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Kevin Nash has expressed a very harsh opinion about WrestleMania 42 and about how TKO is handling the company, stating that the weekend seemed to him "soulless". According to Nash, the difference with the Vince McMahon era is that there used to be a stronger relationship with the big stars who drew numbers, while now he feels that connection has cooled off.
In his podcast Kliq This, Nash stated that TKO does not treat legends like Steve Austin and The Undertaker with the same level of recognition they had before. He even joked that the company operates like "The Adjustment Bureau", a way of saying that decisions are made from the outside in a cold and very corporate manner.
Nash's criticism is not only about money, but about the feeling that the product has lost part of its soul and emotional connection with WWE's history. For him, WrestleMania no longer conveys the same magic as when the company had a more personal bond with the talents that had helped build it.
I feel very disconnected from the product and everything else. For me, the whole weekend, maybe because I was at the limit of my strength, seemed a bit bland.
His comments align with other recent complaints about changes in TKO's relationship with veteran figures, including issues of compensation and treatment of legends. Although Nash still recognizes the business behind it all, he makes it clear that, from his point of view, the current company "doesn't get it" in the same way as the old WWE.
In summary, Nash not only criticized the feel of the event, but also the way TKO seems to value - or not value - the figures that built the brand. His interpretation is that the change of hands has brought a more business-oriented, but less emotional, vision of the product.