AEW is no stranger to pushing the line between fiction and reality, but the aftermath of Jon Moxley and Darby Allin’s brutal main event at WrestleDream has taken a personal and bitter turn—this time between Sarah Stock and Amanda Huber.
It all started with Sarah Stock, a former AEW and WWE coach, slamming the decision to feature a spot where Moxley shoved Allin’s head into a fish tank, holding it underwater in a submission attempt. AEW shared the moment on social media, but Stock wasn’t having it. She aimed her outrage at parents, not the company.
“You know who should stop this? Mothers. With their remote control.”
“This is worse than the plastic bag over the head.”
“Kids are going to end up dead trying this stuff at home. @aew”
But in a fiery twist, Amanda Huber—widow of AEW’s late Brodie Lee—fired back at Stock in defense of the segment, calling out what she saw as a double standard. In a reply, Huber blasted Stock for hypocrisy and dragged a personal memory into the conversation.
“This was midnight on a ppv. Meanwhile when you were working you choked another woman out with a belt. Where was the outrage over kids trying that? And you wanna quote tweet a video of me talking about kids grief to defend you being a hypocrite?! Fuck all the way off.”
Stock quickly clapped back with a sharp reply of her own.
“You’re exposing your ignorance.”
But Amanda didn’t back down, challenging Stock directly.
“What ignorance exactly? Please educate me on your expertise when it comes to children or parenting.”
That’s when Sarah delivered a cutting accusation tied to their past behind the scenes at AEW.
“Ignorance to how the industry works. No need to get hysterical. Not surprised, though; the first day I met you, you spent the entire ride in a tizzy tearing down Sting’s daughter and TK for allowing her to ‘take your spot’ in AEW Outreach.”
The tension between the two women adds fuel to a growing conversation around what pro wrestling presents to its viewers—especially kids. While Stock raises concerns about safety and impressionable audiences, Huber sees the backlash as misdirected and personal. The conversation is no longer just about kayfabe violence. It’s now about real-world parenting, personal history, and bitter resentment spilling out in public.
Do you think Sarah Stock is right to raise concerns, or is Amanda Huber right to call her out for hypocrisy? Join the conversation below and share your thoughts.