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Dispatches from the Lake: Beards and Besties

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Welcome Baxel, Axel
Photo Credit: WWE.com
So, how stupid was it that Curtis Axel was pulled off television while Ryback was out in hindsight? (Ed. Note: He also may have been injured, but I'm not sure)  If you weren’t going to unite them as a tag team, why not use Axel to fill out the thin roster? I can’t be surprised about this crap anymore, but I was pleased and flat out SHOCKED that WWE addressed it later in the show. Continuity isn’t one of the E’s strong points, so when it rears its beautiful head every once and a while, I get a little giddy.

Our two matches this week were Adam Rose against the returning Axel and Jack Swagger taking on Heath Slater. We’re going to do this a little different this week, mostly because I’m bored of saying the same things over and over about these lack luster, by the numbers matches.

Some highlights:

I loved that Axel’s completely forgotten that distraction roll ups were a thing while he was gone.

After Axel lost to a distraction assisted Party Foul, he was chilling in the locker room when who should appear but The Ryback! Apparently, they were separated during a drunken trip to Mexico. So, Axel hadn’t been kept off television. He was sloshed and wandering the Mexican countryside until he found his way home, sporting the sweet beard he’s currently rocking. They came to an accord, saying it was better that they split for now, but they made a bro pact to return at some point because they are BEST FRIENDS. This was awesome. Just seek out this section and watch this.

Why the hell has Slater’s music not been updated? I get that WWE does not give any kind of a fuck about him, but for the love of the flying spaghetti monster, get rid of the Three Man Band music. It just makes me sad.

Also, regarding gentle Heath, all I could think while he was tapping out to the Patriot Lock was how badly I wanted to watch him eke out a win over the Hoss-tastic Swagger. I never knew how badly I want scrappy babyface Slater fighting up from underneath for a victory until this match was over.

The Raw Recaps Strike Again

We’re already well into the next RAW cycle, so I’m not going to spend much time on what happened last week, but I had a few things I wanted to touch on. Firstly, I will never be able to cheer for Vince McMahon. He was and is the epitome of all evil in the Raw universe to me. I get people think he’s a genius, so he gets the ‘yay, you gave us a thing we liked’ cheer. Just not for me. Though, I could get behind senile grandpa Vince, who randomly totters out to yammer on about how his network is only $9.99, throwing out stipulations that screw over his family, and how he wore an onion on his belt, which was the style at the time.

And really, McMahon? No stipulation for John Cena’s team? Why must you always throw out these little crumbs of an eventual heel turn, when it’s never going to happen. You’re doing nothing for the completely implausible, 100% not happening scenario I’ve got running in my head for Survivor Series.

Secondly, why is jealousy the only emotion that WWE gets? Every women’s feud in the last five years has revolved around either they’re nuts or jealous of each other. The Big Show and Mark Henry are currently fighting because of jealousy (at least, they are according to the commentators). Humanity has a rich spectrum of emotions. I understand that this is a wrestling program that feels it has to appeal to the goldfish-like memory of the lowest common denominator, but adding variety to what passes as feuds these days would do nothing but help your product.

Oh, and on a final note, I need Seth Rollins to keep doing Randy Orton’s taunt. That was just outstanding.

I Listen So You Don't Have To: Steve Austin Show Ep. 167

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Austin was back taking your calls on the latest show
Photo Credit: WWE.com
If you're new, here's the rundown: I listen to a handful of wrestling podcasts each week. Too many, probably, though certainly not all of them. In the interest of saving you time — in case you have the restraint to skip certain episodes — the plan is to give the bare bones of a given show and let you decide if it’s worth investing the time to hear the whole thing. There are better wrestling podcasts out there, of course, but these are the ones in my regular rotation that I feel best fit the category of hit or miss. If I can save other folks some time, I'm happy to do so.

Show: Steve Austin Show
Episode: 167
Run Time: 1:25:10
Guest: None

Summary: Stone Cold is back working the phones this week during an NFL Sunday, and there’s a few mentions of that action as well as some dalliances into a busy college football Saturday. Callers have questions about finishing moves, Austin’s heel comedy work, the WrestleMania XIX documentary and protecting the business, missing out on working with Randy Savage, deer hunting, the current WWE women’s product, working with Vince McMahon and Donald Trump, working with unusual vehicles, post-Raw segments, CM Punk, King of the Ring 1996 and Sharkboy mentioning Austin in TNA. The match of the week is TLC2 at WrestleMania X-7.

Quote of the week:“In a world of make believe, you always want to make people at least believe in you.”

Why you should listen: The same reasons you always choose to listen to a Steve Austin call-in show: he has genuine interactions with listeners, the need to get to as many callers as possible provides a much crisper pace than his email shows and there are a few questions that get him into territory he hasn’t covered in earlier shows.

Why you should skip it: The same reasons you always choose to skip a Steve Austin call-in show: the listeners are star-struck, the host and guests ramble away from wrestling topics and Stacey inexplicably feeds Austin questions he’s already answered a dozen times.

Final thoughts: As Austin’s show format has stagnated during his recent reality show filming obligation, so too has my ability to offer anything of substance in terms of reviewing each episode. Basically, look at the list of topics. If you see something familiar, you can recount the story verbatim, if you see something new it’s probably worth a quick listen, but chances are he’ll get back to those points eventually as well. It’s not a bad episode, but as Austin says many times, it is what it is. You will not be surprised, but you might enjoy it regardless.

Your Midweek Links: Hoodslam on VICE

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Who in the current WWE could emulate Flair's all-time classic group?
Photo Credit: WWE.com
It's hump day, so here are some links to get you through the rest of the week:

Wrestling Links:

- Hoodslam's Drunk and Bloody Pro Wrestling Isn't for Kids [VICE]

- The Best and Worst of RAW: British Boo Camp [With Spandex]

- Casting the Four Horsemen from Today's WWE Roster [The Squared Circle Blog]

- 10 Count: Dream Matches That Should've Happened But Didn't [Wrassle Rap]

- The Best and Worst of Impact Wrestling: I Can't Believe I Ate the Whole Thing [With Spandex]

- NYWC: Angry Andy Enters the House of Madness [Juice Make Sugar]

- 10 Count: Other Times Bret Hart Was Screwed [Old School Jabronis]

- Wrestling in the Clinton Years: I Never Should Have Eaten Marijuana [4CR Wrestling]

- The Depths of Mania: WrestleMania IV Review [Voices of Wrestling]

- The Depths of Mania: WrestleMania V Review [Voices of Wrestling]

- You Probably Want to Listen to the Iron Sheik Review Metal Bands [With Spandex]

Non-Wrestling Links:

- Violence Is Currency: A Pacifist's Guide to Prison Weaponry [The Concourse]

- University Rowing Team Gets Naked to Fight Homophobia [Jezebel]

- Obama Says the FCC Should Reclassify the Internet as a Utility [The Verge]

- Net Neutrality [The Oatmeal]

- Conflict Kitchen to Temporarily Close to Deal with Death Threats [Kitchenette]

- The Multiple Asian Border Disputes That Could Trigger the Next War [io9]

- You Don't Get to Have an Opinion on How Anyone Gives Birth [Jezebel]

- Why I Talk to Men Who Catcall Me [Gawker]

- The Internet Has a Problem Problem [The Concourse]

- Stop Putting  New-Age Pseudoscience in Our Science Fiction [io9]

- Does Toejam and Earl Hold Up? [The Verge]

- Eight Parallel Worlds That Need to Come Back for DC Comics [Topless Robot]

- Yes, Time Travel Is Possible; Here's How [Gizmodo]

- 52 of the World's Most Widespread Myths and Misconceptions [io9]

- How to Watch the NBA in 2014-15 [Medium]

- The Existential Dread of the Cleveland Cavaliers [Hardwood Paroxysm]

- How to Stir Fry Beef, the Most Harrowing and Wonderful Experience [Foodspin]

- Ten Diet Books that Prove You Can't Eat Anything [io9]

- Delirium Tremens, a Refreshingly Morbid Belgian Ale [The Concourse]

- Most Fruit Beers Suck; This One Doesn't [The Concourse]

- Which Animals Are the Worst to Eat Morally? [Foodspin]

- The Great Mayonnaise War Is Finally Here [Kitchenette]

- On Offensive Pass Interference [The Footbawl Blog]

- The Giving Tree Is Sad Because Shel Silverstein Hated Happy Endings [Jezebel]

- Every Game of Thrones House Combined into One Insane Family Tree [io9]

- 2014 MLB Free Agency: Five Generic Brand Values [Grantland]

- Every Crossover Episode of The Simpsons Ranked [Warming Glow]

Time for a Discussion on Crowds

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Maybe if McMahon put out a good product, he wouldn't have to deal with quiet or sarcastic crowds
Photo Credit: WWE.com
WWE's second semiannual trip to the United Kingdom this calendar year could not have been timed any worse for the multinational sports entertainment conglomerate. Just last week, the company abruptly announced that the launch of its Network in the country would be indefinitely postponed on the day before it was set to debut. America has had it since February and other countries have been slowly added to the frame. Since the US is pretty much WWE's bread and butter, the advertising blitz that the company has perpetrated at the expense of other content or even story development has been overbearing for people who actually could purchase the service. Imagine how annoying and tantalizing it was and still is for Brits who have to go through dubious channels in order to procure a Network feed of varying providence if they want to see it at all.

Britain has a history of raucous crowd reactions that lean towards the side of hardcore fandom. Combine those proclivities with the utter failure on the delivery of a product, and WWE was bound to get angry and vocal reactions from the people in the stands. Live reports bore this scenario out, but the beauty of filming the show six hours earlier because of time differences is that the production crew had six hours to edit out the displeasure before RAW went to air. With Smackdown, the lag time is even greater. Still, having thousands of people in an arena to watch your show do nothing but protest-chant the whole time can be frustrating. Be that as it may, I have no sympathy for WWE in this case because the company did it to itself. Moreover, whenever a crowd reacts in a way that people might find annoying or not conducive to the flow of a show, the blame rarely if ever is on the people.

Crowd analysis has become super-popular to the point where sometimes, I feel as if the main draw for some who watch RAW isn't to critique the content but the fans themselves. Granted, a lot of chants can be annoying; I personally bristle when people start chanting for JBL instead of the wrestlers in the ring. Really, you're going to chant for that blowhard? However regardless, wrestling is unique among most artforms in that feedback is instant. Wrestling companies don't need to workshop material in front of a focus group before release, because that focus group pays money to sit in arenas nearly every day of the week. This nature of the business can be both a blessing and a curse, but the reality is that the fans only should be beholden to the standards of human decency when reacting to something they're presented in real time.

The only time a wrestling company should step in to police its fans is when they go overboard and start chanting or even just blurting out racist, misogynist, or otherwise bigoted things. It's where Absolute Intense Wrestling and all the people who defended them and the fans at Turners Hall for having "freedom of speech" went wrong. Sure, you can choose to yell the N-word at a wrestler, but honestly, why would any wrestling company want that to make tape and then defend that being said? One thing to say you can't prevent those things from happening all the time, but it's another to say you won't do anything about them when brought to your attention. It's not like people haven't been thrown out of wrestling shows before for bad behavior. It's baffling.

Just as baffling are the reports of Vince McMahon coming out to berate the Liverpool crowd during the Smackdown tapings yesterday in the form of a "heel promo." He chastised the crowds for not cheering or booing enough, but those aren't the only true reactions. Granted, it's not like Vince McMahon, real life businessman/wrestling promoter/capitalist tyrant came out to yell at the crowd. The argument could be made that he came out as Mr. McMahon to incite the crowd and maybe get them shouting for more than just the Network. Again, where wrestling is unique is that the line between real and staged can be blurred into discrete pixelation so easily that it's hard to tell when the characters dip into their true feelings. Still, I have to believe that a piece of McMahon's heart was really going out there and yelling at people for real for not reacting to the show, as if a cheer or a boo are the only two true reactions to a wrestling happening.

If anything, the two true reactions are noise and silence, and even then, noise has more characteristic than just its existence, i.e. it's not a Boolean characteristic. The crowd is not part of the script. It doesn't have to abide by any kind of rules about whom they should react, when, or how. The crowd is the feedback, and if that feedback sucks, the problem's with you, not them. If you want the crowd to "have some fun," then you need to give them a reason to have fun. It's no mistake that crowd reactions were at their seemingly most vociferous in 2013 when WWE had a rollicking in-ring product and vibrant stars worth relating to. Sure, the company was still extremely flawed, maybe even as much as it is right now at its core, but the fans didn't have reason to spotlight those flaws when it had Daniel Bryan and The Shield and the nascence of Bray Wyatt and a surprisingly spry Randy Orton and CM Punk and even the rise of passive-aggressive Mom Villain Stephanie McMahon.

Now? The match quality has dropped off, any interesting character has been fed to the wood chipper of conformity, and the focus isn't the story in the ring, but hawking a Network that not everyone can purchase outside of it. If anyone needs to have a heel promo cut on them chiding them for the root cause of bad crowd reactions, it's Vince McMahon, first and foremost. In the meantime, all the breath wasted about crowds and their JBL chants is better directed towards the main narrative. A crowd chanting for JBL or Randy Savage loudly isn't one that should be chided. If anything, those people seem to want to be entertained. I don't know exactly the mindset, because crowd psychology is a fool's errand, but if they react to a bullshit match or segment in the ring with loud voices, imagine what they could do if they had something to sink their teeth into.

Pro Wrestling SKOOPZ on The Wrestling Blog: Issue 9

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ROSS IS CALLING NEW JAPAN MATCH MADE IN *climaxes*
Photo Credit: WWE.com
SUP, FOOLS. Horb Flerbminber IS BACK with another edition of Pro Wrestling SKOOPZ here on this two-bit site for jabronis and people who think Prince Devitt is a terrorist. HOW RUDE. Anyway, I have all the news and rumors that are READY TO BE CRAMMED INTO YOUR MINDHOLE. You had better come at me with an empty mind, because I am going to fill it up with all the hottest SCOOPS, GOSSIP, and ITEMIZED INSURANCE CLAIMS from wrestlers whose homes were damaged in various tropical storms. What did Alexa Bliss claim her patio furniture was worth? YOU'LL ONLY FIND OUT FROM ME, HORB, AND NO ONE ELSE. Not even God himself or various dirtsheet writers who CLAIM they're God like Mike Johnson can bring you the nitty-gritty. NOT A CHANCE.

Anyway, while I work so hard mining the scoops for you and your loved ones, I can't do it alone. I need primary sources from whom I can plagiarize, uh, I mean credit. Yeah, that's the ticket. If you have any leads or any offers on the metal lead that I can give to my alchemist to turn into gold, send them to me at my e-mail address ProWrestlingSKOOPZ@gmail.com. Also, if your name is Hjywjaz Kljumlijab, please e-mail me back. I tried replying to you about your offer to make my penis longer than the Eiffel Tower is tall, but your correspondence seems to have gone flat. DADDY NEEDS A ROCK HARD COCK. If you need to get my UP TO THE FEMTOSECOND NEWS, then you need to follow me on Twitter, @HorbFlerbminber. Which wrestling personality will I fluster into an obscene Twitter rant this week? If you said Sexy Star, YOU MIGHT BE RIGHT.

If you want back issues of my newsletter, please fuck off and die. Oh, I'm sorry, that came out wrong. If you would like back issues of the newsletter, send a self-addressed stamped envelope to my post office box, which you can get by going to this URL. The digital list was wiped out thanks to a VIRUS that was sent to me by Rajah. Apparently, he was trying to get back at me for attempting to have him handed over to House Bolton to collect on a bounty placed on his head for supporting the Starks. Look, I'm not saying being flayed is pleasant, but it's not as bad as depriving my readers of THE SCOOPZ I broke back in the day.

Also, I am currently recuperating at Weiss Memorial Hospital in Chicago, IL after I was BRUTALLY assaulted by CM Punk. Apparently, he didn't like me breaking and entering into his house to steal his day planner so I could get all the BREAKING NEWS about his social life, which is the next wave in DIRTSHEET JOURNALISM. If you're not reporting on where Punk is buying his disposable razor blades or what viewing of Interstellar he's going to see on Thursday, then YOU'RE NOT REPORTING THE REAL SCOOPS. Anyway, I have no health insurance, and the treatments for my broken jaw are going to end up costing me an arm and a leg, LITERALLY, if I can't pay. The doctors at this hospital are ruthless. I think they may be on Obama's DEATH PANELS. Obamacare my ass. Anyway, send me all the money you can spare right away so I can pay my bills and afford solid food again when the wiring comes out of my jaw.

Also, I'm selling artifacts from the TRUE CROSS on the side. Are you a devout Christian? Do you want to have the most sacred relic this side of the Holy Grail? Then HAVE I GOT A DEAL FOR YOU. You can buy shards of the True Cross IN BULK. You can get a pound of artifacts for the low price of $200, or you can get a bulk discount of $10 off every increase of 100 lbs. But don't take it from me, listen to this testimonial from Artis St. Swivens from Fon du Lac, WI:
Did you take a shit in that bag and light it on fire on my front porch?
See, another satified customer.

Also, be sure to check your batteries in your smoke detector. Fresh batteries save lives, people.

- The big news of the week is undoubtedly Global Force Wrestling announcing that Jim Ross will call the action for the English language broadcast of New Japan Pro Wrestling's WrestleKingdom 9. Ross is reputedly already looking forward to telling fans in person that the Young Bucks, reDRagon, and Time Splitters should really be slowing down in there and using more psychology when he announces the IWGP Jr. Heavyweight Tag Team Championship Match.

- Jeff Jarrett also issued a separate press release that just said in 72 point Impact font "DID YOU KNOW THAT JEFF JARRETT IS IN THE BULLET CLUB?"

- Most of the card for the four-plus hour event was also released, and let me tell you, if you're not looking forward to this show, you're a monster. An absolute disgrace of a wrestling fan. I spit in your eye if you dare criticize New Japan Pro Wrestling.

- In WWE news, Vince McMahon at the Smackdown tapings yesterday berated the crowd for not cheering or booing loud enough and implored them to have some fun. This was a last minute rewrite, as the script originally called for McMahon to come out, drop trou, and swing a WWE Network flag from his penis, saying "FUCK YOU, YOU WANT THIS? YOU WANT THIS? YOU CAN'T HAVE IT."

- Developers have announced that WWE 2K15's roster will only contain John Cena and Randy Orton, as all the other features have been gutted so that the graphic designers could get every rippling muscle and tattoo detail down pat.

- Liverpool fans came under fire for chanting for "JBL" on Monday night, but my sources say that right before RAW came back from commercial, Vince McMahon came out and asked the crowd "Which member of the roster would you like to see drawn, quartered, and fed to the hounds?"

- Despite not having any shows in the can for 2015 yet, TNA officials have promised a new and improved television product in 2015. The script for the first 2015 show, written by @Seinfeld2000, has been leaked EXCLUSIVELY to me:
wat if the mane event of the show was sunny siaki vs aj styles for the title?

imagen TNA today
- Pro Wrestling Guerrilla is in dire straits right now, as both Ring of Honor and EVOLVE/Dragon Gate USA talent could be unavailable for booking as early as its first show in 2015. Sources say that Candice LeRae has suggested bringing in more women, to which Super Dragon said "AHAHAHAHAHAHAA yeah right. Hey Joey, you and Candice are jobbing at the next show to me and Rob Terry. Someone get me Rob Terry's phone number."

- Paul Heyman recently has taken to Twitter to rebut accusations that his poor financial planning and possible fraud submarined ECW. In an unrelated note, this week marks the 15th anniversary of the last time one of his ECW paychecks cleared at a bank.

- Chael Sonnen surprised analysts on the ESPN sports cable networks in the past ... and it's about MMA Šogad.Paziņojumā testosterone replacement therapy, I have no way to follow the news conference. he was admitted to the United States, you must remember that the weekend is UFC 180 ESPN, "We created an analyst UFC Gilbert Melendez." I understand that it is a long term contract. Melendez looks at UFC 168 ESPN as an analyst for Fox Sports 1 in the program is ... m.

- Lucha Underground's third episode is tonight, which means you should expect the peanut gallery to blow up your Twitter timeline over arguments about intergender wrestling for a third straight week.

- Time to haul ass to Lollapalooza.

- I interviewed Paul Roma the other day. I asked him what it feels like to be considered a worse Horseman that the guy who killed his family, and he walked out of the room sobbing. How unprofessional.

- CM Punk is disillusioned this week.

- The original script to the Smackdown Halloween show was sent to me by my anonymous tipster within WWE, and originally, it called for Cesaro to show up to his match with Dean Ambrose wearing a bed sheet ghost costume and dump out his Halloween bag in the middle of the ring which would be filled with rocks. The callback to the Charlie Brown Halloween special was scrapped because kids might not have gotten it, and because they were afraid Ambrose would bludgeon Cesaro to death with the rocks in an attempt to curry favor with Vince McMahon.

- Alberto del Rio and WWE came to a joint agreement. The former party agreed not to disparage his ex-employers in public, while WWE promised that it would limit racism in the company only to office members over the age of 68.

- Expect Big E's "A New Day" vignette to drop on the next Monday Night RAW, the group to debut at Survivor Series, and for it to be relegated to Superstars and the opening match of Main Event by mid-December at the absolute latest.

- Saraya Knight will miss 6-8 months of action after taking a selfie with Jack Swagger earlier this morning. Swagger's camera phone exploded and shards of debris were lodged in Knight's right eye and lung. She was quoted as saying "At least the bugger didn't give me a concussion by bootin' me in me noggin."

- Samoa Joe will wrestle Chris Hero for Jersey All-Pro Wrestling this weekend. When asked why he decided to make the appearance, Joe said "I guess I have a thing for companies that might not be active around this time next year."

- Gabe Sapolsky's WWN Live tour of China is drawing well according to reports. So far, the shows have already outdrawn three times every other show EVOLVE has ever run in its history.

- Last week's poll results: 72% of you said that TNA would be closed before the end of this year, 20% said it would last through Lockdown '15, and 8% said you would fund a Kickstarter to make sure TNA never ran a single show ever again. This week's poll:

I Listen So You Don't Have To: The Ross Report Ep. 39

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Ross chats with a former colleague of his
Photo Credit: WWE.com
If you're new, here's the rundown: I listen to a handful of wrestling podcasts each week. Too many, probably, though certainly not all of them. In the interest of saving you time — in case you have the restraint to skip certain episodes — the plan is to give the bare bones of a given show and let you decide if it’s worth investing the time to hear the whole thing. There are better wrestling podcasts out there, of course, but these are the ones in my regular rotation that I feel best fit the category of hit or miss. If I can save other folks some time, I'm happy to do so.

Show: The Ross Report
Episode: 39
Run Time: 1:50:43
Guest: Alex Greenfield

Summary: JR and former Smackdown head writer Alex Greenfield have a long talk about the writer’s often tumultuous WWE career. They start with a look at Greenfield’s early wrestling fandom and career foundations. That leads to a discussion of whom he worked well with backstage and who offered more resistance. They talk about struggles in the WWE work environment, share stories about Undertaker, JBL, Vader and others, spend a good deal of time breaking down Greenfield’s contentious relationship with Vince McMahon, offer some high praise for Mark Henry, analyze parlaying WWE work into the rest of the entertainment industry, reflect regrets and end with Greenfield discussing the wrestling-based work of two obscure media personalities.

Quote of the week:“It’s Vince’s sandbox and I was being allowed to play in it. And that’s not the way I treated it. My ego got away from me after I got promoted. … We didn’t get along, and most of that’s on me. … I never found the right way to work with him. Ultimately that’s why I quit. It just got to be not worth the trouble.”

Why you should listen: Can’t get enough firsthand accounts of backstage drama? Here you go. Greenfield certainly has direct experiences worth revisiting, and his self deprecation is genuine. Unlike others who offer tales from their time on the front lines, Greenfield seems to have learned about the business and himself, so while he’s not afraid to be blunt, he also lacks the defiance and self righteousness that’s often off-putting in such interviews.

Why you should skip it: Much like JR’s insistence his interview with Magnum TA was inspirational, he repeatedly says Greenfield is controversial. The episode description promises an “explosive, uncensored conversation.” But unless you’ve never heard an interview with a former WWE writer — and really, who hasn’t at this point? — you won’t be surprised by anything. Also, though it should go without saying, skip the monologue. The interview starts around 28:30.

Final thoughts: Greenfield’s specific experiences are unique to him, but his general impressions of life as a writer is not. JR gets strong points for not shifting the focus to himself, and it’s always pleasantly surprising when host and guest avoid the temptation to be self congratulatory and overly nostalgic. This by no means the highlight of The Ross Report, and it’s sure to pale in interest to next week’s show with Matt and Jeff Hardy. But it’s a solid effort showing JR might be getting more of a handle on the aspects of his personality that turn off certain listeners and moving his show toward a greater relevancy.

Nine Years Gone

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Miss u, Eddie
Photo via WWE.com
Nine years ago today, in a Minneapolis hotel room, the wrestling world lost a true icon. Eduardo Gory Guerrero, better known to his fans as Eddie or Eddy, passed away from heart failure at the all too young age of 38. Guerrero lived fast and hard, both inside and out of the ring, but while his premature passing was cynically not surprising, it didn't make the sting hurt any less, and it doesn't make the void he left in the wrestling industry any shallower. Guerrero came as close to being a universally beloved wrestler as anyone ever could have. He was rude and devious as a heel, and lovable and relatable as a babyface. And boy, could he ever put on a show between the bells. Guerrero may not have been the best wrestler of all-time between the ropes, but I struggle to think of ten wrestlers who clearly were better than him in all facets of the game.

Guerrero wrestled everywhere and left an indelible mark on any promotion for which he competed. His humble beginnings as a luchador rudo, teaming with Art Barr (another figure who died well before his time) while terrorizing the lucha establishment, led to his introduction into the highly influential channels of mid-'90s prestige wrestling. Whether working under the hood in New Japan Pro Wrestling as Black Tiger or with his face shown to the world in Extreme Championship Wrestling. As many ECW standouts ended up, Guerrero signed with World Championship Wrestling, where he became a cornerstone for the burgeoning cruiserweight division. His feud with Rey Mysterio, Jr. was the stuff of legends, and their Halloween Havoc mask vs. title lucha de apuesta could very well be the best match of the '90s, if not of all-time. Guerrero spent time bouncing between weight classes, and he had feuds with wrestlers from Konnan to Ric Flair.

By 2000, he became dissatisfied with his lot in WCW, and along with Chris Benoit, Dean Malenko, and Perry Saturn, he jumped ship to WWE. He found initial success, but soon, his vices caught up with him and he was fired. Guerrero worked to sober himself up, and he worked in fledgling promotions such as IWA Mid-South and Ring of Honor that would become the backbone of the current indie golden age. Soon, he was re-signed to WWE, and his second act with the company proved to be his most successful. He not only won crowds over with his lovable cheater antics and masterful in-ring performances, but he won favor with the office that led to him beating Brock Lesnar for the WWE Championship and engaging in what everyone thought was going to be the most inspirational and memorable WrestleMania closing moment ever, embracing Benoit as confetti rained from the ceiling. Of course, Benoit's gruesome final days cast a sickening pall over that moment, but at the time, it was heartwarming.

In life, Guerrero was a flawed man, but who among the world's population is perfect? His substance abuse issues that ultimately played a role in claiming his life are minor compared to the warmth and energy he brought into an arena. He brought a light to WWE that was not replicated until Daniel Bryan began his ascendance. He was universally praised for his wrestling by his peers and his fans, and if anyone made it look easier than Guerrero did at his height, then I haven't found them out yet.

Eddie Guerrero was quite unlike any performer who came before him, and no one who has come after has come close to becoming the next him. The mold was broken when he was born, and now that he's been gone for almost a decade, it's become increasingly clearer how special and unique a performer Guerrero was. Rest in peace, and viva la raza.

Best Coast Bias: Get Back

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Back like déjà vu
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Dean Ambrose would've gotten a better fight out of the mock Rollins mannequin he toted out a few RAWs ago then he did against Justin Gabriel in the closing part of the program.

Watching Alicia Fox trying valiantly while failing to carry Cameron into something watchable must be the professional graps equivalent of Kat Dennings on 2 Broke Girls: watching a sunflower trying to emerge from a pile of manure.

Adam Rose's Bunny actually served its purpose in helping its steward beat Stardust, probably leading to a tag match that hopefully leads to the re-emergence of Leo Kruger and/or the reveal of the wascally wabbit. Serviceable stuff, but short, and more in service of the story than the match. Kofi Kingston's promo promising an alliance with Xavier Woods' A New Day alliance probably drove up recruitment numbers for the New Black Panthers.

This almost interminably long hour from an in-ring standpoint had one little bit of glimmer in the darkness, however. As it's had to do since the Spring Of Yes! turned into further proof of Abeyance's stranglehold on the WWE World Heavyweight Championship, NXT was put on display and while another battle between Tyson Kidd and Sami Zayn didn't quite didn't save the show, it wasn't for lack of trying. They were given the most time of anything on the show -- come to think of it, it may've gone the length of every other match on the show combined -- and showed off yet again not only what they were able to do last week and in that RAW tag match pre-Fatal 4 Way but expanded upon the building blocks of that and all their rivalry contretemps down Full Sail for the last few months.

Seeing a British audience immediately respond to Zayn and break out in the familiar ole-ing after the bell rang should remove the speck of doubt there was that everyone's favorite Syrian-Canadian was ready for the big time (even if big time's creative is probably unready for him). They went into some fun chain wrestling with a multitude of go-behind reversals, Sami got applause merely by slamming Kidd's face into a few buckles, and heading into break he'd reversed the polarity and made Nattie kiss him a couple of times in between beatings of Zayn.

The second half built upon what had come before while going off into its own jaunts: Tyson blocked a trademark Blue Thunder bomb but couldn't escape one when Zayn landed on his feet after a back suplex attempt, and the series of reversals off of the slingshot Owen Hart-style rollup that led to last week's chicanery was caught by the referee this time. No wonder the blokes were chanting This Is Awesome as it roared down the stretch. Yet this time would see Tyson use some chicanery again -- this time hugging Nattie on the floor while Zayn held off on bringing him back into the ring only to have the former Tag champion trip him up from the bottom rope before sliding in and ending the match with a swinging fisherman's neckbreaker.

Let us also keep in mind, considering it got hype on commentary while the match was going on, that Zayn is as you read this hours away from competing vs. Adrian Neville for the Big X. Kidd can't fight Neville anymore. That stipulation doesn't apply to Zayn. And given the nature of the two victories on two Tuesdays and an otherwise inexplicable match against Dash Wilder on the Championship Wrestling from Florida last week...not saying, just saying.

It's a fun thing to think about, and should be even better to see play out. You know, the inverse of Cameron's wrestling.*

(* = nobody is allowed to call that a cheap shot that didn't see the match, especially the ending. Writers going through their fourth IPA shouldn't be thinking they can't legally drive a car but could take a bump and be in position better than somebody who's supposed to be trained at this and is allegedly improving. Of course, she could prove everybody wrong and be the Bella Twins of 2017, but that's then and this is now. Jesus. H. Vishnu, she is Not Good.)

Twitter Requst Line: The Century Edition

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The Ascension will probably be just fine
Photo Credit: WWE.com
It's Twitter Request Line time, everyone! I take to Twitter to get questions about issues in wrestling, past and present, and answer them on here because 140 characters can't restrain me, fool! If you don't know already, follow me @tholzerman, and wait for the call on Wednesday to ask your questions. Hash-tag your questions #TweetBag, and look for the bag to drop Thursday morning (most of the time). Without further ado, here are your questions and my answers!

I'll answer your question with a question of my own. Does the Ascension even have a gimmick anymore? Sure, they have the hieroglyphs on their gear, but the whole "spooky supernatural dudes" thing went out the window before they won the NXT Tag Team Championships, and may have had the kibosh put on it when Kenneth Cameron DUI'd his way out of the company. Right now, the Ascension remind me of a modern day Road Warriors, Demolition, or even the Steiner Bros. They're two big dudes who will kick your ass without quarter or mercy.

Now, all the rumors have placed them as the replacements for Luke Harper and Erick Rowan in the Wyatt Family. That gimmick has proven to work inasmuch as a dude can run being Wyatt's acolyte independent of WWE's bullshit parity booking. Truth be told, I think the Ascension has one of the better shots to get over on the main roster of the dudes populating the Full Sail ring every Thursday night.

I haven't watched Night Court in years, but Mick Foley would work perfectly as Judge Stone. Also, you might want someone with a little more charm than Heyman in the John Larroquette role. Bobby Heenan might fit better there.

Oh God, WHYYYYYY. Okay.

Hulk Hogan, Andre the Giant, Bret Hart, Owen Hart, Shawn Michaels, Ric Flair, Undertaker, Randy Orton, Bob Orton, Koko B. Ware, Titus O'Neil, Mr. Wrestling, Mr. Wrestling II, Villano, Villano II, Villano III, Villano IV, Villano V, El Hijo del Ice Cream, Ice Cream, Jr., Cesaro, Chris Hero, Mike Quackenbush, Sara del Rey, Daizee Haze, Bull Nakano, Wahoo McDaniel, Gorgeous George, Sami Zayn, Jaguar Yokota, Atlantis, Steve Austin, Mikey Whipwreck, Gory Guerrero, Eddie Guerrero, Charlotte, Booker T, Road Dogg, Billy Gunn, Chuck Palumbo, Mark Jindrak, Rellik, Sean O'Haire, Konnan, Art Barr, Dump Matsumoto, Mickie Knuckles, Mickie James, Kenny Omega, Kana, Io Shirai, Mio Shirai, Mayumi Ozaki, Aja Kong, Hailey Hatred, Rickey Shane Page, ACH, Matthew Palmer, Martin Causaus, Willie Mack, So Cal Crazy, Ultimo Guerrero, Gregory Iron, Darren Young, Nicole Matthews, Rachel Summerlyn, Jazz, Kyle Matthews, Drake Younger, Ophidian, Amasis, Goldust, Stardust, Ryback, Low Ki, Portia Perez, Mark Henry, Sheamus, Glacier, Little Egypt, Mae Young, Tully Blanchard, Mildred Burke, Lou Thesz, Arn Anderson, Paul Roma, Ole Anderson, Barry Windham, Lex Luger, Sting, Bam Bam Bigelow, Akira Hokuto, Sherri Martel, Rick Martel, Dino Bravo, Kevin Steen, Jojo Bravo, Luke Hawx, Madison Eagles, and Daniel Bryan.

THERE ARE YOU HAPPY NOW.

I would call it THE ART OF HOSSDOM: CRITERION COLLECTION. But yeah, it definitely has the potential to be one of those all-time classic elephant-seal-mashing-up-against-each-other matches along with the Sheamus/Mark Henry classic from SummerSlam '11 and any number of standout bouts featuring Vader against an opponent of size, mostly from All Japan.

I probably have answered this question before, but I'm glad to recount my first ever WWF house show at the Spectrum, which featured Bret Hart vs. brother Owen in the main event. They rehashed the Bret/Jerry Lawler King of the Ring '94 finish, where Bret had the sharpshooter on past the bell and ended up getting retroactively disqualified for excessive post-match brutality. I don't remember much else from that show, but I do remember having a really good time and also looking for television cameras that just weren't there.

You remember the matches that would headline Superstars or even Saturday Night's Main Event? The ones where the big main event stars like Hulk Hogan would wrestle someone way down the card but still a name entity? I would bring those matches back for the marquee TV matches nowadays. Sure, dudes like Don Muraco or Dino Bravo didn't stand an ice cube's chance in the crater of Mauna Kea of winning, but matches like those still had an aura to them. They served as a glimpse into the future that maybe someone below the card could have a better program in the future.

Nowadays, those kinds of matches could explore the studio space in a far more extensive manner with better quality than the matches of yesteryear could have. The quality of the roster has improved dramatically in terms of in-ring work. The possibilities are endless.

The ultimate answer would be to reinstitute the brand split, but I trust Vince McMahon to curate that as well as I would my dog to watch over a meat locker full of sides of beef. I would follow this paradigm for the WWE's schedule:

  • RAW - The narrative show: All the big happenings take place here
  • Smackdown - The wrestling show: Put marquee matches on Friday/Thursday, load it up with title defenses (IC/US/Tag/Divas), and use it to advance stories via wrestling in the ring rather than segments and vignettes
  • Main Event - The HARDCORE wrestling show: Not hardcore as in ECW, but for the people like me who live for weird matches or prolonged, PPV-quality bouts with clean finishes between odd pairings
  • NXT - Its own universe: Naturally
  • Superstars - The recap show: Basically, Superstars is perfect the way it is.
Well, my guess is TweetBag 200 will come sometime in December 2016 if I keep up the current pace, so I'll take a stab at that timeframe:
  1. Seth Rollins cashes in Money in the Bank the night after WrestleMania 31 on Roman Reigns after every crowd between the Royal Rumble and Mania inclusive took a giant shit on his positioning as The Guy.
  2. Global Force Wrestling presents its biggest show in November '15 as a pastiche of every satellite promotion on one card. The main event will be Kazuchika Okada defending his Global Force Unified Championship against Myzteziz (the former Mistico/Sin Cara). The show will do well enough to embolden the company to go from syndicated TV recap show to a full live slate.
  3. The Undertaker retires at WrestleMania 32. The entire weekend is dedicated to him, as he is inducted into the Hall of Fame the night before as the trophy inductee. His final match is against John Cena, and on RAW the next night, he gives his farewell speech to the crowd where he will break character for the first time ever.
  4. TNA closes up shop for good a month or two after Lockdown '16 when Jeff Jarrett buys out the Carter family for the name and library to absorb into GFW.
  5. Sasha Banks and Charlotte will headline a WWE pay-per-view, Hell in a Cell 2016, inside the cage, marking the first time two women were in the main event of a WWE PPV.
Leav...

*reads the parenthetical*

DAMMIT.

In all seriousness, the best thing Bischoff has ever done was watching Japanese wrestling and basically porting over the idea of an invasion angle and emphasizing the innovative junior heavyweight scene. WCW in 1996 into 1997 was exciting because it was doing things that weren't done on a grand scale in America. That credit gets nerfed when you look at how he handled it after the first year, but I promised my sponsor I would cut down my slander of Bischoff this year. I PROMISED.

That depends on where Chikara is going in 2015, and honestly, the company's direction will be up in the air until December 6's finale. The Flood angle could still be going strong by September of next year, but the more I think about it, the more I believe that will come to an abrupt conclusion at Tomorrow Never Dies to segue into the next major crisis event, Chikara Zombies. Of course, a third option could be The Flood suffering a major blow and then petering out, causing Trios next year to be in an interstitial period between crisis events, and even more so, Chikara could go into a whole other direction after The Flood story ends that no one but Mike Quackenbush and his braintrust know. For simplicity's sake, I am going to assume that Trios will happen in an interstitial period:
  1. The Colony - Fire Ant, Worker Ant, Silver Ant
  2. The Osirian Portal - Ophidian, Amasis, Shynron
  3. The Spectral Envoy - UltraMantis Black, Hallowicked, Frightmare
  4. The Devastation Corporation - Max Smashmaster, Blaster McMassive, Flex Rumblecrunch
  5. The Bloc Party - The Proletariat Boar of Moldova, Mr. Azerbaijan, and to shake things up a bit, the Lithuanian Snow Troll
  6. Old Fashioned - Jervis Cottonbelly, Marion Fontaine, Thunderkitty
  7. The Batiri - Obariyon, Kodama, Qefka the Quiet
  8. The Throwbacks - Dasher Hatfield, Mr. Touchdown, Sugar Dunkerton
  9. Chicks Rule - Kimber Lee, Heidi Lovelace, and Veda Scott
  10. The Gentlemen's Club - Chuck Taylor, Drew Gulak, Swamp Monster
  11. The Submission Squad - Gary the Barn Owl, Pierre Abernathy, Davey Vega, Evan Gelistico
  12. The JOB Squad - Al Snow, Steve Blackman, The Blue Meanie
  13. The Yacht Club - "Smooth Sailing" Ashley Remington, Juan Francisco de Coronado, Prakash Sabar
  14. Team Texas - Jojo Bravo, Thomas Shire, Jessica James
  15. The New Kids on the Block - Kid Cyclone, Race Jaxon, Hype Rockwell
  16. The Mean Street Posse! Team Excellence - Gran Akuma, Dan Champion, Ken Broadway
A Cena-appreciation movement is already afoot. It began with the match-quality fetishists like myself and Dylan Hales who have rightfully been pointing out for years that Cena has been one of the best big-match performers in WWE history. Then, the folks over at 4CR Wrestling started their own Cena-centric religion with The Champ as its messianic figure. All this movement needs is for someone else to take his place as THE MAN, and thus as the sponge for all the scorn that is reserved for WWE's top star as a proxy for the shitty booking, and it will have its tipping point.

Twitter has helped me break down my preconceived notions, stereotypes, and biases just on the sheer number of diverse opinions that exist out there. It's helped me to realize that using terms like "The Internet" are useless, because you have so many different subsets of people ranging across the gamut in all shapes, sizes, and beliefs. In turn, it has helped inform my writing to make fewer generalizations and analyze situations more from my own point of view rather than some false idea of what "makes money" or "is popular."

Pull a New Jack and just keep it in a shopping cart!

Brock Lesnar doesn't die, he just sleeps. Rumor has it, he's not only awakened Cthulhu, but he's beaten the Ancient Old One to a bloody pulp and claimed his sleeping place at R'lyeh, where he will rest until Paul Heyman blows the yak's horn to summon him again for the Royal Rumble or whenever.

Golf is a sport/pastime/whatever that has a lot of downtime and deserves to be knocked down a peg or two, so yeah, let's ship those three clowns off to the PGA tour.

Xavier Woods doesn't strike me as the kind of guy who forgets such a momentous decade, no matter what.

for the record:
I've seen that scenario floated around before, and it's the second best way to tie up The Shield's arc in WWE that I've seen. The first best is inventing time-travel and beating WWE Creative with a large fish until they agree that the group should probably stay together a little while longer. The main problem is that it perpetuates the WWE's biggest problem with its babyfaces in that they're spiteful babies. Reigns and Ambrose double-crossing Rollins might elicit a pop from the crowd, but does it make them good guys? One could argue that Ambrose right now isn't so much a traditional babyface as he is a crazed antihero, but at the same time, every single fan-favorite in WWE acts in the same spiteful manner. Still, it's a good plan, especially if you just sit back and accept nihilistically that WWE is full of terrible, awful people.

You're going to want to throw something at me, but I get the sinking feeling that John Cena's rumored clash with Rusev at WrestleMania is going to be for the United States Championship. And Cena's going to win it by Attitudinally Adjusting Rusev's ass back to Russia. I can't think of a logistically plausible opponent to take him down before Mania.

Breaking news, Brock Lesnar has been eaten by a vengeful Cthulhu, so his WWE Championship is now vacant. THE TOURNAMENT TO DECIDE IT:

  • John Cena, Daniel Bryan, Randy Orton, and Dolph Ziggler are given first round byes since they're the four wrestlers who held the WWE World Heavyweight or either component belt last and are still active within the company
  • FIRST ROUND: AJ Lee d. The Miz, Rusev d. Sheamus, Roman Reigns d. Mark Henry, Seth Rollins d. Dean Ambrose
  • SECOND ROUND: Dolph Ziggler d. AJ Lee, Rusev d. Daniel Bryan, Roman Reigns d. Randy Orton, Seth Rollins and John Cena go to a DOUBLE DISQUALIFICATION and Reigns gets a bye to the final
  • SEMIFINAL: Rusev d. Dolph Ziggler
  • FINAL: Rusev d. Roman Reigns and unifies the WWE World Heavyweight and United States Championships FOR MOTHER RUSSIA. 

I was actually asked this question last year, so rather than start from scratch, why not repost it since it hasn't changed.

I've been to a few venues for wrestling shows, not as many as I would have liked, but I've been to a few. Most of them were standard. Even the New Moon Rising Wrestling Proving Grounds (aka the Wolf Dick Arena) felt like a wrestling venue. However, I've been to a couple of shows at the CZW Training Academy, and let me tell you, that place doesn't feel like a wrestling venue. A ring is plopped down in the middle of a carpeted office space. The bathroom is prominently placed near the stage. The ceiling height-to-room area ratio is completely out of whack, and having the wrestlers come in from basically the reception area is the cherry on the sundae. It's a great room to watch wrestling, don't get me wrong, but it's totally weird.

To be honest, the Attitude Adjustment isn't exactly bad for him. Cena needs to show his freakish strength, and his current finisher does a good job of displaying that. I think he may need to tighten it up a bit; I've seen variants of the AA on the indies that actually looked forceful and effective. The thing about Cena is expecting him to snug up his moves is like asking Davey Richards to sell long term, or asking Stephanie McMahon not to peacock up whenever another woman lower on the totem pole is sharing scene time with her. He's got a great handle on match flow and storytelling, but doing moves tightly is not his forte. So, the challenge is to give him a move that looks good no matter how loose it's done, and it still is able to accentuate his superhuman strongman abilities. If he couldn't use the AA, then a gorilla press into a front powerslam would be a great fallback that might actually look better on a consistent basis.

I would argue that peak push came after WrestleMania last year, when he won the World Heavyweight Championship and was being positioned as a top guy going forward. But thanks to Jack Swagger, well, that never panned out the way it should have. He's getting a nice run right now, but I feel like the Sword of Damocles is hanging over the heads of anyone who is expecting Ziggler to do anything but be a midcard workhorse from here on out.

Because compiling the TWB 100 by myself is a grand enough undertaking. If I were some single loser living as a shut-in in an apartment, I might think about it, but I got too much time on my hands to expand the project that far myself, and honestly, no knock on anyone else, but I only trust myself to curate the yearly project.

To clarify, I'm not a fan of the "shoot" interview as done by RF Video or Kayfabe Commentaries where it's clearly a cash-grab interview. However, guys like Colt Cabana and Steve Austin have perfected the art, only instead, they use the term "podcast," and frame their shows as conversations presented for free. That being said, everyone heard Cliff Compton's side of the story about his trip to Nigeria. When is someone going to get Great Power Uti's account? WHEN I SAY?

If you're not counting TNA, then the answer has to be Samoa Joe in a walk. I mean, even uninspired and going through the motions like he's been known to do in TNA, he was still among the best working on that roster. Imagine if he went to a hypothetical company that actually paid him and didn't book him to get a dick tattooed on his face?

IF you did mean to imply TNA, then the answer shifts to Portia Perez. She's a workhorse who has wrestled in nearly every promotion in the United States and Canada, yet she's never gotten a sniff for either TNA or WWE for whatever reason. I don't think I've ever seen a match of her's that I thought was below average, and she works so damn hard every time out.

I Listen So You Don't Have To: Art Of Wrestling Ep. 224

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McIntyre is Cabana's guest this week
Photo Credit: WWE.com
If you're new, here's the rundown: I listen to a handful of wrestling podcasts each week. Too many, probably, though certainly not all of them. In the interest of saving you time — in case you have the restraint to skip certain episodes — the plan is to give the bare bones of a given show and let you decide if it’s worth investing the time to hear the whole thing. There are better wrestling podcasts out there, of course, but these are the ones in my regular rotation that I feel best fit the category of hit or miss. If I can save other folks some time, I'm happy to do so.

Show: Art Of Wrestling
Episode: 224
Run Time: 1:05:29
Guest: Drew McIntyre

Summary: Colt Cabana sits down with a fellow WWE expat, but he and McIntyre go way back to the Scot’s brief stint in OVW. They talk about how McIntyre’s language skills have evolved over seven years in America and his childhood interests and early start in pro wrestling. Eventually they focus on the Three Man Band period and the process of adjusting after being fired from WWE. Jumping back in time they cover McIntrye’s wrist injury and revisit his earliest days in America and how he breezed through the developmental system, learning to drive, and his WrestleMania moment. They would up discussing McIntyre’s pre-WWE days working in the United Kingdom and what that independent scene looks like today.

Quote of the week:“I don’t mind what I’m doing and such, I just want to wrestle is my big thing. Let’s find an interesting character, jut give me 10 minutes and I’ll lose every night. That’s all I want to do is wrestle. … That’s all I ever wanted was to get the opportunity to wrestle.”

Why you should listen: McIntyre fills one of what I presume is Cabana’s more popular guest types. He has a WWE pedigree but his life story isn’t widely known. He can speak to things people remember from television but also participate in a conversation that unpacks the performer behind the character. McIntyre comes across as remarkably likeable and it’s nice to be able to think about the way his professional and personal experiences, many of which played out for an audience of millions, have helped his personal evolution over the last several years.

Why you should skip it: Don’t come hoping to hear a bitter ex-WWE employee or rants about the foolishness of the 3MB experience. Also, don’t expect a complete, chronological career retrospective. There’s a good deal of jumping around and the actual WWE talk is one of the lesser elements of the larger conversation. It’s not ignored like an elephant in the room or anything, it just doesn’t organically surface, and WWE-only fans might be frustrated at all of the time spent exploring other topics.

Final thoughts: One key difference between Cabana and Jim Ross is the former understands the type of show he’s presenting and rarely oversells. Whereas JR seems to think any former WWE employee is revealing salacious details the fans lust for, Cabana is blunt. He’s sitting down to talk with a friend, he’s going to try to keep things positive and just be excited about having a career in wrestling. As someone who wasn’t paying much attention to wrestling during McIntyre’s arrival and hot start, I left this show wanting to learn more about his work. Certainly others will be inclined to check out what he’s been doing since leaving WWE, and if that’s the case then Cabana’s primary goals are met. As with many Art Of Wrestling installments, it was a decent use of an hour, even illuminating in parts. It’s not an Earth-shattering, must-hear experience, but neither does it pretend to be. I think you’ll enjoy having a listen.

Best Coast Bias: Yes, He Can't

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You know what you call friends like this? JERKS.
Photo Credit: WWE.com
There's a reason Dan Marino gets remembered one way and Joe Montana gets remembered another. There's a reason people who loved the NBA have one set of associations when it comes to Dominique Wilkins and another when it comes to Michael Jordan, the same way the words Pete Campbell make Mad Men fans make one face and the words Don Draper another.

As the Internet noted in several places over the past week before it became horribly broken by the latest iteration of something that's already happened a couple dozen of times, America loves an underdog story more so than an actual underdog; what the American ethos is built around for better and for worse according to that line of thought is winning, period.

And yet.

Try telling that to the disbelieving Full Sail audience, who had their hands on their heads like the Undertaker had just fallen at WrestleMania. Try telling that to Sami Zayn, sitting agog in the ring after another moment where he showed restraint and compassion where his best friend didn't and all he ended up with for that display of sportsmanship was another high profile loss. And see what Adrian Neville thinks of that theory, since he's probably about to become the most hated man in Florida this side of Rick Scott while having done several thousand fewer things wrong.

You knew you were getting a TV MOTYC when the Man That Gravity Forgot and everybody's favorite Syrian-Canadian hooked horns in the main event for the Big X. You probably even suspected it was going to come down to another Fatal 4 Wayesque moment where Neville found a hint of the killer instinct the overly nice Zayn couldn't.

And yet.

For all the increased confidence Zayn showed up with to start the match and all the new maneuvers he was able to pull off during it -- a sweet counter powerbomb and a German > German > half nelson suplex trifecta -- it turned out Neville would beat Zayn because he could, and survived because he let him. Neville would whiff on the Red Arrow, and come up clutching his leg. Zayn was in the corner, cocked, loaded. He had a Helluva Kick all set to uncork and finally end this road to redemption with the indie rock playing in the background while kissing Anna Kendrick as the credits rolled. The only thing standing in the way was the ref checking on Neville, and then throwing up the X. All he had to do was kick him. Given the wide expanse of WWE babyface history, it wouldn't've even registered as a blip in the litany of Cheney moves.

But Zayn waited, hesitated, cogitated. And you know what they say about those who hesitate; one small package later, the match was over in heartrending fashion. Neville got in the hug seen above before falling back down to the mat and scooting to the corner. The trainer checked on the Englishman while Zayn invented the 10,000-yard stare; you could almost see him narrowly manage to squash his darker nature as he rotated between rage, anguish, disappointment and disgust.

It was one of the finest endings WWE's ever managed to put on, let alone in the history of NXT. And look at everything still on the table: the two-segger served as an amuse bouche to what will probably be a rematch that headlines the December 11th special and gets something closer to the half-hour mark (not that this match wasn't fine, but it clocked in closer to fifteen). And, of course, the free Network goodies end on the 1st. Should we even mention the fact that they delivered resolution without delivering the resolution? There's still plenty of room for Zayn to yell out his own version of "Clear a path, [matriarch fornicators]! I'm going home!" whether or not certain former Canadian comrades show up and tell him he knows what he has to do. Hell, watching that ending it wouldn't be shocking for sympathetic Zayn supporters to imagine maiming Neville's appendages one by one and it's not like he wasn't fighting off that urge in briefly seen moments after the fact. That ending could easily be the impetus for a fully heel Zayn.

Except it's Sami Zayn, and this is NXT. Chuck Klosterman posited earlier this year that Machiavellian was a huge misnomer because the thing that made people turn that into a phrase wasn't anything that the author actually did himself in his life, but that he could easily imagine someone or someones doing something dastardly in a logical manner to better their position in life via power as seen in the Prince. You know, the sort of thing Neville's done the last two times his title's been on the line and Zayn's been in the match. It wasn't illegal to pull the ref at the last special but it sure wasn't virtuous; here, he either cashed in on his best friend's moral compass being due North at all times after crowing about it for weeks either using and overdramatizing an actual injury or feigning one to get the opening needed since despite putting an unblemished 2014 on the ledger when faced with this Zayn, he couldn't beat him in the normal ways. A villain can easily be seen in those who know the most (about their friend's weaknesses and aversion to moral turpitude) and care the least (about anything except staying NXT Champion).

The title match had the possibility to suck up every bit of oxygen out of Orlando given the great action and storytelling; instead, from stem to stern NXT probably put on their best hour-long show of 2014. When the Program of the Year puts on at bare minimum a candidate for Episode of the Year, it's worth noting. While everything was quality, we'll begin where the show did and a pivotal, historical moment in NXT history: the suxeN reunited!

Okay, that was just a side result of the actual pivotal, historical thing--Finn Bálor making his debut, slinking to the ring like he was a plaything on a Bray Wyatt string working at about a .93 Patrick Bateman and still getting cheered to the heavens before he could even speak a word, let alone announce he was the future. International Airstrike took offense to that, as you may expect, as you may also expect Hideo Itami coming out to show his style was kick when the main roster douches had his boy hemmed up in a 2 on 1. (For all the brilliant chants the Full Sailors have used in the past two years it's hard to find one meaner ((or more accurate?)) than the "Who are you?" they chanted at Gabriel in the brief moments before the new Japanese superstar showed.) The veterans were on their heels for the majority of the fight, highlighted especially by Bálor hitting a Zaynesque tope con hilo headed into the first break of the show and put a bow on the proceedings by hitting his double stomp off the top and polishing off Gabriel. Bálor looked tremendous in his debut while in his little bit of time Itami managed to show off some nice kicks.

At this point they should almost get them in the ring against the champions just to see all the giffable moments that would occur, and in fact later on in the hour the Lucha Dragons would manage to overcome Wesley Blake and Buddy Murphy in a showcase that actually highlighted all four men. For once everybody on commentary was in unison, and everybody was right - team Buddy Blake (Ed. Note: I prefer the name Dubstep Cowboys – TH) showed flashes of brilliance as they came out as a unit with a new Tron look and theme as another step on the road of them fulfilling their hopes of being "the most functional team in NXT history". They got off a few nice combinations as well, but there was just too much space in the ring for the luchadores not to do their thing, and the belt holders prevailed as would be expected when Sin Cara put the finishing touches on with his one-armed powerbomb setting up the senton bomb. The highlight moments were right beforehand, as Kalisto turned himself into a neon yellow version of Sonic the Hedgehog, rolling around the mat and only stopping to dodge Murphy or Blake while kicking them in the openings to set up the hot tag before hitting the move of the show towards the match's conclusion with a springboard corkscrew suicide moonsault. As in need as they are of a narrative and credible opponents, watching them really gel and put on probably their best match as a unit was sweet.

The other match was a sprint, really, and moreso a setup for Sasha Banks to once again reiterate She Wanted The Belt and she wanted to go through Charlotte to get it. During her challenge to her old BFF her new one in Black Irish Becky Lynch stood next to her and looked mad sassy. Alexa Bliss gave the Boss a run, especially with this snap sunset flip powerbomb that somehow looked more impressive since it came out of a corkscrew and came out of the corner. That definitely needs to get added onto the arsenal, but Sasha wasted little time in knocking her down once she survived that and polishing her off with the Banks Statement combo whilst not giving a whit about Bliss' busted nose in the process. It's not a matter of if but when the BFF Implosion finally goes down for real, and that's still probably a few weeks off until it can join Paige/Emma II, Charlotte/Nattie, and Charlotte/Bayley as awesome women's title matches featured on the WWE Network for an already well-known price.

And after all that -- the establishing of a newer tag team while further embellishing the champions, the quality women's wrestling, a phenomenal debut that would only get outshined by a main event par excellence from a talent and storyline standpoint -- you'd think there's no possible way they can follow that up with the next show.

And yet.

I Listen So You Don't Have To: Cheap Heat Nov. 13

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Savage/Warrior is one of the topics of discussion this week
Photo Credit: WWE.com
If you're new, here's the rundown: I listen to a handful of wrestling podcasts each week. Too many, probably, though certainly not all of them. In the interest of saving you time — in case you have the restraint to skip certain episodes — the plan is to give the bare bones of a given show and let you decide if it’s worth investing the time to hear the whole thing. There are better wrestling podcasts out there, of course, but these are the ones in my regular rotation that I feel best fit the category of hit or miss. If I can save other folks some time, I'm happy to do so.

Show: Cheap Heat
Episode: Nov. 13, 2014
Run Time: 1:03:38
Guest: None

Summary: In a unusually scattershot conversation, Shoemaker and Rosenberg look ahead to Survivor Series, hit a few key moments from RAW, take a quick look at the premiere episode of Lucha Underground and end by previewing the WWE.com list of the 100 greatest matches available on WWE Network. There’s a few diversions (notably one about suits and dress shirts and another about Bill Cosby), but that’s the gist.

Quote of the week: Shoemaker, on Lucha Underground: “What they’ve gotten right, more than anything else that everybody else has gotten wrong, is that they’ve found a way to match WWE’s production quality without making it look like a ripoff of WWE. You don’t feel like you’re watching a crappy, low-rent show when you’re watching it. It looks beautiful.”

Why you should listen: Cheap Heat regularly relies far too heavily on discussing the current RAW episode, and that’s most certainly not the case here. And even in a week when both hosts are involved with a WWE project, they look beyond the mainstream to dabble in Lucha Underground, a good entry point for fans who have no knowledge of this new venture. The last chunk of the show includes a few minutes focusing on the Randy Savage-Ultimate Warrior career match at WrestleMania VII, and both guys bring decent insight to the discussion.

Why you should skip it: There’s plenty of good reasons to take a pass. The nonwrestling talk is either utterly useless (why does ring around the collar happen so fast?) or completely inappropriate for the arena (Bill Cosby rape allegations, everybody!) to say nothing of some pretty tasteless Chris Benoit “humor” from Rosenberg that defies all reason. In regards to the wrestling topics, With Spandex is a far better resource for Lucha Underground reviews, the WWE 100 discussion reveals little beyond what any average fan can glean from exploring the list on their own and there’s not enough known about the Survivor Series card at this point to warrant the attention given on this episode.

Final thoughts: I’m kind of at a loss here. This episode certainly veered off in directions I wasn’t expecting. I can’t recommend it as essential listening because it really doesn’t add any knowledge or depth to my understanding and appreciation of current events, but at the same time I feel it deserves a wide audience just because it’s such a different version of what had become a formulaic (trending toward stale) podcast. Maybe I just want other folks to have a listen and give me their input, because I can’t with any real certainty explain my own response upon first listen. Anything that gets the talk away from a simple bit-by-bit rehash of RAW is a notable change, but not all of those changes are welcome or refreshing. That said, I’m already interested to see if next week’s episode is a continued branching out or a safe return to form.

Stricken By Nostalgia

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Maybe he wasn't the "biggest draw" or the "greatest promo". He was way more than that to me. He was my friend. 

I could relate to Eddie Guerrero more than any other wrestler. I saw him every week on Smackdown. I met him every Tuesday evening. That was when they would show the Smackdown that aired two weeks ago in the USA. I was always two weeks behind but it never mattered to me. I had Eddie, Rey Mysterio, Edge, et all on Smackdown. These guys were the best. And the best out of all of them was Guerrero. I had no spoilers then and I didn't need them. All I needed was to see him walk out and perform in the ring alongside the stellar cast that they had at the time. Bad guy, good guy, weak guy, guy who lost to Brock Lesnar, it didn't matter. 

Nostalgia is a dangerous thing. It makes you think that things were better than they really were. Not here. I know I can never recapture that era of 2002-2004. I was a lonely kid. Lots of bullying. Bad hand-eye co-ordination. Luggard at sports. Loner. Freak. But on Tuesday evenings nobody could have been happier than me. 

I know what its like when your family hates you for being drunk. I have that feeling that I have hit bottom. Everyday. That there is nowhere to go but up. But I know that I want to fight another day because I am addicted. I am addicted to the high that I don't know but will know when I get there. I want to do good. I want to provide for my family. I want to be respected. 

Guerrero lost it all because of his addictions. But the man fought like hell to get back to the top before his physical heart decided to give out. I can't even imagine that climb back to the top. To live every day in the hope that someday you will be able to justify your existence to your family. That you will one day hold your head high. 

Why do I still watch wrestling? 

Because many years ago, in that brief period of 2002-04, I really needed wrestling. I depended on it to take me away to another place that was not my life. I thought that it was a bad thing to depend on something. I don't think so anymore. Wrestling is art and we depend on art everyday. It gives me hope, it gives me color. It has all the shades that are required: hope, grief, joy, laughter, passion, anger - and most of all - familiarity. Whatever happened, I knew that he would be there, lieing, cheating, stealing. Being a glorious heel. Jumping from ladders. Landing on his back on steel. Whatever it took to make me feel alive.    

Oh, Eddie.   

The Wrestling Blog's OFFICIAL Best in the World Rankings, November 17

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Not only is he deadly with his elbows, he'll beat you with a boot too
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
Welcome to a feature I like to call "Best in the World" rankings. They're not traditional power rankings per se, but they're rankings to see who is really the best in the world, a term bandied about like it's bottled water or something else really common. They're rankings decided by me, and don't you dare call them arbitrary lest I smack the taste out of your mouth. Without further ado, here's this week's list:

1. Chris Hero (Last Week: Not Ranked) - AT the Five Boroughs Wrestling show on Friday night, Hero wrestled Drew Gulak, and at one point during the match, beat Gulak with his boot. I ain't even mad. That move is some next-level grumpy old man shit. Hero may be the closest thing the indie scene will ever get to an American Tenryu, and it'll be fabulous once he becomes fully actualized in his curmudgeonly glory.

2. Sasha Banks (Last Week: 1) - She named her team with Becky Lynch BAE. Best. At. Everything. ONE OF US. ONE OF US. ONE OF US.

3. Falafel (Last Week: Not Ranked)OFFICIAL HOLZERMAN HUNGERS SPONSORED ENTRY - Middle-Eastern cuisine has become one of my staples over the years, mainly because falafel is so goddamn tasty. It's crunchy, earthy, and it pairs well with the herby and spicy harif sauce that you can find at most joints. Highly recommend.

4. Becky Lynch (Last Week: Not Ranked) - Not only is she one of the best wrestlers in the world with a vast and rich resume that stretches three continents, her hype-man swag levels are off the charts. I mean, did you see her pumping up Banks in the background and around ringside? She could get a crowd fired up for the fuckin' Icy Hot Stuntaz.

5. Aaron Rodgers (Last Week: 7) - Y'know, I could be all bitter about his absolute ownership of the Eagles, but then I'd just be getting way too serious about sports again. I can't hate on the best quarterback in the NFL right now. Just can't.

6. Heidi Lovelace (Last Week: 8) - Sure, Missile Assault Ant may have sent a message by defeating Lovelace's friendly rival Kimber Lee in somewhat short order, but Lovelace replied by doing this. OOH.

7. Grumpy Cat (Last Week: Not Ranked) - I'm not down at all on Grumpy Cat's appearance on RAW tonight, mainly because I'm holding out hope that I can say super cool and my weird celebrity crush Aubrey Plaza was once on RAW. Also, everyone is dying for the Tyson Kidd segment, but I think I'd rather see the Cat come out to "Somebody Call My Mama" and do a karate demonstration with Ernest Miller.

8. Karl Stefanovic (Last Week: Not Ranked) - He wore the same suit every day for a year to prove a point about sexism, and judging by what he observed, hoo boy, he did prove it. But no, "misandry" isn't some imaginary thing and is the real problem. Right.

9. Mark Henry (Last Week: 5) - I'm not sure what he was doing with that Dolph Ziggler match on Monday, but I'm sure he went back to his hotel and beat the shit out of the Big Show, just to keep appearances up.

10. Sara del Rey (Last Week: 10) - SARA DEL REY FACT: She celebrated her birthday by allowing Alexa Bliss to start having some offense. She's a magnanimous teacher.

Instant Feedback: They Can Rebuild Him, They Have the Technology

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The guy on the right was rehabbed just fine. Why can't the guy on the left?
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Missy Hyatt, back in the day, was one of the first true sex symbols in professional wrestling. Valued for her looks, she became a multi-territorial star and a heat magnet of the first degree, laying the groundwork, for better or worse, for her entire gender for the next couple of decades. Like many stars of the past, she's made a comeback on Twitter, and whether I agree with her or not in various instances, she's proving to add value with her insights into wrestling she's watching, current or past. To wit, an observation from tonight's RAW:

His seeming double-turn in England last week seemed to put him down the same namby-pamby path upon which he was set ever since CM Punk was finished with him the first time, but it turned out to be the rare case where WWE deserved the benefit of some storytelling doubt. In three weeks, the world's most prominent Paneraphobe seemed to reclaim the mojo he lost in early 2013. Everything that he endured has been undone because WWE finally put two and two together and got behind a guy that the crowd was ready, willing, and able to support.

Fans, for all their faults either as individuals or a mob, pick up on things. People in the crowd that might be stereotyped as a sheep that WWE can mind-control can pick up on guys who have "it" in some degree or another. Dolph Ziggler and Damien Sandow are two wrestlers who get the benefit of that doubt because they've been able to show their hands even in the shittiest of situations.

Ryback, since being disengaged from The Shield and CM Punk, participated in one of the greatest instances of worked attempted murder, developed the best possible Rob Riggle character, was bold enough to go all-in on kissing Paul Heyman without hesitation as to what kind of heat it would bring him, kept improving in the ring, and in his grandest stroke, got human heat sink Curtis Axel over in a tag team. He did so with irrepressible enthusiasm, and as the "Goldberg" chants segued to "Feed Me More!" singalongs, the crowds were won over slowly but surely to the point where his comeback pop could be mined for something more than a cheap, one-night reaction.

The Big Guy is the poster child for how easily a wrestler can be rehabbed, sure, but someone else on the roster, a guy who shared the ring with Ryback on two separate occasions, has an even greater potential. Ryback's run at least had the injury to give him an excuse to lay low. Meanwhile, Cesaro came off a first quarter that saw him wrestle in the NXT and possibly WWE match of the year and get the ultimate shine of being the first Andre the Giant Battle Royale winner. Since Mania, he was mangled and battered in ways that were baffling given his paygrade. He still has been near the periphery of relevance, but he's always just been a guy rather than someone with any kind of agency.

I hesitate to use the harsh overreactive language of the stereotypes because Cesaro has been in these big-time matches. He was in Money in the Bank for the vacant title, and he's been given long showcases against guys like Ziggler, Dean Ambrose, and now Ryback. If you're not in favor with the office, you don't get time to create like Cesaro has. You're Zack Ryder, who makes a monthly appearance to take lumps from Rusev just to keep the Bulgarian-representing-Russia from accumulating too much rust on his gears.

However, if you're just a guy going out there to make other dudes look good, then what kind of career are you having? it's entirely possible that maybe Cesaro's calling in life will be to linger in the space between the main event and midcard, acting as some kind of metaphysical gatekeeper who acts as a barometer for his opponents. If you can't have a good match with Cesaro, then you can't have a good match with anyone, so to speak. But I'm not sure WWE has read the entire book on the Swiss Superman.

Cesaro has proven that he can go in the ring. He's shown that he can carry feuds in front of smaller audiences, both in the indies and more recently in NXT, where he and Sami Zayn took a throwaway "I NEED MORE COMPETITION" promo and turned it into a simple yet straight fire story that spanned nearly a year. WWE has yet to take the next step on the big stage. The company put him with Heyman, and inexplicably, the "greatest manager ever" spent the time trying to get Brock Lesnar over than anything else. The budding feud with Jack Swagger was paid off by having Cesaro splinter off and spin wheels against Rob van Dam. He spiraled into arrhythmic and sporadic appearances with no semblance of story. WWE has done him dirty.

Yet, he still gets people bringing the "Cesaro Section" signs. People still chant for him, and they even pop for him when he's teased in a big spot like he was at the end of the show. And just as The Big Guy was the latest to prove, heat in wrestling is elastic, especially if you've got the performance ability that people crave. Ryback's reboot was well-needed and much-appreciated, but another wrestler who could totally carry a feud and especially a series of high-profile matches is in need of the same rehabilitation. The question is whether WWE pulls the trigger on Cesaro, or whether Vince McMahon's rumored continual "not getting" of Cesaro will leave him to wither in WWE's purgatory for the rest of his career on the roster.

I Listen So You Don't Have To: Steve Austin Show Ep. 168

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Another Austin call-in show this week
Photo Credit: WWE.com
If you're new, here's the rundown: I listen to a handful of wrestling podcasts each week. Too many, probably, though certainly not all of them. In the interest of saving you time — in case you have the restraint to skip certain episodes — the plan is to give the bare bones of a given show and let you decide if it’s worth investing the time to hear the whole thing. There are better wrestling podcasts out there, of course, but these are the ones in my regular rotation that I feel best fit the category of hit or miss. If I can save other folks some time, I'm happy to do so.

Show: Steve Austin Show Unleashed
Episode: 168
Run Time: 1:24:12
Guest: None

Summary: After nearly 40 minutes of stream-of-consciousness jibber-jabber whilst driving about Los Angeles, Stone Cold opens the phone lines to talk to listeners about the first year of his career between Dallas and Memphis, comedic chemistry, the finishing moves of himself, Bray Wyatt and Roman Reigns, the lack of blood in the current era of WWE, race- and sex-based stories during the Attitude Era, some crazy times with guitarist Zakk Wylde, the utility of Lanny Poffo, Austin’s favorite movies, his steel cage preference, “Mean” Gene Okerlund and the chance of Austin ever opening a wrestling school. The match of the week is Ric Flair vs. Shawn Michaels at WrestleMania XXIV.

Quote of the week:“I would love to have a 20-by-20 ring in my barn so if they wanted to send somebody down to spend a few days with me, for me to work on some of the finer points with them, I would love that. Because I would want someone to be able to come to my place that has five, 10 years of experience but just needs a little help getting over the hump. That’s where I’m able to help put salt and pepper on the steak and I ain’t gotta teach you from the bare-bones basics from start to finish.”

Why you should listen: The best part is the kid from India who stayed up until 1:30 a.m. local time to tell Austin how big a fan he is and what Stone Cold’s performances meant to the boy’s late father. Aside from that, I found myself chuckling at some of the Zakk Wylde stories. Further, Austin is the latest notable WWE personality to distance himself from some of the more questionable aspects of the Attitude Era, and if you wanted to know where the Texas Rattlesnake stands on one of wrestling’s great debates — chain link vs. big blue bar — he’s got your answer.

Why you should skip it: At least half the show is Austin more or less talking to himself to less comedic effect than his stronger efforts. He again takes calls from listeners wanting to visit familiar territory, and when he wades off topic to discuss his movies or tell stories about partying with rock stars, it’s easy to wonder if you couldn’t perhaps find a better way to kill some time.

Final thoughts: I’m starting to think somebody with a little free time could do all of us a service by isolating the best moments of Austin’s last month or so of shows into one 90-minute recording. It’s fair to say there would be at least one or two snippets from each of his call-in and email shows, and this is no exception. But there also would be plenty of chaff for the cutting room floor (in case you fancy mixing some metaphors) and again, no exceptions here. Here’s hoping next week brings one or two episodes that shake up the format.

Lutefisk List: Things to Do Instead of Watching Survivor Series

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Don't want to watch Cena overcome the odds again? Do something else!
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Hello friends, Lutefisk here! If you're like me, you probably didn't watch Monday Night RAW and you don't really have any reason to complain. However, if you're not like me, then you probably watched RAW and probably didn't like much of what you saw.

For what it's worth, I'm not subscribed to the WWE Network. I don't plan on ordering the Network anytime soon. I've more or less stopped watching WWE. I'm never home to watch Smackdown and I've gone weeks without watching ANYTHING from Raw. It's pretty great and less stressful this way.

Now, some of you probably have the WWE Network. Some of you might be still under your current subscription and maybe there are others who have the month of November for free. People will most likely still watch the show on Sunday. People will like it and others will hate it. That's wrestling, for you.

But what if you decided to NOT watch Survivor Series? Stick with me here a second! What if you just said screw it and canceled your subscription and opted to spend your Sunday evening doing something else? Well, I'm here to help! This list provides some alternatives.

  1. Read a book: You have one of those laying around your living quarters, right? They're usually very informative.
  2. Re-arrange your sock drawer: I've used this as an excuse reason to avoid going out and socialize with people. Look at that sock drawer! It's a mess! CLEAN IT UP!
  3. Learn a new language: I'm not saying you need to go and buy Rosetta Stone, but learning a new language counts as a skill. That skill is useful on your job application. That better job application will help you get a new job, which will help you make more money.
  4. Watch Brooklyn Nine-Nine: Seriously, it's a great show.
  5. Watch Bob's Burgers: It is on Netflix, which I will point out is cheaper than the WWE Network.
  6. Alphabetize your kitchen pantry: I don't think I need to explain why you should do this.
  7. Play WWE 2K15: You're the boss (I guess?)
  8. Water your plant: When was the last time you tended to your plant? DON'T YOU LOVE IT?
  9. Penguin Cam: Look, you're cold, I'm cold, let's at least watch Penguin videos.
  10. Clean your bathroom: That bathroom sink of yours looks disgusting.
Obviously there are more things you could do, but these are a few ideas to help get you through your Sunday night. But seriously, clean that bathroom sink. It looks horrible!

Icarus. Deucalion. Jakob? Your Tomorrow Never Dies Update

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Will Deucalion, center, send Icarus to a grisly end?
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
December 6 at the 2300 (formerly ECW) Arena in Philadelphia, Chikara's landmark 14th season will come to a close, and the assumed last match on the show has been set. Icarus, the current Grand Champion, will engage in a final showdown with the Flood's mammoth and seemingly invincible leader, Deucalion. Because Director of Fun Mike Quackenbush has instituted a points system for contention, the title will not be on the line; Deucalion has not wrestled a singles match yet, and in fact he only made his in-ring debut at the show in Haverhill, MA this past Saturday. Just because the gold isn't on the line, however, doesn't mean the stakes aren't crucially high.

Deucalion's carnage has been steady and severe ever since he made himself known at the premiere in Easton in May. He's since taken out many combatants in this war for Chikara's soul on both sides. Kobald, Estonian Thunder Frog, Archibald Peck, deviANT, and a good portion of the Greenhorn Militia all have met their ends at the knee of Deucalion's chokebreaker. The most recent victim came in Haverhill, when Deucalion made his in-ring debut alongside the Gekido, Volgar, and Jimmy Jacobs against the combined forces of the Spectral Envoy and the Batiri. After the match, Deucalion tried putting Frightmare on ice, when 17 of all people made the save. Apparently, 17 had been stumping for Frightmare to join the Flood for awhile, and of course, he couldn't very well join if he was, well, dead. While the Gekido's leader got away, the subgroup was punished when The Shard ate the chokebreaker as penance for his cohort's insolence.

Despite everyone running afoul of the Titan of Titor meeting a gruesome end, Icarus still wants this battle. Perhaps for the first time in his career, his name will provide clues as to his fate. The Greek mythological version of Icarus had a chance to escape from the labyrinth using wings he and his father made, but he flew too close to the Sun, melting the binding wax and causing him to lose flight and meet his demise below. Challenging Deucalion may be as tempting as flying as close to the Sun as one can get, and not even the mighty Thunder Frog, a minor deity of Eastern Europe, could escape the cold grip of the Titan's hand.

In other news, the first captain for Cibernetico Royale has been named. The Flood's eight will be led by none other than Jakob Hammermeier, the prodigal son whose return was made known at King of Trios when he removed the Dr. Cube mask and revealed his possession of the Eye of Tyr. The mystical artifact, which was at the heart of promotion's main story in seasons nine and ten, is perhaps the most powerful item one could possess. Additionally, Hammermeier seems to be fortifying the BDK subgroup's ranks with former members. Although Tursas and Ares both were jettisoned, Hammermeier has added former member Pinkie "Pink Ant" Sanchez to the fold. He was under the Haack hood until this past weekend, which begs the question on who could be wearing the Slaash mask. Even if the Flood subsides after December 6, I get the sinking suspicion that the resurrected BDK could be sticking around for the long haul.

Of course, Cibernetico and the suspected main event will join Heidi Lovelace's battle against Missile Assault Ant for the Young Lions' Cup.

All in all, I'm getting supremely tense over what might occur at Tomorrow Never Dies. Additionally, I spoke to senior official and most decorated guest in The Wrestling Podcast history Bryce Remsburg at the latest Wrestling Is Fun! event, and he only said that I "should make it a point to be there." Whenever he makes that cryptic statement, things go down, whether it be the untimely closure at the Trocadero at Aniversario: Never Compromise, or the dramatic rebirth at this year's National Pro Wrestling Day. Hold onto your posteriors, Chikara fans.

Nothing Gold Can Stay: The Fleeting Nature of WWE Alliances

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Where have you gone, Wyatt Family?
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Around this time last year, WWE boasted two strong, cohesive trios that defied traditional standards within the promotion and that looked like they could stick around for awhile. The Shield was going through trial turbulence, but the Hounds of Justice hadn't been the subjects of any massively obvious foreshadowing. Meanwhile, the Wyatt Family, which had been in its infancy as a group, was already entangling itself within the tendrils of main event creatures in CM Punk and Daniel Bryan. Even if The Shield was bound to fall apart in a fiery wreck, the Wyatts were to remain a stable, nuclear stable unit.

Now, heading into Survivor Series this year, neither group is together. The Shield famously broke up like a hacky RKO after dominating Evolution in a series of pay-per-view trios matches. Meanwhile, WWE Creative scrambled to fix Bray Wyatt after it had ruined him in bad stories against John Cena, the Usos, and Chris Jericho, and the braintrust felt that stripping the Eater of Worlds of his acolytes was the best thing for all three. When Erick Rowan emerged from the back as a member of Team Cena and immediately started jaw-jacking with his former partner Luke Harper is when I felt the feeling at its strongest. Alliances in WWE are never meant to stay together.

The funniest thing about that maxim is that the company has an annual event, the second oldest of its pay-per-views, dedicated to eight-or-ten competitor tag matches. Building towards gang warfare would be a lot easier if gangs existed. The company had the right idea in 1997, except it had the wrong players executing on the plan. Don't get me wrong, the Nation of Domination and its splintering that led to all kinds of stables coming around was awesome in theory, but I sat through that event and had to watch basically two white supremacist groups fight it out using mostly sidewalk slams. IT wasn't good.

WWE right now is built for that kind of stable madness, and no other group proved it more than The Shield did between TLC 2012 and Payback 2014. They battled so many different combinations of wrestlers to great effect that one could fashion a statistics course using Shield opponents as the subject material. Not only is WWE stocked to the gills a supremely talented roster of singles wrestlers, those competitors do well in group situations as well. So why has WWE abandoned its two most successful stables a year after they ruled the roost?

One could argue that The Shield had no worlds left to conquer as a group. After basically going World Series sweep on Triple H's vanity stable, they had stood alone on the mountaintop, and while the way the group broke up left me nonplussed, I won't argue that splitting the three up was a terrible move. That isn't to say I had massive problems with the way things happened. For one, Seth Rollins turning out of nowhere made no sense, and I still contend that the group could have stayed friendly even as they went on and did their own things, kinda like how The Avengers still get together for the big missions but the individual members all have their own titles where they have their own adventures. Still though, the Rollins/Dean Ambrose feud has been a net positive.

But what storyline reason existed for the Wyatt Family to break up? Wyatt said he "fixed" his two acolytes, but really, Harper and Rowan were as feeble as a tag team as Wyatt was as a threat to Cena. WWE failed Wyatt and his family at every turn, and instead of fixing the group as a whole and building towards a story where Wyatt could show how he fixed them, the group was scuttled in the hopes it would spark something with crowds. Basically, two groups were blown up to make five edgy loners and a corporate sellout, which at this point seem to be the only archetypes WWE seems to have left for its white wrestlers. Black wrestlers get to do Black guy things, which hey, at least WWE is going to bring A New Day back into the fold. Still, Kofi Kingston, Xavier Woods, and Big E are arriving too late to help with a Survivor Series card that could use them though.

The splitting of both groups feels endemic of WWE's booking patterns since the Attitude Era. No surprises exist when that window of a couple of years is perhaps the most fetishized time frame when it comes to original programming for The Network or for DVD releases. Basically, Vince McMahon has seemingly been ordering his writers to give him things that worked in 1998 reformatted with new stars when those new stars might fit in some other role. Every hero exists with an anti- out in front. Every heel is either a bloodthirsty HOSS or a chickenshit coward. Women are sexy cattle with two emotions. And no one can be a friend with anyone else for longer than a year.

All of those booking foibles are terribly tragic, but the last one is especially depressing in the face of another limp Survivor Series card, one that hasn't been fleshed out yet and where most of the matches won't be formally announced until they happen. Groups may not be necessary for a critically successful wrestling show, but when you have an event based around having big elimination tag matches, their presence can certainly help.

Best Coast Bias: WWE Mehwork

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An accurate visual representation of the program
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Episodes of Main Event that are the last ones before Network specials (nee pay-per-views) are almost the dictionary definition of purgatory. They exist in neither Hades nor a Victoria's Secret lingerie show backstage; they merely are, forgotten almost as soon as they're done airing.

This could've been the hour to break that sturdy but unspectacular chain.

It wasn't, however.

When NXT is really clicking and earning its Show of the Year accolade, it's due to action: compelling matches and/or storylines that make the hour fly by in seemingly a fraction of the time. These Tuesdays that serve as a Big Sell for Sunday Sunday SUNDAY work more like Neuralizers: once it flashes by your eyes, you stand where you were blank-eyed and it takes a few beats to figure out something's off.

The Usos and the Dust Brothers kick off the show with a tag match that's perfectly cromulent but definitely some Pacifico compared to some of their earlier craft beer matches in the fall. This wouldn't normally be so glaring except that in order to sell for Sunday both the Mizzes and Matadores took to the announce table, so 6¼ people were all trying to talk at the same time on occasion with the gray cloud of Let's Be Careful Out There hanging over the hour the entire time. Cole getting a selfie with Torito almost got as much screen time as the Usos closing out to win the match in the familiar "are the Champions in jeopardy?!" trope

Bray Wyatt polished off Jack Swagger to the surprise of absolutely no one. The only thing that could've raised an eyebrow was that during the prematch diatribe directed at Dean Ambrose -- they're fighting at some point this week, though who knows when -- he became the second man on the show to refer to himself as a god. (It may occur to some audiophiles out there that this whole thing could've easily been avoided if Wyatt had ever listened to No Church In The Wild and taken into account Dean Ambrose's psyche.)

Earlier on Adam Rose got his Jesus Christ Pose on saying how he'd saved the Rosebuds and puppet mastered them into singing on his cue, in addition to establishing an important "no humping" rule to the (guy who's in a) Bunny (suit depending on which second this is and who's commentating) about 24 hours too late. Then there was an interspecies match as they took on Tyson and Nattie Hart in a race to see who's team could implode the fastest. In fact the early moments would see both Kidd and Rose bossing around their seconds on the apron after blind tagging in on both ends kept their more popular seconds from going at it to open. Tragically for Rose, wherever he's trying to get to, Kidd's at already, as the former Tag Champion used the Bunny's sitting on the ropes inviting him back in as an invitation to snap off possibly the most hilarious apron gamengiri ever. The Sharpshooter followed, but Rose hesitated before not doing so, and was nowhere in sight when Kidd threw in another cheapshot kick after his and his wife's victory. Most interestingly, given the timing of the Manson nupitals (brb vomiting everything ever) and Rose's suddenly overt Jim Jones cosplay, has WWE backed into something culturally relevant with the prince of the party bus?

Even the Paige/Alicia Fox match that was supposed to serve as an amuse bouche for an eight-woman elimination tag at some indeterminate point in the near future was a sprint more than something that could've been a stealth classic if it went for ten minutes and/or two segments, as Foxy took advantage of a rather (ahem)lascivious cover from her old best friend to reverse into a better one and pin the former NXT and Divas Champion. Paige got in a couple of good-looking shots, but nothing supremely awesome, no alarms and no surprises here.

It fit right in with the other 56 minutes to a tee in that respect.
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