Bruce Prichard addresses accusations that he was a “bully” to Chris Park aka Abyss during WWE Unreal
While speaking on his podcast, WWE Executive Director Bruce Prichard addressed accusations that he was a “bully” to producer Chris Park aka Abyss during WWE Unreal…
“There are cameras everywhere. There are cameras around you all day long. You forget there are cameras on you.
It’s live TV. You know who they’re going to come to at the end of the day if the show doesn’t work, or the show doesn’t go off on time, or it just doesn’t work? They come to me. Okay? That’s the end of the story. I’m responsible for it.
So when it comes to communication, sometimes things get lost in communication. Also, the beauty of documentaries and the beauty of editing is you can create stories. You don’t get the whole story all the time.
Anybody who knows Chris Park knows what a wonderful human being he is. He’s one of the sweetest guys on the face of the earth. Extremely talented and really good at what he does. And he cares — I mean, just cares. He’s a beautiful soul, man. He really is.
Chris takes everything to heart. If you’re in a situation and you’re at a point where you’re asking a question and you’re not getting an answer — or I’m not getting the answer that I need — if I ask you what time it is, I don’t want to get the history of watchmaking. I want to know what time it is.
If I ask you how much time we have left, I don’t want to hear, ‘We’re getting close.’ I just need a number. Tell me. Help me.
"Is he mad at me?"
This WWE Unreal segment absolutely broke my heart.
Abyss is such a sweet and innocent man, I'm glad William Regal was there to comfort him. pic.twitter.com/3JCrvz24pS
— Stanley Graps (@stanleygraps) December 10, 2025
And that happens literally every week on every single show. It was good TV — I still haven’t seen the whole thing. I watched the entire series, but I had it on while I was working, so I haven’t sat down and just watched it. I did watch that particular scene and thought it was hilarious. I just thought it was great.
But Chris is Chris, and Chris is awesome. So anybody that takes that as being a bully or anything else — you’ve never worked in live television and you’ve never worked in real life. And if everything has to be sugarcoated for you, I feel really, really sorry for you.”







