The "TKO Shit PR" thread

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Tremendez

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It being Minneapolis feels like it’s a high possibility.
 
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Tommy Shelby

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He’s definitely done at summerslam. That’s Cena , AJ and Brock. Time for the younger generation to step up.

Oba for Brock to retire would be fitting but I imagine they will give it to gunther unless Brock specifically wants Oba. He said in the rumble when they squared up not yet and smiled .

Who replaces AJ? That’s one of the more difficult ones, I mean I see a couple of possibilities but would like to hear others thoughts on this before I say .

Cena - Cody is the only full time guy who can he hasn’t even come close to it yet but give it a few more years and see how it goes as he’s Cena chosen anointed one
 

Barry Poppins

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Newly released police video obtained by The Associated Press shows former WWE CEO Vince McMahon's high-speed car crash in Connecticut last summer and reveals that a state trooper was trying to catch up to him to pull him over at the time.

McMahon, now 80, was driving his 2024 Bentley Continental GT on the Merritt Parkway in Westport on July 24 -- coincidentally, the same day that WWE legend Hulk Hogan died of a heart attack in Florida. State police said the Bentley, which can cost over $300,000, was going 100 mph (160 kph) or more.

"Why were you driving all over 100 mph?" state police Detective Maxwell Robins asked McMahon after the crash, according to police bodycam video. Replied McMahon: "I got my granddaughter's birthday."

Robins' dashcam video showed McMahon approaching a BMW in the same lane, appearing to hit the brakes and swerving into the left lane at the last second. The Bentley clipped the rear of the other car before smashing into the left lane guardrail and careening back onto the highway, creating a cloud of dirt and car parts.

No one was seriously injured in the crash, police said. Besides damage to the rear of the BMW, another vehicle driving on the opposite side of the parkway was struck by flying debris.

McMahon was cited for reckless driving and following too closely. A state judge in October allowed McMahon to enter a pretrial probation program that will result in the charges being erased from his record next October if he successfully completes the program. He was also ordered to make a $1,000 charitable contribution.

State police said Robins was trying to catch up to McMahon on the parkway and clock his speed before pulling him over. They said the incident was not a pursuit, which happens when police chase someone trying to flee officers. They said it did not appear McMahon was trying to escape the trooper.

"I'm trying to catch up to you and you keep taking off," Robins told McMahon in video recorded by police body cameras on the side of the highway.

Replied McMahon: "No, no no. I'm not trying to outrun you."

When asked by Robins why McMahon didn't change lanes sooner to avoid the crash, McMahon denied looking at his phone and added that he hadn't driven his car in a long time. The video also showed McMahon talking to the driver whose car he rear-ended. Barbara Doran, of New York City, told the AP last summer that McMahon expressed his concern for her and was glad she was OK.

After McMahon was given the traffic summons, he shook hands with Robins and another trooper and they wished him well.

McMahon stepped down as WWE's CEO in 2022 amid a company investigation into sexual misconduct allegations. He also resigned as executive chairman of the board of directors of TKO Group Holdings, the parent company of WWE, in 2024, a day after a former WWE employee filed a sexual abuse lawsuit against him. McMahon has denied the allegations. The lawsuit remains pending.

McMahon bought what was then the World Wrestling Federation in 1982 and transformed it from a regional wrestling company into a worldwide phenomenon. Besides running the company with his wife, Linda, who is now the U.S. education secretary, he also performed at WWE events as himself.
 

Looji Nagata

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Should lose his license... at least until he takes another test for it, the old bag of piss.
 

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He’s definitely done at summerslam. That’s Cena , AJ and Brock. Time for the younger generation to step up.

Oba for Brock to retire would be fitting but I imagine they will give it to gunther unless Brock specifically wants Oba. He said in the rumble when they squared up not yet and smiled .

Who replaces AJ? That’s one of the more difficult ones, I mean I see a couple of possibilities but would like to hear others thoughts on this before I say .

Cena - Cody is the only full time guy who can he hasn’t even come close to it yet but give it a few more years and see how it goes as he’s Cena chosen anointed one

Nobody replaces anybody

Let them do their own path.
 

Chris

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Shareholder plaintiffs in the WWE merger lawsuit are asking the Delaware Chancery Court to sanction defendants — including Vince McMahon and lead WWE executives Nick Khan and Paul Levesque — over the alleged destruction of relevant evidence, including Signal messages and McMahon’s handwritten notes.

The plaintiffs are seeking adverse inferences: sanctions that would allow the judge, at the anticipated trial, to assume that the missing evidence would have been unfavorable to the defendants responsible for the loss.

The motion, which appeared publicly on the docket this week, alleges that Vince McMahon, Khan, Levesque, as well as non-defendant former executives Stephanie McMahon and Brad Blum failed to preserve communications despite multiple notices from WWE’s legal team to do so. Under Delaware law, parties subject to a litigation hold are required to preserve potentially relevant communications once litigation is reasonably anticipated.

Khan, WWE’s current president, is characterized as “spearheading” communications on the messaging app Signal, which allows users to time messages to auto-delete. Khan is also alleged to have deleted conventional text messages, which plaintiffs say, based on context, included merger discussions and the investigation of alleged misconduct by McMahon.

The motion contains a new factual allegation not previously made public: that Vince McMahon, Stephanie McMahon, and Khan met with Endeavor CEO Ari Emanuel and President Mark Shapiro on December 13, 2022 — a few weeks before McMahon exercised his controlling interest in WWE and returned to the company and immediately pushed to explore a sale or merger. Emanuel and Shapiro are now the top two executives for TKO, after merging Endeavor’s asset UFC with WWE in 2023, at the conclusion of that M&A process.

The December 2022 meeting, which plaintiffs say was for the purpose of discussing a possible merger, adds to a previously reported August 2022 meeting that’s reflected in text messages between McMahon and Emanuel, in which McMahon asked whether he could bring along Khan and Stephanie McMahon. At the time of both purported meetings, Khan and Stephanie McMahon were serving as co-CEOs of WWE. Vince McMahon, though still controlling shareholder, was ostensibly out of the company. He had announced his retirement in July 2022 amid allegations of sexual misconduct and investigations into millions of dollars in previously undisclosed hush-money payments to women who formerly worked for the company.

Representatives for each of TKO, WWE, Vince McMahon, and Stephanie McMahon did not respond to requests for comment from POST Wrestling on whether the December meeting occurred or its purpose.

The plaintiffs, representing a class of shareholders, present the meetings as part of their central allegations in the case that the eventual TKO merger was predetermined by McMahon, with the cooperation of other key executives and board members. In exchange, Emanuel allegedly promised to give McMahon a role in the company after the merger and help him with the federal investigations into his alleged misconduct. The plaintiffs describe McMahon’s July 2022 resignation as “pretextual,” claiming that the merger process was “rigged” in favor of Endeavor, allegedly depriving WWE investors of a more competitive, valuable M&A deal. The defendants in the case have denied the allegations.

Filings unsealed last December revealed records showing McMahon and Emanuel in communication throughout the summer of 2022, after McMahon resignation. Public court records also showed Shapiro texting Endeavor executives with his expectation that McMahon would return to WWE within months and initiate an M&A process — messages sent just hours after McMahon’s retirement announcement, anticipating exactly what McMahon would do in January 2023.

The plaintiffs contend that Khan’s deleted text messages also include discussions with Emanuel in March 2023, during the time that WWE and Endeavor negotiated the merger. In a written response filed earlier in the case, attorneys stated on behalf of Khan that he “has no recollection of the particular content of any deleted messages,” that the plaintiffs had identified in discovery materials.

Unsealed exhibits include a table produced by McMahon’s attorneys during discovery showing the existence of Signal communications between McMahon and numerous individuals. Last November McMahon’s attorneys provided a table to the plaintiffs that showed the existence of McMahon’s communications over Signal with various people, including apparently Khan, Emanuel, Stephanie McMahon, Paul Levesque, Saudi Arabia’s General Entertainment Authority Turki Al-Sheikh, Brock Lesnar, WWE executive Bruce Prichard, then-WWE production executive Kevin Dunn, former WWE executive John Gaburick, and others.

However, in the public versions of these materials, notes that may indicate the intervals at which messages were set to auto-delete are redacted for the individuals the plaintiffs allege failed to retain communications: Khan, Levesque, Stephanie McMahon, and Blum. That portion of the table is redacted for messages with Emanuel also.

One of two segments of a table provided by Vince McMahon's attorneys to counsel for the plaintiffs on Nov. 17, 2025, detailing McMahon's Signal chats; disclosed in public versions of exhibits filed on both Dec. 23, 2025 and Feb. 27, 2026.

The second of two segments of a table provided by Vince McMahon's attorneys to counsel for the plaintiffs on Nov. 17, 2025, detailing McMahon's Signal chats; disclosed in public versions of exhibits filed on both Dec. 23, 2025 and Feb. 27, 2026.

Plaintiffs cite text message records that they say show Khan steering conversations away from standard text and toward Signal. In one previously reported exchange, McMahon texted Khan about the 2023 Cody Rhodes vs. Roman Reigns WrestleMania main event. Khan replied with the word “Langis.” When McMahon asked what it meant, Khan responded: “Read it backwards!” — an apparent reference to the Signal app. Plaintiffs argue that the exchange reflects Khan directing McMahon to shift the conversation to the encrypted messaging app rather than continuing by conventional text.

Defendants in the case are Vince McMahon, Khan, Levesque, and former board members George Barrios and Michelle Wilson. Stephanie McMahon and Blum are not defendants in the case. Neither WWE nor TKO is a defendant in the case; however, the company’s attorneys are representing defendants other than Vince McMahon, who has separate counsel.

If the plaintiffs prevail in the case, which is scheduled to go to trial in June, they could recover monetary damages. Shareholder lawsuits following mergers of billion-dollar companies, like WWE and UFC, are common. In large mergers, convincing a court of even a difference of a few percent in equity value can translate into tens or hundreds of millions of dollars in damages. That’s why during such M&A negotiations and at other sensitive times — like the time surrounding the 2022 investigation of alleged misconduct by Vince McMahon — key executives and board members are generally advised to preserve their communications records in anticipation of potential litigation.
 
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Barry Poppins

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Classic shredding of documents for plausible deniability.
 
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Shareholder plaintiffs in the WWE merger lawsuit are asking the Delaware Chancery Court to sanction defendants — including Vince McMahon and lead WWE executives Nick Khan and Paul Levesque — over the alleged destruction of relevant evidence, including Signal messages and McMahon’s handwritten notes.

The plaintiffs are seeking adverse inferences: sanctions that would allow the judge, at the anticipated trial, to assume that the missing evidence would have been unfavorable to the defendants responsible for the loss.

The motion, which appeared publicly on the docket this week, alleges that Vince McMahon, Khan, Levesque, as well as non-defendant former executives Stephanie McMahon and Brad Blum failed to preserve communications despite multiple notices from WWE’s legal team to do so. Under Delaware law, parties subject to a litigation hold are required to preserve potentially relevant communications once litigation is reasonably anticipated.

Khan, WWE’s current president, is characterized as “spearheading” communications on the messaging app Signal, which allows users to time messages to auto-delete. Khan is also alleged to have deleted conventional text messages, which plaintiffs say, based on context, included merger discussions and the investigation of alleged misconduct by McMahon.

The motion contains a new factual allegation not previously made public: that Vince McMahon, Stephanie McMahon, and Khan met with Endeavor CEO Ari Emanuel and President Mark Shapiro on December 13, 2022 — a few weeks before McMahon exercised his controlling interest in WWE and returned to the company and immediately pushed to explore a sale or merger. Emanuel and Shapiro are now the top two executives for TKO, after merging Endeavor’s asset UFC with WWE in 2023, at the conclusion of that M&A process.

The December 2022 meeting, which plaintiffs say was for the purpose of discussing a possible merger, adds to a previously reported August 2022 meeting that’s reflected in text messages between McMahon and Emanuel, in which McMahon asked whether he could bring along Khan and Stephanie McMahon. At the time of both purported meetings, Khan and Stephanie McMahon were serving as co-CEOs of WWE. Vince McMahon, though still controlling shareholder, was ostensibly out of the company. He had announced his retirement in July 2022 amid allegations of sexual misconduct and investigations into millions of dollars in previously undisclosed hush-money payments to women who formerly worked for the company.

Representatives for each of TKO, WWE, Vince McMahon, and Stephanie McMahon did not respond to requests for comment from POST Wrestling on whether the December meeting occurred or its purpose.

The plaintiffs, representing a class of shareholders, present the meetings as part of their central allegations in the case that the eventual TKO merger was predetermined by McMahon, with the cooperation of other key executives and board members. In exchange, Emanuel allegedly promised to give McMahon a role in the company after the merger and help him with the federal investigations into his alleged misconduct. The plaintiffs describe McMahon’s July 2022 resignation as “pretextual,” claiming that the merger process was “rigged” in favor of Endeavor, allegedly depriving WWE investors of a more competitive, valuable M&A deal. The defendants in the case have denied the allegations.

Filings unsealed last December revealed records showing McMahon and Emanuel in communication throughout the summer of 2022, after McMahon resignation. Public court records also showed Shapiro texting Endeavor executives with his expectation that McMahon would return to WWE within months and initiate an M&A process — messages sent just hours after McMahon’s retirement announcement, anticipating exactly what McMahon would do in January 2023.

The plaintiffs contend that Khan’s deleted text messages also include discussions with Emanuel in March 2023, during the time that WWE and Endeavor negotiated the merger. In a written response filed earlier in the case, attorneys stated on behalf of Khan that he “has no recollection of the particular content of any deleted messages,” that the plaintiffs had identified in discovery materials.

Unsealed exhibits include a table produced by McMahon’s attorneys during discovery showing the existence of Signal communications between McMahon and numerous individuals. Last November McMahon’s attorneys provided a table to the plaintiffs that showed the existence of McMahon’s communications over Signal with various people, including apparently Khan, Emanuel, Stephanie McMahon, Paul Levesque, Saudi Arabia’s General Entertainment Authority Turki Al-Sheikh, Brock Lesnar, WWE executive Bruce Prichard, then-WWE production executive Kevin Dunn, former WWE executive John Gaburick, and others.

However, in the public versions of these materials, notes that may indicate the intervals at which messages were set to auto-delete are redacted for the individuals the plaintiffs allege failed to retain communications: Khan, Levesque, Stephanie McMahon, and Blum. That portion of the table is redacted for messages with Emanuel also.

One of two segments of a table provided by Vince McMahon's attorneys to counsel for the plaintiffs on Nov. 17, 2025, detailing McMahon's Signal chats; disclosed in public versions of exhibits filed on both Dec. 23, 2025 and Feb. 27, 2026.

The second of two segments of a table provided by Vince McMahon's attorneys to counsel for the plaintiffs on Nov. 17, 2025, detailing McMahon's Signal chats; disclosed in public versions of exhibits filed on both Dec. 23, 2025 and Feb. 27, 2026.

Plaintiffs cite text message records that they say show Khan steering conversations away from standard text and toward Signal. In one previously reported exchange, McMahon texted Khan about the 2023 Cody Rhodes vs. Roman Reigns WrestleMania main event. Khan replied with the word “Langis.” When McMahon asked what it meant, Khan responded: “Read it backwards!” — an apparent reference to the Signal app. Plaintiffs argue that the exchange reflects Khan directing McMahon to shift the conversation to the encrypted messaging app rather than continuing by conventional text.

Defendants in the case are Vince McMahon, Khan, Levesque, and former board members George Barrios and Michelle Wilson. Stephanie McMahon and Blum are not defendants in the case. Neither WWE nor TKO is a defendant in the case; however, the company’s attorneys are representing defendants other than Vince McMahon, who has separate counsel.

If the plaintiffs prevail in the case, which is scheduled to go to trial in June, they could recover monetary damages. Shareholder lawsuits following mergers of billion-dollar companies, like WWE and UFC, are common. In large mergers, convincing a court of even a difference of a few percent in equity value can translate into tens or hundreds of millions of dollars in damages. That’s why during such M&A negotiations and at other sensitive times — like the time surrounding the 2022 investigation of alleged misconduct by Vince McMahon — key executives and board members are generally advised to preserve their communications records in anticipation of potential litigation.

oh wow its alrighty been 3 years since tko started

boy has time has gone by so fast
 

Chris

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Barry Poppins

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Gonna bring it up in here for now, but I genuinely think 2026 is shaping up to be the worst year for WWE's tag division, ever.

It's actually shambolic how bad it is (mostly referring to the men's tag roster). As far as actual realistic tag teams, and not two singles guys cobbled together, it's Fraxiom, The Usos, the Street Profits, Los Garza, Alpha Academy, the Los Americanos dweebs, and the Creeds. :DEAD:
 

Looji Nagata

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tbf, that doesn't sound as bad. I'm pretty sure there were worse times. Like around the Drew/Cody tag team run back in the day. I remember that as the height of people being critical about the amount of thrown together Teams on the roster (or being pushed, instead of the few "real" Tags). ... Maybe I remember that wrong though.