Well that was a show. A pretty good show. Certainly a pretty good show by 2021 WWE's standards. Of course it was not without moments that make rational viewers go "Huh???" Jesus there's a lot wrong with this product right now. But Survivor Series 2021 was a perfectly decent watch overall.
Of note before I get into this, it's a mistake to watch an AEW PPV one weekend and then a WWE PPV the next. Wrestling quality aside, WWE's live crowds are lifeless compared to AEW's. I don't care what side of the wrestling fence you're on, there's simply no getting around this fact. AEW fans are so much more excited to be there than WWE's, and it's not even close. Just about every match at Full Gear got enormous crowd reactions throughout, while almost nothing on this show made these fans give a tupenny fuck. Everything at Survivor Series lost up to a full star off its rating, just because the crowd was dead. I've said it before, but how does Vince not think this is a red-alert-level problem? If your audience doesn't react to anything, you're clearly not engaging them. If you're not engaging them, they aren't going to watch your show.
Oh also? Pat McAfee is annoying as shit. Guy doesn't shut up and half the time says things that make no sense. It's good that unlike every other WWE announcer he has a personality, but someone's gotta reign him in a little.
I was pretty pissed to see Shinsuke Nakamura vs. Damien Priest get bumped to the pre-show, particularly considering just how much time was wasted on video packages, commercials, entrances, etc. There is no excuse whatsoever for a match of any importance being relegated to the Kickoff while the company pisses away airtime on a video package for Drew McIntyre or Bobby Lashley. What the fuck were those all about? Yeah, we know who both those guys are, why are you showing us documentary-style videos with no objective? Or how about Vince McMahon and the stupid gold egg? Are we seriously building an entire episode of RAW around "Rich Old Guy's Expensive Trinket Missing?" Imagine thinking your wrestling audience wants to see your obscenely wealthy 76-year-old ass whining about how someone stole your new toy. Anyway, Nak vs. Priest was pretty good while it lasted, with lots of nearfalls and counterwrestling. Until Priest let go of a submission hold because Nakamura's guitar player friend distracted him with his guitar playing. What the actual fuck is with this gimmick? Welcome to WWE, where a legit badass with MMA experience gets turned into a comedy character. Priest went after Rick Boogs, took his guitar away, broke it over his knee, and bludgeoned both Boogs and Nakamura with it, drawing a disqualification. So Damien Priest, who had been undefeated for months since debuting on RAW, loses by DQ on a Kickoff show. Makes sense.... Like I said, this was good until the finish. **1/4
The proper PPV opener easily stole the show, as Becky Lynch and Charlotte Flair had a very intense, aggressive fight. To WWE's credit they resisted the temptation to make it look like a shoot or have some wacky Montreal-esque ending. Becky and Charlotte worked stiffly and urgently, using their real-life tension to fuel the bout. There were a ton of nearfalls, both women used each other's finishers (Becky didn't quite lock in the Figure Four properly and had to kinda turn it into a heel hook), and it built to Flair attempting to steal a win with a rope-assisted roll-up, only for Lynch to reverse it and use the ropes more surreptitiously so the ref didn't see it. Lynch got the pin and gloated over her archenemy. This was a very good match with a few sloppy moments, like Charlotte's top rope moonsault that more or less missed Becky. Still this was unquestionably the best thing on the show. ****