Yes, I know I’ve written about NXT 2.0 before, but WWE decided to purge itself of another batch of wrestlers again this week. The new set of releases featured strictly NXT 2.0 and Performance Center talent. It is what it is. We don’t like it, but it’s a part of business, and there’s nothing we can do to prevent it from happening.
However, with the latest batch of releases, I couldn’t help but look at the current NXT roster and shake my head. If you add everything up, the numbers aren’t bad at face value. There are 40 men and 25 women on the NXT 2.0 roster as of the moment I type this sentence. Compare that to Raw, which currently has 35 men and 13 women, or Smackdown, which has 27 men and 11 women. That’s a lot for the “developmental” brand.
You need to take a deeper dive and look at that NXT roster a little more thoroughly to get the real picture, though, and that’s what I decided to do. Let’s start by going through the list of 40 men and placing them into tiers. The top tier will consist of the main event talent and the wrestlers that are clearly viewed as something special by those in charge of NXT.
- Bron Breakker: Obvious choice as the NXT Champion.
- Joe Gacy: He normally wouldn’t be in this tier, but he’s in the NXT Title picture right now, so he’s here. It might be temporary, but it still counts.
- Carmelo Hayes: He is counted on to go out there and have Match Of The Night candidates every time he steps in the ring, title or no title.
Honestly, I think that’s it. That’s pretty sad. Three people, and one of them isn’t even being bought as a believable and credible main event guy. Let’s move on to the second tier. This one will consist of other champions, as well as people who are a step away from being believably involved in the main event.
- Cameron Grimes: As always, when Cameron Grimes is mentioned, I am legally and contractually obligated to mention the fact that he nearly broke my leg at an independent wrestling show a few years back.
- Elton Prince: As one-half of the NXT Tag Team Champions, he’s here under the “other champions” category.
- Kit Wilson: Ditto.
- Grayson Waller: He’s one of the best on the NXT roster at drawing heat, and he is always placed in positions to have one or two “wow” spots in every match.
- Roderick Strong: Roddy is one of the better in-ring workers on the roster, but at almost 39, he doesn’t exactly fit their youth movement. According to reports, he also wants to be released from his contract, so we’ll see.
- Santos Escobar: He just turned 38, so he isn’t in-line with the youth movement, either. He’s still a world-class worker, but he continues to get booked to lose almost all of his big matches.
- Solo Sikoa: It’s pretty clear that the higher-ups like him, but with his family tree, that has already brought up a ton of speculation that he won’t be in NXT long.
- Tony D’Angelo: At this point, he’s still far more reliant on character work than in-ring work, but he’s still improving a ton as an actual wrestler.
Again, that’s not a ton of people. Let’s move on and get to the next tier. This one is mostly people used in tag teams, but will also feature some wrestlers who have had at least one push on television, even if it didn’t really work.
- Brooks Jensen: Over the last few months, he has been on television more in vignettes than he has for matches.
- Josh Briggs: Ditto.
- Brutus Creed: I think it’s pretty clear that The Creed Brothers could be a big part of the future of tag team wrestling in WWE. Take that for whatever you think it’s worth.
- Julius Creed: Ditto.
- Cruz Del Toro: Pretty regular television time, but it has been months since you could consider any of Legado Del Fantasma’s wins “big.”
- Joaquin Wilde: Ditto.
- James Drake: You could make an argument that Grizzled Young Veterans are the most underutilized tag team that NXT has had in a long time, losing almost every big match they’ve been in.
- Zack Gibson: Ditto.
- Edris Enofe: He has spent more time on NXT television in 2022 thirsting after Toxic Attraction than he has wrestling.
- Malik Blade: Ditto.
- Duke Hudson: It seems like he has gone through 20 character changes recently, and now, his on-screen girlfriend and his tag team partner have been released, possibly putting him back at square one.
- Von Wagner: The man with the most awkward sounding promos in all of wrestling. He always seems like he’s on the verge of a mini-push, and then it just stops all of a sudden.
Our biggest tier so far, mostly because of the tag team workers. Time for the next tier, which is going to feature the “question mark” guys. These folks are either on the shelf with an injury, or have had some things happen that were out of their control, so we don’t really know what the future holds for them.
- Odyssey Jones: He came out of nowhere to reach the finals of the 2021 NXT Breakout Tournament, then floated around with no real direction until he ruptured his patella and is going to be out for at least a few more months.
- Xyon Quinn: Winning “lesser” matches upon his debut, losing the “bigger” matches, and then winning the “lesser” matches again. Now he might be injured. Lots of potential, but yeah… a total question mark right now.
- Fabian Aichner: Imperium was a well-oiled machine that looked like it could dominate NXT for the foreseeable future. Now, all that remains is Aichner, and we have no idea what will happen with his singles career.
- Wes Lee: He went from one-half of the NXT Tag Team Champions to being stripped of the titles for something he had nothing to do with. He has potential to be a singles star, but we’ll have to see if he reaches that potential.
Another small tier, but in this instance, that’s not such a bad thing. The current roster is, overall, pretty healthy. Next up, we have the tier of people who have been featured on television at least semi-regularly, but it didn’t equal a lot of wins or any sort of sustained push.
- A-Kid: He came over from NXT UK with a small amount of fanfare, and it turned into one win, two straight losses, and than over a month of nothing.
- Andre Chase: Like Tony D’Angelo, Chase is far more reliant on his character work than anything else right now. He hasn’t even wrestled in over two months.
- Boa: He might be most remembered so far for all the times he has been beaten up by women on NXT programming. It has been over three months since he last had a match.
- Ikemen Jiro: He’s going to go down as the reason Kushida didn’t want to remain in NXT. The man is rarely used on television, and when he is, it isn’t to rack up the wins. In fact, he has never won an NXT singles match.
- Sanga: It looked like he might get a push when he was in a team with Rinku (Veer Mahaan), but then they were split up. Then it looked like he could get a push with Grayson Waller, but then they were split up.
- Trick Williams: Another person to have never won a singles match in NXT. He’s doing a great job as Carmelo Hayes’ friend, though.
It’s another relatively small tier, and that brings us to the final tier. The competitors on this list are the unknowns of the NXT roster. They either haven’t wrestled for the brand on television yet, or they haven’t done so in a long time. Either way, we have no idea what to expect from them.
- Bodhi Hayward: Andre Chase’s prized student has only wrestled twice on NXT television. He does have a win over Von Wagner, but that was over a month ago, and nothing has come out of it yet.
- Channing Lorenzo: “Stacks” is an associate of Tony D’Angelo that hasn’t even wrestled on television yet. His signing with the company was only announced a couple months ago.
- Troy Donovan: Ditto for “Two Dimes” over here.
- Dante Chen: Three matches on television over the span of five months. He won one, lost one, and had one match tossed out due to interference. We haven’t seen him wrestle on television since.
- Guru Raaj: Pretty much the same. Three matches on television in a month, but he lost two and his other match was the aforementioned one with Chen that got tossed out. He hasn’t been on television since those three matches.
- Nathan Frazer: As Ben Carter, he built up a lot of buzz on the independent scene and in AEW YouTube matches. It turned into some success in NXT UK, but he just made the jump to NXT 2.0, with only two matches so far.
- Ru Feng: He has two matches on NXT television, losing both, but the last one took place six months ago.
Take a moment to look at each tier again. Go up and down through the male roster and tell me how exciting it looks on paper.
It’s not exciting to me. Not at all. Even the biggest Joe Gacy fans I know say he probably doesn’t belong competing for the NXT Title, especially now that he has traded in the monster Harland for a bunch of stupid, faceless druids. Hell, the NXT Champion himself is probably someone that Vince McMahon is already making plans to call up.
“That’s fine. If Gacy drops a tier or two, and if Bron Breakker gets called up, it just means room for new people in the top tier.”
Well, yes, that is technically true. However, that second tier is full of people that probably have no shot to be in the top tier based on how they’ve already been booked in NXT, as well as others who the average fan will say isn’t “ready” yet. I’m sure some of you are big fans of Tony D’Angelo, but NXT Champion Tony D’Angelo? Same for NXT Champion Grayson Waller?
I know what some of you are thinking. Many people didn’t think Bron Breakker was “ready” to be the NXT Champion, and there he was, winning the title in his ninth match in NXT. There are two key differences that separate Bron Breakker from Tony D’Angelo, Grayson Waller, and a lot of the other new talents that NXT has showcased over the last several months. One of those differences is more important to us, the fans, and the other seems to be more important to Vince McMahon and anyone who has any sort of “say” in WWE. For us, it’s the fact that Bron Breakker LOOKS like a superstar. From the moment he debuted, you could look at him and see big things in his future. He looks like this badass buzzsaw that is going to decimate anything he comes in contact with, and so far, that is pretty much what we’ve seen. The other key difference is that he’s a second-generation wrestler. Don’t ever… ever, ever, ever… underestimate how much Vince McMahon loves that kind of thing. Vince would’ve enjoyed it if Bronson Rechsteiner was Bronson Horowitz, the son of longtime WWF enhancement talent Barry Horowitz. The fact that he is the son of Rick Steiner, and the nephew of Scott Steiner, immediately added those dollar signs in Vince’s eyes. Throw in the fact that he looks like his father, wrestles like his father (and his uncle before Scott went off the deep end with how he looked), and sounds like a computer generated mashup of both Rick and Scott? Sheeeeeiiiiittttt… Vince was thinking of ways to crown the kid as soon as he signed his WWE contract on the dotted line.
Now, for the sake of poops and chuckles, let’s do the same thing we just did, but for the NXT women’s division. The first tier will cover the “main event” scene, with the Women’s Champion, anyone she’s currently feuding with, or women that are right there in the thick of things.
- Mandy Rose: No matter what you think of her, she has the top women’s title on the brand, so she’s at the top of the list.
- Roxanne Perez: Not a bad gig. Brand new signing that isn’t even old enough to legally buy alcohol where she lives, and she’s already involved in going after the NXT Women’s Title.
- Wendy Choo: Does she belong here? It’s hard to tell. After Perez lost to Mandy Rose, it almost seems like the feud is continuing on because of Wendy “Wile E. Coyote” Choo over here. Her gimmick has already ran its course.
Another top tier with only three people in it, and you probably don’t even need the third name. Moving on to the second tier… it is, once again, consisting of other champions and anyone who are believably only a step away from being involved in the “main event” scene at any time.
- Gigi Dolin: One-half of the NXT Women’s Tag Team Champions. With no secondary singles titles in the women’s division, this places her in the “second place” spot by default.
- Jacy Jayne: Ditto.
- Alba Fyre: Realistically, you could place her in a few different tiers. She SHOULD be here, but she also has a new name and hasn’t had a match in over a month after seeing a bit of a mini-push.
- Cora Jade: She got a push out of nowhere, and then disappeared. I think she’ll still be in this type of spot when she gets back, though. Maybe she went off to actually learn how to ride a skateboard.
- Io Shirai: If she’s injured like someone on Twitter believes her to be, she moves to a different tier. Otherwise, she’s the biggest star in the division and is always one step away from being a champion as long as she’s in NXT.
Not a big tier, especially when you consider that 40% of it is the NXT Women’s Tag Team Champions. Next tier is the same as the men… women that are mostly used in tag teams and/or who have received at least one push on television, even if that push didn’t really go anywhere.
- Katana Chance: As Kacy Catanzaro, she was able to get some semi-regular television time. With a new name change, we’ll see if anything else changes.
- Kayden Carter: She didn’t get the snazzy new name change like her partner did, but we have to see if that leads to anything new with this team.
- Valentina Feroz: She has yet to win a match on NXT television, either with her tag team partner or in singles action, but hey… at least she’s there. I guess.
- Yulisa Leon: Ditto.
- Ivy Nile: She is undefeated in singles competition with this new character, but it was mostly squash matches, so she didn’t actually move up the card. With Malcolm Bivens gone, it will be interesting to see what her future holds.
- Nikkita Lyons: She had a bunch of vignettes, and has been undefeated since making her NXT debut, but she’s been in the same feud for over a month now. Maybe she advances after this, and maybe she doesn’t.
- Tiffany Stratton: Like Lyons, she had a bunch of vignettes air before her debut. Unlike Lyons, she’s been up-and-down with wins and losses since her debut. She always seems to be involved in something, though.
Our biggest tier yet for the women. Next up, the “question mark” tier. This is for the women who are currently out of action, or who have had things happen that are out of their control.
- Candice LeRae: She’s still out on maternity leave, but with her husband no longer there, one of her on-screen “kids” on Raw, and her on-screen “son-in-law” released, you have to wonder if we’ll see her in NXT again.
- Indi Hartwell: Lots of questions about what happens now. As I said, her on-screen “dad” is gone, with her on-screen “mom” possibly soon to follow. Her “brother” is on Raw, while her “husband” and her tag partner are also gone.
- Zoey Stark: She had surgery to repair a torn ACL in November, with no word on a possible return date. Before her injury, she was always prominently featured on television, so we’ll see how that goes when she gets back.
Oh, hey, yet another small tier. Next up is the tier for women who have been featured on television at least semi-regularly, but those appearances didn’t really lead to any sort of sustained push or even many wins.
- Elektra Lopez: For a while, it looked like she was going to be getting a real push, and then it faded away. Now, she’s more of a Manager/Valet for Legado Del Fantasma than anything.
- Lash Legend: Like Nikkita Lyons, who she has been feuding with for over 28 straight years, her in-ring work isn’t the reason she seems to trend on Twitter whenever she’s on television.
- Sarray: She is as start-stop-start as it gets, as she debuted, won a couple matches, disappeared, returned for a bit, disappeared again, and then returned for a bit. Nothing has come out of it.
The final tier for the women features the unknowns. Maybe they haven’t wrestled on NXT television yet, or maybe they’ve only had a match or two, or maybe they just haven’t had a match in a long time.
- Amari Miller: She has yet to win a match in NXT, and she hasn’t even participated in a match in over two months.
- Fallon Henley: Sure, there was more on-screen time during what was happening with Legado Del Fantasma and Josh Briggs, but that seems to be over just as quickly as it started.
- Sofia Cromwell: She just made her debut for the company, with zero matches yet.
- Tatum Paxley: With two televised matches under her belt, she’s still a fresh no0b.
This is a dire, dire situation. The two best in-ring workers left (Io Shirai and Candice LeRae) aren’t even available to wrestle right now, with LeRae possibly done with NXT altogether. The Artist-Formerly-Known-As Kay Lee Ray can “go” in the ring, but she hasn’t really connected with fans in America like she did with the NXT UK crowds. Mandy Rose is certainly better in the ring than she was during her main roster run, but she’s still someone that the company has placed in this position because of the way she looks. You can take that as a knock if you want, but trust me when I say that it isn’t. Cora Jade seems to be primed as a huge part of the future of the women’s division, and so does Roxanne Perez.
What the hell else is there beyond that?
I have no problem with a “youth movement” sweeping through NXT. Almost every wrestling promotion you can think of has done something like that at least once. Not only is it fine, it’s actually a good idea when you do it right. You can’t just keep pushing the same people over and over and over and over again, taking them into their 40’s and then into their 50’s. You have to keep evolving and keep creating new stars. WWE’s problem with NXT is that they didn’t ease into the “youth movement” like they should have. Introduce a new wrestler or two. Try to create a new star or two by building pushes. Take one or two of the “established” talents and move them on, either to Raw and Smackdown, or… if you absolutely need to… releasing them from their contracts. Instead, they tried to do it all at the same time, bombarding viewers with waves of brand new names that they had never seen or heard of before.
At one point, not very long ago, it could be said that NXT had, perhaps, the best overall roster in all of wrestling. World-class performers from top to bottom. A mix of veterans that had traveled the world, and also some of the hottest young acts in the business, all of which were becoming primed for bigger and better things. The likes of Adam Cole, Johnny Gargano, Samoa Joe, Shinsuke Nakamura, and Drew McIntyre were able to handle the main event scene with no problems whatsoever. Then, you had people like Walter, Pete Dunne, Bianca Belair, The Revival, The Street Profits, and many more were able to become stars, or at least get introduced to a much bigger audience. Every division in NXT was packed, sometimes to the brand’s detriment.
Of course, we know what happened with THAT version of NXT. They went head-to-head with the brand new All Elite Wrestling, who were able to capture the attentions of wrestling fans almost immediately. It doesn’t matter if you thought AEW was better or worse than NXT. What mattered was the viewership numbers, and AEW was winning that battle far more often than not. Vince McMahon saw that and… let’s face it… he panicked. He saw everything that NXT was doing, saw that they were losing the battle, and decided to “hard reset” the brand, basically wiping everything clean and starting from scratch. If the “old” NXT went this way, then the “new” NXT had to go that way. Everything changed, pretty much overnight.
It’s not like the shift has really helped those viewership numbers much. Even without having to share a night and a timeslot with AEW, NXT’s viewership numbers were slightly down for the last few months of 2021 after they became NXT 2.0 in September, and the numbers are down even further to this point in 2022. What’s next? Another shift? Do you go even younger? Starting in June, the only people wrestling on NXT television will be 12 years old or younger, competing in their very first wrestling matches that aren’t taking place against their siblings at home, where they would use pillows as steel chairs and mattresses as the ring. If the “Black & Gold” version of NXT wasn’t “working” enough for Vince McMahon and WWE, then you have to say that the current version is even further away from “working” enough for Vince McMahon and WWE.
It just remains incredibly frustrating to sit and watch what is happening with a once-thriving brand. Not even a year ago, you could watch Takeover specials that would feature every match being a banger of some sort. In the pre-pandemic days, NXT was as hot as a company could be on-screen, with compelling television every week and Takeover specials that would always be in competition for Show Of The Year accolades. Now, it’s almost sad to see how far things have fallen.
One of the knocks on AEW that you’ll see from a lot of trolls online is that they’re the “minor leagues” with wrestlers that “nobody has heard of” and things of that nature. Let’s say, for the sake of this argument, that AEW IS the “minor leagues” and that they do have wrestlers that “nobody has heard of” all over their roster. If that’s the case, what does that make NXT 2.0? If WWE is the “major leagues” and AEW is the “minor leagues” right now, NXT has to be a “slow-pitch softball league” or something along those lines, right?
Am I crazy? I want to know how you feel about NXT 2.0, especially compared to the different “eras” of NXT we’ve seen in the past. Do you like the new version better? Is it unwatchable? If you’re watching it, who are some of your favorites, and who do you think is going to be a big star in the future? As always, hit me up in the comments section below, or on Twitter (@HustleTheSavage), and let me know what’s on your mind.
Weekly Power Rankings
- Cameron Grimes vs Solo Sikoa vs Carmelo Hayes: Just a great match between three of NXT’s top talents, all of whom seem to have a chip on their shoulder. They want to show the world that they’re the “main event” in NXT, no matter where they are on the card, and even though they aren’t in contention for the NXT Title. When you go throughout wrestling over the last few decades, promotions have seen some incredibly fun times when their “midcard title” divisions are full of people like that. Intercontinental Title, United States Title, X-Division Title, etc. When those divisions are on fire, it helps to raise the overall entertainment value on a company’s product tenfold.
- Dax Harwood vs Cash Wheeler: Yes, it was an absolute Bret/Owen tribute, with several spots being carbon copies of things that Bret and/or Owen did in specific matches of theirs. No, I don’t care. As long as they aren’t doing spot-by-spot re-enactments in every match they do, I’m fine with paying tribute to the heroes and legends that helped them get to where they are today.
- Nathan Frazer vs Grayson Waller: Waller has had times where it looked like he might be presented as NXT’s next breakout star. In the last five-and-a-half months, the only people he had lost to in singles competition are AJ Styles and Tommaso Ciampa. He also had the honor of being the one to interrupt Johnny Gargano’s emotional farewell to NXT and beat him right out the door. Now, in one night, it looks like that “next breakout star” title might be given to Nathan Frazer. This was quite the performance by both men. Maybe Frazer can reach some of the potential that he showed he had when he first started going viral.
- The Creed Brothers vs The Viking Raiders: A good ol’ physical brawl. The Viking Raiders are like the other recent main roster wrestlers who have been showing up in NXT, and they’re really turning back the clock. On the other hand, The Creed Brothers really look like they could be main roster stars in the future. They’ve had people comparing them to the Steiner Brothers from day one. I get it. I’m interested to see where their story with Roderick Strong goes from here.
- Hookhausen: After weeks of it looking like we might possibly be on the verge of seeing Danhausen and Hook facing each other, now… we might… be seeing them form a team? Obviously, the Danhausen stuff isn’t for everyone. For that matter, the Hook stuff isn’t for everyone, either. However, the only thing that matters right now is how live crowds are reacting to them, and live crowds are loving every minute of this story. Right now, putting Hook in a team like this is the best thing for his development. He’ll get plenty of opportunities to show other aspects of what he can do.
- NXT Possibly Returning To Full Sail: I’ve made it very clear in previous columns that I’m not a huge fan of the Capitol Wrestling Center/Performance Center crowds. They’ve been too quiet too often. Now, reports have come out that WWE is looking to bring NXT back to Full Sail University, the brand’s home for nearly a decade. You could say a lot about Full Sail NXT crowds, but one thing you can’t say is that they’re too quiet. If they like you, they’re not afraid to let you know. At the same time, if they don’t like you… they’re not afraid to let you know. Think of everything I wrote about in this column. If one of these NXT 2.0 wrestlers aren’t “ready” in front of the Full Sail crowds, they’re going to get dumped on with the quickness. I don’t know about you, but that sounds like must-see television.
- Darby Allin vs Swerve Strickland: Swerve has become another new AEW signing that has fallen into a weird stretch where he wins, loses, wins, loses, and so on. It’s weird, but there’s not much that can be done when AEW has signed so many people and have a roster that is insanely loaded like they do. You’re always going to have situations where matches feature multiple people that “can’t lose” but end up losing. It’s just how things work. At least this match was good.
- Bianca Belair, Asuka & Liv Morgan vs Becky Lynch, Rhea Ripley & Sonya Deville: It was more of a house show match than a television main event, but it was entertaining, and the live crowd in Greensboro, North Carolina really enjoyed it.
- AJ Styles vs Damian Priest: The match itself was good, but I really liked the post-match happenings. AJ needed some assistance in his feud with Edge and Priest, and he got some help in Finn Balor. AJ and Finn are going to make for a really fun team, even if it’s just a temporary one. Bullet Club continues going strong, all these years later.
- Drew McIntyre vs Sami Zayn: My only issue with this match is the same issue I had with the entire episode of Smackdown. Because it was taped after the last episode of Smackdown, you had a crowd that was worn out from sitting for so long, and that means a crowd that isn’t as loud as they could be. That’s it, though. Sami continues to look like he’s having a great time out there after everyone assumed he was miserable and would be in a hurry to let his WWE contract expire so he could go to AEW.
- Rey Fenix: As good as Penta is, the package just isn’t complete without his brother around. It’s good for both of them that Rey has returned from injury.
- Cody Rhodes Announced For The Next Broken Skull Sessions: There’s always some good guests on Steve Austin’s Broken Skull Sessions. Some are more interesting than others, but they’re always somebody special. Now, with the announcement that Cody Rhodes is going to be the next guest, a lot of people are having their attention and curiosity piqued. Cody has said that he won’t be doing interviews where he bashes AEW and its employees, but you know people are going to be very interested to see if he takes any shots at them here, even if those shots are small and veiled.
- Samoa Joe vs Trent Beretta: Trent has been one of the biggest victims of AEW’s super loaded roster. Since he returned five months ago, he has looked like a million bucks. He looks like he should be competing for titles, but instead, he’s losing to the likes of Samoa Joe, Bryan Danielson, Jay White, and Adam Cole on television. He has good performances in every match, but he just so happens to be facing people who are getting big pushes, so he takes loss after loss. It’s unfortunate, but once again, that’s just how things go when you have that many people under contract.
- Sammy Guevara vs Scorpio Sky: I enjoyed the match, but nowhere near as much as a lot of you did. For one, I’m already sick and tired of the TNT Title being passed around so much. This is now the 12th reign (counting Sammy becoming the interim champion in January after Cody Rhodes came down with COVID) in the title’s history. A history that hasn’t even hit the two-year mark, mind you. Even worse, there have been eight reigns in the last seven months. Whatever. That’s just my own personal pet peeve. Also, I hated all the no-selling in this match. It’s a Ladder Match. Think of all the great Ladder Matches you’ve seen in your life. The competitors damn near killed each other, and everything was sold as such. It’s not difficult to “sell” the shit you’re seeing in these types of matches. The no-selling here was highly unnecessary and took so, so much away from the match for me. If you enjoyed it, that’s fine. It’s just not something I enjoyed. Outside of the no-selling, though, this was as good as expected.
- Yet Another Good Lacey Evans Video: Yes, another good one. However, I am MORE than ready to move on and see if Lacey has improved in the ring.
This Week’s Playlist: “712PM” by Future… “PUFFIN ON ZOOTIEZ” by Future… “GOLD STACKS” by Future… “HOLY GHOST” by Future… “I’M ON ONE” by Future & Drake… “Skyline” by Khalid… “whatever u like” by UMI… “It’s Going Down” by Parle… “Holiday Road” by Lindsey Buckingham… “Carrying Your Love With Me” by George Strait… “Faithfully” by Journey… “Lonely Boy” by The Black Keys… “Mr. Brightside” by The Killers… “Lithium” by Nirvana… “Everlong” by Foo Fighters… “Big Shot” by Billy Joel… “Movin’ Out (Anthony’s Song)” by Billy Joel… “Fly Away” by Lenny Kravitz… “Maria Maria” by Santana & The Product G&B… “Uprising” by Muse… “Take Back The Night” by Justin Timberlake… “You Make My Dreams (Come True)” by Hall & Oates… “Out Of Touch” by Hall & Oates… “Kiss On My List” by Hall & Oates… “Walk This Way” by Run-DMC & Aerosmith… “Holding Out For A Hero” by Bonnie Tyler… “Electric Avenue” by Eddy Grant… “Runaround Sue” by Dion… “Welcome To The Jungle” by Guns N Roses… “Patience” by Guns N Roses