WWE Hall of Famer Bully Ray has urged management to allow more organic creativity among current talent, drawing parallels to the rebellious styles of Triple H and Shawn Michaels. Speaking on Busted Open Radio, Ray highlighted the recent resignation of Brian James, known as Road Dogg, from the SmackDown writing team as a symptom of overly calculated storytelling. He praised recent adjustments to WrestleMania 42 plans but called for greater freedom to foster breakout moments.
On the latest edition of Busted Open Radio, Bully Ray addressed the departure of Brian James, better known as Road Dogg, from his role on the SmackDown writing team. Ray suggested that James' resignation stemmed from frustration with the creative process, quoting him as telling WWE, “Take care, brush your hair.” He described James as passionate about wrestling and possibly overwhelmed by the stress or disagreeing with certain decisions, leading him to step away.
Ray pointed to behind-the-scenes footage from WWE Unreal showing tension between James and Triple H over talents like Chelsea Green and R-Truth. James advocated for capitalizing on organic momentum by “pulling the trigger” on these performers, while Triple H emphasized needing a long-term plan. For instance, regarding R-Truth's head-shaving moment, James pushed to build on it immediately, but Triple H questioned the next steps, indicating no forward plans existed.
A key concern for Ray is WWE's structured approach stifling “lightning in a bottle” moments that create icons. He questioned, “Where is my next Austin 3:16 moment coming from?” and recalled unplanned successes from his ECW and WWE days, such as the “What’s Up?” headbutt and “Get the tables!” chant, which caught fire organically without prior approval.
Despite criticisms, Ray commended WWE's recent pivots for WrestleMania 42, likening them to a football halftime adjustment amid declining interest—ticket sales were about 8,000 short of last year. He highlighted changes involving Rhea Ripley, Jade Cargill, CM Punk, and Roman Reigns as necessary to boost enthusiasm, noting that strong storylines like the Bloodline have previously carried the company.
Ray directly challenged Triple H, WWE's Chief Content Officer, and Shawn Michaels, who oversees NXT creative, to recall their DX-era roots of bucking the system. “They know what it’s like to go out there and organically get over... don’t ever forget about who you were and what got you to the dance, and maybe let some other people do that,” he said. This call comes as WrestleMania 42 approaches in Las Vegas this April, where authentic connections could define emerging stars.