Single location mass tapings, no house shows, and almost all revenue derived from money being paid by Spike.
TNA is basically just like one of those MTV promotions (Lucha Libre USA, WSX, etc) that exist solely due to whether the network chooses to air them, except TNA also runs PPV's that nobody buys.
I mean, the reality is that nobody can exist without TV these days, including WWE, but you get the idea. It's hard to call TNA a regular full time promotion at this point. ROH will run more shows next year and be the #2 touring group in the U.S.
This is what happens when you have a real business looking at the books of a wrestling company. As I've said before, they had someone look at them that they didn't want to (we've now learned it was Mama Carter).
Everything sounds bad, and maybe it is, but this sounds more like a business that looked at the books, cleaned them up, and are now looking to regroup and reorganize to set themselves up to be profitable. It looks like its a company that wants to stay afloat rather than just let sink. They are just no longer going to give Dixie carte blanche with the check book and they are getting down to the bare bones to see if this TNA project can turn a profit. They've legitimately cut all of the fat they could at this point.
-Took this show off the road. It was a massive failure all around and was probably their biggest expenditure.
-Streamlined middle management.
-Cut the fat from the ancillary business-side of the company (PR, HR, etc)
-Cut the bloat from the oversized roster and those they kept were selectively asked to take paycuts and take on expanded roles (notice the teaming together or random pairs, the women that aren't being used regularly, now working as valets, etc).
-They let their biggest contracts expire and set them up to renegotiate to friendlier deals (Anderson, Hulk, Devon, etc).
All of this stuff is just token business practice, IMO. I don't know how much to look into it beyond that. The cancellation and consolidating of shows late in the year, looks like they just want to muscle past Bound for Glory and finish up 2013 and regroup for 2014. If 2014 shows that this is a no-win situation and its constantly in the red with this unbloated roster, then, we might be looking at the Carter's selling. But I think they'll give it the ol college try in 2014. It'll be an important year for them.