|
Post by bestthateverdidit on Sept 24, 2011 17:00:07 GMT -5
Orton is face because he fights heels and usually wins clean.
I like him a lot. I found him boring ofr a long time and his promos are still boring but IN DA MIDDLE O DAT REENG (as Booker would say) his character is so evident in EVERYTHING he does. It's incredible.
|
|
|
Post by crimsonwolf on Sept 24, 2011 18:06:35 GMT -5
I really don't understand at all how Randy is a face. Like, I really, really don't. Same reason Stone Cold was. People like him. Simple as that, really. At least that is how it seems to me. Austin was never a true face though. People cheered him, but he continued to beat up on both heels and faces. And in all honesty, except for when he was a heel, I don't ever recall Austin giving absolutely brutal beatdowns except to people who really had it coming. Orton's another story. It reminds me of when he got pissy and beat the tar out of Christian after Orton got disqualified for for blatantly kicking him in the nuts. Dude is a prick.
|
|
The Doctor
Dennis Stamp
New teeth. That's weird.
Posts: 4,952
|
Post by The Doctor on Sept 24, 2011 18:21:39 GMT -5
Same reason Stone Cold was. People like him. Simple as that, really. At least that is how it seems to me. Austin was never a true face though. People cheered him, but he continued to beat up on both heels and faces. And in all honesty, except for when he was a heel, I don't ever recall Austin giving absolutely brutal beatdowns except to people who really had it coming. Orton's another story. It reminds me of when he got pissy and beat the tar out of Christian after Orton got disqualified for for blatantly kicking him in the nuts. Dude is a prick. To be fair Christian had just spat in his face. I think I would have gone pretty crazy in Orton's position. Also Austin was a full blown face for quite a while, at least in terms of crowd reaction. Orton is the same - a face by virtue of people cheering for him. But both do what they want as opposed to what a face is meant to do. I like it personally.
|
|