Why MJF Isn’t Happy After Recent Wedding
MJF is believed to be very unhappy for one very good reason after his recent wedding.
MJF and AEW broadcaster Alicia Atout recently married one another in a ceremony attended by many of their friends from the world of wrestling.
Tony Khan moved a pay-per-view so he could attend the event, and photos that did the rounds online showed the likes of Daniel Garcia, Lexis King, Max Caster, Tony Schiavone, HOOK, Taz, Jeff Jarrett, Karen Jarrett, and QT Marshall all in attendance.
Many fans noted that Hangman Adam Page was also at the event despite his recent involvement in a heated feud with MJF. Wrestling tribalism raised its head as a section of fans decided the last forty years hadn’t happened and that MJF and Page shouldn’t have been seen publicly together.
And it seems MJF might agree with that sentiment.
MJF Not Happy Wedding Photos Went Public
Speaking on Wrestling Observer Radio, Bryan Alvarez noted that no wrestlers put photos from the wedding online, but rather, fans had trawled family Facebook posts to find them:
So apparently they didn’t put any of those photos on social media. What happened was it was fans that went through like the family Facebook albums and they got pictures and posted them. This was not something that like MJF or Hangman or anybody in the company went out and did. This was all fans finding pictures from family albums and putting them out there on the internet.
Dave Meltzer noted that MJF and Alicia Atout are not thrilled about the photos going so public, with MJF said to be particularly protective about his wrestling persona:
I know that they’re not particularly happy it happened. It’s not the end of the world. I mean everyone knows and this and that. It’s still, especially for people who have kind of the mentality that he [MJF] would have, and that I would presume Page would have, but I know he would have in the sense of he wouldn’t want that.
If you use any quotes from this article, please credit original source and h/t with a link back to TJR Wrestling for the transcription.