Dana White Told to “Rethink” Earning Strategy as $500 Move Gives Fans “Flashbacks” of UFC’s Painful Memory

UFC boss Dana White‘s move to give the fans a unique opportunity at UFC 316 has seemingly backfired! The UFC’s “Name on Canvas” campaign sounded like a VIP dream—pay $500 and your name gets printed onto the mat for a real UFC event. After the show, you get a framed piece of the used canvas, authenticated and all. But for the fans watching the event, it turned into something else entirely.

Memories came crashing back of UFC 200 and its infamous mustard-yellow mat, now mocked as one of the brand’s worst visual missteps. When UFC first introduced “Name on Canvas” back in February 2025, it was meant to be exclusive. A bridge between fan and fighter—a collector’s dream. But as more fans saw the latest design, it was less about legacy and more about exposition. The new mat featured bold UFC lettering, corporate chickens, and plenty of yellow accents. It was UFC 200 all over again.

Between the chicken logo and the gold UFC letters, I’m getting flashbacks of the yellow canvas from UFC 200. I still haven’t recovered from that experience…

— DarrenM (@alternatemma) June 8, 2025

This backlash isn’t just about color. It’s about brand identity. UFC has built its legacy on rawness. By turning the Octagon into a pay-to-print zone, the UFC and Dana White may have unknowingly diluted the very thing that makes it magnetic. And then there’s the price tag. Sure, the canvas gets framed. But if what’s on that canvas feels like a cheesy marketing ploy, is it still worth the cost? Here’s a look at what the internet had to say!

Fans slam Dana White and Co. as ghosts of UFC 200 blunder rear their head at UFC 316

One fan joked, “Wow I think I see my name on the UFC canvas if you really squint… and it only cost me $500.” The sarcasm hit hard. For many, this wasn’t worth the price tag. Especially when you’re paying for what looked like a billboard floor.

Others flat-out questioned the logic. “Why would anyone PAY to put their name in a UFC canvas? Seriously – what is cool about this? Why is this an interesting collector’s item?” another asked.

And the most vocal critics? They brought out the big flashbacks writing, “Between the chicken logo and the gold UFC letters, I’m getting flashbacks of the yellow canvas from UFC 200. I still haven’t recovered from that experience…”

Even the UFC’s logo choices were under fire. “This f— chicken logo,” one fan posted bluntly. Another added, “UFC’s gotta rethink some of these canvas ads.”

(More to follow…)

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