On his podcast, Matt Camp discussed WWE’s The Bump being canceled after Megan Morant replaced Kayla Braxton, “The Bump wasn’t the same without Kayla, 100%. I worked with Scott Stanford, I worked with Rosenberg, I worked with Sam, I worked with Byron, I worked with McKenzie, and I worked with Kevin Patrick. If you’re in broadcasting, it is good to work with people you don’t know or aren’t comfortable with or haven’t developed chemistry with yet. Sometimes chemistry will come, and sometimes it won’t. To answer the original question: Everybody except for one person that I worked with would listen. I didn’t know everything, and I would listen to Kevin about stuff, and he would listen to me about stuff. People would lean on me for wrestling stuff. We’re doing this; I’m going in. Let’s go. You’re only going to get better if you haven’t done something by listening to other people.
I did have broadcasting experience for WWE—yes, I did, 100%. I did radio, I did House of Hardcore, indie wrestling, I hosted podcasts about fantasy football, and I did ‘Busted Open.’ Those were great experiences to have. I said when I was doing radio on SiriusXM and fantasy football stuff, I wasn’t good until five years after I did it. You know, 10,000 hours and all that stuff Malcolm Gladwell talks about. Not that I read the book, but I know what the thought process is behind it. All of that stuff does get you better. Ten years ago, seven years ago, I wouldn’t have been able to sit here by myself and talk for an hour as I’ve been doing, but I listened and learned from people who had done it before me—producers, and you know what, they’re willing to help because they are also tied to the success that you have. If the show does well, hey, I produced that show. We’re putting out a good product; we get to do more. There were people who produced shows that I was on who moved up in the world.”