[quote name='mykevermin']No way am I watching three hours of WWE straight week after week. And I don't have a DVR, so watching it afterward is out of the question. Unless TE is better than Raw, I won't catch it.
Even as a die-hard wrestling fan, I'm long past the time where I had to catch every WWE program ever. I haven't watched Smackdown with any regularity in years (once every 3 months or so, like I watch TNA Impact). I gave up on NXT midway through season 2, I've never watched Superstars, and I watch Raw 2 out of every 3 weeks, the most frequently.
Kevin Dunn told the NY Times that this was targeted to people who wouldn't normally watch an "event wrestling program." Which sounds to me like he's either convinced himself of two things that aren't true ((a) WWE programming is wrestling and (b) Tough Enough will appeal to non-wrestling fans), or he's using double speak to say it's going to appeal to the WWE Universe™, who aren't necessarily fans of wrestling anyway.
I'll have to see the lineup for Tough Enough, but I can't imagine it being any different than NXT (that is, non-wrestling based and dumb as a kick in the cock), and I can't imagine the show will matter at all. Just like the "diva searches," just like the previous Tough Enoughs, just like NXT, being the "winner" doesn't mean a

in' thing when everyone else ends up on the main program anyway.
Ask Kaval, ask Daniel Puder, how much it meant to "win."[/QUOTE]
The first couple of Tough Enoughs before it became a piece of Smackdown were actually pretty good and we got some good wrestlers out of it.