, while others are rightfully calling it the most desperate cry for relevance in 2026. If you want to know which side of the fence people are on, just look at the absolute carnage in the comment sections.
The believers vs. the reality check crowd
Does Vince Russo have a point?
There is a segment of the audience—the ones who probably own too many vintage Attitude Era shirts—that actually buys into this. They argue that the current booking of major weekly segments feels oddly sterile. They look at the recent television output and see a vacuum where the sheer chaos and unpredictability of the nineties used to live.
To these enthusiasts, the corporate branding and the TKO-approved smoothness are glitches, not features. They cling to the idea that a power shift is always lurking around the corner. If you scroll through the deeper threads, you’ll find people dissecting every single promo, convinced that a stray comment from a wrestler is a coded message for an impending takeover.
The sane people in the room
On the other side of the aisle, you have the rational majority who realize that Vince Russo literally makes a living off saying things that hurt people’s heads. These fans are tired. They point to the fact that WWE has been hitting record viewership numbers and high-level production values without any outside interference.
As Ringside News recently reported, the speculation is based on little more than pure conjecture. The prevailing sentiment is that the current product, while imperfect, is at least functioning as a professional wrestling company rather than a backstage soap opera driven by one man’s volatile whims.
Why this rumor has legs (and why it shouldn't)
People keep clicking on this stuff because the fear is real. It’s like hearing a creak in the hallway at 3 A.M. and wondering if your house is haunted. After decades of being held hostage by booking decisions that ranged from genius to absolute insanity, the fanbase is a bit of a trauma victim. You can’t blame them for being jumpy.
But we have to be honest for a second. The state of TNA or the recent issues we saw with ROH Global Wars Cincinnati prove that the industry doesn't need to look backward to find drama. Wrestling is at its best when it moves forward, not when it’s trying to recapture the magic of 1999.
The verdict: Russo is just fishing for engagement
Here is my take. Russo knows exactly what buttons to press to get people talking. By tossing out the name of the most polarizing figure in industry history, he guarantees himself a week of podcasts, hot takes, and mentions. It’s the oldest trick in the book, and frankly, it’s a little sad.
The argument for a McMahon return rests on the shaky assumption that fans actually want the product to return to a state of total instability. I just don't see it. The current creative direction—while occasionally slow—has a level of consistency we haven't seen in two decades.
Is the product perfect? Hardly. We still have boring segments, questionable finishes, and matches that feel like they were booked in an iPad app. But that’s infinitely better than the alternative of sliding back into a period where every single story arc was derailed by the whim of a guy who thinks a dumpster match is the apex of human drama.
Look, the internet is going to keep spiraling over these theories until the next big PLE drops, but let's try to keep our feet on the ground. Wrestling is meant to be fun, not a constant exercise in predicting the next administrative collapse. Enjoy the matches, ignore the grifters, and stop waiting for ghosts to show up in the gorilla position. The ring is still 20x20, and the wrestlers are still doing the heavy lifting, even if the person calling the shots has changed.