MyNetworkTV V.P. On SD! Going Live, Jeff Hardy, More

…continued from page one

 

"Wild" Bill Brown asked Paul about the network’s future with the WWE, especially with the downturn in the economy, along with the recession over the past year. Businesses & networks tend to exhibit the "what have you done for me lately?" attitude. Is SmackDown’s future safe on MyNetworkTV. Paul was confidant in his response to The Mayhem Nation: "As long as the people that are currently here at MyNetworkTV…as far as we’re concerned, it’s not going anywhere. It is helped put MyNetworkTV on the map with the viewer. Our audience growth over the last year has been phenomenal. Here, we were perceived as a sort of small little network, and SmackDown remains the #1 program amongst all broadcasting cable networks in men 18-34…They’ve lost nothing in terms of their viewer base. All we have done is manage to grow. Our affiliates are happy with us, the network is certainly happy with us, and the corporation is happy with this particular program, so certaily for the foreseeable future, as long as we can be involved, we are gonna be involved."

 

With SmackDown being taped every Tuesday night, there is a large percentage of the WWE Universe that would no doubt welcome the opportunity to see a live SmackDown experience on a weekly basis. Blade asked Paul if the idea of a transition from taping the program to airing it live has been discussed internally with the WWE & if any future specials are planned (such as the SmackDown prior to WrestleMania, which aired live from Houston). "That’s a tough one. We initially had some conversations along those lines. If they decide they wanted to go that route, we would certainly listen to it & welcome those kinds of opportunities. I think that they feel right now that’s it’s best doing the business the way they do it. We will work with them in any way, shape, or form if that’s something they would decide they’d want to do. I don’t know there is anything in the plans for that now."

 

For years, some of the WWE’s harshest critics have referred to SmackDown as the "B-show," with Monday Night RAW being the "A-show" for the company. In closing, Mosh asked Paul if MyNetworkTV over the past year is tired of having their program being referred to with that stigma, or are those "armchair quarterbacks" wrong in their assessment of their analysis — as when a show hits a ten-year milestone, that’s something they cannot even ignore. "I don’t know if getting tired of it is the right way to say it. The truth of the matter is that we understand & appreciate the value of RAW. It actually helps us. The stronger RAW only pushes more & more of the WWE fanbase to SmackDown. It helps SmackDown grown. We do a lot of cross-promotional type things with RAW. We totally understand & respect the importance that RAW is to the WWE franchise. However, SmackDown has put itself in a position these past ten years where it’s really hard to say one’s an ‘A’ & one’s a ‘B.’ I think they offer equal kind of value. We all know the importance of the Pay-Per-View. Without that Friday night cornerstone audience that SmackDown has, the Pay-Per-Views may or may not be as strong. These two brands are ultimately the strength of the WWE overall."

 

More is contained in this Mayhem exclusive with MyNetwork’s Paul Franklin, including his candid thoughts & comments on having the opportunity to have The Undertaker, Batista, & Rey Mysterio rejoin SmackDown (and why he feels really good about what the WWE Creative Team has done for the show recently), what the effect of Jeff Hardy’s & Edge’s departures have had on the program, why CM Punk is "one to watch" on SmackDown, plus a look back at the top SmackDown moments/memories/superstars over the past year on MyNetworkTV (and throughout the best ten years overall).

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