chris hero
Photo Credit: WWE

Chris Hero: WWE Still Sees ‘Indie’ As A Bad Word, ‘You’re Not Even Really A Wrestler’ There

Chris Hero is no longer a member of the WWE system, but his time in NXT showed him the vast differences between the company and the independent wrestling style that he was renowned for.

In a recent appearance on the ROHStrong Podcast, Hero looked back on his time in NXT and claimed that while WWE has made some progress, it still looks down on “indie guys” and tries to mold them into the company’s formula.

“I’ve had tons of that, even in my recent stint in NXT, where they think there are certain ways that things should always be done,” said Hero. “And it is absolutely, you know, now, not as much, but it is still a knock on you to be an ‘indie guy.’ They see ‘indie’ as kind of a bad word, and I don’t know how many of them actually have a grasp of what the independent scene has done over the years.

“I think they just the way it is, and they know that their boss likes things this way, and we need to make sure that the new guys coming in do it this way. Because if they don’t, they’re gonna get chewed out. So it’s very much a reprogram, retrain, reteach, break bad habits kind of thing when these things don’t matter when you are a star, right?

Hero then described certain habits he noticed WWE frowned upon, such as pandering to the crowd too much or turning your back on your opponent. He explained that in the WWE system, you have to teach yourself to focus on what works.

“There are just these certain habits that we get because we’re in there, figuring this stuff out,” said Hero. “And it’s a, ‘Wash, rinse, repeat, let’s do it this way, get the response.. Okay, that worked this time, I’ll keep that in my brain so that next time when I need that response, I’ll try to do the same thing, or I’ll change it up to try and get an even better reaction.’

“But when you’re in that system, what you have to remember is, you’re no longer wrestling for yourself.”

Hero also argued that in WWE, wrestlers cease to exist in favor of “superstars” who tell stories with wrestling moves sprinkled in. He stated that this pattern is set until WWE trusts someone enough to give them some space.

“You’re not even really a wrestler,” said Hero. “You will have opportunities to wrestle, but you are a superstar that is telling the stories that they want you to tell and occasionally doing wrestling moves. That’s kind of how it breaks down, and it can be very frustrating for people that have pro wrestling tied to the identity of who they are and who they want to be. Because unless you because a huge star, you will not have the time on television to wrestle wrestle.

“You’ll be in there for four minutes here, 10 minutes here, maybe 15 minutes on a pay-per-view, but it will be micromanaged. And until you gain a certain amount of equity, you have to do things their way. And if you don’t do things their way, you will not get to an opportunity to where you can build that equity up.”

RELATED: Chris Hero Looks Back On The First Episode Of ROH Wrestling, Vows To Return To Wrestling At ‘The Right Time’

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