If you follow professional wrestling at all you know what NXT is, and if you're like me, you wonder why it can't be as good as the main show. When talent gets called up there's that feeling of loss because now, the wrestler you watched become NXT champion is now going to be buried by older, more established talent. The question though is how did this small developmental territory become better than the main show? This book gives us a peek inside NXT and tries to explain it all.
The book does a good job of introducing the brand to an audience who may not follow prowrestling, or may be curious about this developmental territory that became an underground phenomenon. It gives you the inside scoop, and the interviews from talent to trainers all talk about nurturing new talent and giving these wrestlers a chance to hone their craft in a state of the art facility that gives you the tools to be great, but in the end you have to want it bad enough.
It's an interesting book about a man who wanted to create talent for the future, give them a place where they could have an opportunity to become a WWE superstar the correct way. In the process, it became better than the main show they were supplying talent for due to the way HHH handles the business side of things, and a belief that the talent from NXT deserve to be seen, and now they and its grown into a cult like following.
It's an interesting book filled with stories that rave about HHH, the performance center, and the great things they do there. You learn a lot about how the place works, and sometimes you almost want to head down to Orlando to try out for a spot on the roster. There's a touching chapter dedicated to the late Dusty Rhoades, and you get to see what kind of things the performance center offers. It gives you an inside look at how WWE is creating future superstars, the only question it doesn't answer is if wrestling is fake, but you already know the answer to that one.
If you're a fan, or just curious about NXT and what it is, this is a must read book. It gives you the stories about how NXT was created and there's a lot of gushing about how great the place is. It's a great commercial for the building and its talented crop of wrestlers. It repeatedly tells you that you have to work hard to make it, and if you don't it's clearly your fault.