Brody King’s absence from this week’s episode of AEW Dynamite quickly sparked speculation online — but both Warner Bros. Discovery and AEW are now firmly pushing back on the rumors.
The former challenger to MJF, who demolished the outspoken star last week to secure an AEW World Championship opportunity at Grand Slam: Australia, was noticeably missing from Wednesday night’s broadcast. That absence raised eyebrows, especially after Dave Meltzer reported that King had allegedly been pulled from the show at the request of Warner Bros. Discovery. According to the report, network officials were concerned King’s appearance could trigger more anti-ICE chants from fans, similar to the “F**k ICE” chants heard before his match with MJF.
However, WBD has flatly denied the claim.
In a statement issued to Wrestling Inc., the company made it clear they had no role in King’s scheduling.
“Warner Bros. Discovery did not have any involvement in Brody King’s upcoming AEW schedule,” the statement read. “Any speculation to the contrary is categorically false. Brody is scheduled to appear during the next AEW event, which will air this Saturday on TNT and HBO Max.”
When further pressed by Voices of Wrestling regarding the wording of the statement — specifically whether “upcoming” left room for involvement in King missing Dynamite — WBD reportedly reiterated that they had no part in his absence.
AEW also denied the rumors. According to Fightful Select, company sources stated that King’s absence had nothing to do with the network or last week’s chants. In fact, some within AEW reportedly said that Meltzer’s report was the first they had heard of such speculation.
So where was Brody King?
The answer appears far less controversial. PWInsider reports that King was among several AEW talents flying from LAX to Sydney, Australia, in preparation for Grand Slam: Australia. As a result, he was never scheduled to appear on Dynamite in the first place.
With King en route to Australia and a World Championship opportunity looming, it looks like this situation may simply be a case of travel logistics — not network interference.
All eyes now turn to Grand Slam: Australia, where King will look to capitalize on the momentum he built by steamrolling MJF and attempt to shock the world on an international stage.
