“It’s still a super young company. In wrestling, five years can seem like a really, really long time, but as far as an organization or a successful company or any type of organization, it’s extremely young. It’s still a baby. My daughter’s three years old, like, three years can seem like a long time if you look at it through one lens, but if you look at it through a different lens, it’s like she’s a three-year-old. She’s barely existed yet. You know what I mean? AEW is still basically a toddler. It’s wide open to mold it into whatever we want. There are no rules. Much like my three-year-old daughter, it’s got a whole person to grow into. AEW is wide open. It’s still a piece of clay.”
“I’m not really concerned about what (AEW) is right now; I’m concerned about what it could be five years from now or 10 years from now, or 20 years from now. That is the exciting thing to me. But the journey of a thousand miles, a million miles, begins with a single step and steps like Wednesday night.”