Nick Khan is gaslighting us about WrestleMania 40

Nick Khan needs a better hobby than telling fans old lies as if they’re fresh news. During his latest media rounds, the WWE President dropped the line that the company’s main event plans for WrestleMania 40 “never changed.” If you were actually watching in early 2024, you remember the absolute firestorm when The Rock tried to step into that spot.

We saw the #WeWantCody movement hit social media like a brick through a window. The fans hijacked segments, booed The Rock off the stage, and forced a rewrite that arguably saved the entire event. Hearing Khan claim that was the plan all along is like watching someone trip into a pool and insist they were just checking the water temperature.

Nick Khan claims WWE WrestleMania 40 plans ‘never changed’

The online reaction has been predictably brutal. Fans who spent weeks rallying behind Cody Rhodes are feeling gaslit by the corporate line. You don’t get a mid-story pivot that includes a massive fan rebellion if you already had it mapped out in some secret binder.

The McMahon shadow is still haunting the room

While Khan is busy editing the past, Stephanie McMahon is finally pulling back the curtain on how the Vince McMahon scandals gutted the future. She recently confirmed that the turmoil changed her oldest daughter’s path to the ring. It’s a sobering reminder that the company’s internal rot didn't just affect stock prices; it nuked the next generation’s career trajectory.

Some fans argue that keeping the kids out of the business is the smartest move Stephanie ever made. As Ringside News noted, the family legacy is currently tied to a brand that spent years weathering heavy internal storms. You can't blame a parent for wanting to keep their kid away from that spotlight right now.

Is the ring still waiting for Drew McIntyre?

Switching gears to the active roster, everyone is wondering when Drew McIntyre is finally stepping back into the squared circle. The guy went dark after taking the loss to Jacob Fatu at his last big appearance. Rumors are swirling that he’s been busy with his acting work, but the clock is ticking on a return.

The fans here are split right down the middle. Half the basement is convinced McIntyre needs to re-emerge as a total heel to freshen up the title picture. The other half just wants to see the guy work a stiff match with Gunther or Bron Breakker to remind everyone he’s still got the best work rate in the company.

The problem is the lack of clarity. Sources suggest he is prepping to return now that his filming schedule has cleared, but we’ve played this waiting game before. It feels like the writers are stuck in a holding pattern while they wait for the main event scene to stop eating its own tail. We need less corporate spin from Khan and more actual booking stakes on the card.

The Verdict: Corporate optics vs. fan reality

Who has the stronger argument here? It’s not even a contest. The fans hold the cards because we provide the heat, and history shows we change the show. When Khan stands there and says plans didn't change, he’s trying to maintain this illusion of total control. He wants the investors to believe the company is a machine where output is guaranteed, regardless of outside pressure.

But we know better. The WrestleMania 40 narrative was messy and chaotic, but that was exactly why it worked. If it had been managed by a static, unchanging corporate plan, we would have watched a stale main event that nobody wanted to see. The friction is a feature, not a bug.

Ignoring the reality of the Cody Rhodes movement doesn't make the company look smarter; it makes the leadership look disconnected. They treat us like we have the memory of a goldfish. If they think they can retroactively rewrite the 2024 season, they are in for a long summer.

My pick for the biggest swing and a miss? It has to be the insistence that the Roman Reigns vs. Cody Rhodes path was linear. It wasn’t. It was a 15-round fight that the fans won. Stop trying to polish the history books and get back to the storytelling that made the last two years actually watchable for anyone over the age of ten.