Ethan Page Addresses Criticism Of ‘Karate Man’ Character

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Did Ethan Page “kill the business” with his ‘Karate Man’ character? Page certainly didn’t think so, and he addressed those criticisms on a recent episode of Going Postl with Swoggle.

Page drew comparisons to the angle with Elias/Ezekiel, and what it was like trying to portray both characters on television. You can read highlights of Page’s appearance below:

Bringing ‘Karate Man’ to television: “You want to know what makes me the most mad? This is honestly, this is my curse. It’s my gift, but it’s also my curse. I do everything too soon. This is peak pandemic, I have nothing going on, how am I going to be able to tell stories with just myself? I’ll create this other character, I’ll feud with myself, there are merchandise options, all this stuff. I’m doing double bookings. I’m taking these paydays where Ethan Page wrestles at 2, Karate Man wrestles at 4, Ethan Page wrestles at 8. Karate Man outsold Ethan Page in merch. The whole time I’m thinking, ‘People don’t tell me what to do.’ Then, when it was kind of like pushed on me to bring it on television, I was ultimately offered an ultimatum where it was like, ‘On your exit, you can either turn on your tag partner and do this feud with him, or you do Karate Man on TV.’ I was like, ‘Well, there might be money in the future for this, so let’s just do Karate Man on TV.’ In my mind, I’m thinking, ‘this will be fine as long as…’ and I was very vocal about this: it gets presented as two separate people, so there is Ethan Page on the show and there is Karate Man on the show. No one understood it, or they chose not to. Either way, it’s fine, it’s not my show, I can’t control everything. It all worked out in the end.”

WWE doing the Elias/Ezekiel angle: “Then I see on WWE, about a year later, they do exactly what I wanted to do with Elias. Everyone loves it. Rave reviews. Genius idea even. So innovative. I’m thinking, ‘Hold on, I killed the business on a show no one really saw? But this guy…’ It was awesome, all the power to him. The whole time, I’m thinking like, ‘Do we just choose who sucks?’ The part that sucks is that when it comes to comedy, everyone has their own style, but my style is very serious. It sounds stupid, but I thought the more serious and on the nose you treated Karate Man, the funnier it is. The more campy it is, the less funny it is to me. It’s almost like you’re beating people over the head. ‘This is supposed to be funny. You’re supposed to laugh.’ No, if we treat it like these are two separate people, I promise, I’ll play them both to a tee. You have to take it like it’s serious, people think it’s hilarious. The Karate Man lives. He’ll be around forever. I’m putting him in another project, coming soon.”

Ethan Page and Matt Hardy lost to JungleHook on last night’s episode of AEW Dynamite. You can keep up with all your wrestling news right here on eWrestlingNews.com. Or, you can follow us over on our Twitter and Facebook pages.

The post Ethan Page Addresses Criticism Of ‘Karate Man’ Character appeared first on eWrestlingNews.com.

Did Ethan Page “kill the business” with his ‘Karate Man’ character? Page certainly didn’t think so, and he addressed those criticisms on a recent episode of Going Postl with Swoggle.

Page drew comparisons to the angle with Elias/Ezekiel, and what it was like trying to portray both characters on television. You can read highlights of Page’s appearance below:

Bringing ‘Karate Man’ to television: “You want to know what makes me the most mad? This is honestly, this is my curse. It’s my gift, but it’s also my curse. I do everything too soon. This is peak pandemic, I have nothing going on, how am I going to be able to tell stories with just myself? I’ll create this other character, I’ll feud with myself, there are merchandise options, all this stuff. I’m doing double bookings. I’m taking these paydays where Ethan Page wrestles at 2, Karate Man wrestles at 4, Ethan Page wrestles at 8. Karate Man outsold Ethan Page in merch. The whole time I’m thinking, ‘People don’t tell me what to do.’ Then, when it was kind of like pushed on me to bring it on television, I was ultimately offered an ultimatum where it was like, ‘On your exit, you can either turn on your tag partner and do this feud with him, or you do Karate Man on TV.’ I was like, ‘Well, there might be money in the future for this, so let’s just do Karate Man on TV.’ In my mind, I’m thinking, ‘this will be fine as long as…’ and I was very vocal about this: it gets presented as two separate people, so there is Ethan Page on the show and there is Karate Man on the show. No one understood it, or they chose not to. Either way, it’s fine, it’s not my show, I can’t control everything. It all worked out in the end.”

WWE doing the Elias/Ezekiel angle: “Then I see on WWE, about a year later, they do exactly what I wanted to do with Elias. Everyone loves it. Rave reviews. Genius idea even. So innovative. I’m thinking, ‘Hold on, I killed the business on a show no one really saw? But this guy…’ It was awesome, all the power to him. The whole time, I’m thinking like, ‘Do we just choose who sucks?’ The part that sucks is that when it comes to comedy, everyone has their own style, but my style is very serious. It sounds stupid, but I thought the more serious and on the nose you treated Karate Man, the funnier it is. The more campy it is, the less funny it is to me. It’s almost like you’re beating people over the head. ‘This is supposed to be funny. You’re supposed to laugh.’ No, if we treat it like these are two separate people, I promise, I’ll play them both to a tee. You have to take it like it’s serious, people think it’s hilarious. The Karate Man lives. He’ll be around forever. I’m putting him in another project, coming soon.”

Ethan Page and Matt Hardy lost to JungleHook on last night’s episode of AEW Dynamite. You can keep up with all your wrestling news right here on eWrestlingNews.com. Or, you can follow us over on our Twitter and Facebook pages.

The post Ethan Page Addresses Criticism Of ‘Karate Man’ Character appeared first on eWrestlingNews.com.

 

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