For six years, one thing about WrestleMania has been as reliable as the pyro, the fireworks, and the crowd chanting themselves hoarse: The Weeknd delivering the official theme song. His hits have defined the atmosphere of WWE’s biggest event, becoming the soundtrack of some of its most iconic modern moments.
That streak has now come to a screeching halt.
In a surprise announcement that instantly detonated across the Internet, WWE confirmed that The Weeknd will NOT be featured as the theme artist for WrestleMania 42 in Las Vegas. Instead, the company is turning to a completely different sound — and a decision that fans are calling everything from “genius” to “opportunistic chaos marketing.”

The new theme for the biggest wrestling show of the year will be:
Aerosmith x YUNGBLUD — “Back in the Saddle (2025 Remix).”
A classic-rock titan and a genre-bending modern superstar teaming up for a WrestleMania anthem should have been a buzzworthy story on its own. But things took a far more dramatic and unexpected turn, because the remix arrives at the exact same moment a backstage feud between Steven Tyler and YUNGBLUD is exploding online — a feud that has already generated millions of views, reaction videos, conspiracy theories, and fan-edited clips circulating across social media.
And now the question everyone’s asking is simple:
Did WWE know?
Did WWE plan this?
Or is this the REAL reason The Weeknd suddenly vanished from the lineup?
The End of an Era: Why The Weeknd’s Streak Matters
Since 2020, The Weeknd has been synonymous with the grand spectacle of WrestleMania. “Blinding Lights,” “Save Your Tears,” “Less Than Zero” — these tracks didn’t just accompany promos; they shaped the mood and energy of entire storylines. The partnership became such a fixture that fans assumed it was automatic, even contractual.
So when WWE dropped an early-morning press release naming Aerosmith and YUNGBLUD as this year’s theme artists, confusion spread instantly.
Some fans were excited. Others were livid. Many were simply stunned that WWE would break one of its most successful traditions without warning.
But if WWE planned a clean, celebratory rollout of its new theme song, that plan evaporated within hours thanks to a wave of unexpected chaos.
The Backstage Meltdown Heard Around the Internet

The timing could not have been more dramatic — or, as some fans argue, more suspicious.
Just days before the WrestleMania theme announcement, leaked eyewitness accounts described a volatile confrontation between YUNGBLUD and Steven Tyler following a joint performance. YUNGBLUD allegedly stormed backstage and declared:
“I will NEVER share a stage with him again — he’s a washed-up icon.”
The line spread like wildfire.
Then came the twist: Steven Tyler reportedly walked into the room minutes later, asked everyone else to leave, and delivered one single, quiet sentence that left YUNGBLUD frozen.
No yelling. No retaliation. Just a moment so intense that witnesses said “you could feel the air disappear.”
The mysterious sentence — still unknown — fueled the Internet for days, turning the feud into a full-blown cultural moment.
Enter WWE. And the Flames Get Higher.
Just as the Tyler–YUNGBLUD drama hit maximum virality, WWE announced that those very two artists would be debuting the 2025 remix of “Back in the Saddle” as the official WrestleMania theme.
Coincidence? WWE says yes.
Fans say absolutely not.
Comment sections immediately filled with reactions like:
“They knew EXACTLY what they were doing.”
“This is WWE. If there’s drama to exploit, they’ll exploit it.”
“How did The Weeknd get replaced the same week YUNGBLUD goes viral for disrespecting Steven Tyler? This is PR strategy 101.”
And the timing is undeniably uncanny.
The announcement didn’t just ride the wave — it poured gasoline on it.
Within 24 hours, the remix teaser hit over 15 million views across platforms. WWE’s social posts surged. Even non-fans of wrestling were suddenly talking about WrestleMania 42.
In other words?
The controversy is working. Big time.
Is WWE Capitalizing on Scandal? Or Did They Have No Choice?
Industry insiders are split.
Some believe WWE couldn’t have predicted the feud but simply decided to embrace the chaos once it happened.
Others — including a few anonymous music-industry sources — suggest a more calculated theory: The Weeknd may have been quietly backing out, renegotiating, or stepping away for personal or business reasons, and WWE seized the opportunity to pivot toward a viral-ready collaboration.
Then there’s the most dramatic theory floating online:
WWE saw the Tyler–YUNGBLUD clash, realized it could dominate headlines, and deliberately rushed the announcement to capitalize on the drama.
After all, WWE’s mantra has always been simple:
“Controversy creates cash.”
And nothing is creating controversy right now like YUNGBLUD calling a Rock & Roll Hall of Famer “washed up.”
Why Aerosmith x YUNGBLUD Actually Makes Sense for WrestleMania
Despite the drama, the collaboration itself is undeniably strategic.
Aerosmith brings legacy, nostalgia, and multi-generational recognizability — perfect for WrestleMania’s massive, global audience.
YUNGBLUD brings youth, edge, rebellion, and a fervent fanbase that leans young and highly digital — the exact demographic WWE has been aggressively trying to capture.
And “Back in the Saddle” is a powerful, stomping anthem that fits the explosive vibe WWE builds toward every April.
A 2025 remix blends eras, audiences, and energy in a way that WWE’s modern branding thrives on.
But even fans who like the new direction still want answers.
So Why Was The Weeknd Pushed Aside?

That remains the question fueling the speculation.
WWE has offered no explanation.
The Weeknd’s camp has remained silent.
And insiders are tight-lipped — either out of professionalism or because something bigger is unfolding behind the scenes.
Theories range from:
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Creative disagreements
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Contract renegotiations
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Scheduling conflicts
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Private disputes
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WWE wanting a “new sound” for a “new era”
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Or, as some believe…
a desire to ride the wave of the hottest music drama of the moment
Until someone speaks publicly, the silence only fuels more interest.
What Happens Next?
WWE is already teasing the official music video for the remix.
Aerosmith fans are rallying.
YUNGBLUD’s critics and defenders are battling in comment sections.
The Weeknd’s loyal fanbase wants answers.
And WrestleMania 42 — still months away — has already generated more conversation than most years do by March.
The streak is over.
The drama is not.
And if WWE wanted attention, they’ve got it — louder than ever.
One thing is certain:
This year, the road to WrestleMania starts with a remix, a feud, and a mystery WWE refuses to explain.