Wrestling Twitter is basically a powder keg on the best of days. You give them a five-star classic, they complain the finish was rushed. You give them a 30-minute promo, they say there isn't enough grappling. So when Bianca Belair and Montez Ford dropped the very first episode of their pregnancy vlog, as covered by Wrestling Inc, you already knew the timeline was going to split into completely unhinged factions. This isn't just news. It's pure content. And in the wrestling bubble, content is something to be dissected, debated, and screamed about until someone brings up the Attitude Era.

For the uninitiated, Bianca and Montez have been building their brand outside the ring. We all saw the Hulu show. But jumping from a produced reality series into raw YouTube vlogging is a completely different beast. It invites the fans directly into their living room.

Naturally, the internet reacted exactly how you'd expect. It was a chaotic mix of heart emojis, cynical booking theories, and people complaining that this somehow ruins the Street Profits' momentum. Let's break down the madness, because the discourse right now is absolutely exhausting.

The "Protect Them At All Costs" Brigade

First up, we have the overwhelming majority: the enthusiasts. These are the fans who treat Bianca like actual royalty. A huge chunk of the fanbase is eating this up. They love the behind-the-scenes look. They love that Montez is just as high-energy when he's looking at an ultrasound as he is when he's hitting a frog splash from the rafters. The general sentiment across the main subreddits was basically one long, collective sob. People are saying this is exactly the kind of wholesome content they need after watching three hours of Monday Night Raw where everyone is betraying each other.

But even in this group, there's a weird anxiety. Fans are terrified that WWE is going to somehow find a way to ruin this. The trauma from past wrestling storylines involving pregnancies is very real. Snitsky booting a baby doll into the crowd still lives rent-free in our heads. So while people are happy for them, there's this underlying plea to Triple H to please let this remain a personal vlog and not an angle on SmackDown.

The Cynical "What About the Push?" Crowd

Then we pivot to the skeptics. You know these guys. Their profile pictures are usually a grainy screenshot of a Japanese wrestling promotion from 1998. They do not care about wholesome content. They care about work rate, title pictures, and why Montez Ford isn't currently holding a singles championship.

For this crowd, the vlog is just a distraction. The criticism isn't directed at the baby—because even wrestling Twitter isn't that evil—but at the focus. The prevailing narrative on the grumpier sides of the forums is that Montez is leaning too hard into the reality TV lifestyle instead of breaking out as a solo star.

They argue that every minute spent editing a vlog or shooting footage is a minute not spent establishing himself as a main event threat. It's a completely unfair standard, obviously. The man is allowed to have a family and a life outside the ring. But the frustration stems from the fact that we've been teased with a Montez solo run for nearly three years. We saw the flashes in the Elimination Chamber. We know what he can do.

The critical observation here isn't totally invalid. The Street Profits have felt stagnant for a while. They get starting-and-stopping pushes. Sometimes they are the top guys, sometimes they are completely invisible. This vlog series, while amazing for their personal brand, does signal that maybe their immediate priority isn't climbing the tag team mountain again. It's brand building. And for the diehards who just want to see Montez hit that beautiful splash and win a singles belt, it feels like they are watching his prime window slowly close while he films reaction videos.

The Fantasy Bookers Going Off the Rails

You can't have a major life event happen to a wrestler without the fantasy bookers turning it into an angle. It is physically impossible for the internet wrestling community to just say congratulations without following it up with a five-paragraph pitch for how this affects the upcoming draft.

The threads mapping out Bianca's eventual return are already out of control. People are debating timelines like they are medical professionals. They are literally doing the math on when the baby is due, how long a training camp takes, and projecting exactly which month she will be cleared for a surprise Royal Rumble entry. It is both impressive and deeply unhinged behavior.

Then there are the people trying to figure out what Montez does in the meantime. The consensus seems to be that he needs a solo run while Bianca is out. The idea floating around is that he channels the new dad energy into a serious, focused mid-card title chase. But let's be real. WWE is far more likely to just have him and Angelo Dawkins keep doing the exact same backstage segments they've been doing since 2022.

My Final Verdict

Let's summarize exactly what this release did to the fanbase. The reactions essentially fall into three distinct buckets:

  • The diehard fans who are emotionally devastated and begging WWE not to turn the pregnancy into a storyline.
  • The absolute cynics who are furious that Montez isn't spending his free time doing extra deadlifts to win a mid-card title.
  • The fantasy bookers who are already mapping out the child's in-ring debut.

Let's cut through the noise. Bianca and Montez are incredibly smart. They know that a wrestling career has an expiration date. You take bumps for a living, your knees eventually give out. By launching this vlog, they are securing their bag outside of the WWE machine. They are transitioning from wrestlers to influencers, and they are doing it seamlessly.

The people complaining about it being a distraction are missing the point. The business has changed. You don't get over just by having good matches on a random Monday night anymore. You get over by being undeniable across every single platform. Cody Rhodes proved that. Logan Paul proved that. Now Bianca and Montez are doing it their way.

Do I want to see Montez finally get that singles push? Absolutely. It is criminal that he hasn't had a proper run with the United States or Intercontinental title yet. But getting mad at a vlog isn't going to fix WWE's booking. If anything, showing that they can draw eyeballs and keep people engaged while Bianca isn't even wrestling might actually force management to see them as the top-tier stars they are.

So let the skeptics complain in their niche forums. Let the fantasy bookers map out ridiculous return angles. The reality is, Bianca and Montez are winning the internet right now. Just keep it off my television screen when I'm trying to watch a ladder match, and we'll all be perfectly fine.