There is a difference between heat and rejection. Right now, what Pat McAfee is getting ahead of WrestleMania does not feel like the kind WWE is hoping for.
McAfee is charismatic, recognizable and has proven he can deliver in big moments. But this is not just another segment or celebrity cameo. It is not even a vehicle to push a product. This is the main event scene of WrestleMania, and fans are pushing back, not quietly either. To them, this is not adding to the story. It is replacing it.
The story fans were invested in
For months, the emotional core of this build has centered on Cody Rhodes and Randy Orton. Twenty years of history does not require much setup. At its best, the feud felt layered, personal and rooted in that history. It felt like a WrestleMania main event should feel: earned.
That is why the frustration is so loud.
McAfee’s insertion does not feel like a twist that enhances the narrative. It feels like a pivot that interrupts it. Instead of deepening the conflict between Rhodes and Orton, the focus shifts outward to a personality who was not part of the journey fans were following. Once that shift happens, it is hard to ignore.
When the reveal is not worth the build
Mystery angles live and die by their payoff. They can elevate a story or derail it. Wrestling fans will buy in, speculate and debate for weeks if the reveal delivers.
This one did not.
The reaction was not explosive or satisfying. It was confusion, followed by disappointment. Not because McAfee is incapable, but because the role he stepped into felt larger than what fans believed he should occupy. Expectations matter, and WWE set them high.
The “main character” problem
There is an unspoken rule in wrestling: the biggest matches should belong to the wrestlers who carried the story.
Rhodes and Orton.
Right now, it does not feel that way. Instead of standing at the center, they are part of a story that increasingly revolves around McAfee’s motives, promos and presence. The gravity of the main event has shifted, and not in a way that elevates the people it is supposed to.
For a fan base that has spent years asking for long-term storytelling and payoff, that is a tough pill to swallow.
It feels too corporate, not organic
Modern fans are more aware than ever. They understand media deals, cross-promotion and branding. That awareness is working against this angle.
McAfee is more than a commentator who wrestles occasionally. He is a major media figure with ties outside WWE. When he becomes central to the biggest storyline of the year, it does not feel accidental. It feels strategic, and not in a storytelling sense.
That perception breaks immersion. Instead of asking what happens next, fans start asking why this is happening at all.
The promo that made it worse
If there was a chance to win fans over, it likely depended on McAfee’s delivery.
Instead, going off script, his tone criticizing the product, calling out the fan base and positioning himself above the current landscape had the opposite effect. The following week, WWE then proceeded to double down, and produce another promo where Pat’s “huge announcement” was that WrestleMania 42 tickets would be 25% off for that weekend. It’s also very hypocritical writing. Nothing says “we don’t care about your feelings” like a pathetic begging of “please buy our tickets, here’s a coupon!”
Wrestling fans will embrace a villain, but there is a line between playing a heel and sounding dismissive of the audience. Right now, that line feels blurred.
WrestleMania is not the place for this experiment
This might work elsewhere. A SummerSlam angle, a Royal Rumble twist or a long-term story could have potential.
But WrestleMania is different.
It is where stories are meant to pay off, not pivot. It is the culmination, where full-time stars carry the weight of the biggest matches and the audience expects resolution.
That is why this feels off.
It is not about McAfee, it is about timing
This is not a rejection of McAfee as a performer. I have been a fan of his since his outlandish days as a punter for the Indianapolis Colts. I have followed his media path since his podcast was out of the back of a box truck. With Pat, he has proven he belongs in WWE in some capacity. He is entertaining, committed and understands the business. We get that.
But this moment feels misplaced.
Fans do not want to see this spot given to someone who was not part of the climb, especially when the people who were are still there.
The bottom line
Fans are rejecting this because it feels like a detour at the worst possible time.
They wanted Rhodes vs. Orton to stand on its own. They wanted the story they invested in to reach a natural conclusion. They wanted WrestleMania’s main event to feel like the culmination of everything that came before it.
Instead, they got something else.
In wrestling, sometimes that says more than any reaction ever could.








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