Kane officially addressed the creative direction of his 2014-2015 “Corporate Kane” persona during a recent interview. Speaking with the Going Ringside podcast at River City Wrestling Con, the Hall of Famer noted that while the initial concept was strong, the execution failed to meet expectations. He attributed the breakdown in the storyline to the fast-paced nature of the industry and a departure from the original vision.
“It was a really good idea, but the execution wasn’t that great. And again, the reason was because everything moves so fast, and sometimes we just forget the idea. The idea of Corporate Kane was Corporate Kane as Corporate Kane. I don’t even know why he called it Corporate Kane—I didn’t even like that. He was never supposed to wrestle; he was just a mouthpiece. And then when The Authority needed an enforcer, that’s when Kane put on the mask,” Kane stated.
Triple H’s Vision for Dual Personas and the Shift in Character Protection
The original strategy for the character was designed to protect the suited version of the “Big Red Machine” from physical altercations. The concept drew inspiration from legendary Japanese wrestler The Great Muta, featuring two distinct personas that did not acknowledge one another. Kane revealed that the “Corporate” version was never intended to be touched by opponents, only for the masked enforcer to handle the physical workload for The Authority.
“But they were never supposed to touch the guy in the suit, and that whole thing got completely lost. And it was almost like The Great Muta, where you have two characters. And Kane in the suit never would talk about the other Kane wearing the mask. It just got lost. That was actually Triple H’s idea, whose wrestling mind is unbelievable—but we talked about doing that, and that was his thought. And like I said, it just kind of got lost in the mix, unfortunately. And then I just ended up getting beat up by everybody,” he concluded.
