Anonymous
9/7/2025, 6:58:06 PM
No.18765916
>>18765980
>>18766815
>>18767020
>>18767291
>>18768411
>>18768652
>>18768906
>>18770101
>>18771188
>>18771848
>>18771857
>>18772790
Eric Bischoff Claims AEW Dynamite Viewership Will Sink to 300K by End of Current TV Deal
Eric Bischoff has always been vocal about his criticism of AEW, which is why it comes as no surprise that he has now claimed AEW Dynamite will eventually decline to an average viewership of 300K viewers.
Bischoff explained that nearly a year earlier, he had studied AEW’s ratings trends and noticed the company was losing roughly 22 to 23 percent of its audience each year. Using what he described as simple math, he averaged the numbers over several months and built a projection for the future.
>“It’s becoming evident to everybody. So what was it—about a year ago, eight months ago—I was sitting down and there was this debate about ratings and network deals and what AEW could be doing in the future. And I just sat down with a glass of wine and looked at the last two years of ratings for AEW. It’s simple math. If I can do it, it’s pretty simple math. I had a little $8 calculator and a glass of cheap red wine. I punched in a couple of numbers and saw they were losing an average of about 22 to 23 percent of their audience every year.”
>“Here’s the thing, Dave. For a guy who studies so much, you should just figure this part out—it’s a simple math equation. I took their existing audience, averaged it out over three or four months, and said, ‘Okay, that’s my baseline of what AEW is currently doing.’ Then I went back and looked—they’d been losing about 22 or 23 percent on average. So I just did the simple math, Dave. You don’t have to study, you just have to actually do it.
>And I did the math and thought, ‘Oh, this is where they are now. This is where they’ll be a year from now. This is where they’ll be three years from now, unless they reverse the 20 percent average attrition per year.’ I project that by the end of their existing contract, they’d be hovering around 300,000 viewers. Back in November, on November 14, 2024, I said a year from now AEW would be hovering around 500,000 viewers—and I was absolutely right.”
Bischoff explained that nearly a year earlier, he had studied AEW’s ratings trends and noticed the company was losing roughly 22 to 23 percent of its audience each year. Using what he described as simple math, he averaged the numbers over several months and built a projection for the future.
>“It’s becoming evident to everybody. So what was it—about a year ago, eight months ago—I was sitting down and there was this debate about ratings and network deals and what AEW could be doing in the future. And I just sat down with a glass of wine and looked at the last two years of ratings for AEW. It’s simple math. If I can do it, it’s pretty simple math. I had a little $8 calculator and a glass of cheap red wine. I punched in a couple of numbers and saw they were losing an average of about 22 to 23 percent of their audience every year.”
>“Here’s the thing, Dave. For a guy who studies so much, you should just figure this part out—it’s a simple math equation. I took their existing audience, averaged it out over three or four months, and said, ‘Okay, that’s my baseline of what AEW is currently doing.’ Then I went back and looked—they’d been losing about 22 or 23 percent on average. So I just did the simple math, Dave. You don’t have to study, you just have to actually do it.
>And I did the math and thought, ‘Oh, this is where they are now. This is where they’ll be a year from now. This is where they’ll be three years from now, unless they reverse the 20 percent average attrition per year.’ I project that by the end of their existing contract, they’d be hovering around 300,000 viewers. Back in November, on November 14, 2024, I said a year from now AEW would be hovering around 500,000 viewers—and I was absolutely right.”