WWE Spoilers: WWE's plans for Superstars in New Orleans during WrestleMania 30 week, plus Damien Sandow talks frustrations and push

By Andrew Meola | Feb 22, 2014 12:57 PM EST

In a little more than a month, WWE will descend upon New Orleans for the week of WrestleMania 30. And according to a new report, WWE is preparing as best it can to prevent any troublesome situations during that week.

F4WOnline.com reports that WWE and Vince McMahon are taking extreme measures to keep its Superstars and other talent busy during WrestleMania 30 week so that nothing embarrassing happens and that no one gets in trouble during their time in the party city. Vince McMahon reportedly said that he does not plan on sleeping during that week.

Damien Sandow Talks Frustrations and Halted Push

Damien Sandow recently spoke to ThisIsInfamous.com and had some interesting comments about WWE creative, wrestlers' frustrations and more. Check it out below (apologies for the length, but the first question is necessary to give Sandow's answer the proper context):

Let me ask you about the Money in the Bank. There's obviously been a lot of attention paid to performer's frustration as of late for obvious reasons. I don't want to get into specifics about that because there are lots of people who just don't know anything, but as someone who has seen their pushes start and then get cut off, and who's had Money in the Bank title shots that didn't go further than that, how do you deal with the highs and lows and creative inconsistency, I guess, that can befall someone like yourself and your character?

I think your actual language, in my opinion, is what's wrong with a lot of the Superstars. I don't mean that as a shot at you...let me explain myself.

Sure.

Their frustrations and, I hate this term, but 'push.' What is a push? Every time you get a chance on television, that is a chance to win fans. That is a chance to create good content. A lot of the guys...'I'm not working in the main event.' If they have a problem with that, you get yourself in the main event. If you're not, you make sure your match is the best match of the night. You can only go forward. I never saw me losing my briefcase to John Cena as a bad thing, it was a chance for my character to evolve. And evolve I did! I think, looking back at my career, when it's all said and done, that night will go down as one of the most pivotal nights in my career.

Well do you think, then, that there is too much emphasis placed on wins and losses? Not only by fans, but also by performers, as opposed to just going in night after night and trying to entertain?

I think there isn't enough emphasis placed on what the WWE actually is. What the WWE actually is is the greatest show on earth. I've actually touched on this previously, but when you go to a WWE show, it's Grandma and Grandpa and everyone in between. When you are given a role on that show, it is completely up to the performer to do the absolute most they can with that role. From there, the sky is the limit."

What do you make of all this? Let us know in the comments below.

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