>>8540557The timing of the upsurge in discussion about Tristen R. Nash on /pw/ was as suspicious as Kevin Nash's apathy for his son's life. It was as if someone had whispered his name into the collective consciousness of the internet, just days before his untimely death.
His father, Kevin Nash, was known for his podcast, though his content was starting to become increasingly stale; stories of the early 90s had been run dry, and his audience was becoming bored and unenthusiastic. It was no surprise that the father, Kevin Nash, had tried to milk the tragedy for all it was worth; after all, he had already made a name for himself doing exactly this with his friend Scott Hall’s death. His content had become stagnant as of late, creating a deep desperation in him that culminated in a last-ditch attempt to revive his podcast by telling a dramatic and morbid story.
The clues that Tristen left behind painted a picture of this terrible and ghastly plot- to murder his son Tristen in cold blood so that he could milk the tragedy for views- and the suspicions on /pw/ only seemed to further confirm this probability, in all its dreadfulness. The only thing still left in doubt was whether Kevin Nash was truly capable of something so heinous, or whether the mere suggestion of it was just a ridiculously dark joke.