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The Friday News Dump to End All Friday News Dumps: Angle Is Wrestling Again

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Angle is back, it's true, it's damn true
Photo Credit: WWE.com
When Kurt Angle came back to WWE, the idea of him wrestling again was tantalizing, even though his myriad medical issues might have precluded that for awhile. The general vibe was that he'd be ready for action by WrestleMania, where he'd probably wrestle Triple H in a vanity match. Or, he'd end up replacing Roman Reigns in the main event of a RAW-branded B-pay-per-view because of an outbreak of viral meningitis in the WWE locker room. If you had that scenario as your entree for Angle back into a WWE ring, congratulations on hitting for a trillion dollars on your five dollar bet, because hoo boy, it's happening. WWE just dropped the news item as a news dump on WWE Dot Com two days before the scheduled event, TLC, was set to happen.

Reigns is only the latest victim of meningitis on the roster. Bray Wyatt, Bo Dallas, and Jojo have all been kept off the road because of the outbreak, which makes sense. Wyatt and Jojo have been romantically linked, and Wyatt and Dallas are brothers who probably travel on the road together. Reigns getting the bug points to an even wider outbreak than first thought, however. Of course, Wyatt was also supposed to wrestle on the show, in his Sister Abigail persona, against Finn Bálor's Daemon persona. He's definitely not doing that. In his stead, however, Smackdown superstar AJ Styles will fill in. Of course, Styles/Bálor may be the MORE intriguing match because one of them founded the Bullet Club and the other brought it mainstream, and oh yeah, WWE is in petty bickering bullshit mode with the remaining members of it.

Anyway, I almost thought Angle was going to insert himself in the match alongside The Shield Monday night the way he was jumping around. Perhaps he had an idea that he was next off the bench in case someone came down with the bug, and given that Reigns worked a full match vs. Braun Strowman in the main event of RAW, I'm guessing this development was pretty recent. Either way, while viral meningitis is perhaps the lesser of the meningitises, it's still not anything to fuck with. Hopefully, Angle isn't rusty and he's in good enough condition to compete. Either way, Sunday night is going to be pretty interesting.

Personal Foul, KINSHAAAASSAAAAAA, 15 Yards, Replay Down

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The collegiate King of Strong Style
Photo Credit: Rich Barnes/USA Today
The current football season has given the world a plenitude of wrestling moves performed on the gridiron, and this past Saturday, the focus went from suplex and slam to knee strikes? Syracuse quarterback Eric Dungey channeled his inner Nakamuraness against the Miami Hurricanes:

All that was missing was Corey Graves yelling "KINSHAAAAAASAAAAAA!" or the New Japan announce team yelling "BOMA YEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!" Of course, the big difference between college football and wrestling, besides the fact that if that knee were intentionally thrown and not just a circumstance of taking the leap, is that even in WWE, the Kinshasa/Boma Ye is a protected finisher. Here, the Orange ended up taking the equivalent of the three-second tan, as Miami won, 27-19. Maybe the next time they play (which won't be in the next three years, for some reason), Syracuse should just take Miami to Suplex City.

The Dream Team Strikes Again

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The man and his crew
Photo via @PowerbombTV
Yesterday, Powerbomb TV presented Futures, the second of its big, catch-all shows with talent from affiliate promotions. It featured the crowning of the Independent Champion, the culmination of a tournament that sought the best unsigned talent across at least the continent of North America. After outlasting Fly Warrior and Joey Lynch, Jonathan Gresham walked out Old Forge, PA as the first ever holder of that title. Flanked by his manager Stokely Hathaway and new Dream Teammates John Skyler and Maxwell Jacob Friedman, Gresham took the glory and even was issued a challenge from an absolute legend in indie wrestling. Jody Fleisch threw the gauntlet down after the match ended.

Of course, it'd only make sense that challengers would come out of the woodwork to go for the newest title on the scene. With PBTV's latest announcement, its number of affiliate promotions covers a wide swath of styles and regions across the world. The Independent Championship already is a top indie title in the United States. It also is well on its way to being a top title worldwide too with PBTV's reach in Mexico, Portugal, and other countries outside the USA. Gresham now is going to be in demand for local promotions all over the globe.

Gresham also has the pedigree to be able to shoulder that load. He's already regarded as one of the best workers in the world, and adding that title to his mantel not only is a ceremonial achievement, but it's an endorsement of him as an able ace for the entirety of indie wrestling. All he has to do is put in the matches and people will see it clearly. He'll have the best management possible behind him in Hathaway, who enhances everyone he's attached to. He helped Moose get to where he is. He salvaged Timothy Thatcher's EVOLVE Championship reign. And now, he's going to go worldwide. I can't think of a better tandem to break PBTV and the Independent Championship out.

Oh, I Love Trash: WWE TLC 2017 Review

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TRASH TRUCK TRASH TRUCK TRASH TRUCK
Photo Credit: WWE.com
In the TH Style, obviously.

Highlights:
  • Asuka defeated Emma in the opening match with the Asuka Lock.
  • Cedric Alexander and Rich Swann won over Brian Kendrick and Gentleman Jack Gallagher after Alexander hit Kendrick with the Lumbar Check.
  • Alexa Bliss retained the RAW Women's Championship over Mickie James with a DDT and a pin.
  • Enzo Amore regained the Cruiserweight Championship via pinfall after an eyepoke and the Sole Food.
  • Finn Bálor took out AJ Styles with the Coup de Grace.
  • After interrupting Elias' performances all night by throwing produce, Jason Jordan goaded him into a match and beat him with a roll-up.
  • Braun Strowman and Kane started brawling with each other in the main event after miscommunication, leading to the rest of their team turning on The Monster Among Men and throwing him into the back of a garbage truck.
  • Dean Ambrose, Seth Rollins, and Kurt Angle won the main event after hitting Miz with the Shield Triple Powerbomb.

General Observations:
  • Honestly, I'm still not sure why Emma had to earn the right to wrestle Asuka with no titles on the line and only a debuting superstar as the prize. I understand Asuka is important overall, but this just felt like more shitty meta-storytelling, although not nearly as offensive as Dolph Ziggler's entire being.
  • The heel stalling in someone's debut match is a trope that WWE needs to put on ice for awhile next to "Champion loses non-title match to build for rematch" and "pushing Kane without Daniel Bryan as a tag partner."
  • Booker T calling this match like he's never even heard of Asuka before seeing her was both patently annoying to me, the NXT fan, and totally understandable as a sort of metaphor for the number of fans who don't watch NXT and were seeing her for the first time. "She needs t'find anuddah gear" was some basic shit that kinda played a lot into how WWE fumbled this first match in layout at least.
  • WWE wants all its superstars to be extremely online, and it strains so fucking hard to go viral, which is why this "Emma cares too much about social media LOL" character is so grating. Either cater to your average age of viewer by heeling young people behavior or, y'know, practice what you preach and maybe don't heel one of your best wrestlers by making her aware of trending and other shit you motherfuckers love to co-opt for yourselves?
  • Asuka taking the slap and smiling should have gone right into her finishing flurry, but the match was laid out to continue the heat, which was baffling. I hate that the term "fireworks factory" gets overused in review writing, but if any match had me waiting for something bigger to happen, it was the opener.
  • The paradox of it all was that it was a really well-laid out match. Emma worked really well on top, and Asuka showed she can do the vulnerability thing that she wasn't necessarily called upon to do in NXT.
  • The promo segment with Miz whinily rallying the troops felt like the most obvious foreshadowing ever, like WWE couldn't help itself from nudging the audience into getting spoiled on how the heroes were going to pull this thing off.
  • Elias riffing on local music scenes is what's going to give this cheap heat generating gimmick a whole lot of legs. Although I wished he would've went with the crowd diss early on in his Prince "Let's Go Crazy" preacher intro, I can't complain with him honoring one of the most iconic dudes ever to pick up a guitar.
  • I understand wanting to get back at someone for a slight, especially in wrestling where scores get settled with VIOLENCE, but Vince McMahon's WWE never fails to portray the supposed good guy in the least flattering way possible. Jason Jordan tossing vegetables unbagged from a shopping cart felt like such a try-hard move. I'm not sure how anyone would want to cheer him unless they really stretched the definition of ironic humor far.
  • If the cruiserweight tag match had one flaw, it was that Jack Gallagher and Brian Kendrick Miz'd Cedric Alexander on the tope con hilo early on in the match. Thankfully, they weren't tasked with keeping him safe on the fall, but they were too far up and made the move's impact look piddling compared to how BEAUTIFUL it was in the mid-air rotation.
  • No, Nigel McGuinness, I guarantee you Gordon Solie probably had never uttered the words "sports" and "entertainment" in immediate succession.
  • Mickie James came out for her shot at the RAW Women's Championship in denim-colored and patterned jeans and a ringcoat. Was she headed to a formal event in Canada?
  • That was a low blow. I'd like to apologize to the great nation of Canada and pass along my condolences on Gord Downie's passing.
  • James making Alexa Bliss flinch into the ropes and then smacking her ass was such a cagey veteran move that it almost made up for the rampant ageism in their current feud. Almost.
  • The commentary team finally acknowledged how goddamn stupid it was to make an entire feud highlighting how old James was when Goldberg was the fucking Universal Champion for two whole months earlier in the year.
  • James hit an actual closed-window hurricanrana, which made her better than the at-the-time Cruiserweight Champion.
  • Bliss came out with a Canadian Destroyer that only got a two count, but finished the match with her DDT. I'm pretty sure the Jim Cornettes of the world took that as some kind of commentary that wasn't there.
  • Seriously, who let Jordan escape the supermarket parking lot with a shopping cart?
  • Corey Graves, however, got all the rave reviews for dropping local music references in Elias' segments. Semisonic and The Replacements? Nice.
  • Enzo Amore lost his voice and yet still cut his pre-match promo without really letting up. Relative to his talents, that was his Michael Jordan Flu Game of performances.
  • "Kalisto Killed Harambe" sign made me wonder if one year was enough time for those jokes to be funny again, or if the irony poisoning on that needs a lot more time to detoxify.
  • Nothing will ever be funnier to me than Amore trying to grapple. I used to be on the "Enzo isn't bad" train in the ring, but god, he has been exposed lately. Putting him on 205 Live was a mistake, so obviously, WWE had to make him Champion again. It's working for Jinder Mahal on Smackdown!
  • For a good match, it felt like AJ Styles vs. Finn Bálor took awhile to get going. Then again, Bálor was all Daemon'd up to fight Bray Wyatt, so I guess this match didn't have to take on the bombs-dropping tenor that a match with actual hot history would have.
  • I'm going to be honest with you all. My brother got married this past weekend, and by the time TLC rolled around, I was really at my most tired from what was a wild-ass weekend of partying. So my notes for this match weren't exactly the neatest and my attention wasn't exactly the most awake at the time. I'll probably go back and re-watch the whole match, but from what I got, it was definitely better than whatever pseudo-horror schlockfest the company would've given the crowd with Wyatt.
  • Still though, the "too sweet" at the end was super fucking gross. I don't blame Bálor or Styles at all for it, because hey, they helped cultivate the brand and what not. But it's like, WWE totally embraces the movie villain role that every Trump Administration bigshot does, and frankly, I don't want that kind of bullshit infecting my entertainment. It's not fair to the workers in WWE. It's not fair the Bullet Club dudes whose bottom lines are getting pinched. It's not fair period.
  • Ah, finally, the match where the poor musician got to exact revenge on the produce-wasting heckler from before. Wait, that's not how the story was presented? Oh dear.
  • I will say that I'll never get tired of seeing Jordan pluck dudes out of the air on leapfrog attempts to slam them down.
  • Elias is going to be a huge deal for WWE if it doesn't pigeonhole him into some dork heel role like it did Damien Sandow, intellectual savior era that is. He got people to cheer Jordan, which is not something many people can say.
  • Kurt Angle came down with the Rest of The Shield in the flak jacket which was fine except he kept mugging for the camera. I'm not sure he got the whole oeuvre, but really, at this point, I'll be happy if he can get his pants on without assistance in the morning.
  • The smartest thing possible for both a "hiding the old guys' weaknesses" and a "hey, that really makes sense!" standpoint was breaking out the plunder right away.
  • Angle going through a table early was the biggest shock and maybe the one thing that proved either he's crazier than anyone thought or that maybe people have been exaggerating how hurt/broken his body really is.
  • Of course, he did a stretcher/medical emergency spot, and hey, one of the EMTs was Darin Corbin!
  • WWE ignoring TNA and New Japan Pro Wrestling trying to claim this match was Angle's return to wrestling, not just WWE, in 11 years was understandable, but Booker going along with that verbiage when they were in the same stable in TNA showed how much of a company stooge he could really be.
  • Ah, so the Kane/Strowman interruptions earlier WERE foreshadowing! Very clever, guys. Very clever indeed. Although it didn't play out nearly as long as I thought, at least then...
  • It's a good thing I was kinda avoiding Twitter during the main event, because man, the number of people who probably made Duke "The Dumpster" Droese references when the trash truck came out would've made me facepalm so hard that I'd have broken my nose.
  • That being said, Dean Ambrose and Seth Rollins diving off said garbage truck was both expected and still totally ruled.
  • ...oh, Kane didn't forget that Strowman hit him. Honestly, having Kane and then the rest of the team take out Strowman was height of Attitude Era capriciousness, but, I mean, did YOU really buy the idea of Strowman being a team player the whole way through?
  • Besides, it set up yet another ridiculous scenario where any normal man would've died a billion times just for Strowman to come back and break everyone else in half.
  • Angle making the big heroic return was the most obvious setup, but I almost was afraid Strowman was going to come back dragging the garbage truck on his ankle to throw Angle halfway to Mankato.
  • Angle doing the Shield Bomb with the other two at the end felt a bit weird, but hey, I'll take it.

Match of the NightJack Gallagher and Brian Kendrick vs. Cedric Alexander and Rich Swann - I had high hopes for this match going in mainly because all four guys are aces and they were able to have a story behind them. They did not disappoint, even if the match screamed "They were told in Gorilla to do their standard stuff" in the second slot between two highlight matches. The fact that they were able to go out and have perhaps the best match of the night speaks to how good all of them were. For Swann and Alexander to get main crowd reactions after months of toiling in front of exiting crowds, dead tired from two condensed hours of Smackdown every week, speaks to how electric they are.

Swann put on the highlights early with a seamless cartwheel escape out of a lockup. Things like that may seem small in the grand scheme of things, but man, they really do put some pepper on a match. The little things like that set up bigger stuff at the end, like the Phoenix Splash to break up the Captain's Hook. One looks at how easy he makes the minutiae, and they expect the grand strokes, only to be amazed at even how well those big things pop off the screen. Alexander had the big highs and the flashy moves, but his oeuvre was decidedly different and complementary to his partner's. No one does a dive to the outside like he does. No one really lands the big kick let alone landing it and segueing perfectly into the next spot. His skills were prominently on display last night. People like to crap on newer wrestlers for too much "choreography," as if everyone's NOT in on the joke nowadays, but those people do have a kernel of legitimacy to their complaints. The thing is, the best guys, like Alexander and Swann, never make the athleticism take precedence over the fact that they're trying to win a match.

And of course, Gallagher and Kendrick provided great bases for their opponents, even if the match wasn't explicitly about them. Alexander was a great hot tag for sure, but it was up to the heels, Gallagher especially, to foment the crowd's desire to see Alexander get in there and clean house. Kendrick was mostly a glue guy, but man, the timing and execution on the Swann counter into the Northern Lights suplex on the outside was on point. Honestly, I didn't expect this match to get as much shine as it did, and even more honestly, I thought they deserved a lot more. However, they all went out, busted their asses, and made sure the crowd was just as up for Mickie James and Alexa Bliss as it was for Asuka and Emma. That's the best thing one can ask for with the second match on the card.

Overall Thoughts: I heard rumblings going into this show that it was one of the worst cards WWE put out this year on paper. Honestly, I didn't see it, even before Roman Reigns and Bray Wyatt were felled by the "viral infection" that is seemingly running rampant throughout the company right now. Real talk, everything went at least as expected, with the Kalisto vs. Enzo Amore match actually overdelivering a bit (mostly due to Kalisto). Sure, the main event probably would have been better with Reigns in the Kurt Angle slot, but if you think that match gets laid out the exact same way with Reigns in there, you're a bit delusional. I mean, Braun Strowman still probably gets stuffed in the back of a garbage truck, but the way to get there probably is different. I don't know. The point is, TLC looked like a good show going in, and it gave a good return on investment.

Granted, it wasn't a perfect show. For one, Asuka should have absolutely trucked Emma. Obviously, Asuka was never a speed-queen in NXT, and she had to sell a lot in various matches, including one against Emma at her first Takeover. NXT is a different beast than the main roster, and wrestlers need to make huge splashes if they're being presented as huge deals. Asuka got vignettes and hushed-tone praise in advance of her graduation to RAW. She should've iced Emma within a few minutes just to put the exclamation point on that build. It would've cemented Asuka as a made woman, and then she could have had the match last night on RAW in two weeks. First impressions mean so much, and giving a first impression of vulnerability for someone coming into a new place with a long undefeated streak felt tone-deaf at the very best. It does seem silly to critique a match for being too good or for a worker like Emma to be given too much offense. Being able to divorce myself from the feeling that WWE was in the process of taking another layup from NXT and botching it on the main roster, I enjoyed the action a lot. Asuka showed a lot of dimensions she didn't really have the chance to in NXT. But if it were me booking it, she'd have planted a roundhouse kick right in Emma's mug to start and got a quick pin to make a statement.

Additionally, I didn't like Enzo Amore regaining the Cruiserweight Championship either. WWE has a plan to build the cruisers around a central villain, but if you go back to what made the Cruiserweight Classic special, it wasn't people chasing a singular bully. No one worked heel in it outside of a few flashes of Brian Kendrick using veteran guile in a few instances. So they get to RAW and after some weak, identity-finding months of belt trading among Kendrick, TJ Perkins, and Rich Swann, the division goes right into the reign of Neville and then Amore lording over things, the complete opposite of what worked on the smaller scale. It was one thing to have Neville as the top dog cruiserweight bully, because that motherfucker could work a match. Still, he had to sacrifice a good portion of his athleticism, including an incredibly over finish, so he didn't get cheered for his actual wrestling.

Meanwhile, Cedric Alexander and Rich Swann have spent the whole goddamn existence of 205 Live floundering in limbo or in bad stories over Alicia Fox with Noam Dar. They finally get a decent story with a pay-per-view endgame, and what happens? The crowd goes bonkers over them. The kernel is still there, and fans have long memories. It's not too late to cut bait on Amore as Champion and go with a round robin of dudes who can go supernova and the able workers who can base for them, maybe a technical background with a hot antagonist gimmick who has history of basing for lucha libre, no matter how watered down or Americanized it was, because hey, outside of Gran Metalik, it's not like WWE is importing a ton of real luchadores, right? It's a shame the company doesn't have someone like that *cough* DREW GULAK *cough*.

Of course, perhaps the worst thing to happen was the post-match Finn Bálor/AJ Styles "too sweet"-ing that seemed to be allowed from management as a fuck you to the people WWE is actively trying to sue out of doing it. Honestly, it's natural the two workers would do it, especially since WWE has actively allowed them to embrace their past in an attempt to profit off someone else's intellectual property. I don't blame either Bálor or Styles in the least. However, WWE clearly has piggybacked off someone else's work, and now is trying to keep those same people from doing the same through legal channels. It's gross.

However, the positives of this show far outweighed the negatives. Like I wrote above, every match was at least good, even Amore/Kalisto. The first three matches flirted with greatness, actually, especially the cruiserweight tag match. But it also bears noticing how far Alexa Bliss has come as a worker, and how automatic the RAW women's division has become for quality on a show-to-show basis. WWE can throw two, three matches out there, and it's going to be able to buoy a show. If Nia Jax decides to come back and not leave, and depending on how many Mae Young Classic/NXT graduates come up in the near future, stacking half a show with women's matches could be more than conceivable.

I think the main event is going to obviously dominate conversation just because of how much stuff happened in it. Every once in awhile, WWE puts on a match that is just chock-full with Attitude Era overbooking and clutter, but unlike the late '90s, when the best workers were either relegated to the deep lower card or were broken-ass neck Steve Austin, it rarely ever came off with the desired effect. Few people watched WWE in the late '90s for match quality. Right now, however, the matches are a huge draw because of how the business has evolved and the roster WWE has put together. The least regarded workers in the match were the two limited-use old-timers whose deficiencies were hidden within the stipulations and by the sheer number of other wrestlers in the match. They served their purposes, and in turn added to the rollicking fun.

Sometimes, all a match has to be is fun to work. Matches like the cruiser tag or Styles/Bálor were good and satisfying because they hit certain beats and followed a more "wrestling" formula. A two-man advantage handicap garbage gimmick match, however, has to follow different beats, and it has a different set of rules. You work with the players and the pieces you have. You can overbook this kind of match and have it play out in a manner that leaves you happy you watched the thing. The Monday Night Wars era overused that kind of booking and left fans jaded and convinced that it was bad. In this case, how else would anyone have booked that match to go forward, other than not having booked it at all? It had the big car crash action. Sure, the stretcher spot has been overused by WWE, but in this case, when everyone thought Angle was a risk to legitimately die in the ring, it actually worked for once.

Then, you have the garbage truck. It was probably the most polarizing thing to be introduced into that match, but it worked. It provided a unique and memorable platform for Rollins and Ambrose to jump off. Honestly, WWE should be trying to find new and unique things for Rollins to jump off at least for the next five-to-ten years. IT's what makes him work. The truck also provided yet another deus ex machina for Strowman and great motivation for him to crush more people in the aftermath. I don't wanna call it a "face turn" because I don't think WWE needs to make Strowman a pure babyface for him to be either popular or narratively effective. He just needs to keep mauling people and keep getting put in situations that would kill anyone else five times over just to come back like a spirit of vengeance. In fact, like @TimWelcomed(kinda) noted on Twitter after the show last night, Strowman just needs to keep being fed to vehicular death traps and coming back stronger than ever like Shredder at the end of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1990).

But the most clever bit, and one that felt just a bit wasted with Angle there in place of Reigns, was how it mirrored the first Shield match so much. One of the monster threats (Ryback then, Strowman yesterday) was neutralized on the left side of the stage facing the ring from the entrance. The other monster threat, Kane in both instances, got put through the barricade in front of the ring announcer/timekeeper area. And as Daniel Bryan took the pin in the first match, so too did Miz, the person who currently uses Bryan's YES! kicks, in this match. Sure, a lot of dots remained unconnected between the two matches, but the attempt at symmetry was noticeable.

Even though WWE has the tendency to phone stuff in, it has almost always done right by The Shield. Last night's main event wasn't the main event most fans wanted. It wasn't the match I wanted for sure. However, I'm not sure anyone could have looked at the card headlined by that match, even after the addition of Kane or the loss of Reigns for Angle, and said that on paper, it looked awful. I'm all for dunking on Vince McMahon and his execution on running and promoting wrestling. Sometimes, however, one has to ignore the goblin in the room and look at the combinations of wrestlers and how that talent might go out and ball. This match had all the right combinations before the changes were made, and even though the main event was diminished, adding AJ Styles to any card makes it better. Sometimes, WWE can make you get excited; when its talent delivers on the promise, everyone wins.

The Wrestling Blog's OFFICIAL Best in the World Rankings for October 23, 2017

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Seriously, why would anyone piss Braun Strowman off?
Photo Credit: WWE.com
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. Braun Strowman (Last Week: 6) - It took like seven other dudes and a trash truck to put Strowman down last night, and even then, does anyone really think he's not showing up tonight with pieces of mangled garbage truck as his armor? All they did last night was piss him off. I thought at least Sheamus and Cesaro were smarter than that.

2. Toni Storm (Last Week: 2) - Storm's birthday was this past week, and I hope that everyone got her a nesting doll of hats tinier than the last.

3. Stokely Hathaway (Last Week: Not Ranked) - Big Stoke doin' thangs, now managing the Independent Heavyweight Champion Jonathan Gresham in addition to the rest of his Dream Team all over the indies. If you're not managed by Hathaway, then what the heck is your problem?

4. Asuka (Last Week: 7) - Even though Emma got in a bit more offense than I had expected, Asuka proved that at least one member of the RAW roster wasn't ready for her. Now, bring on Brock Lesnar, motherfuckers!

5. New Belgium Brewing Co. Citradelic Tangerine IPA (Last Week: Not Ranked)OFFICIAL HOLZERMAN HUNGERS SPONSORED ENTRY - My youngest brother got married over the weekend, and we, as in the bridal party, got a party bus. My contribution to the alcohol-soaked party was a 12 pack of this brew, which actually tasted like a dryer version of Orangina. In terms of IPAs, it was eminently drinkable, like no bitterness and all the refreshing citrus. I'm a fan.

6. LeVeon Bell and JuJu Smith-Schuster (Last Week: Not Ranked) - The Eagles don't play until tonight, so I can't award a BEEFY BOY OF THE WEEK unless they win tonight. However, Bell and Smith-Schuster make up the NFL content for this week's list with the best touchdown celebration I've seen since the league relaxed the rules this offseason. Maybe if Bell looked UNDER the goalpost, he'd actually have found Joe Horn's old cellphone though.

7. Jordynne Grace (Last Week: Not Ranked) - I'm not even sure if she won her match vs. Angelus Layne at Futures, although I'm sure it was goddamn good given the principals involved, but man, she sure won against another troll-faced dickwad who wanted to know why a man would wrestle a woman other than to intentionally get cooties. By the way, the match in question is vs. Fred Yehi, which is gonna be a hoot cuz anything involving either one of these wrestlers is, by definition, a hoot.

8. Joel Embiid (Last Week: 8) - Yeah, it hasn't been the best start for the Sixers, but Embiid is out there ballin' his ass off. Look, starting 0-3 is not ideal, but this is a young team full of guys playing together for the first time for the most part. Hell, look at the game the Sixers lost by the most; it was the one he didn't play in because of his minutes restriction and cautiousness for his injury history. This team is going to make a run, and when it does, Embiid will be the firestarter. Or Ben Simmons will. Either way, goddamn, I still Trust the Process, motherfuckers.

9. Lockjaw (Last Week: 9) - Look, I'm gonna level with you; I didn't see the most recent episode, but I'm confident enough in assuming Lockjaw was the best dang part of it.

10. Oney Lorcan (Last Week: 10) - I can neither confirm nor deny that Lorcan is here for viral meningitis, but he's definitely here for porkin'.

Leftism and Wrestling: The Haves and Have Nots

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WWE co-opting this moment is gross, flat out
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Even though capitalists and conservatives run and populate the wrestling business, as an artform, it lends itself to leftist ideals. This series hopes to show wrestling fans why they should embrace the left, not just for the sport/art, but also for themselves.

WWE TLC was known for a lot of things, but one of the most iconic images, one that WWE's Twitter account is using as a header image right now, was the "Too Sweet" between former Bullet Club members and current WWE big shots Finn Bálor and AJ Styles. The gesture was spontaneous, as pointed out by Styles on Twitter yesterday, but the problem wasn't with the wrestlers making it. They're only labor, and even if they have more control and privilege over their actions, they're still just guys acting spontaneously, making a cool moment. The problem comes when it gets co-opted by the people trying to squelch anyone else trying to use it outside the company's confines. Of course, the Bullet Club is a rebel stable based off "stealing" intellectual property to use to promote itself, so fair is fair, right? Well, not exactly. It all has to do with the scale and size of the entities involved. Assuming that the Club has autonomy from the New Japan and Ring of Honor offices, the members are true independent contractors/actors. WWE is working with the backing of its own corporate empire, one that was only partially built by the McMahon family.

The intellectual property in question, the "Too Sweet" hand gesture, feels way too ambiguous to enforce any kind of copyright on, especially seeing that it's way too similar to the metal horns popularized by the late, great Ronnie James Dio or the University of Texas' hand sign for "Hook 'em, Horns!" Kevin Nash himself said that he modeled it after North Carolina State University's hand sign. Either way, the members of the Club outside WWE could have maneuvered with legal feasibility, but the problem comes when it's time for Cody Rhodes, the Young Bucks, and anyone else who isn't part of the Sinclair Broadcasting Group or Bushiroad Corporation to lawyer up to argue it. Basically, WWE can afford to bunker in to protect everything it owns, whereas the non-corporate defendants here can't.

The most insidious thing is that Vince McMahon did not create "Too Sweet." Paul "Triple H" Levesque may have had a hand in propagating it, but it was when he was part of labor, not when he was in management or after having married into the McMahon family. It's either a hand gesture stolen from the public domain and co-opted for purposes in wrestling or it was an item either taken from labor or worse, bought from when ANOTHER company created it. Nash and Scott Hall popularized the hand signal while in World Championship Wrestling as members of the New World Order. McMahon and his company in that case wouldn't be protecting their hard work; they'd be enforcing profits made off their mere purchase.

The dirty secret of capitalism, and of feudalism, and of any economic -ism that relies on agglomeration of resources and benefits centrally and away from labor is that hard work doesn't get you ahead in most cases. For every person who wakes up at 4 AM and works 12 hour days to get ahead and make money, one sees a hundred cases of people working 50-plus hours a week just so they can feed themselves after spending money on rent, bills, and feeding dependent parties like children and elderly boarders. You know who gets rich? Mostly people who are already rich. The wealth just circulates in the same pool of wealth for the most part. Rich people inbreed worse than how George RR Martin, DB Weiss, and David Benioff portray Targaryen and Lannister relationships in A Song of Ice and Fire and Game of Thrones.

Vince McMahon didn't build WWE through his ingenuity. He took over a company from his father. He had a few entrepreneurial ideas, but mainly worked via predatory tactics — undercutting regional promotions' handshake deals with contracts, buying time on local television against them, purchasing tape libraries under market value — to make WWE into the empire it is today. Levesque and the other main inheritor, daughter Stephanie McMahon, will have done even less work to build the empire since they're pretty much taking the keys from dear old dad. Once upon a time, the people running WWE could be considered to have built their own empire, however many shortcuts they, well, McMahon took. Now though? WWE is basically squatting on the work of everyone else and playing keepaway with its relatively infinite cash supplies and legal resources.

Of course, owning all this wrestling history via tape libraries and whatever isn't enough for McMahon and Levesque, because their entire MO concerning Bálor, Styles, Karl Anderson, and Luke Gallows since coming aboard was leeching off their associations with the Bullet Club. WWE filed for a trademark for Bálor Club within a year of his debut on NXT television. Styles, Anderson, and Gallows were called the fucking Club for fuck's sake. Commentators have said the letters "IWGP" in succession more times in the last 22 months than they had since Antonio Inoki invented the term that they abbreviate. I don't need to tell you how hypocritical it is, because you either already know and are mad, or you already know and have your head shoved so far up Levesque's or McMahon's asses that you can taste what supplements they consumed that day before the gym.

But that's just the difference between the haves and have-nots in society at-large, a singular case study in why capitalism allows the concentrated wealth around a select few people, most of the time only through an accident of birth. Vince McMahon himself may have once upon a time been what geezers and blue-hairs called nouveau-riche, but his money has gotten old in a hurry, especially since that money has only multiplied through predatory capitalism and opportunities for purchase that were only opened up with immense wealth. It's a self-fulfilling prophecy, almost an ourobouros if you will. The fact that his company feels the need to needle individual persons (note that the cease and desist orders were sent to individual wrestlers and not Bushiroad or Sinclair) for doing the exact same things it's doing to them shows how much privilege gets concentrated with money.

Fair is a foreign concept in capitalism. No one gets a fair shake. Those with money have the tables tipped in their favor. Those without it have to overcome real odds, not the fugazi "odds" that WWE scripts for John Cena, Roman Reigns, or other top heroes to overcome. It's why no matter how tryhard and annoying Rhodes or the Bucks are, they are always in some degree of the right, especially when facing off against the megalithic corporate Behemoth known as WWE.

Wrestling Six Packs: Things Braun Strowman Should Survive Next

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If Death gets into it with Strowman, Strowman not only wins but shouts "I'M NOT FINISHED WITH YOU YET!"
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Braun Strowman is pretty much unbreakable. Roman Reigns put him in the back of an ambulance, locked the door, and backed him into a wall at high speeds. He was back within a week. Kane, The Miz, Cesaro, and Sheamus loaded him into the back of a trash truck, and crushed him. He's not back yet, but I'd be shocked if he wasn't at Survivor Series. While Undertaker filled the supernatural niche for WWE characters for nearly three decades, his brand of spooky aura never really fit the company outside of the crazy pre-Attitude Era New Generation days. Strowman's superhuman healing factor and Juggernaut-like invincibility, however, is a far better fit for a fantastical/unrealistic character trait. The following Six Pack explores different ways WWE can "kill" Strowman, only for him to come back angrier and somehow hungrier than ever.

1. Car Explosion - "They" say that it's okay to recycle angles every seven years. I don't know who "they" are; maybe they're the ones who decided to call Leon White "Vader?" No clue. Anyway, more than seven years have elapsed since WWE blew up a car on live television. In fact, Donald Trump was but a rube wondering if Vince McMahon had been killed instead of President of the United States and also Twitter. Strowman should not only be engulfed in a fiery explosion of a motor vehicle, he should show up within two weeks with nothing but a bandage on like his left shoulder and ready to dunk the person who detonated him into a literal basketball net.

2. Pushed Off a Tall Building - The most unbelievable part of this would be believing anyone could push him off an edge with enough force to propel him and just enough force that they can stop before they go off the side. Because outside of maybe Roman Reigns, does anyone on WWE's roster strike you as being able to survive being thrown off a building in kayfabe terms? Maybe Bray Wyatt can like BLERP mid air or something, but why waste Strowman on a feud with him, even if they have history. Anyway, regardless of logistics, you could film Strowman on top of some shattered concrete paving earlier in the day and throw him off a building onto a big inflatable pad. With the right camera work, WWE could make everything come off well, well, except for the part that saw a WWE performer fall to his death in the ring. Maybe this one isn't such a good idea after all...

3. Eaten by a Wild Animal, Maybe Even a Dinosaur - Come to think of it, perhaps a dinosaur is the only animal that could really work outside of a gigantic sea creature like a whale or even a giant squid. And it could work too if McMahon ever decided to throw some money behind either major CGI or genetic reengineering. I mean, he has a T-Rex skull in his office! Besides, if anyone could survive the harsh environment of a dinosaur's stomach for long enough time to crawl out of the intestines or punch out of the side, it's Strowman, right?

4. Engulfed in a Grain Silo - Not only would this provide the hilarious escape of Strowman literally eating all the raw grain to escape, but it would also be an important opportunity for a safety PSA about working in and around grain silos. But basically, I'm just here for Strowman showing up bloated from eating a shitpile of grain and the creative gymnastics it would take to actually put Strowman and his feud partner even in the vicinity of a grain silo.

5. Running Afoul of Ancient Criminal Enterprise, The Hand - Okay, maybe this idea skirts the boundaries of good taste because it would cause WWE to handle intellectual property that has Asian people in a role that plays close to a stereotypical vest. One wrong turn in the writer's room, and McMahon would have them recreate the infamous Kaientai/Val Venis segment from the Attitude Era. Regardless, Strowman could even literally die in this battle, well, not literally die, but kayfabe-die, and still come back because The Hand is all about bringing people back from the dead.

6. Nuclear Detonation - Maybe this is a bit too extreme and a bit too on the nose given that Trump could get us into a thermonuclear pissing match with North Korea any day now. That being said, what better way to overpower Strowman than by exposing him to several petajoules of energy? Maybe this one would be better suited for the WWE comic book, but hey, if McMahon can budget for a mock nuclear explosion, he should goddamn take that risk for his audience's entertainment, goddammit.

Your Midweek Links: Sour on WWE

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Mahal's challenge just hasn't inspired any strong, good feelings
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Hey, Wednesday has come for you, and you know what that means? Yep, the best wrestling content from the last week is here on The Wrestling Blog to help you power through to the weekend. I am doing this as a public service so you don't have to worry about being bored at work. Aren't I just a swell guy?

Hey, WWE had a pay-per-view this weekend, TLC. I have the DEFINITIVE REVIEW! [The Wrestling Blog]

WWE continued its war against the Bullet Club at that PPV. I tell you why it's gross and how it represents a larger problem in society with how the rich are able to accumulate wealth by fiat and how hard work doesn't get you anywhere [The Wrestling Blog]

The main event of Survivor Series is set, and it will feature Brock Lesnar taking on Jinder Mahal. However, Nick Piccone is not impressed and wants to know why anyone should care. [Medium]

David Bixenspan looks at WWE wrestlers being more willing to leave and why that condition can look actually smart. [Deadspin]

The Daniel Bryan/Sami Zayn segment on Smackdown was good, but it felt out of place, argues JJ McGee. [The Spectacle of Excess]

Ashly Nagrant looks at TLC and the recent spate of WWE television and is impressed by how women have taken over the narrative. [Deadshirt]

Sam DiMascio gets in the Halloween spirit and rattles off a list of matches that totally fit the horror movie oeuvre. [Spandex Are Still Cool]

Marc Madison examines Roderick Strong's career, which has been a long time in the making. [Camel Clutch Blog]

NON-WRESTLING #1: Butch is looking to raise some money for the Southern Poverty Law Center and also celebrate Blackness with an all-Black screening of Black Panther when it arrives in theaters next year. [GoFundMe]

NON-WRESTLING #2: The World Series began last night, so get in the mood with staff predictions on the MLB Championship featuring the Los Angeles Dodgers and Houston Astros. [HOT SPROTS TAKES]

Repeat After Me: Intergender Wrestling Is Not Domestic Violence

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Don't come at Mia Yim with your concern trolling
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
Nothing riles random Twitter users up like the topic of intergender wrestling. When it happens on random wrestling shows, whether on television like Lucha Underground or at indies across the world, live crowds and viewers seem to eat it up. However, sexists who refuse to believe that women could hold their own in a fight against men using psuedoscience to back up their "claims" of legitimacy in a worked sport that features undead demons and Braun Strowman (also, especially since gender is an absolute work) and concern trolls who equate any instance of a man fighting a woman to domestic violence just don't know when to let the argument go. The former are annoying, but the latter can be dangerous because usually, they're men who have never experienced anything close to domestic violence trying to play valiant hero in an area where actual survivors may or may not be advocating for the thing they're blasting. It's not to say that irresponsible intergender wrestling that does come off like DV doesn't exist, or that actual DV survivors can't be triggered by even responsible instances of women wrestling men. It's just fans and wrestlers alike who do have histories of suffering abuse tend to be for intergender action.

Mia Yim probably is the most famous example of an abuse survivor in professional wrestling currently speaking. She's not just a survivor, however. She's an activist to make sure no one goes through what she went through. She's also wrestled her share of men in her career and continues to do so. In fact, she'll be facing off against Sage Phillips for Black Label Pro, one of the hottest up-and-coming promotions in indie wrestling. That kicked off some ribald replies from a concern troll who immediately went the Bryan Alvarez-clutching-them-pearls-at-Lucha Underground route and claimed it to be domestic violence, telling Yim that she was a hypocrite and undoing all the work she had completed to date. He then claimed that you wouldn't see this kind of thing in WWE, which once had Chyna as Intercontinental Champion, or Ring of Honor, that at one time had intergender tag team titles. Yim could've ignored the dude, but honestly, while I would have, I also have never experienced DV and don't really have the same impulses that she might have. So she tweeted this:
Important things to take from that tweet. One, consent is still one of the most difficult things for people, especially men with power, to wrap their minds around. As much as rapists have a hard time reconciling that a woman has as much right to reject sex as they have to engage in it, concern trolls have as much of a hard time realizing that the woman in an intergender match can come to conclusions on their own. Automatically labeling a match as DV without regarding the agency of the woman involved is just as sexist as a promoter, agent, or booker insisting on a match to abusive and triggering tropes.

Second, and most importantly, it's someone coming at an actual domestic violence survivor like they know better than she does about what does and doesn't entail domestic violence. People can be so quick to play hero activist that they don't realize the most important thing one can do for a marginalized person is listen to them. The person in question yelling at Yim certainly isn't trying to listen to her. That's not good allyship; it's selfish buffoonery at the very best.

This again is not to say that people cannot be triggered even by responsible intergender wrestling, because every single person is different and unique. Brain chemistry is almost entirely never 100 percent exactly the same between the same person at different ages, let alone two or more different people, so it's important that those who do get triggered sit down and have dialogues with people who enjoy or perform intergender wrestling who don't. Talking and communication are how people get places, especially if they're on the same side. But again, usually, it's people who aren't victims who try and play good liberal soldier lashing out at anything that they imagine to be offensive to their imagined automaton of a demographic minority in their heads. Don't be like those people. Even if you object to intergender wrestling, take the goddamn time to listen to the people who perform it, especially if they're the marginalized party and especially if they've survived DV and are actively trying to Put the Nail In It.

Pro Wrestling SKOOPZ on The Wrestling Blog: Vol. 3, Issue 9

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WAR!
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Guess who's back, back again? HORB IS BACK, tell a friend. And an enemy. AND 50 TOTAL STRANGERS. That's right folks, HORB FLERBMINBER ONCE AGAIN HAS ALL YOUR NEWS FOR THIS PAST WEEK and then some. I dig DEEPER than any of my peers. Hell, that's not true because HORB DON'T GOT NO PEERS. Everyone else is below me, including, no, ESPECIALLY Ryan Satin. YOU HEAR ME, TMZ BOY, YOU AIN'T GOT NOTHIN' ON THE HORB, especially not assault charges from a Dubuque Hampton Inn in 2007.

Reading the newsletter owns so hard and gives me the kind of praise that keeps my grandmother's dialysis machine running. However, if you wanted to support me even MORE, you'd first follow me on Twitter, @HorbFlerbminber. It's the only place you can find up-to-the-nanosecond news as well as the only outlet where I post my informative short video recipes. Just last week, I posted a recipe for chicken soup that's to die for, literally. The secret ingredient is black tar heroin! Also, be sure to order back issues of the newsletter, that is, if I can find the stupid remote. You know, it was just here a couple of minutes ago. Ah, well, the following is a list of feature issues you can order, theoretically, of course:
  • May 8, 1912 - Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
  • June 30, 1965 - Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat.
  • March 17, 1982 - Happy St. Patrick's Day!
  • December 20, 1989 - Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur.
  • September 5, 2001 - Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.
And now, the news

- The big news of the week is that war has broken out between RAW and Smackdown in advance of Survivor Series. The hostilities began Monday night when Smackdown's air force, on order of Shane McMahon, dropped cluster bombs on the RAW locker room, killing five and injuring 26 more. Kurt Angle ordered a Sarin nerve gas counterattack, but was talked down by his second-in-command, Roman Reigns, who didn't want to see his commandant succumb to the inhumanity of war. The sides currently are at stalemate, as the no man's land between the two trenches is wrought with landmines and gig blades used by Abdullah the Butcher.

- TLC REPORT: Feh, nothing nearly as good as the people setting up the ring at Pro Wrestling Guerrilla this weekend. You stupid fucks not paying attention to the FAR SUPERIOR WRESTLING. I SPIT AT YOU.

- Of course, the big news out of TLC was that not only did Bray Wyatt miss the show due to a viral infection, so did Roman Reigns. Vince McMahon was unhappy with the viral infection because it didn't make Reigns look st... oh, I'm getting word that making any more "MAKE ROMAN LOOK STRONG" jokes is now a felony in 45 states and punishable by death in the Central African Republic. Well, folks, I have to go to a banquet in Bangui next week, so I can't finish this item. Sorry.

- Kurt Angle made his return to a WWE ring to replace Reigns, and thankfully, he made it out without shattering into a trillion tiny little shards of Intensity, Integrity, and Intelligence.

- Braun Strowman, however, was put into the back of a trash truck, compacted, and driven out of the arena. However, I saw him walking around backstage afterwards like nothing was wrong and I was AGHAST! Why wasn't he fitted for a full body cast to commit to the gimmick? I guess some people just don't care about kayfabe anymore.

- AJ Styles replaced Wyatt against Finn Bálor, and you better believe I was hootin' and hollerin' when they Too Sweeted after the match. WWE REALLY CLAPPED BACK AT THE BULLET CLUB, YEAH BOYEEEEEEEEE.

- Nia Jax allegedly walked out of WWE on advice from her cousin, Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson. Once she gave that reasoning, WWE officials held the door open for her and told her to take as much time as she needed and please don't say anything bad to Cousin Rocky please please PRETTY PLEASE WITH SUGAR ON TOP.

- Survivor Series will have four Champion vs. Champion matches, and none of them will matter.

- Impact Wrestling has announced it's no longer affiliated with Global Force Wrestling after the erratic behavior of Jeff Jarrett. "Quite frankly, we're sickened and disturbed by Jarrett's behavior," said Ed Nordholm. "We are firm believers in the Federal Reserve and curse any attempt at going back to the Gold Standard."

- Kevin Owens left the Smackdown South American tour Saturday to attend to a family matter. While he is not sharing what the issue is, I am transparently speculating that he had to deal with an issue of his family's greatest rival, The Cavity Creeps. The Steen family believes strongly in dental hygiene, you know.

- TLC REPORT REPORT: The above report? Yeah you rubes, that was a test to see how many of you are stupid enough to accuse me of working you.

- PWG RESULTS: Ricochet defeated Chuck Taylor to win the promotion's title and then immediately went into the crowd and choked Justin Roberts by his tie "just to get it over with."

- LUCHA UNDERGROUND SEASON THREE FINALE: Prince Puma takes whole episode to sing the Rolling Stones'"I'm Free."

- Paul Fontaine has been shot by Vince McMahon's executioner's squad for pointing out that the RAW ratings drop from first to third hours this past Monday was the largest in show history. I know he was just the messenger but still.

- Shawn Michaels will referee the NXT World Championship match between Drew McIntyre and Adam Cole in San Antonio, TX on November 17. NXT officials thought it was a good move because with his drifting eye, he can keep a good look on both competitors even if they're on opposite sides of the ring from each other.

- The Bullet Club has officially invited the McMahon family to the next Ring of Honor show. When the McMahons initially rebuked the offer, Cody Rhodes offered to treat them to dinner at Tavern on the Green, anything they want off the menu, even surf and turf.

- Kenny Omega has been added to ROH Supercard of Honor XII because the company has only sold three tickets so far, one to Brandi Rhodes and two to the Young Bucks' wives.

- Conor McGregor called his fighter Andres Fili a "f*****" after his match this weekend. I hope all you FAKE wrestlers were sitting under the learning tree when that happened. Best on promos.

- Jim Ross told Colin Cowherd he thinks WWE will get a date out of McGregor. "I will firebomb Titan Towers if Vince doesn't offer him at least a contract for Mania. SAUCE IT!"

- Smart Mark Video and Powerbomb TV announced a partnership where SMV titles will be available on PBTV starting November 1. Meanwhile, FloSlam officials were busy trying to photocopy fruit roll-ups at the public library.

- Gabe Sapolsky on Twitter answered criticism over how he's run EVOLVE and WWN Live with this quote: "DO YOU KNOW WHO THE FUCK I AM? I AM GABRIEL THE BIG SWINGIN' DICK SAPOLSKY, YOU PIECE OF SHIT. KNEEL WHEN YOU ARE IN MY PRESENCE, FUCKBAG."

- Davey Boy Smith, Jr. saved a woman from committing suicide Sunday. He was driving along a bridge and saw her on the side. He pulled her down to safety, but the woman suffered a cracked rib when Smith instinctively pulled her in for the running powerslam. He apologized profusely afterwards.

- The Trentonian had Honky Tonk Man on the cover of its Sunday issue. However, it was because he robbed a jewelry store in Ewing Township, NJ.

- Paramaribo.

- Taryn Terrell left Impact Wrestling. Fuck, I didn't even know she re-signed there.

- Teddy Hart missed bookings this weekend and will miss them in the foreseeable future, as he's fighting cattle rustling charges in Texas.

Last week's poll results are in, and it looks like rain for the next fortnight off and on. This week:

Twitter Request Line, Vol. 210

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Hashimoto was taken from the world too soon, but that just means he'd clean up in heaven's G1
Screengrab via YouTube
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 afternoon (most of the time). Without further ado, here are your questions and my answers:

I don't think enough G1/World League/International Wrestling Grand Prix alumni are dead to do a full 20, so I'll stretch it out to include honored guests too, I suppose. I'll keep it to people whose careers are in my purview as a wrestling fan. All of these wrestlers are either Japanese or have competed in Japan.

Block A: Bam Bam Bigelow, Bison Smith, Bruiser Brody, Chyna, Dusty Rhodes, Eddie Guerrero, Giant Baba, Road Warrior Hawk, Shinya Hashimoto, and Yokozuna

Block B: Andre the Giant, "Dr. Death" Steve Williams, Gary Albright, Hayabusa, Jumbo Tsuruta, Mitsuharu Misawa, Owen Hart, Rick Rude, Terry Gordy, Umaga

You didn't ask me to book it, but I'll give you a final match between Misawa and Hashimoto anyway. One of the Four Pillars of Heaven vs. one of the Three Musketeers. I can't pass up that opportunity. Sorry, Andre.

It should be Clash of the Champions, probably, or some other World Championship Wrestling property. WWE already has the right idea using Starrcade to drum up nostalgia in the South of Thanksgiving nights spent digesting turkey while watching terribly booked wrestling that'll just be undone the next week. Why not make that the nostalgia pay-per-view? The company's using the name, and maybe Godfather Cody Rhodes will feel like the upgrade in setting would be a good enough ring-kiss to satisf... oh shit, my eyes just rolled typing that last clause so hard they popped out of my head.

Because God is not real, and anyone willingly watching WWE in 2017, myself and yourself included, do not deserve nice things.

Too many content creators/authors/showrunners/wrestling writers confuse the issue and think "narrative integrity" and "OH SHIT MAGIC N SHIT" is a choice they have to make rather than the former being something every story should have and the latter being setting or a dressing. If you have a bad enough story, you can hopefully make bank by turning up fantasy elements to 11. It's what Michael Bay has built his entire career around. Now, why do they think it's a Boolean choice? I have no idea. Persons can be intelligent, but people are dumb, especially people with money, tunnel vision, and inability to see why people like things before mass-copying that thing.

If I'm going to use other name NXT call-ups as an example, the answer is probably never. The main roster has punted on Shinsuke Nakamura, Bayley, possibly Sami Zayn too, and thanks to injuries, probably The Revival. You might like the Zayn heel turn, but it's embedded with god-awful meta storytelling and runs counter to the legendary arc that he and his NXT storytellers built before coming up. You have high hopes for Asuka. I have high hopes for Asuka. That means she'll be jobbing to Alicia Fox on Main Event within two months.

But if I'm going against my gut feeling on this and pretend that Vince McMahon and the RAW writers will keep her important as her foreboding and her name and her streak, then she should probably truck Alexa Bliss at the Royal Rumble, WrestleMania at the latest. Then WWE can start to build to someone beating her at SummerSlam at the earliest. But that takes into account WWE doing right by a name NXT call-up and well I'm not ready to give that company the benefit of the doubt.

Learning to Live with Smackdown

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The root of all Smackdown's evil
Photo Credit: WWE.com
This week on Smackdown I'm learning to live with:

Flames. On the Side of My Face. I hate Shane McMahon SO. MUCH. The second he appeared on screen I just wanted to turn the show off. If I didn't have a review to write, I would have. That's how much I am not enjoying Smackdown right now. I don't care about the build to Survivor Series, I don't want to wait and see where anything goes, I don't care about any of it. Why does WWE have to needlessly fuck with everything? Why couldn't Survivor Series just be a fun night of friendly competition? Why this brand competition that makes no sense and makes everyone on Smackdown look like an asshole, especially Shane McMahon? Pretending to do RAW a favour by letting AJ Styles fill in for Bray Wyatt but really sending him in as a mole?

Attacking the already sickness-depleted RAW roster? Creating a violent conflict where one did not already exist? Threatening Kurt Angle? Making sure that RAW can't retaliate? These are all total jerk moves. It might be different if we were supposed to think Smackdown was out of line and that McMahon was abusing his power, but we're not. Instead commentary was trying to justify everything with a “This is war, there are two sides, you gotta look out for number one” narrative, and it's bullshit. I'm so, so tired of watching shitty people do shitty things while I'm supposed to cheer for them because the shitty people in charge of this whole shebang have absolutely no concept of morality.

They can't even follow through on their own dumb ideas. If AJ Styles was sent to RAW to fill in for someone only to betray the people who thought he was doing them a favour, then shouldn't everyone on Smackdown be very suspicious of Michael Cole, who was once again filling in for Tom Phillips? Shouldn't he have been a little jumpy? Or are we pretending that the announce team has never taken an active role in show proceedings?

Daniel Bryan's disapproval might give me a tiny hope that someone will call McMahon on his bullshit, but I'm so tired of having to grasp for slivers of enjoyment in a giant pile of disappointment. I want more than that. And given the way things have shaken out lately, Bryan's judginess will probably be boiled down to a power grab on his part because Shane McMahon is great and don't you ever forget it. And his leather jacket makes him look cool and hip and not like a douchey try-hard.

Meanwhile Sami Zayn is still a bad person for saving his best friend from an attention hungry, power abusing boss, just so we're clear. And somehow it's his fault that Shane McMahon decided to jump off a thing, and he should feel really bad about that even though McMahon is apparently totally fine and has suffered zero consequences from losing the Hell in a Cell match. Look, I don't know. This show's logic does not resemble our Earth logic. Then again, the Milwaukee crowd seemed to love everything Shane McMahon was spewing, so what the fuck do I know?

Tag Time
The tag division is the only part of this show that still feels fresh and fun right now, which is pretty amazing given that New Day and the Usos have been the only featured teams for a while, but that's how consistently good they've been. On this episode Kofi Kingston and Xavier Woods took on Chad Gable and Shelton Benjamin with the Usos sitting in on commentary. It makes sense for the next team facing the Usos to go through New Day first as a kind of proving ground, and I enjoyed the match a lot. New Day is out of contention for now, but they haven't let up the intensity of their matches, and Gable and Benjamin are working well together. I really appreciated their teamwork sequence at the end with Gable throwing Woods into the ropes for Benjamin to kick him straight back into a pin. We haven't gotten to know Gable and Benjamin as a team at all, so it's little things like that that help us to see them as a unit. I do not want to see Chad Gable fall victim to lacklustre audience reaction yet again because this stupid show refuses to invest in its characters.

I'm really looking forward to Gable and Benjamin facing the Usos for the titles. I just wish the rest of the division wasn't relegated to doing wasteland stuff in limbo.

A Whirlwind of Nothing
We got two quick, meaningless matches on this show. One had Baron Corbin lose via disqualification against Sin Cara for playing too hard. Last week he lost because Sin Cara was too much for him, but this week he lost because he was too much for Sin Cara. And both of these outcomes add up to absolutely nothing! I'm so glad he won the United States Championship for this!

Elsewhere, AJ Styles made short work of poor Sunil Singh. There's no reason why that match should have lasted longer, and I certainly don't begrudge Styles having a bit of a rest after wrestling on TLC and Raw, but it was yet another waste of time during an episode that frayed my patience to its absolute limits. This is what we're using AJ Styles for? I'm so glad he lost the United States Championship for this!

Recycling
Remember last year before Survivor Series when the women's division was fighting over who would be team captain? This year before Survivor Series the women's division is fighting over who will be team captain. There's still no point to being team captain other than getting to say that you're team captain for a team that's fighting for absolutely nothing at Survivor Series, but whatever. The artificial nonstakes provided yet another reason to just throw everyone in the ring and see what happened. And the match was...not good. Usually I can reconcile myself to these Everyone in the Pool matches by at least appreciating the wrestling but not this time. No one got a chance to stand out other than maybe Naomi, who took a hard knock into both a barricade and a ringpost. The action almost immediately spilled to the outside with only two people fighting while everyone else just lay around. Nothing of note happened, the pacing was poor, and the final face-off between Becky Lynch and Carmella was devoid of any kind of tension or intensity. I'm glad Becky Lynch won, and I guess I'll be interested to see if anything develops between her and Charlotte Flair, but on the whole this was a really disappointing match.

The only highlight was backstage when Daniel Bryan said that everyone other than Natalya would be on the Survivor Series team no matter what, Lana pointed out that there were six of them, and Bryan immediately responded with, “Not you, Lana.” I wasn't very nice about Daniel Bryan last week, but I think he's as over this show as I am. His line delivery was on point all episode.

Survival of the Snakest
Last week Sami Zayn won a tag match by delivering a low blow to Randy Orton, so this week Orton secured his Survivor Series spot by delivering a low blow to Zayn. See, it's not repetitive or predictable, it's thematic. I'd be annoyed at Zayn losing to Orton but frankly it made so little sense for Zayn and Owens to want to represent Smackdown that I'm glad. They should be thumbing their noses at the whole Survivor Series enterprise. Anyway, the match was actually pretty good. Randy Orton's performance is always elevated when he works with talented people because he is a parasite. Zayn is making an art form out of wrestling sarcastically. I didn't even know that could be a thing, but there you go. He's amazing and he deserves better.

These write-ups are going to be sporadic for the next couple of months, and I have to say that I've never been so glad that my for realsies work is going to prevent me from watching wrestling. I really need a break from this show. I've already got a spring in my step just knowing that I will not be watching Bobby Roode and Dolph Ziggler's two-out-of-three-falls match next week. I really hope things have improved by the time I can watch regularly again. I hate being such a downer.

Kiko Alonso Introduced the Emmamite Sandwich to the NFL Last Night

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Alonso brought wrestling flair to football cheapshots last night
Photo Credit: Patrick Smith/Getty Images
This year seems to be a banner year for wrestling moves on the football field, and Kiko Alonso of the Miami Dolphins kept the chain going last night with a questionably dirty hit on Baltimore Ravens' quarterback Joe Flacco. Flacco was in the process of sliding, which for those who don't know NFL rules, if a QB slides, he's giving himself up and is down at the beginning. Any hit afterwards is deemed illegal unless you can make the argument the tackler was in the process of tackling before the runner started his slide. Alonso looked pretty late here, but that's not why he made TWB today. Some people say he landed a Tito Santana-meets-Masato Tanaka hybrid of the flying forearm and Sliding D. Personally though, I think this tackle evoked more of Emma's signature seated corner splash, the Emmamite Sandwich


Eesh. Either way, Flacco ended up with a concussion on the play, and Alonso was flagged 15 yards for the personal foul, even though some people are still making the argument that it was a bang-bang play and he started the process of tackling before Flacco slid. Regardless, I'm always going to err on the side of player safety, but also pointing out when tackles and other stuff on the football field resemble wrestling moves. It's a complex duality, I know.

NXT In 60 Seconds

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"YOU'RE EITHER NE... jk I always wanted to say that.  But join us! We'll have fun."
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Master Regal: Due to extenuating circumstances in her qualifier, Nikki Cross will be entered in tonight's last chance battle royal.  Per her SAnitY associates: the Authors of Pain will get their rematch next week and the non-competing wrestler will be banned from ringside.

Oney Lorcan and Danny Burch: come out individually
Full Sailors: pop for both
Tino Sabotelli and Riddick Moss: come out as a team
Full Sailors: pop for neither
Oney: starts wrecking them and tags out
Danny: ends up in the Bad Part of Town
Full Sailors: clap so that Danny can rally enough to make the tag
Danny: does so
Oney: Chops!  Charging European uppercuts!  Blockbuster!
Team AXE Body Spray: Yeah, enough of this.  fallaway slam into the corner on Oney, get rid of Danny and Gory bulldog combo Oney
Referee: Winners!
Danny: (pulling Oney up) Well, that sucked.  Let's get it right next time.  

Vanessa Borne: I'm winning this battle royale!
Ron Howard Voiceover: She wasn't.
Bianca BelAir: I'm winning this battle royale!
RHV: She...actually that would put two heels against two faces...
Sage Beckett: I'm winning this battle royale!
RHV: Sure you are, Sister Abigail.
Candice LeRae: I'm winning this battle royale!
RHV: She...should but probably won't?
Billie Kay: I'm winning this battle royale!
RHV: Another fatal four-way with Team Australia in it?  Probably not...but it would be perfectly logical...
Nikki Cross: slowly makes her way in, beelines for Taynara Conti, and eliminates her
Everybody Else: fights everybody else 
Conti: sends Nikki into the barrier before refs get rid of her
Peyton Royce, Who Of Course Came Out With Her BFF: shoves Nikki into the steps 
Bianca BelAir: eliminates Zeda and Rhea Ripley
Sage Beckett: after commercial, eliminates Dakota Kai then Aliyah
Nikki: comes back from the dead to lay out everybody with a Crossbody, then eliminates Borne, Sage and Santana Garrett
Abbey Laith: charges
Abbey: is stupid
Abbey: is eliminated
Mercedes Martinez: eliminates Sarah Logan
Candice LeRae: eliminates Lacey Evans
Bianca: PRESS SLAMS Candice out 
RHV: And then there were four.
Bianca: throws Billie over the top
Billie: hangs on by the braid
Full Sailors: applaud
Bianca: DON'T YOU EVER TOUCH A BLACK WOMAN'S HAIR whips her with the braid many times
Full Sailors: oh shit
Nikki: tackles a recovering Billie through the ropes to the floor
Mercedes and Bianca: end up fighting on the apron
Nikki: Fools!  eliminates both
Billie: Fool!  throws Nikki over the top
Peyton: oh no honey what is you doing
Nikki, Who Never Hit the Floor: comes back in and eliminates Billie
Referee: Winner!
Master Regal: holds the NXT Women's World Championship but is otherwise completely ignored
Peyton Royce: yells at Nikki
Nikki: yells back
Ember Moon: comes out and looks imposing
Kairi Sane: comes out and looks adorable but also mildly imposing
God's Production Team: Yes, this will work nicely.

Drew McIntyre: Well, as champion, I do feel a need and honor to represent NXT overseas, never mind, hi Zelina what can't I do you for?
Zelina Vega: Where is our contract?  Who is this fighting champion you keep referring to?
DMC: (sighs) Said it once, and twice, so this is thrice: YOUR.  BOY.  NEEDS.  TO.  DO.  THIS.  FACE.  TO.  FACE.  throws hands in the air and walks off disgustedly
"The Press": tries to ask Zelina questions
Zelina: I AIN'T OUT HERE TO TALK TO YOU PUTOS storms off
 
Aleister Black: comes down to ringside
Velveteen Dream: pops up behind him at the bottom of the ramp like a bad online ad, waits a beat before throwing him into the steps, then ties him up in the ropes SAY MY NAME!  SAY IT!  slaps him
Black: clearly irate, still mute
VD: Say my name!  Say my name!  slaps him again
Black: now more irate and mute, puts the boot up on a charge then almost sends him back to Lake Minnetonka with Black Mass
VD: gets out of the ring and alternately holds up his jaw and makes the "Thiiiiiis close"two finger gesture
Black: still irate and mute

Zelina: My success comes from impatience.  Why is my client waiting a week for a contract to a title match?  Drew will realize the higher up you get — just like last time — the harder it is to breathe.  He's ducking El Idolo because he can't really handle the rarefied air of a champion.
Cien: wrestles
Roderick Strong: counter wrestles
Cien: delivers a dragon backbreaker on, then a reverse facelock elbow drop into the apron
Some Guy In North Carolina: DELIGHTFUL!
Cien: Rope-assisted triangle armbar!
Roddy: Pop-up Malenko gutbuster!  Rope-hung Stronghold! Step up enzuigiri!  Back suplex into the apron!
Cien: Kickout!  Tornado reverse DDT!  Double knee express in the corner!
Roddy: Kickout!
Cien: Spinning back elbows!  Double knee express
Roddy: ANGLE SLAM!  Big corner knee!  Baseball slide!  If I win this, I can get another shot at the belt...I know it...
Cien: Dude, your shoe's untied.
Referee: Good catch. ties it
Zelina: Huh.  Even I missed that.  AH WELL leaps off the apron and ranas Roddy into the steps FINISH HIM!  FINISH HIM NOW!
Full Sailors: applaud way more than boo
Cien: does finish it with the hammerlock DDT to keep it 100
Referee, Both Shoes Tied: Winner!

Zelina: (snatching Mauro's headset like a wig) We'll see your champion face-to-face NEXT WEEK.
Cien: says some derogatory things in Spanish
Both: leave
The Three Of Them: arrive
Everyone: ?!
PA: SHOCK...THE SYSTEM.
Everyone: ohhhhh
the Undisputed Era: enter the ring as Roddy is pulling himself up
Some Guy, Bay Bay: You're not a loser, Roddy; just a guy who lost.  You don't want to keep disappointing your family like this, do you?
Roddy: clearly conflicted and confused
Adam Cole: This is our time.  This is going to be our NXT.  It's our Era, man, it even says so on official shirts and everything.
Full Sailors: seem to be about 3:1 in favor of this
Cole: takes off his armband and extends it towards Roddy
Roddy: after a few beats takes it, looks at it, then looks back at Cole
ACBB: Just a little something to think about.  Say hi to Marina and the little one from us.
Bobby Fish: Roddy...it just makes sense.
tUE: leave
Roddy: stares down at the wristband until the screen goes black

Pick Three: Fight Club Halloween, Chikara Doubleheader, Beyond in New Jersey

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Da Hit Squad anchors a huge show for Beyond Wrestling in New Jersey
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
It's the weekend, baby! You know what that means, time to drink precisely one beer and dial 911 wrestling is happening, and it's happening all around this great world. I'm going to highlight three shows which I think will be of most interest. Of course, I'm only one person. You can check out which shows are coming up possibly in your area via Cagematch. Anyway, go to, if you can, these great shows that may be happening in your area, on television/YouTube/streaming, or for later consumption via VOD, DVD, or whatever other means one uses to consume wrestling at a later date:

Fight Club Pro Wrestling Day of the DeadTonight (Friday, 10/27), Starworks Warehouse, Wolverhampton, England, 7 PM local time - Halloween is in a few days, and of course the wrestling companies are getting in on the action. Fight Club, one of England's top true indie promotions, is getting in on the action in a big way with a spooky main event that will pit a man who teams with a werewolf against a wrestling skeleton. That's right, Chris Brookes, one half of CCK and the Fight Club Champion, will defend his title against Penta El Zero M in a huge main event that will probably end up being the biggest match in England this weekend, which is saying something given how many top promotions are running. Also on the show, Travis Banks will continue the greater CCK trio wars vs. the Lucha Brothers against Rey Feníx. I'm sure if Rey and Penta had a brother and if Kid Lykos wasn't hurt, they'd be wrestling each other too. The best match of the show, however, may end up being the Mark Haskins/David Starr undercard match. Starr has been establishing himself as one of the top wrestlers in the world, and Haskins is still out to prove that a silly neck injury can't keep him down forever. Also appearing on this show will be all three members of British Strong Style: Pete Dunne, Trent Seven, and Tyler Bate. By the time this post goes up, the show will already have started. However, check back to the promotion's On Demand page on Vimeo to see what should be a spooky special event at a later date.

Chikara Deep Breath and A Good Man Goes to WarTomorrow (Saturday, 10/28), Logan Square Auditorium, Chicago, IL for both shows, 3 and 7 PM local time - Chikara visits Chicago for a doubleheader of shows that are jam-packed with big matches. Then again, Chikara in Chicago is always a special time. The first show, Deep Breath, has a huge debut on it. The Carnies, the tag team sweeping the South, will venture into Chikara for the first time to battle the former Campeones de Parejas, Cornelius Crummels and Sonny DeFarge. If any team can handle the snot-soaked dirty pool of Chikara's "legitimate businessmen," it's the down-and-dirty combo of Kerry Awful and Nick Iggy. Another match to watch on this show is Everett Connors battling Travis Huckabee. Connors is no stranger to Chikara, as his Justin Bieber-favoring high-flying has left conflicting tastes in people's mouths. How will it fare against the first-year technical excellence of Huckabee? The second show, A Good Man Goes to War, will feature some huge matches with big implications behind them. The main event sees Fire Ant getting his shot at Juan Francisco de Coronado's Grand Championship. Fire Ant is the last Colony member standing, and he's gone just a little berserk lately after seeing his friends all get picked off one by one. Will he be the one to end Coronado's reign of terror? Or will it be Rory Gulak, who came so close at the Wrestle Factory this past summer? He doesn't have his shot yet, but he has two points and will have a tall task to complete to get his third. Icarus stands in his way. The former Grand Champion and Chikara's most tenured current tecnico will give him all that he can handle and then some. Finally, former tag partners COLLIDE as Hype Rockwell will attempt to settle Race Jaxon's hash once and for all. If you can't make it out to Logan Square Auditorium for either show, then fret not; you can either get the DVD/Blu-Rays from the store or, as I'd recommend, sign up for Chikaratopia.

Beyond Wrestling Denim RecruitsTomorrow (Saturday, 10/28), Game Changer World, Howell, NJ, 2 PM local time - Beyond Wrestling is coming back to the state of New Jersey for the first time since it did secret shows at the Combat Zone Wrestling school, and it's partnering with another deathmatch promotion in Game Changer Wrestling to bring its frenetic brand of super-indie graps back to the Garden State. Beyond is NOT playing around either with the main event, as Monsta Mack and Dan Maff, known as Da Hit Squad, the legendary New Jersey tag team that has reformed and taken the entire East Coast by storm, will battle Nate Hatred and Nick Gage, otherwise known as H8 Club. You might wanna wear a poncho if you're sitting anywhere close to the front row, because it's gonna get violent. In fact, this entire show is loaded from top to bottom, so it's hard to highlight just a few matches. I mean, do I go with Dezmond Xavier and Zenshi (the former Shynron) blowing it up in the air or Martin Stone (Danny Burch in NXT) going to the mat with John Silver? What about Team PAWG (LuFisto and Jordynne Grace) doing battle with Maria Manic and Penelope Ford, or should I highlight Ford's boyfriend and certified star-quality crazy person Joey Janela tangling with #BigMike himself, Michael Elgin? I mean, Chris Dickinson is probably going to murder Darby Allin, and it will be tremendous, but so will Powerbomb TV Independent Champion Jonathan Gresham taking on up and coming superstar and one half of the Milk Chocolate tag team, Brandon Watts. Both the Team Pazuzu vs. Team Game Changer and Johnny Cockstrong vs. Dick Justice matches will be insane, but in different ways. How the hell will I be able to choose which matches to highlight over others? I can't! This will be one of the best shows of the year if it's anything like it feels on paper. Go to this show if you can. If not, check back later on Beyondemand. You won't regret it.

OTHER SHOWS TO WATCH
  • Preston City Wrestling Fright Night 2017 (Friday, Preston, England)
  • International Wrestling Cartel High Stakes 2 (Friday, Wheeling, WV)
  • Rival Pro Wrestling Dead on Arrival (Friday, Pomona, CA)
  • Chaotic Wrestling Breaking Point 2017 (Friday, Haverhill, MA)
  • NOVA Pro Wrestling Pumpkin Spice Lariats (Friday, Fairfax, VA)
  • PCW Kick Ass and Chew Bubblegum (Saturday, Preston, England)
  • PCW Girl Power 3 (Saturday, Preston, England)
  • Ring of Honor Soaring Eagle Cup (Saturday, Mt. Pleasant, MI)
  • Southside Wrestling 7th Anniversary Show: Masked Mania (Saturday, Stevenage, England)
  • Westside Xtreme Wrestling Fight Forever Tour: London (Saturday, Tufnell Park, England)
  • Pro Wrestling Revolver Tales from the Ring (Saturday, Clive, IA)
  • On Point Wrestling at South Jersey GreekFest (Saturday, Woodbury Park, NJ)
  • Game Changer Wrestling Worst Behavior (Saturday, Howell, NJ)
  • PROGRESS Wrestling Chapter 56: La Danse Macabre (Sunday, Camden, England)
  • ATTACK! Pro Wrestling GooseBUMPS V: Paper Boats and Red Balloons (Sunday, Bristol, England)
  • Beyond Wrestling Apocalypse Dudes (Sunday, Worcester, MA)
  • Southern Underground Pro Wrestling Headwalk Among Us (Sunday, Nashville, TN)

WWE Releases Three: Emma, Darren Young, Summer Rae

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Happy trails and good luck, Emma
Photo Credit: WWE.com
WWE released multiple wrestlers yesterday in a stunning move, not so much for the people released, but because of the timing. Emma, Summer Rae, and Darren Young were given pink slips. The most surprising was Emma, who had just gotten out of a two-match series against Asuka where she was given a lot of offense against the debuting RAW superstar. However, it felt like the writing was on the wall with her for awhile. The company's refusal to utilize her talents, which are immense, was one of the most baffling personnel decisions of the last five years. Her final gimmick, a geek who only cared about trending, was incredibly frustrating and hypocritical because it set her up for humiliation by a company that has spent the last decade about wanting all the plaudits of social media and wanting its talent to be extremely online.

Young and Summer were hardly utilized over the last few years. Young had a fun gimmick where Bob Backlund coached him, but an injury derailed that run, which had gone nowhere by the time it happened. Summer had been off television for a long time outside of a silhouette appearance on the Fashion Files. Of the three, she seems like the one least to continue on wrestling, as she's become an Instagram model in the interim, which I hear is quite lucrative. She had been suffering from lingering injuries anyway.

Honestly, both Emma and Young should do well on the indie circuit should they choose to continue their careers there. It's just frustrating to see the biggest and most lucrative wrestling company in the world squander wrestlers' talents like that. It's also frustrating to see WWE adopt so much of a pat-yourself-on-the-back mentality to activism that it just ignores its own LGBTQ+ wrestlers. Young was left in some slimy midcard haze while WWE courted, pushed, and embraces open homophobes, whether it be through making Warrior the public face of its breast cancer activism or pushing AJ Styles despite his public comments about homosexuals.

The fact that it happened on a Sunday is both surprising and distressing. I thought the Friday afternoon news dump was bad, but doing it on a Sunday just as NFL games were about to start feels like a new level of low, like WWE wanted to sneak it under the rug on a day people generally are supposed to enjoy. Regardless, it's not a good look for WWE.

It sucks to see anyone lose their jobs though. WWE needs to do a better job creating channels for people outside the main event, especially women, to develop characters. I mean, the Attitude Era had people getting mad reactions with shitty booking, but they were on screen and were attempted to be portrayed as important. Imagine if WWE had that wherewithal today with the current infrastructure and roster, which is leaps and bounds better by any conceivable metric with the exception of top talent star power. But you won't see any big shakeup in that department until the revenue numbers go down, and judging by the last financial call, it's not soon on the horizon.

Does Dave Meltzer Have a Burner Account?

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Pictured: Meltzer when thinking about all the arguments he'll win on Twitter thanks to his burner account
Twitter is a wild place sometimes. People get owned, do nasty stunts, or even type dumb shit and press send, causing a firestorm of backlash. Speaking of which, what's up, Lio Rush! Anyway, the funniest development lately has been the emergence of stars using burner accounts, or dummy accounts that you make for yourself for various reasons. National Basketball Association superstar Kevin Durant was recently outed as using a burner account to defend his honor and praise himself. Durant is undoubtedly one of the top five players in the league, but few people really see that over his overarching penchant for being really goddamn corny. The burner account thing is the latest and one of the biggest pieces of evidence towards that.

So, who in wrestling would be the most hilarious person to possibly have a burner account? Dave Meltzer would have to be really high on that list, wouldn't he? He has a penchant for arguing with people, both on the level with him but mostly below him in terms of influence and follower counts. His go-to demeanor on Twitter is dismissive in nature. He's OBSESSED with winning arguments, especially in subjective areas. So when this tweet pops up...
...you have to wonder if Meltzer forgot to log out of the main account to make that tweet.

Of course, plausible deniability can come into play as maybe Meltzer was tweeting like The Rock used to cut promos. Or maybe he was making some arcane reference to a past star with that kind of reference. His knowledge of wrestling history is encyclopedic, and I'm not sure anyone comes close to him outside of a few people I can think of. However, this absolutely smells like Meltzer has a sock puppet somewhere that he uses to buttress his own arguments. Occam's Razor cuts towards this outcome as most probable. Well, that or Meltzer suffering a stroke or a hemorrhage, but he continued to tweet afterwards.

The question then becomes what his burner account could be? Meltzer isn't the kind of person that would be smart enough in covering his tracks to pick a name that would hide himself well. My guess is it would be something referencing "six stars" or "Meltzer fan." Who knows, except for the fact that this, if it is the case, is the funniest development to happen in wrestling Twitter in a long, long time.

Thanks to Robert O'Neillfor originally pointing this out.

Look Who's Tickling the Ivories Playing the Pixies... uh, John Cena?!?

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Wrestler. Spokesman. Pianist?
Photo Credit: WWE.com
John Cena can do a lot of things. He can wrestle. He can talk eloquently. He can, well, kinda rap. He can speak Mandarin. He can show compassion and love for his fellow human being. And apparently, he can play the piano. The Bella Twins' YouTube account recently passed 900,000 subscribers, and as a thank you, they posted a video of Nikki's fiance Cena playing a song that honestly shocked me, The Pixies "Where Is My Mind?" Not only is that out of the milieu that one might expect Cena to play, it's a deep cut. The Pixies are one of the more popular cult fave alternative rock bands from the late'-80s/early-'90s and are often cited as heavy influences on Nirvana's sound, but they're still a cult favorite band. I don't know how to process it. Watch for yourself.



Yeah, I'm not ready to crown him Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart or even Billy Joel, but for a dude whose chosen field is professional wrestling, I'm impressed. Cena has surprises up his sleeve for days.

Nonsense and Sensibility: The Survivor Series Conundrum

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It has a good foundation, but does that mean it's a universally, objectively good story?
Photo Credit: WWE.com
The current theme for Survivor Series is the same as the concept behind Bragging Rights, a short-lived pay-per-view concept in the dying days of the last brand split. Apparently, after a whole year-plus of infighting and tension at management, the audience is supposed to believe that the rosters are rallying around each other and around their authority figures because that's this month's theme. Watching Nattie Neidhart and Becky Lynch fight side-by-side after spending months sniping at each other felt a bit hollow. It was enough that it made me not really care about Smackdown last week. That being said, were all those proceedings really nonsensical? If so, how much of it was laid out by the creative team, and how much of it is viewer headcanon taking over? It's not an easy question to answer.

For one, the wrestlers seem to have a unifying take on all of this. Wade Keller, the eternal curmudgeon who treats kayfabe like it was the Hope Diamond, went in on the show-ending angle from RAW, and he got the business from two unlikely sources. The first was Dolph Ziggler, who is known for his Twitter ribaldry but rarely for going in on dirtsheet writers. The second was Joey Ryan, who doesn't even work for WWE. Their point of view on the situation brought some clarity, that the wrestlers are as much a fraternity in character as they are out of character. Most personal beefs are small compared to the greater good of the whole body. Whether or not you buy that explanation is one thing, especially given WWE's booking stokes personal enmity, sometimes over the dumbest things, and favors rapid escalation so that the evolution into gimmick matches is available for all feuds. Regardless though, it was a cogent explanation. It's also not as if everyone was on board. Sami Zayn and Kevin Owens were absent from the RAW invasion, which makes sense because they're currently mad at Smackdown commissioner Shane McMahon. It shows that at least in this major instance, the Smackdown creative team is doing due diligence.

One could even look at this as almost a company picnic paradigm, where the same sort of atmosphere is in play. Sure, your coworkers annoy you day in and day out, but when it comes time to compete against the other office, you stomach it because it's a day off and you might get a prize if you win. The big reason why it might not feel like a company picnic is because the company in question deals in violence, namely, intraoffice violence, but if one really wanted to look at it through that lens, it works, and it becomes super-relatable to viewers.

However, that scenario presents two major problems, one tangible, one subjective. The first is obviously the stakes. WWE hasn't really laid out anything on the line outside of pride, and given that wrestlers change alignments all the time and change brands whenever Vince McMahon wants to SHAKE THINGS UP, FUCK YOU, pride seems like a flimsy reason. The other reason has everything to do with how one consumes entertainment. Some people want to relate to their media, and others want vicarious catharsis. The latter does carry a bit of relatability, sure. But at the same time, when I watch wrestling and relate with someone, I don't want that protagonist to feel the same sense of frustration that I do when I run into conflict at work. I want them to be able to ram their target's head clean into a stationary object.

I don't want to see Bobby Roode and Dolph Ziggler fighting vaguely on the same side because their offices are in the same building. I want them to fight, namely, I want Roode to spike Ziggler on his head so hard he forgets his political affiliation and proclivity to make his gimmick that he has entertaining matches. It is a deeply personal thing, and it doesn't necessarily make the current angle bad, but the lack of universality, along WWE's patent lack of motivation for anyone to partake in this the depth and breadth that the Smackdown roster so far has, makes it sketchy to say the least.

It also doesn't help that WWE's creative direction rarely shows signs of an overall unifying direction. While it has done exceedingly well with individual stories (namely Braun Strowman's rice, the reunification of The Shield, Kevin Owens' descent into anarchic madness), rarely is an overarching theme for either show reached before the creative team, led by a chairman in McMahon who has the attention span of a gnat, bails and shuffles several other minor stories. One needs to forgive the skeptic for not getting into this whole hog when the direction just comes out of nowhere.

World-building has almost always been an Achilles' heel for WWE, and the storytelling more often than not tells the audience to accept situations on fiat. In this case, maybe a foundation emerges for people enjoy it with better reason than "turn off your brains for once!" However, it's not something that has a universal basis, and while I won't question why someone now looks forward to the Survivor Series card with bated breath, it's certainly not something for me with great reason.

The Wrestling Blog's OFFICIAL Best in the World Rankings for October 30, 2017

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Still reigning
Screen Grab via WWE YouTube
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. Toni Storm (Last Week: 2) - Another weekend, another round of dominating the British Isles for Toni Storm. Honestly, I'm shocked, SHOCKED that she hasn't kicked off a tiny hat craze because of how good and powerful she is at the wrestling.

2. Kris Wolf (Last Week: Not Ranked) - I have only seen Wolf in action via gifs of her promos, like here, and I feel like she's the best thing in all of wrestling, not just joshi or STARDOM, but all of wrestling. I wanna see her feasting on ALL THE MEAT.

3. Juju Smith-Schuster (Last Week: 6, along with LeVeon Bell) - Smith-Schuster kept momentum rolling from his touchdown celebration by rejecting notorious sports troll and former-turned-current again adult actress Mia Khalifa and then torching the Detroit Lions for 193 yards and a touchdown. He even had the quips on Twitter about it. Even though he plays for the Steelers, one of the league's least likable franchises, he's becoming one of the league's most likable players. I'm here for it.

4. Asuka (Last Week: 4) - I wouldn't read too much into Asuka's duet of matches with the now-released Emma, if just because showing that she can wrestle the grind style is probably more important to her overall future than anything. She acquitted herself well, to be honest. Still, I just can't shake the nagging feeling that if WWE knew it was going to release Emma — and a release like that doesn't feel out of nowhere — then why not have Asuka just ice her in 30 seconds at the pay-per-view at least? I guess you could say that RAW is not ready for Asuka either.

5. Braun Strowman (Last Week: 1) - He didn't appear on RAW, but recovery isn't instant. He's gotta rest at least a week, man. I heard he's recovering in R'lyeh with Cthulhu, the only other being on the planet who can match him for raw destructive ability.

6. Reese's Peanut Butter Cups (Last Week: Not Ranked)OFFICIAL HOLZERMAN HUNGERS SPONSORED ENTRY - On the scale of Halloween candies, with circus peanuts and Necco wafers at absolute zero and Kit Kat at ten, Reese's Peanut Butter Cups are a solid 16,000. The absolute best possible Trick-or-Treat reward, and it's not even close. Beware trying to raid them from your children, however, because they may rightly divorce you at best or justifiably assault you at worst.

7. Timmy Jernigan (Last Week: Not Ranked) - The Eagles defense is a monster, and it all starts up front with the big hogs in the middle of the line. Fletcher Cox rightly gets a lot of press, but I wanna talk about Jernigan, who has been playing out of his mind this whole season. Anytime someone tries to run on him, he swallows him up like Kirby in the middle of the fray in Green Greens. I thought losing Benny Logan was going to be a big hit, but Jernigan has more than replaced him.

8. Ben Simmons (Last Week: Not Ranked) - Gotta give equal time to each of the Sixers' young guns, especially now while they're healthy and not at the mercy of Dr. Nick Riviera and the rest of the teams' quack medical staff. Anyway, Simmons is showing why he was the consensus top prospect coming out of college in 2016. I'm pretty sure he and Joel Embiid could win every promotion's tag team titles within a week if they wanted to, but they're dedicated to bringing a title home to Philly. Gotta love that.

9. Lockjaw (Last Week: 9) - As this dumpster fire of a season of Inhumans has evolved, problem after problem has come wriggling out of the woodwork like maggots feeding on a days-dead corpse. In the beginning, the show focused on a patently unlikable Royal Family that supported a literal caste system as the protagonists. As the season went on, the show started to strip the characters of their powers so that it was like watching a superhero show with depowered superheroes. Then it went and killed two key characters — Triton in the premiere and Gorgon in the latest episode. All of it could be forgiven if the writing was good or the storytelling compelling, but man, it's almost like the dude who pooped out Iron Fist as the worst Marvel Netflix installment shouldn't have been tasked with presenting Marvel's most tenuous comics property on television with a shoestring budget. Oh, and if you don't think Scott Buck was the problem on Iron Fist, watch The Defenders and see how much better Danny Rand, Colleen Wing, and especially Bakuto are framed and written. It's night and day. Anyway, sorry for the rant, but Lockjaw, in defiance to all of these circumstances, still owns and deserves all your metahuman pets and treats.

10. Oney Lorcan (Last Week: 10) - Well, those of you doubting that Oney Lorcan was here for porkin', well, YOU SICK FREAKS.
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