AEW has filed a lawsuit against TrillerTV and its parent company, Triller Group, Inc., alleging that the streaming platform owes just under $5 million in unpaid revenue from pay-per-view sales and proceeds for the now-discontinued AEW Plus subscription service.
As reported by POST Wrestling, the lawsuit was filed on April 29 in Duval County Court in Florida, further detailing that Triller Group used AEW-derived revenues to fund other businesses, including a social media platform that never took off:
[Triller Group Inc.’s] strategy of robbing revenues generated by TrillerTV’s distribution of AEW content to cover other of Defendants’ operating expenses (much of which was spent on the social media platform endeavor) negatively impacted its relationship with and payments owed to AEW.
The lawsuit follows a separate case brought by TrillerTV itself against Triller Group, adding to the picture of Triller’s financial and corporate troubles.
Flipps Media Inc., the corporate entity underlying TrillerTV, told the Delaware Chancery Court that the company is insolvent and unable to pay its debts, citing a lack of board of directors preventing it from filing for bankruptcy.
Despite these ongoing legal matters, TrillerTV continues to operate with many upcoming live events currently listed on its streaming schedule.
AEW launched MyAEW in March 2026, replacing much of what TrillerTV offered international wrestling fans through AEW Plus.