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The Undertaker has decided to take a step further beyond the world of wrestling rings and fully enter the universe of content creators. To celebrate his 35 years in WWE, the legend launched his official YouTube channel, a space where iconic matches, classic vignettes, backstage material, and new episodes of his series Six Feet Under are already being compiled.
WWE presented the launch as a true milestone in the career of the "Deadman," encouraging fans to relive historic moments and discover never-before-seen archive pieces. For a figure so associated with mystery and silence like Undertaker, opening such a direct window with the public represents almost a change of era.
However, someone didn't take long to react: Logan Paul. The WWE star, who built his fame precisely thanks to YouTube before transitioning to wrestling, didn't miss the opportunity to make a venomous and highly subtextual comment.
On social media, Paul ironically complained that now others are invading "his" digital territory, as if Undertaker were copying the model that he helped normalize in modern wrestling.
"I'm tired of these 'outsiders' who think they can become YouTubers just like that," he wrote, completely flipping the narrative that had haunted him for years: that of a wrestling outsider who came from the internet to "take advantage" of the business.
Logan's move is not coincidental. His comment reinforces the idea that he is no longer just a celebrity who landed in WWE, but someone who opened the door to this blend of digital star and full-time wrestler.
For Undertaker, the YouTube channel is another chapter in his transition to a ubiquitous legend: podcasts, special appearances, storytelling tours, and now his own on-demand content. Interestingly, his message contradicts what wrestlers who criticize the idea of outsiders succeeding within the 12 ropes point out.