Jade Cargill, the human embodiment of “jaw-dropping entrance,” is taking her star power to new heights, officially signing with Paradigm Talent Agency. Known for representing WWE’s crème de la crème (CM Punk, Liv Morgan, and Montez Ford, to name a few), Paradigm’s Sports Group now has one more shiny name on its roster. And frankly, Hollywood better buckle up.
The Paradigm Shift
In an Instagram statement that oozes hype, Paradigm announced:
“A living, breathing superhero has arrived! Jade Cargill is now a client at Paradigm, and she’s ready to continue breaking barriers.”
The deal will represent Cargill “in all areas,” which is corporate-speak for “we’re about to get her in movies, TV shows, commercials, and possibly her own line of superhero capes.”
This move makes perfect sense. Cargill, who joined WWE in 2023 after dominating AEW, has the charisma of a Marvel lead and the physique to match. She even cited Hollywood aspirations as one reason she traded All Elite action for WWE’s global spotlight. (Take note, Dwayne Johnson—there’s a new People’s Champ in town.)
Wrestling, but Make It Blockbuster
Cargill isn’t leaving wrestling behind anytime soon. She’s thriving in WWE, currently enjoying her second reign as Women’s Tag Team Champion alongside Bianca Belair. The pair clinched the titles at Bash in Berlin and have since redefined tag team dominance while also probably breaking the internet every time they post a gym selfie.
Next up, Cargill heads into Survivor Series: WarGames, teaming with IYO SKY, Naomi, Rhea Ripley, and Belair in what promises to be a show-stealing Women’s WarGames match. But after the dust settles in the ring, could a Fast & Furious cameo be far behind?
WWE + Hollywood = Unstoppable
Cargill’s signing is part of a larger WWE-Paradigm bromance. The agency has steadily been scooping up WWE talent, from Drew McIntyre to Liv Morgan, likely looking to turn the squared circle’s brightest stars into Hollywood megastars.
With this partnership, Jade Cargill isn’t just breaking barriers—she’s smashing them with a steel chair, posing for the cameras, and asking, “Who’s next?”