>>16178645Imagine the wrestlers are movie actors.
Now imagine you're at a bar full of movie fans, the sort of people who have a subscription to cinemas so they can go whenever they want to whatever movie they want.
You hear them having conversation with each other about this new flick they've already seen, and they're discussing the plot, the story and how it made them feel.
Then suddenly some guy walks in and goes "HAHA YEAH, but did Tom Cruise really make $250 million dollars? HEH I don't think so, he's only a $249 milly actor."
Before you know it, the friendly discussion stops and 7 complete strangers have joined in the arguing and start to insult each other over who's making more money in Hollywood.
The group that was calmly talking before quietly leaves the bar and the venue slowly empties as the argument continues endlessly.
Out of 200 patrons, only 9 are left, including the barmaid who can't be bothered to be on the job anymore.
That's what wrestling fans do with "the draw".
They're applying an objective measurement to the subjective feeling of entertainment, as if the objective success validates a subjective feeling and mandates it across the board for everybody, and if others don't like it they're wrong "because look at the money you mark".