logo
Adam Cole breaks silence on AEW All In TNT Championship vacation

Adam Cole breaks silence on AEW All In TNT Championship vacation

Yahoo3 days ago
The post Adam Cole breaks silence on AEW All In TNT Championship vacation appeared first on ClutchPoints.
When news broke before AEW All In Texas that Adam Cole would not only not be wrestling on the promotion's biggest Pay-Per-View of the year but would be outright vacating the TNT Championship, it left fans downright perplexed.
Advertisement
Sure, Cole has suffered injuries in the past, from concussions to a broken ankle during his program with MJF, but he just wrestled a complete match on Collision mere days before All In. What happened?
While that isn't known just yet, Cole took to the ring before the four-way match for the TNT Championship match and laid out his past, present, and potentially future in All Elite Wrestling, which isn't as guaranteed as some might hope.
'It's really hard to put this into words, but I wanted to come out here and talk to you all. Very sorry that I let everybody down. I can't wrestle tonight.I have some health issues going on at the moment that not only will not allow me to defend this championship tonight, but I am going to be gone for a while. And I don't even want to think about talking about retiring because I am not in the right headspace, but I wanted to have this opportunity to come out and talk to you all. If this is indeed goodbye, because you are the best damn wrestling fans in the world. Thank you. Thank you. Since I was nine years old, I've always dreamed of being a professional wrestler,' Cole said.
'It's all I've ever, ever wanted to do. And all of you made that dream come true for me. You've supported me across multiple promotions all over the world. You have no idea how much that means to me. With my, with my highest moments and recently my lowest moments, all of you have been so supportive every step of the way. D**n it.
Advertisement
'I will love you forever. Thank you so much. I don't want to take up any more of your time because we have the best damn wrestling pay-per-view you've ever seen happening right now. We're going to have a new, a new TNT champion tonight. Once again, you will continue to watch AEW do pay-per-view like nobody else in the world does. And from me, honestly, from everybody at AEW, thank you for making AEW what it is. Thank you for making AEW so special. And thank you all so damn much for changing my life. I love you always.'
Did Cole losing not on his belt but potentially his career put a horrible damper on All In? Yes, while watching Dustin Rhodes finally become a singles champion in the promotion was sweet, it coming at Cole's expense isn't a tradeoff even 'The Natural' would have accepted. Needless to say, one question Tony Khan will have to answer tonight during the All In media scrum is borderline guaranteed, as fans want to know what's next for the 'Panama Playboy.'
Related: 'Hangman' Adam Page earns surprising endorsement before AEW All In
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Strange Wonders Await: The Oddities and Curiosities Expo Takes Over Richmond
Strange Wonders Await: The Oddities and Curiosities Expo Takes Over Richmond

Yahoo

time28 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Strange Wonders Await: The Oddities and Curiosities Expo Takes Over Richmond

Enjoy a showcase of all things weird. RICHMOND, Va., July 15, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Brace yourselves for the strangest and most exciting event of the year as The Oddities and Curiosities Expo, the ultimate celebration of all things peculiar and extraordinary, returns to Greater Richmond Convention Center in Richmond, VA on August 9th and 10th. Tickets start at $10 and can be purchased at The Oddities and Curiosities Expo is a one-of-a-kind traveling showcase that brings together hundreds of oddity vendors and artists from across the country, creating a playground for the strange and unusual. Here, the weird, wonderful, and downright bizarre unite in a fascinating display of the extraordinary, providing a platform for vendors and artists to connect with a community of like-minded individuals. The event will travel coast to coast, visiting 40 cities in the United States and Canada in 2025. Attendees can browse and shop for rare and unique items, including taxidermy, preserved animal specimens, dark artistry, original horror and Halloween-inspired artwork, antiques, metaphysical accoutrements, handcrafted oddities, skulls, bones, and funeral collectibles. Beyond shopping, the expo offers an immersive experience with photo opportunities, tarot readings, sideshow performances, and various concessions to keep attendees entertained throughout the day. Founded in Oklahoma by Michelle and Tony Cozzaglio, The Oddities and Curiosities Expo has hosted hundreds of events across North America, recognizing a growing demand for this unique large-scale gathering. "We created this expo to give odd small businesses and artists a space where they can thrive," said Michelle. "Our goal is to build a community where people feel safe to be themselves, surrounded by like-minded folks who appreciate the weird and wonderful." With its strong DIY ethos and a commitment to excellence, the expo continues to grow year after year. "Our success comes from working with the best exhibitors in the world and curating every event to deliver exactly what our attendees want to see," Michelle added. "We're always looking for ways to evolve and make the experience even better for both our exhibitors and our guests." As the original, curated event of its kind, the Oddities and Curiosities Expo remains the leading destination for the wonderfully of The Oddities and Curiosities Expo can also purchase tickets to a day-long taxidermy class where they can learn to make their own full-sized taxidermy mount, which will vary by city, insect pinning class, or wet specimen preservation workshop. In all classes, hosted by The Sleeping Sirens, students will work with sustainably sourced specimens to learn the basics of taxidermy and entomology and will be provided with a variety of tools and materials. It is important to note: All animals in the taxidermy class and other parts of the show – like preserved specimens – are sourced ethically and died of natural causes. EVENT INFO The Oddities and Curiosities Expo will take place Saturday, August 9th from 10am to 6pm and Sunday, August 10th from 10am to 4pm at Greater Richmond Convention Center at 400 E Marshall St, Richmond, VA 23219. Tickets are $10 in advance or $15 at the door. Children 12 and under are free. The event is all ages - however, parents are advised to use their best judgment about if their children should attend. Tickets can be purchased at The Raccoon Taxidermy Class will be held on Saturday, August 9th, from 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM for $325. The Wet Specimen Workshop sessions will be held on Sunday, August 10th, from 10:00 AM to 12:30 PM and again from 1:30 PM to 4:00 PM for $150. The Beetles and Spiders Beginner Entomology Classes will take place on Saturday and Sunday with morning and afternoon sessions available for $150 per class. All classes will be hosted by Heather Clark of Sleeping Sirens Art & Oddities with built in breaks for lunch and exploring the expo. Materials and tools are provided, and tickets include admission to the expo. For additional information, follow The Oddities and Curiosities Expo on Facebook, Instagram and TikTok. ContactDayna Castillopress@ View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Oddities & Curiosities Expo Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Andrea Gibson, a Poet of Love, Hope and Gender Identity, Dies at 49
Andrea Gibson, a Poet of Love, Hope and Gender Identity, Dies at 49

New York Times

time30 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Andrea Gibson, a Poet of Love, Hope and Gender Identity, Dies at 49

Andrea Gibson, a master of spoken-word poetry who cultivated legions of admirers with intensely personal, often political works exploring gender, love and a personal four-year fight with terminal ovarian cancer, died on Monday in Longmont, Colo. Gibson, who used the pronouns they and them and did not use an honorific, was 49. Megan Falley, their wife, confirmed the death. Gibson was among the leading voices in a resurgence of spoken-word, or slam, poetry in the mid-2000s, centered in cafes and on college campuses around the country. They were prolific, publishing seven books, mostly poetry, along with seven albums, all while touring tirelessly. In 2023, Gov. Jared Polis of Colorado named Gibson the state's poet laureate. Gibson performed shows as long as 90 minutes, even with chronic stage fright — a condition addressed in the poem 'Ode to the Public Panic Attack,' a work that typified Gibson's sardonic yet vulnerably honest approach. The poem, addressed to a panic attack, begins: You find me at the coffee shop, at the movies, buying comfort food in the grocery store. Then, after a long list of the many other banal situations in which the panic finds Gibson, the poem concludes: To step towards the terror. Its promised jaw. To scrape your boots on the welcome mat. To tell yourself fear Is the seat of fearlessness. Even when you're falling through the ice that is never Been weakness. That is the bravest thing I have ever done in my life. Earlier this year, Gibson appeared in the documentary 'Come See Me in the Good Light,' directed by Ryan White, which focused on Gibson and Ms. Falley during Gibson's long struggle with cancer. It premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January and won the Festival Favorite Award. Gibson's poems were always emotionally freighted, whether they were fiercely political statements or achingly painful odes to lost love that left audiences in tears. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Chicago band says their song was sampled in Travis Scott track without credit or permission
Chicago band says their song was sampled in Travis Scott track without credit or permission

CBS News

time32 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Chicago band says their song was sampled in Travis Scott track without credit or permission

A Chicago band said one of the world's biggest rappers used part of their song on his new album — but said Travis Scott failed to credit, compensate, or clear the sample. After years of working on and performing their song, "Pursuit," Chicago band Pixel Grip woke up to a surprise when they heard a sample of their song. "And then I listened to it again and then in all caps was like, 'Holy s***!'" said vocalist Rita Lukea. Lukea told her bandmates — drummer/producer Tyler Ommen and synth player/producer Jon Jon Freund their song was on the new Travis Scott album "JackBoys 2." "I can just tell immediately, because like, I worked so hard on this song, it's like, I can hear the bass line in the background. I can hear the noise that swirls in the very beginning," said Freund. Playing their song "Pursuit" and Travis Scott's song "Kick Out" side-by-side, Pixel Grip said there is no doubt. "As soon as I had headphones on, I was like yo, y'all, this is just a sample," said Ommen. "This is the song in the background." The Pixel Grip song "Pursuit" took years — starting at a festival in 2018. The band's media shows clips of them putting it together in 2020. So the band posted online that the Travis Scott song had sampled "Pursuit" without permission. "I just can't stop thinking about who else extremely famous or powerful in music knows about us and even actively likes our music but refuses to throw us a bone," Pixel Grip wrote in a post on X. Pixel Group said they got a message from Scott's co-producer, Sean Momberger, telling them, "Hey the label should be reaching out to clear the sample soon." Momberger said the song wasn't cleared prior to release, and added that he loved "Pursuit" and "knew it was special right when [he] heard it." Momberger was also behind what was arguably last year's biggest rap hit — Kendrick Lamar's "Not Like Us." "It just would have meant the world if he even just tagged us or shout us out in any way, like, that would've been a huge moment for us," said Lukea, "but instead, he just completely acted like we don't exist." As the band looks over their new album, they say they're open to work with others. "We're happy to collaborate, just let us know," said Ommen. But they are hoping to be a part of the process — not just the end product. "song is good," Lukea said. "We just want credit." The band will hit the road for a tour with dozens of stops starting Sept. 23, and is already thinking about the ways that they are going to incorporate the controversy into their sets. CBS News Chicago reached out to producer Momberger and several members of Travis Scott's team. We have not heard back.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store