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Mox Is in Josh Barnett's Bloodsport II

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Mox is gonna dip his toe into the Bloodsport well
Photo Credit: NJPW1972.com
Last year at WrestleMania, Matt Riddle's Bloodsport shone a light on shoot-style wrestling, or some form of it. I'm not sure what went down last year was a facsimile of what one might find in RINGS, but it was certainly different from anything else happening that weekend. This past year, with Riddle in WWE, the mantel of Bloodsport fell on a far less appealing namesake. Although this year's Mania weekend Bloodsport was as good if not better than last year's from an in-ring standpoint, the fact that Josh Barnett booked himself to go to a time limit draw with Minoru Suzuki (Riddle did the job for him, for posterity) and make the event more focused on THE RULES rather than dudes beating the shit out of each other martial-arts-style was enough of a reason to long for Riddle back.

Anyway, if you wanted more of that style of wrestling outside of Mania weekend, you're getting your wish, as Josh Barnett's Bloodsport 2 (more accurately someone's Bloodsport 3) will be taking place September 14 in Atlantic City. The main event has been signed, as the event's namesake will be taking on Jon Moxley, as announced by this video from Game Changer Wrestling last night. This match will be interesting because when you think of "shoot-style," Mox is probably near the end of the list. That being said, Riddle's Bloodsport featured Nick Gage going up against Timothy Thatcher, and that was the best match on that show. I feel that Mox vs. Barnett will have similar vibes, although I am already cringing on how Barnett is going to book the match so that he looks like a badass with a 15-lb. dick.

All bitterness aside, Barnett's first Bloodsport was a great show with a lot of diverse talent. While I'm not really holding out hope for either Masashi Takeda or Hideki Suzuki to come back, I'm sure this card will have similar talent on it. Perhaps Thatcher makes a return? Killer Kross is almost a lock to appear. Perhaps Phil Baroni continues on his path to transition from MMA guy to pro wrestler. Dude has the charisma to do it, he should totally follow in the footsteps of guys like Riddle, Chuck O'Neil, Shayna Baszler, and of course, Filthy Tom Lawlor, who may be the best of the bunch. Either way, Bloodsport II(I) should be well worth tuning into, another reason why Game Changer Wrestling for its flaws is perhaps the most fan-friendly wrestling promotion around.

Seth Rollins Has His Nose Lodged All the Way Up His Bosses' Asses

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Rollins keeps attacking, but is it really him talking?
Photo Credit: WWE.com
For four years after WrestleMania XXX, Roman Reigns was painted as a company man, the guy Vince McMahon wanted to get over at all costs, and who was to be the heir apparent to John Cena as "the guy WWE rams down your throat." Whether he was that or not is up to your own analysis, as it was with Cena and Hulk Hogan and anyone else anyone with the surname McMahon has tried pushing as the company's ace. For every laurel wreath laid at Reigns' feet, he took it in stride. He may have been inoffensive, corny even. Never once though did he seem aggressively brown-nosed. Now, this isn't to say he wasn't or is not a company man. It's just he's not as in your face about it when he's doing publicity. Seth Rollins? Yeah, as documented before, he is more than willing to lodge himself into the rectum of his bosses in order to curry favor.

In order to be the company man that McMahon and Paul Levesque want him to be, Rollins' first task has been to disparage the good name of one Jon Moxley. As linked above, he first went on the offensive on a podcast where he pretended to know the word "presumptuous" and intimated that he wasn't as good a wrestler because he couldn't handle "the grind" like Rollins could. As silly as that sounds, it was what Rollins was meant to say. Unless he's incredibly phony, and hey, he might be, going in on a supposed "brother" as soon as he left the company smells a little too much like McMahon and Levesque using Rollins as a proxy. So it shouldn't be a surprise when he continued his onslaught, this time on a conference call in preparation of SummerSlam:
He's right that Moxley is competition, but "taking food off [Rollins'] table?" I only have one thing to say to that.

Get all the way the fuck outta here.

When wrestling had major competition, the folks who lived through those eras liked to say they made money hand-over-fist. If anything, Moxley giving legitimacy to All Elite Wrestling is, in theory, putting enough money in Rollins' checking account for him to buy as much protein bars and boneless, skinless chicken breast as his heart desires. If anyone is taking food off Rollins' plate, it's the people feeding him his bullshit lines about his friend. I'm not sure about how much revenue "The Boys" get out of the ungodly amounts of money WWE pulls in from its revenue streams, but if it's anything more than 50.1 percent, I'll drop dead. Hell, if they got more than ten percent, I'd be shocked. Part of being a wrestling promoter is dicking your talent out of the money that you can't pull in without them. Where else do you think McMahon is getting his money to fund an entire goddamn football league?

The fucked up thing is that it's understandable that WWE volleys shots back at AEW, because again, however smaller a share of the market the latter has, it's still corporately-owned, billionaire-backed competition. There are no good guys in this thing, even if one party is less bad than the other. That being said, look at the people taking shots for AEW: Cody [Rhodes], Kenny Omega, the Young Bucks. Yeah, they're "The Boys," but they're also the executive vice presidents. McMahon and Levesque have their stooge boy relaying messages, not even the EVPs, but to the guy who confessed that WWE was making him depressed. It feels like such a chickenshit move, and it's all on Rollins to say no, that he's not gonna take potshots at a guy with whom he was joined at the hip.

Notice that even now, Reigns refuses to take shots at Moxley. Do you think Levesque and McMahon conveniently didn't ask him to do the junkets and fling shit at Moxley? Again, it's not to say Reigns is defiant or doesn't want to help WWE as much as he can no matter how morally grotesque the company is. He just has limits and boundaries. You don't have to respect it. I really don't. But again, as there are degrees of bad guy in WWE vs. AEW, there are degrees of bootlicker within WWE, and you can totally point it out. Rollins' behavior is, in a word, embarrassing. But hey, WWE has been nothing short of embarrassing in recent memory, right? Hell, one could say the company has fumbled its way into gobs and gobs of money by sheer accident. Their actions, especially lately, have reeked of paranoia and desperation. In a word, you just hate to see it.

The Latest Team for King of Trios Has Emerged from the Deep

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The terror from the waves is coming for the Trios medallions
Graphics via ChikaraPro.com
For a year-plus now, the Creatures from the Deep have been terrorizing Chikara. Formed by an Ashley Vox who was possessed by a maritime demon to become Oceanea, the group has made its presence known through vicious attacks with numbers. While groups like The Crucible have seemingly minimized the aqueous threat posed by Oceanea, Merlok, Hermit Crab, and Cajun Crawdad, one should not take this group lightly, especially now that their leader has emerged from the great sea, ready to conquer King of Trios. Oceanea has only made two appearances thus far this season, and she will come back to lead Merlok and Hermit Crab into glorious battle. She will reclaim King of Trios for Atlantis, or at least that is her aim. What land-loving team will stop them? Honestly, it's hard to say. Oceanea brings a certain amount of domineering chaos through her leadership. The wily Crab is her tactician, while Merlok's relatively hulking frame will be her hammer. If you want a sleeper team to take the whole thing, you'd be hard pressed to find a better team than the Creatures of the Deep.

With the Creatures of the Deep, the King of Trios field is halfway filled. Oceanea's rowdy bunch of crustaceans and sea serpents will join in the fray with:
  • Team Pump (Scott Steiner, Jordynne Grace, Petey Williams)
  • The Ancient Order of Nations (Mick Moretti, Adam Hoffman, Jack Bonza)
  • The Carnies (Kerry Awful, Nick Iggy, Tripp Cassidy)
  • The Embassy (Prince Nana, Jimmy Rave, Sal Rinauro)
  • The VeloCities (Mat Diamond, Jude London, Paris DeSilva)
  • Team FIST (Icarus, Tony Deppen, Travis Huckabee)
  • The Crucible (Ophidian, The Whisper, Lance Steel)
Also announced for King of Trios weekend for the Rey de Voladores tournament is Boomer Hatfield, who will look to continue his momentum after winning his dad's mask (watched the match over the weekend, and yes, it is a must-see, match of the year candidate) with the secondary tournament from Trios weekend. In addition to the the two tournaments, night 3 will contain a tag team gauntlet which is always fun. You can get tickets to any or all three of the nights on chikarapro.com. The event will happen October 4-6 in Reading, PA at the Goodwill Beneficial Association.

The End of the Bully Ray Saga: Nothing Happened

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He got away with it
Photo Credit: ROHWrestling.com
So, in case you forgot, Bully Ray straight-up kidnapped a fan at Ring of Honor's most recent stop in Portland, OR, and berated him backstage for booing his pweshis wittle chemtrail-believing girlfriend, Velvet Sky. There was a whole to-do about the whole thing, and it ended up that ROH would "investigate" the incident. They released a statement on that investigation, and well, uh, I guess it was handled?
We have now concluded our internal investigation into the events that occurred in Portland on June 2nd and have taken appropriate actions with all parties involved. Our Code of Honor, which calls for sportsmanship, respect and honor in- and outside of the ring is a core value of this company and one we will continue to strive to uphold. To all of our loyal and dedicated fans, we apologize for the incident that transpired and we encourage all of our fans to continue attending our events. Furthermore, we promise to continue delivering the best wrestling and the best live experience on the planet. In adherence to Ring of Honor policy, we will not comment further on these matters.
I don't know about you, but I see a whole lot of words that say absolutely nothing. They've taken "appropriate actions" and "will not comment further on these matters," which tells me that Bully Ray got zero discipline, and the fan in question, @xIAMHOLLYWOODx probably got a free foam finger or a Marty Scurll shirt or some shit. Normally, if you take action against someone, you announce the repercussions publicly. It might not be required for a non-publicly traded company like ROH like it is for WWE, but whether or not you have to by law isn't enough of an excuse to withhold what you did to punish a dude who, again, KIDNAPPED A FAN for basically nothing. Again, the fan and everyone around him seem to corroborate that he didn't say anything out of line, but even if he did, it's not a reason you take someone in the back for physical intimidation.

In addition to leading me to believe that nothing happened to Bully Ray, that statement also is hilariously worded in that it sounds like the company abides by the Code of Honor pre-match handshake as a policy. I am cackling at them implying that they solve their problems with a handshake. The obvious explanation is that the Code of Honor is more than just a silly handshake, but a company owned by Donald Trump's most effective propaganda arm that has had a long history of doing the shitty things it accused the fan doesn't deserve that quarter. Much like with the last investigation into Jay Lethal's sexual harassment allegations from Taeler Hendrix, nothing has come from a serious charge against the company, and honestly, I'm not sure you should expect any change from ROH until the company closes.

October 2 Is the Start Date for AEW on TNT

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The TV debut is set in stone
All Elite Wrestling scored a coup just by getting a timeslot on TNT, the former home of World Championship Wrestling Monday Nitro. Although wrestling is moving away from needing television, cable or network, to survive, WWE's rights fee coup with USA and FOX show how lucrative being over the air or on cable can really be. Today, the newly minted AEW on TNT Twitter account dropped the hard date for its debut, Wednesday, October 2. Furthermore, the main AEW account confirmed the venue, Washington, DC's Capital One Arena, and according to a press release, the show would be live for two hours (8-10 PM ET). I'm not sure if it would be for one week or if the whole run will be live, but that's still a big detail to announce.

The show is already generating shockwaves throughout the rest of the industry. Contracted wrestlers are already saying their goodbyes to the independents. Whether or not AEW will make exceptions is unknown, as Joey Janela has already announced Spring Break 4 for Mania 2020 weekend. WWE is already rumored to be acting by seeing if they can put NXT on FOX's main subsidiary sports network, FS1. No matter how many people want to pretend WWE isn't shook by AEW to its core, well, you can only look at its business decisions, executed and rumored, since the upstart promotion was announced.

The show doesn't have a name yet, although "AEW on TNT" wouldn't be the worst title. It wouldn't be the best title either, but better to go with something simple than to give it a corny name that people will make fun of. Either way, the action should be hot and heavy when it goes to air at 8 PM ET on TNT on October 2. It'll be the first AEW show after August 31st's All Out, so you'll get all the fallout and then some. The biggest test will be to see if they learned their lesson from what WWE is doing with its television and doing something fresher and different. I fear they may fail it, but the roster at least will be fresh enough that it can carry any creative lag until the folks in charge either find footing or turn the work over to someone who knows what they're doing.

The BOLA Field Is at 15

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The Bad Boy is back at BOLA
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
I was gonna hold off on collating the next round of Pro Wrestling Guerrilla's Battle of Los Angeles field until they got two-thirds full. However, the Twitter account last announced a competitor this past Friday, and no other name has been added either Monday or Tuesday. The most reasonable explanation for this is that Super Dragon doesn't want anything to take away from show week, and Friday is their anniversary show SIXTEEN, headlined by the Rascalz defending their PWG Tag Team Championships against EYFBO/LAX. That one should be, as the kids say, a hoot. Personally, I think it's because Super Dragon fell into a time vortex, and no one else knows the password for the Twitter account. Who knows. Anyway, if you want a tidy place to see the first eight competitors, check here. For the next seven, check below:
  • Jake Atlas - Atlas made headlines for coming out of the closet, but it's the wrestling that makes him a heroic representative of the LGBTQ+ community in the biz. He's been tearing it up, up and down the Pacific Coast, working not only for PWG but for Defy Wrestling in Seattle, All Pro Wrestling in San Francisco, and even AAA in Mexico. Atlas has even come east and competed for Game Changer Wrestling. He's gotta be considered a favorite to win the whole thing, especially since he's not signed to All Elite Wrestling like some other people who are favorites and thus he doesn't have to worry about an exclusivity deal preventing him from working PWG.
  • Tony Deppen - Another face familiar to PWG, Deppen has become one of the bedrocks of East Coast wrestling as well, namely in Chikara, where his manic energy and resemblance to Chuck Taylor have carried him to top heel heights as a member of Team FIST. No matter how far he makes it, he will be a delight to those in attendance.
  • Feníx - For my money, he's the best wrestler in the world, or if not, on a very short list of candidates. His breakneck working pace has put him in every promotion that will have both him and his brother, Pentagón, Jr. He's also a PWG regular and a former Tag Team Champion. While his AEW exclusivity will more than likely take him out of the running to win the thing, he will go deep most likely, and however far he goes, he will dazzle the crowd with his mastery of both traditional lucha libre and of the big highspots that will make you fear for his safety.
  • Lucky Kid - What's with all these kids in the tournament this year? Anyway, Lucky Kid, like A-Kid, is from Europe, but he made his bones in Westside Xtreme Wrestling in Germany. He comes highly touted from fans of that promotion, and well, you can't go wrong if you make it big there. Just look at all the wrestlers WWE poached from that company to stock its apostate tax shelter show in the United Kingdom.
  • Joey Janela - Another AEW signee, Janela will make his farewell to the Globe here with another BOLA appearance. Will he dive from the balcony? Will he let Caveman Ugg bite his bare feet? Or will he just keep it low key, enjoy some In 'N Out, and wrestle a few matches for a grateful crowd? Yeah, that last one is probably out of the question. Either way, the Bad Boy will make his last trip to PWG memorable in some way.
  • Brody King - King stands along with Atlas and probably Bandido as the heavy favorites so far. He's a PWG regular who isn't tied to AEW after BOLA is over, so you know he's gotta have a lot of juice behind him. The HOSS brawler will look to barrel through the rest of the field en route to a guaranteed shot at the PWG World Championship.
  • Barbaro Cavernario - The last announced name thus far is one of the other cavemen I was expecting (the other being Jungle Boy). Imagine if Jungle Boy gets announced and the final is him, Barbaro, and Ugg? Man, that would be quite the story for future generations of wrestling. Anyway, Barbaro comes from Mexico with the highest recommendations and also perhaps the rawest competitor in this thing. I expect whatever match he's in will get insanely rowdy.
And there you have it, 15 wrestlers down, nine more to go. How will the rest of the field shake out? I don't know. You gotta figure Jungle Boy will be involved. Other names that feel too easy are Puma King, Trey Miguel, Flamita, Laredo Kid, and of course, Pentagón. Chuck Taylor and Trent could be there too. Maybe they bring back Hechicero? I don't know. What I do know is my eyes will be peeled for the rest of the field, whenever Super Dragon gets to announcing it. The Battle of Los Angeles takes place September 19, 20, and 22, most likely at the Globe Theater in Los Angeles.

Daniel Bryan and 205 Live

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While it would result in great matches, there's no need for 205 Live to exist, let alone Bryan to go there
Photo Credit: WWE.com
So Daniel Bryan, the greatest professional wrestler in its history, has been teasing an announcement the last few weeks on Smackdown, one that keeps getting preempted for some reason. The rumors swirling around that announcement have portented an almost unthinkable scenario, however. Rumblings have given way to Bryan's transition from the main roster to 205 Live, the purgatory of WWE's main roster. If you're as shocked as I am, well, you're human. A little over five years ago, Bryan was the centerpiece of the most satisfying WrestleMania perhaps ever, and not even six months ago, he was one of the few heels on WWE's main roster to get heat not because he sucked, but because he was able to pull puppet strings and get people to jeer him just as easily as they cheered him both five years and one year ago.

Perhaps the logic behind the move is that Bryan can get people interested in any project he works on. Few times in his WWE tenure did he come out met with silence. Perhaps the only time in his career where no one reacted to him was the lull point in 2011 where he was booked flaccidly into his Money in the Bank win, and then after, booked in lazily as many briefcase holders do before he cashed it in in December. Read, he was only ineffective when creative assertively placed him in a position where no one could care about him. Now though, he's got Vince McMahon's ear, and he's one of the few wrestlers who probably has free reign, which makes me suspect the rumored move could be his idea.

Before WWE cleared him and when he was teasing leaving the company, he openly ruminated about some of the best wrestlers he could face off against, where he could flex his creative freedom with receptive opponents working a different style than what is expected on RAW and Smackdown. After re-signing, short of going to NXT, the only place on the roster where he could get a reasonable facsimile of that kind of tour would be going to 205 Live, a show that has a diverse mix of wrestlers with varied styles who work weekly with McMahon's focus less attuned to them. The 205 roster is stacked enough that if it broke away from WWE today, it could be a viable touring indie in any territory in this country or Canada. Chad Gable, Gran Metalik, Drew Gulak, Akira Tozawa, and Jack Gallagher among others make this show must-see even for people who poison themselves from too much main roster television in a given week. And Bryan would have tremendous matches with all of them.

Still, for whatever the arrangement is, and however Bryan would rehabilitate the Cruiserweight Championship, it shows how much weight classes in worked wrestling are, well, stupid. Bryan went to the top of the company weighing 200 pounds soaking wet. He was able to beat guys like Kane, Batista, and Big Show credibly because he's tremendous at wrestling. You know else is really good at wrestling? Just about anyone else at random on that 205 Live roster. Arguments against, say, Gulak being able to hang with, let alone beat, Brock Lesnar due to size discrepancies become null and void when you see Gulak twisting Lesnar's ever-reddening arms into configurations not thought possible. Pro wrestling has always been a theater where impossible becomes possible as the norm, which is why all the concern trolling over realism feels like an exercise in shrill gatekeeping.

If it's McMahon's will or even Bryan's will to be placed on 205 Live, there's not a thing anyone who still subscribes to WWE Network can do to stop it. It might even be appointment television/streaming, for all I know. The thing is though, the idea of limiting wrestling when its potential is limitless is a huge reason why WWE's structural rot is as pervasive as its moral rot. Hell, you could even say something similar about New Japan Pro Wrestling, given how well Shingo Takagi and, I guess, Will Ospreay are doing in the G1 Climax after they did the Best of the Super Juniors tournament. Obviously, coming for the New Japan Juniors will get a lot more people angry than going for 205 Live, but do you really need to have "small boi" titles when these guys can compete credibly against the bigger dudes? I mean, the reason why KUSHIDA is in NXT now is absolutely because of that false dichotomy. Maybe it's time to stop looking at a wrestler's weight to determine how well they get to be booked.

The REAL Competition at the Scenic City Invitational

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BE THERE OR BE SQUARE
Graphics Credit: Nick Iggy
The Scenic City Invitational has not only become one of the premiere tournaments in all American indie wrestling, but it has arguably put Chattanooga on the map as a major territory for American graps. Everyone who is someone is chomping at the bit to be booked at Southern Underground Pro, while the Making Towns Classic attracts some of the best female wrestlers around the country. However, for as much as the wrestling will be incredible on August 2 and 3, the real competition will happen after the wrestling tournament is over.

Tap Out: A Wrestling Tribute to Hot Ones will take place after SCI Night 2, and it will be hosted by SUP color commentator Steven McCash. Four wrestlers (at least four wrestlers already) have been announced to compete in a wing eating competition featuring ten sauces. Each sauce will be hotter than the last one, and if this picture is any indication, well, if the baseline is SRIRACHA, then man, these guys are going to be in for a long, long night. The four wrestlers who will be competing are as follows:
  • Daniel Makabe - The technical wizard will find few counters for hot sauce burn that don't involve dairy products or bread.
  • Jaden Newman - JV Jaden will be moving up to the big boy ranks. Will he be able to stand the heat, or will the BRUTALITY SAUCE knock him back down onto the bench?
  • O'Shay Edwards - The big boy hoss of the competition dishes out hard hits in the ring, but can he take the beating that the capsaicin will give him?
  • Nick Iggy - He might be the favorite, given how odd the diets of Carnies, capital or lowercase c, can be.
Now, I'm not sure where the competition will occur. I feel like it'll be at Soddy-Daisy High School, the venue for the actual SCI, but if you want specifics, you should probably ask Mr. McCash himself. Regardless of where it is, it will be a must-attend event, just to see how these big tough wrestlers can handle the heat.

Twitter Request Line, Vol. Two-Hundred-and-Nice

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Not a matter of if, but when...
Graphics via WWE.com
It's Twitter Request Line time, everyone! I take to Twitter to get questions about issues in wrestling, past and present, and answer them on here because 280 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:
The over/under date will be an announcement on September 26, possibly even for a debut the next week, a flash announcement much in the same way that WWECW's demise was announced the week before it was replaced with the original gameshow run of NXT. The "Paul Levesque is incredibly petty" side of me thinks they'll clear the under with ease. However, there's a certain side of me that thinks they'll wait on it because, a) they aren't going to go with the C-show going to a Fox network before Smackdown's debut on October 4, and b) they may want to play wait and see on All Elite Wrestling's TNT ratings to see how much of a threat they are. But I always lean more towards people in charge at WWE announcing it BEFORE September 26 even if it doesn't make the port over until October 9. So I'll take the under.


Ah yes, Pokémon Champion, the highest goal for all pre-teens in the world of Pocket Monsters! I would have the most splendiferous team, you'd see, consisting of the following:
  • Weavile - Fast and annoying, the first order of business would be to hit your opener with a Fake Out and then set up with Swords Dance plus powerful and expansive Same-Type Attack Bonus (or STAB) attacks of Ice Punch and Throat Chop. And if you send out a pesky Fighting-type, then it's onto...
  • Mimikyu - Oh, you think you're gonna get me with your Close Combat? Think again, binch. Mimikyu with Swords Dance/Shadow Sneak/Play Rough/Drain Punch in addition to its ability will pose a formidable risk to anyone trying to take the team out.
  • Alakazam - Physical attacking can only get you so far, so as Champion, I would need some special firepower in there, and what better than the OG overpowered Gen 1 MONSTER. Running Psychic/Dazzling Gleam/Shadow Ball/Calm Mind, Alakazam will be tough to beat unless you can outspeed him with a super-effective STAB attack.
  • Snorlax - Mind you, if you get past Alakazam, you will have all the heft and bulk of SNORLAX to get through. Body Slam will leave you paralyzed. Earthquake and Crunch round out the attacks, while Rest with a Chesto Berry will leave him charged up for another go-round.
  • Alolan Raichu - As Champion, I would have the ability to go around the world to build my team, and Alolan Raichu gives my team the zap it needs to take your challenge down. Thunderbolt/Psychic/Focus Blast/Nasty Plot will be your downfall.
  • Mega Venusaur - You didn't think you'd get past me without taking out MY LARGE ADULT POKÉMON SON, did you? Having the Thick Fat ability will make it hard for you to hit me with your Ice and Fire attacks, while Petal Blizzard/Earthquake/Outrage/Swords Dance will cause you to GET REKT, even if you send out the bane of my existence, Togekiss.
All in all, it's a pretty formidable team with weaknesses that you can exploit. After all, what's a Pokémon Champion without a way for you to beat him so you can beat the game?

Really, it doesn't beat gypping the Extreme Championship Wrestling roster out of money all while he was getting sugar daddy money from Vince McMahon, and then taking to Twitter years later to dress people down for accusing him of it. Like, he left "the boys" in shambles towards the end of that career. The Tommy Dreamer anecdote about how Heyman left him so destitute he thought about hopping the rail at WrestleMania X-7 and doing a murder-suicide live on pay-per-view should have been a fucking wake-up call to everyone. Dreamer should have at least gone into therapy, and Heyman should be in jail. Instead, everyone laughed it off, and Heyman got to get another cushy job with WWE creative. It's ludicrous.

Sticking with the home team for my first choice, Bryce Harper and "Smoke and Mirrors," Cody Rhodes' old WWE theme, would fit well because Harper is incredibly handsome, and Rhodes' old theme was for when he had that adjective as a nickname. The lyrics don't really describe looks, but the slickly-produced 80s throwback sound evoke images of beautiful people in questionable fashion possibly having gone to the bathroom to do cocaine. Am I saying Harper is on cocaine? No, I'm not, but really, if he did have a substance problem, that would be the one.

Anyway, number two would be Taichi's entrance music for Madison Bumgarner. Like Taichi, Bumgarner hits the ball hard in the limited situations he gets to shine. Also like Taichi's lip-syncing entrance, Bumgarner flaps his gums and nothing of substance ever comes out. Granted, MadBum will never ever be as cool as the Holy Emperor, but the entrance music fits too well. Finally, reaching back to the past, Kirk Gibson will get Dusty Rhodes' WWE theme music, because like Rhodes, he's born of a common man and shares a lot of apparent traits with the blue collar American, even if outside the game, that isn't necessarily the case.

The only way I could do that is if I truly believed kayfabe didn't matter, and no matter how much it's changed or shrunken over the years, it's still an important piece to the wrestling picture. I can't even do it for the sake of debate without violating my own protocol like a robot.

It's easy to say that I would have talked shit back to him and let him kick the shit out of me for lawsuit money, because that's what anyone would say with the benefit of 20/20 hindsight. Plus, I'm a chickenshit who hates feeling pain or bleeding. So yeah, I probably would have done the same thing as the other fan did. I would've said "sir, yes, sir," gotten it over with in as little time as possible, and then blabbed on the Internet to take him down in that way.

REALISTIC - The New York Yankees trade two prospects and some cash to the Texas Rangers for Shin-Soo Choo's entire contract and Mike Minor. The Yankees need pitching to complement their MASHING lineup, and because God hates me, the Phillies probably won't be in the running. But hey, if Minor goes to the Yankees, he won't go to the BARVES, Nationals, or any other National League Wild Card contender.

WHOA! - The New York Mets trade Jacob deGrom, who is 31 and whom they don't want to pay, Michael Conforto, whom they never seem to find a place for in the lineup anyway, and the injury prone Yoenis Cespedes to the Los Angeles Dodgers for Gavin Lux and Dustin May, their two top prospects, and Kenta Maeda. Having deGrom join Clayton Kershaw, Walker Buehler, and Hyun-Jin Ryu gives them the rotation they need to get over the hump and win the World Series after years of coming close. The mets get a serviceable starter in a lost year in Maeda and two top prospects that they can pair with Jeff McNeil and Pete Alonso.

HOLY SHIT, STOP THE PRESSES - The Los Angeles, California Angels of Anaheim send Mike Trout, whom they just signed to an extension but really don't want anymore in my fantasy world of making this trade, to the Philadelphia Phillies for Alec Bohm, Spencer Howard, Yacksel Rios, Mickey Moniak (all prospects), Zack Eflin, and however much cash the Angels want. This trade will deplete the Phillies of their farm, but it will also pair the best player in baseball (Trout) with Bryce Harper, JT Realmuto, Rhys Hoskins, and Jean Segura, giving the Phillies' offense enough juice to outslug teams by sheer will. It also will never, ever happen, one, because the Angels signed Trout to keep him, and two, because trades like this never happen in baseball anymore. Everyone wants to copy the Astros. You know what? It doesn't always work in baseball, especially since no other teams can have their general manager. You tank in basketball because the variance is lower because of roster size and immediate readiness of the players to contribute. Baseball? Yeah, that shit don't fly.

Solomonov may have Israeli food with Zahav and the donut/fried chicken game with Federal Donuts on lockdown, but he's not the only heavy hitter in Philadelphia. Stephen Starr is even more old money than he is, and his roster of restaurants is pretty impressive, including two of my personal favorites, Jones and Butcher and Singer. Jones is more casual in atmosphere and menu, and I put their fried chicken against anyone's, including Federal Donuts. Butcher and Singer is more of a formal joint, the kind of steakhouse you go to for your anniversary.

Protected user @earthdog asks:
Summer Question: What are your top five summertime desserts/treats, and were are the best places in the Delaware Valley to get these treats?
Water Ice - It sounds redundant, and it also is called "shaved ice" or "Italian ice" in other locales. The best place to get it is somewhere in South Philly, but for those who don't wanna venture into the city, you can stop at any Rita's and get something almost as good.

Ice Cream/Gelato - Only lactose-intolerant people seem not to enjoy this summertime staple. The best spot in the area to get it is Cocco's Gelateria in Clifton Heights, PA.

Cheeseburger - What, you thought only COOL treats were here? The cheeseburger is the quintessential summer food, and the best place to get it in the area is P'Unk Burger in South Philly, on East Passyunk Avenue.

Brisket - Again, what's more summer than slow-smoked barbecue? No better time to have your smoker on overnight than during vacation season. The best brisket I've had around here is at Sweet Lucy's Smokehouse on State Road in Northeast Philly.

Watermelon - The quintessential summer fresh fruit can be eaten as-is, or you can cut a hole into the melon and dump a shitload of booze into it so you can enjoy your fruit without ever having remembered eating any. Basically, anywhere you can get one for three bucks or less is the best.

Why did you tell me it originally had sauerkraut on it, which is the worst food people think is great? Ah well, since you got that dish without kraut, the answer is 100 percent absolutely yes. It looks great, but I can't look at it the same way knowing that kraut usually goes on it.

The first two are obvious because they're both local and the best two mascots in sports. I'm talking about the Phillie Phanatic and Gritty, obviously. The next one is the OG, the San Diego Chicken. Next is Mr. Met, only so I can give him a swirly for being associated with such a pathetic franchise. Finally, I'm coming local again for Swoop, but only so I can get his contact info in case the Eagles are bad this year and I need him to run me over with the Eagles' Youth Partnership Bus.

Star Wars - This one's harder because there's less source material and a whole lot more time with which to work, a lot of it a rasa tabula given that the only areas explored on film or in video games have been the Old Republic and, well, those damn Skywalkers. I liked the idea they had with the anthology films/Star Wars Stories to make actual archetype movies in the Star Wars universe. For example, Rogue One was clearly a heist film just set in the backdrop of the Death Star, and Solo was a gangster movie. So in that vein, why not make Days of Thunder on Tatooine with pod racing? You can divorce away from the Skywalkers or other major trappings and rehabilitate the image of pod racing, which was tarnished by how poorly received and transparently a marketing ploy it was in The Phantom Menace. Days of Thunder on the three-sunned sands? If you don't like that, you can just do The Godfather with the Hutts. I don't know.

Marvel - Marvel is a lot easier since it has SO much source material to work with, even more now that the X-Men and Fantastic Four are in the fold. Specifically with the Fantastic Four, now that property is in the hands of people who do good movies, unlike with the last two runs (I maintain that the first F4 movie, the one with Ioan Gruffudd, Jessica Alba, Chris Evans, and Michael Chiklis as the clan, was good if cheesy). Basically, I want control of the franchise so I can do a trilogy not only integrating them into the MCU, but also setting up two major antagonists for full-roster Avengers movies (Kang the Conqueror, Dr. Doom) and the beginning of the integration of mutants as well. The first movie would feature them vs. Mole Man, just like their first comics arc. The second movie would see them going back in time to ancient Egypt, where they would battle Rama Tut and his student, En Sabah Nur. In case those names aren't familiar, those are the alter egos for Kang and Apocalypse. The third movie would see Dr. Doom, who would be in the background of both the first movies, come to the forefront for a battle that would directly lead into his turn as the big bad for his Avengers movie.

Lessons from WrestleCircus: Collective Action Is Best

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WrestleCircus should be a wakeup call to everyone who doesn't know their worth
WrestleCircus, the Austin-based promotion that ghosted wrestlers before going on hiatus, once again ghosted wrestlers before closing in an official capacity. While the promoter released an official notice of closure just days before the next scheduled event, wrestlers didn't find out until they heard secondhand a few days ago. It left a lot of wrestlers scrambling for several reasons, from needing to fill a date they were depending on to trying to find a way back home or to their next booking because WrestleCircus was going to pay for their transportation home after the show. Truly, it was a shitty situation for all involved.

I'm not going to spend more time bashing the guys behind this promotion, because other promoters are doing that enough. I don't need to join that dogpile. That being said, this is not the first time that the people behind this company flaked out on wrestlers and fans alike. I don't want to tell anyone "I told you so" because when a promoter comes to you with a figure that looks too good to be true, you gotta take it, no matter what the reputation is. That's the life for an indie wrestler. You live on the margins to hit your dream, so you make potentially bad decisions because the money is good. And promoters know you can take them, because they have the leverage. Again, indie wrestling lives on the margins for the most part, but that doesn't stop the average promoter from trying to be a dollar store Vince McMahon.

Someone on Twitter said that the revenue split in WWE is 92 percent vs. 8 percent in favor of capital (read, McMahon, his kids, and Paul Levesque). I haven't cross-referenced it yet, but I mean, with how much money WWE brings in, even with paying Brock Lesnar eight figures, they can still pillage the roster's pay to enrich themselves if that figure is true. Indie promoters have the same mentality with a less lucrative pot. Profitable companies exist as-is with no apparent problems, even if "the boys" get gypped. Unprofitable ones, well, the ethical ones operate fine, but the unethical ones pull this kind of shit or worse.

The knives only really come out for the latter scenarios, but it's understandable given the fiscally conservative-leaning nature of locker rooms that they'd trust capital. For as woke as companies are getting regarding social issues, few wrestlers truly adopt ideas that put them at odds with the structural dynamics of payment, and almost none of them really do anything too rebellious. Zack Sabre, Jr. still cashes his checks from Bushiroad, and David Starr gladly takes envelopes from anyone who'll have him. Wrestling is too ingrained in its ways to where any one person can make a difference by themselves.

That being said, WrestleCircus didn't issue its statement until after there was an uproar not only from workers and fans, but from other promoters. If I had to guess, the main guy in charge would've let everything go without saying a word if he could, but direct action, even if that action was pressing the "Tweet" button, worked. Imagine how much wrestlers could change the world if they banded together in some kind of union and took their grievances to every promoter, from Swindle McBullshit running the local VFW with 19 greenhorns and Tatanka to Vince McMahon himself.

Ultimately, the decision to prevent shit like WrestleCircus from happening again is making sure wrestlers have real power from which to draw. Sadly, the barriers are harder to overcome than one might perceive. Again, wrestling locker rooms being havens for financially libertarian thought give many of the workers the idea that unions would kill the business, which is a falsehood, but a widely held one. Additionally, many wrestlers have strong feelings of loyalty to certain promoters. Some are outright friends of promoters. Hell, some of "the boys" ARE promoters. Look at Ethan Page with Alpha-1 Wrestling or even Cody, the Young Bucks, and Kenny Omega with All Elite Wrestling. I don't care how much you believe in a cause, or how you think people who don't employ good praxis are cowards. Human nature dictates that interpersonal interactions most often will triumph over ideological ones.

So how does one climb over that wall? The depressing answer is that it's a gradual process that often involves wrestling moving at the pace or slower than society at-large. The fact that wrestlers like Sabre and Starr exist to be conscious of these things helps. Of course, Sabre mostly working in Japan and Starr being obnoxious bordering on gross turns people off. But the thing about being on the right side of history is that you're going to see a lot of pushback from things that don't really matter, or that should be dealt with aside from the extraneous bullshit. Things like jumping on WrestleCircus are good signs that the tide might be changing. Hopefully, things like these start turning on lightbulbs in people's heads about their own worth. Someday, it's going to happen, but everytime Someday gets put off, well, more wrestlers suffer from it. It's hard, but it has to happen sooner rather than later, before Vince McMahon chokes the life out of the industry at-large, or even worse, before climate change chokes the Earth past the point of inhabitation.

NXT In 60 Seconds for July 24, 2019

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And yet
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Jordan Myles: comes out to a pop
Angel Garza: comes out to a bigger one, again ignores all guy fans in the front row to kiss the hand of a female one
Nigel and Beth: talk about how cute he is before the bell
Myles: proffers the hand of friendship
Garza: fakes taking it and spins away, then gets arm control
Nigel: again notes this is a handsome luchador
Myles: Cartwheel to a backflip to a basement dropkick! BALLIN'!
Full Sailors: Jordan Myles! Jordan Myles! Jordan Myles!
Him: Wrecking ball dropkick!
Garza: Legsweep into the apron!
Full Sailors: have mixed feelings about this
Garza: Into the steps with you! Now into the barricade! whips off the pants
Full Sailors: are above mixed feelings now
Nigel and Beth: are right there with them
Garza: Delayed butterfly backbreaker! Modified camel clutch! Superkick!
Myles: Kickout! Corner kicks! MDK corner lariat! Flying
Garza: Interceptor dropkick! Quebrada!
Myles: Dodge!
Garza: Ah, but I landed on my feet.
Myles: Good! Legsweep! Basement superkick! MDK II! Deadlift bridging German suplex!
Referee: Winner!
Nigel and Beth: aw
Myles: seems pleasantly slightly surprised

Shane Thorne: (after ripping off Mauro's headset) This tournament is dumb. None of these 8 can hold a candle to me at their best and my The Worst. I've been here while they've been wishing to be here. I don't need a tournament to break out; I'll do it all on my own.

Jonathan Grapples: picks a stip he likes that for some reason he thinks he's good at: a street fight

Xia Li: comes out to a decent pop
Bianca BelAir: gets about a 60-40 positive reaction Power into the corner! Shoulders to the ribs! Hammer shots! Glam Slam! Handspring moonsault across the back! Release Hallaway slam!
Full Sailors: (not all, but most) EST! EST! EST!
Bianca: Bulldog suplex with squats!
Xia: maybe I could
Bianca: Nope! You go splat! Kiss of Death!
Referee: Winner!

Killian Dain: reveals he jumped Riddle last week because of the name, and wants to give him a fuller tour of his world that he introduced the OB to last week

"Security Camera Footage" from the PC "earlier this week": shows Jessamyn Duke leaving a ring
Mia Yim: Surprise, mother[lover]!lays her the eff out, slamming her shoulder into an open locker door

Velveteen Dream: shows up in Hollywood casual gear (brother) with the NA championship I will never step down as champion, for the day the Dream isn't champion is the day the experience dies; when it dies it want to go strMayaight to hell, because that's how it would feel to not be champion. It felt like that when Roderick Strong dared claim victory...he's one hell of a man, and the Dream hears tell he can go all night, but no matter who is or what he can do he is not big enough to ride this ride.
Full Sailors: Vel vet een! Vel vet een! Vel vet een!
Dream: But maybe there's someone out there who can who IS big enough, and if they're within sound of the Dream's voice, the Dream would like to experience them.
Roderick Strong: Cool story, even though you didn't believe a single word you just said. You're ducking me because you're scared; even with the shades on I can see it in your eyes.
Dream: whips off the glasses and stares him down
Strong: I'm the most deserving challenger on this continent. I'm the real deal, and if you give me what I want in Toronto the experience will die. And that's undisputed.
Familar Music: comes on over the PA
Full Sailors: WTFHOORAY! Bruiserweight! Bruiserweight! Bruiserweight!
Pete Dunne: comes down to the ring
Roderick Strong: gets in his ex partner's face and gets his fingers snapped tout suite
Full Sailors: Bruiserweight! Bruiserweight! Bruiserweight!
Dunne: eyes the belt a few times and chuckles
Dream: backs up and leaves the ring, then holds it overhead a couple of times on his way out

[commercials]

Strong: What the hell is this with Dunne? He cannot get a shot when I'm the one who's pinned Dream!
Master Regal: I was talking to my mentor, the NXT UK GM Johnny Saint, and while I had planned on a singles match in Toronto, since we'll have Pete at our disposal it will now be a triple threat.
Strong: Favoritism! Disgusting. I should've known, but it's fine--there won't be a triple threat if you let me fight him next week and take him out.
Master Regal: I'll take it under advisement (he ends up doing it, and less importantly next week Breezus/Ryker as well as the other Breakout semi).
Strong: stomping off Unbelievable.

Kacy Catanzaro: comes out to a good pop
Io Shirai: comes out with the new Tron, theme, and all black everything down to the leather pants
Issa Look: thumbs up
Io: Okada-level dropkick at the bell! Basement Meteora! Butterfly backbreaker!
Candice LeRae: jumps Io Step up Owenzuigiri! Tope! grabs a chair
Io: flees and yells in Candice's direction
Candice: fumes from inside the ring holding the chair

The Champ: notes Regal's institutional biases, says Toronto will be a night of Undisputed gold, and makes his stipulation no stipulation since he's beaten Johnny Soon-Not-Even-Going-To-Be-Able-To-Call-Himself-Wrestling at it over the last 2 Takeovers

Keith Lee: comes out to a good pop
Full Sailors: ♫ Oh, bask in his glooooory! Oh, bask in his glooooooory! ♫
Damian Priest: comes out to a decent reaction, smirks at the singalong Speedball kicks!
Keith Lee: Jumping back kick that almost ended your LIFE do you KNOW WHO I AM!?
Full Sailors: NXT! NXT! NXT!
Keith: controls Priest with power as seen above
Priest: Modified Curb Stomp into the bottom buckle! Discus lariat! Crossbody! Falcon Arrow!
Keith: Kickout!
Priest: visibly frustrated Body shots! Pump kick!
Keith: Grizzly Magnum! POOOOOOOOOOUUUUUUUNCE!
Full Sailors: Keith Lee! (whoop whoop!) Keith Lee! (whoop whoop!)
Priest: Knee strike! Tope con hil--what the
Keith: Caught, and now
Priest: Slip out the back! Bell clap! Pump kick!
Keith: is Displeased
Priest: uses the ref as a shield Cyclone kick! Reckoning of the Dice!
Unharmed Referee: Winner!

Beyond Wrestling Uncharted Territory Episode 17 Reader's Digest

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Dickinson got ready for his big Americanrana match with Trashy Tim
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
Beyond Wrestling's weekly show came to everyone live this past Wednesday from the White Eagle in Worcester, MA. It was the last episode before this Sunday's Americanrana and the second-to-last episode in season one. The time has come to dive in:

LAX/EYFBO (Angel Ortiz, Mike Draztik/Santana) vs. Milk Chocolate (Brandon Watts, Randy Summers) and Bear Country (Bear Bronson, Bear Beefcake) vs. Da Hoodz (Chris Pyro, Davey Cash) - I'm grouping these two matches together, because they were both part-and-parcel inclusive of the build for EYFBO vs. Bear Country this Sunday, and also pretty much the same match in layout. The team that was meant to be a warm-up got out of the gates early but was smacked down, and then after a small comeback, the teams that were meant to win won. Granted, one match was better than the others; I'm not sure if Milk Chocolate was ever good, but they were really messy here, but I'm not sure either of these matches were meant to be "good," so to speak. They served their purpose. One other thing to add is that if you're standing far enough away from the television, you'd swear Draztik was actually Eddie Kingston. Draztik looks like a younger Kingston, and they have similar voice and speech cadence. Hopefully, when EYFBO eventually makes it to WWE, they won't ruin that thing going for him.

Leyla Hirsch vs. Alex Reynolds - I thank the Lord Bryan Danielson every day that I get to watch Hirsch wrestle. Every match is something a little different. Here, she was tasked with working a more traditional, less grapplefucky match against Reynolds, who attacked her and John Silver last week after their match. Versatility will help her, because she'll have to have great matches with a wide variety of opponents if she's going to keep the size detractors off her back. Then again, those morons will go in on her regardless because there's no pleasing someone like that. Besides, she maybe like five-foot-nothing, but she's solidly built from head to toe. If you think that her kicking the shit out of someone even as big as Reynolds, you're thicker than a milkshake. Anyway, this match was a really good back and forth that involved some angle-furthering with a John Silver run-in and Hirsch got a semi-clean win out of it. Win-win for everyone.

Nerder Death Kill (Nick Gage, Thomas Santell) vs. Club Cam (Cam Zagami, Christian Casanova) - Did you know Thomas Santell is a repackaged Antonio "The Promise" Thomas of WWE Heartthrobs and Northeast indie fame? I did not, and when I found out, it blew my damn mind. Anyway, the second week in a row, the machinations of Zagami and his ever-growing cadre of underlings foiled any semblance of a complete match here, but again, you gotta build up the feuds, even if Santell and Gage aren't anywhere near Zagami at Americanrana. Ken Doane though, he's such a good henchman type, and he can still kinda work. It's amazing he's stayed with wrestling for this long after WWE released him and no one outside of that odd Dragon Gate USA show really booked him that often.

Daniel Garcia vs. Kevin Blackwood - Something about the Discovery Gauntlet matches I've seen just haven't clicked with me. Garcia showed a lot of promise last week in under two minutes. This week, given a longer time with an opponent he's close to didn't really expand on that promise. There are two kinds of matches, generally — ones that follow a general story that may or may not include limbwork and designed long-term selling, and those that are just a series of spots. Now, I'm not Jim Cornette, and I don't think the latter is bad at all, but the spots have to flow together. This match seemed... blocky or clunky, just no flow whatsoever. It could be the chemistry. It could be their skill level. Or maybe it could be that they're still recuperating from being in a car crash six months ago together. I don't know.

The Butcher and the Blade (Andy Williams, Pepper Parks) vs. Josh Briggs and Anthony Greene - When you advertise a hoss, you might want to make sure they can physically impose over regular-sized wrestlers. For example, WALTER gets a rep as being this massive force of nature, and he's 6'4" and would have Randy Orton looking down on him. However, this tag match had no such problems with Williams and Briggs filling in their roles and slapping around like elephant seals. It's refreshing to see dudes who are big and can use their size for intimidation purposes when some parts of the world can be so bereft of giants that they resort to using Dad Bod Chris Jericho-types as monsters. Anyway, this match was briskly paced and felt like a good palate-cleanser after the prior one. Also, God help the Rock 'n Roll Express Sunday, because I'm not sure that they'll be able to handle Williams.

David Starr vs. Wheeler YUTA - First off, that was the first time I heard Starr's introduction ever (I know, I know, I'm a bad fan), and oh my god it is not only obnoxious as hell, but I can't believe he has the fucking audacity to put "good at Twitter" in there. First off, only two people are good at Twitter, @dril and Jose Canseco. Two, he's actively bad at Twitter, like terrible. Ugh. Thankfully though, the match was outstanding, the best of the night. Starr's reputation precedes him, which made him an excellent dance partner for YUTA, whom I am rapidly buying stock in. HE's been one of the better wrestlers on any card he's been on during his career, but the last few weeks have me convinced he's among the best wrestlers in the world right now. His counters are among the slickest, but he never does them in a way that sterilizes their impact, if that makes sense. This is a match that everyone should try to seek out.

Chris Dickinson vs. Timothy Thatcher - It's so good to see Thatcher back in a Beyond ring. Folks who dug him ushering in grapplefuck into EVOLVE should be advised that he first started doing that thing in Beyond on the East Coast at least. Seeing him not only go up against Dickinson but also physically dominate him at certain portions of the match were both wild to see, and it's also a testament to how good Dickinson has gotten over the years. Beyond has several top-end American indie wrestlers working for them, but that's been their MO all along, even if those wrestlers weren't as recognized. Anyway, the match was great all the way through, and the finish capped off with the full-slide, Toshiaki Kawada-style pin was an incredible visual.

Joey Janela UNCENSORED - Giving Joey Janela a live mic is always part of a recipe for a good time, and this instance was no different. That being said, I'm not sure I wanna see Janela die in the ring, but it adds great importance to his match with Starr, who came out at the end to give a stock e-fed reply, thinking he was the smartest guy in the room. I know at this point it's a collaborative effort, but man, Starr just annoys me.

Caveat Emptor, or Maybe The Parks and Defy Are Better Off Separate

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Los Parks are in hot water, but was it all their fault?
Photo Credit: Justin M. Knipper
Defy Wrestling held the first of two shows for its Super 8XGP tournament Friday, and on that show, Los Parks, LA Park and El Hijo del LA Park, took on the team of Warbeast, Jacob Fatu and The Almighty Sheik. The match was said to be a hard-hitting war, with Warbeast retaining, but it made headlines for what happened after the match. Los Parks took their frustrations out on the referee, Benjamin Roberts, beating on him and pouring water down his pants. At the time, it didn't seem like a big deal, because it's something they do with referees wherever they go. Folks thought Roberts was in on it, and that it was just an angle to get more heat on the team. You can see the video below:
I mean, it looked super innocent to the naked eye, but apparently, it was less than a collaborative effort. Apparently, Roberts was not in on the joke, and thus it came off as more a shoot humiliation attempt. The reasoning is unclear, whether he lingered too long and the Parks took the opportunity to do their signature post-match thing, or he tried to leave and they were mad they couldn't do it. However, it was bad enough that Defy went ahead and made public their intentions not to book the father and son duo ever again.

Several years ago, Chikara fell into a similar situation where Feníx loudly said "fuck" during his quarterfinal King of Trios match. Chikara is well-known to its fans and the wrestlers it regularly uses as family-friendly, so Mike Quackenbush was furious with him for uttering that particular word. However, not only was Feníx not a Chikara regular (his first round match was his first match in that company), but he also spoke exclusively Spanish and without the aid of a translator may not have gotten the gist of what Chikara was. Hell, he may not have even gotten a primer. Lack of communication was the issue there, as it is in this situation.

You would think that booking Los Parks should come with due diligence. Hell, booking ANYONE comes with due diligence, but especially someone like these two, who wrestle in a different culture than what Defy normally operates in. The ref bullying thing is standard operating procedure. If they had known about it and condoned it, they would, or at least should, have given Roberts a heads-up. If they knew and didn't condone it, then maybe we can heap a major part of the blame here on Los Parks. I don't want to fully absolve them, because attacking a non-participant, no matter how much of a work you think it is, should be something that comes with explicit consent, and if they didn't know it was okay, they should have held back. It's not an entire situation where you need to blame fully the promoters, although I do agree they deserve a lion's share of it for not doing their jobs. Still, you expect that going in that everyone's on the level. If not, then whose fault is it really?

The thing about wrestling promotion is that if the people running things want to command the attention that their so-called authority and the share of the purse they pull in dictates, they need to put in the work making sure everything goes off without a hitch. When Sexy Star shoots on someone because, uh, reasons, you could probably chalk that up to plausible deniability, although when she went in on Rosemary, Lady Shani, and Ayako Hamada, it wasn't the first time, and thus the CMLL bookers probably knew that was a chance going in. Then that deniability gets a lot less plausible. In this situation though, how can it be considered as anything but a total failure of the people putting the show together? Promoting and booking entails a lot more than telling the ref and "the boys" what the finish of the match will be. If you want respect as a manager, then manage your talent, manage your show. If managing means watching more than just one match of the person you're bringing in, then do it. If it's making sure you have a Spanish translator around for your Mexican and otherwise unilingual wrestlers, then so be it. But you have to do something. You can't just throw combustible elements out there and then shrug when things go pear-shaped.

That being said, cutting ties with Los Parks was probably the best thing Defy could have done. It has to come with the lesson though that you don't book someone that you don't know without doing your homework. It's a shame the great fans of Seattle and the Pacific Northwest in general now will not get to see Los Parks, but there's probably nothing you can do to repair the situation. Even if Defy bit the bullet and took the L, I don't think either LA Park or El Hijo are in the mood to make amends.

And then, of course, there's the entire chance that this is a work, which, congratulations everyone, y'all fed into the bullshit idea that Jim Cornette puts out that you have to believe it's real at all times in order to be valid. People are in on the joke nowadays. You don't need to work them that bad. But what do I know? Worked shoots are terrible, as referenced by WWE using them all the time and them failing hard. Defy is an indie wrestling promotion on the cutting edge, at least they should be. When you're in the position where WWE takes ideas from you, maybe you shouldn't take their half-baked ideas to poison your own well, okay?

G1 Climax Collect: Nights 8, 9, and 10

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KENTA's back. Tell a friend.
Photo Credit: NJPW1972.com
A relatively quiet week for the G1 Climax saw B-block catch up with A-block in number of matches, and also left only two wrestlers with unblemished records thus far. It's not a runaway by any stretch of the imagination, even if the A-block unbeaten now has a tiebreaker advantage over his closest competitor. Still, with five events down, it's still anyone's ballgame. And more importantly, the action still kicked all kinds of ass. For those of us who aren't necessarily involved in who wins and loses, that's the most important part. Now, it is time to head into the details.

He's Back - KENTA, it's fair to say, may just be back to his Pro Wrestling NOAH form, at least to the people who watched him in NOAH. Regardless of your exposure level to the guy who was Hideo Itami for fiv or so years, it's good to see that fire back in his belly. Personally, saying he was never good in WWE is revisionism. At least before his first injury, when he had the promise of a major league feud with Kevin Owens ahead of him, he was motivated and was doing good work against opponents of all shapes and sizes. But seeing him vs. Kazuchika Okada just annoy him and hit every little niche of antagonism really brought out the satisfaction. KENTA really doesn't do a whole lot of "moves," but that's not really why people like him anyway. He hits hard, and when he finds a good groove, he works it until there's nothing left in that niche. In many ways, that match with Okada, more than the Hiroshi Tanahashi, Lance Archer, or even EVIL, was a statement that he wasn't just in New Japan Pro Wrestling to cash a paycheck or nurse an injured body.

Now, for as good as the match was (and it was good, but might have been excellent had it shaved maybe six minutes off), the bigger question is will New Japan really go all the way and have Okada win the block as IWGP World Heavyweight Champion? It would give him either the opportunity to pick his WrestleKingdom opponent if he won, or it would set up an automatic rematch for January 4, barring a title switch or a briefcase loss. The thing with New Japan is that sometimes, it's hard to predict what Gedo is thinking, not because he's a master strategist, but because it feels like he's flying by the seat of his pants at times. Still, while A-block is not a foregone conclusion, and while Okada has lost two or more matches in the G1 before, it's going to be interesting to see if they pull the trigger on him sailing into the final match.

The Holy Emperor and the Knife Pervert - In addition to KENTA and I guess *sigh* Bad Luck Fale, this year's G1 isn't really lacking in strong heel presences. Taichi's presence in the tournament was questioned by some, but that "some" consisted of just utter dorks and nerds who don't appreciate a dude who rips his pants off mid-match and lip-syncs operatic showtunes. Jay White, conversely, doesn't really have a gimmick that isn't "being in the Bullet Club," but that's enough for him. Both guys — Taichi with putting Miho Abe in harm's way, using outside weaponry, and pulling the ref in the way of his moves; and White basically cursing, stalling, and having Gedo or Chase Owens run interference — basically follow the best path for a non-outsider, non-Fale heel, which is "being a little shit." One could argue KENTA is one too. The best way to get a differing reaction out of a crowd that expects one thing is to give them something completely different. It helps that Kevin Kelly and Rocky Romero show utter antipathy towards both. I wonder what they'll do the next B-block show when Taichi and White face off against each other?

The MVP Candidates Thus Far - So, I wrote about Jon Moxley's run last time, and well, he's kept pace. The Tetsuya Naito match was amazing, and the Shingo Takagi match may have been better. It's hard to say he's had the best slate of matches even in his block, because Takagi has been as hot, if not hotter. Since the first three matches, he lit the ring on fire not just with Moxley Night 8, but his Night 10 match against White was hard-hitting and also cathartic, given that in the moment, everyone hates the Knife Pervert. What about A-Block though? Despite lagging overall, it's not like that troupe hasn't been enjoyable. Will Ospreay, Sanada, and even Bad Luck Fale had enjoyable matches. However, A-block has had some good runs, like Lance Archer, Tanahashi, and Okada. But I feel like KENTA for reasons above is probably the best contender from that block. Of course, each competitor has four more matches left. And really, the Most Valuable Wrestler as named by a blog that has never won a damn award is probably on important to me and maybe a dozen of my most loyal readers. Still though, it's interesting to look at all the wrestlers and their entire slates.

Coming Up - There will be four shows between now and the next time one of these posts goes live, two shows per block. Of the two undefeated wrestlers, it feels like Okada is the one with a better chance to lose a match before next Monday. He has Lance Archer tomorrow night/morning, and Kota Ibushi on Saturday. While an Archer upset would be a bold piece of business, and even if he's a coward most of the year, Gedo can get saucy during the G1, I feel like it's Ibushi that's going to be the more likely upset bid. Moxley could lose to either Toru Yano or White. It actually would be fitting that Mox's debut undefeated streak would end at the hands of YTR in an incredibly disruptive yet entertaining fuck match. Maybe Moxley IS more likely to be knocked off his perch. Weird.

Anyway, as for matches to watch, a few have my attention. First is White vs. Taichi on Night 12, which for reasons stated above, is going to have perhaps the most interesting dynamic. For whom will the commentators pull? Will Abe and Gedo end up brawling on the outside of the ring? Will they just team up and beat the shit out of said commentators? The world will have to wait until Thursday. Another match on Thursday that looks really good is Tomohiro Ishii vs. Hirooki Goto. While everyone looked forward to and generally enjoyed Ishii vs. Jeff Cobb, it feels like Goto is more of a stylistic fit. So as not to spam with B-Block matches, the Archer/Zack Sabre, Jr. match from Night 13 will be intriguing in that Archer has excelled as a bully in this tournament, while ZSJ's bread and butter is catch-as-catch-can-style grappling. Which style will win out? Well, who's to say. Either way, the G1 has been an enjoyable tournament more than halfway through so far, and I expect a strong finish.

Words Matter, or The British Scene Has Bigger Problems Than "Virtue Signaling"

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Andrews maybe shouldn't use words the right has co-opted
Photo Credit: WWE.com
I was raised in a Catholic household and went to Catholic school from kindergarten through high school graduation. Although I have since freed myself from the shackles of Roman Catholicism, I have kept many worthwhile lessons with me from that otherwise iniquitous den of child abuse and unwarranted guilt-tripping. One of them is from one of Jesus' many instructions to his disciples, mainly about how to do good deeds from Matthew 6: 1-4. Mainly, he says not to do good deeds with showy pomp, but to do so in secret. In other words, don't do shit for the adulation, do it because it's the right thing to do. It's something I've kept with me over the years and have at least tried to follow. Of course, sometimes you do need to announce the good things you're doing as an example for those who need a little direction, but going out in the streets and trumpeting how much you give to charity while, say, cheating on your wife, sometimes against your "mistress'" will in private, well, that's probably more along the lines of what Jesus was talking about there.

Anyway, what does any of this have to do with pro wrestling? Well, it seems Welsh wrestler, Chikara alumnus, and current WWE UK "independent contractor" Mark Andrews has a little problem with people bragging about their good deeds, screenshotted because he deleted it:


On the surface, yeah, he's probably got a point, or at least he thinks he has a point. The main problem is the phrase he used, "virtue signaling." It is a dogwhistle for the right, specifically, the alt-right (read, Nazis) who take any sign of expressing an opinion that isn't horribly bigoted as a bad thing. You say you're for, say, reparations for slavery or radical redistribution of wealth? Some loser like Paul Joseph Watson who hasn't left his apartment in like 15 years or Ian Miles Cheong, who used to write a column called, and I shit you not, "Incel Corner" for noted Nazi pedophile Milo Yiannopoulos, will come out and tell you that you're only virtue signaling to get people to like you. I mean, marginalized folks liking you is a side effect of supporting and fighting for the right thing. I mean, what good is supporting equal rights for trans people when you shut up about it all the time?

The question then becomes why adopt far right terminology? As it turns out, maybe Andrews is kind of a shithead?


Yes, tweeting about having a medic backstage and unionizing is... bad? Well, I guess this dickhead really showed his ass. Ah well.

But playing Devil's Advocate here just a little bit, ignoring the above tweet, you could argue that Andrews maybe has a point, but that point gets muddled because he used a weapon commonly associated with chuds such as Steven Crowder or Tomi Lahren. If you think that it becomes an argument of semantics, you're wrong, flat out. Words matter. Actions matter. They all have connotations, whether you like it or not. I mean, it's not like there aren't any other ways to express that point. Like, maybe saying "doing good deeds are their own reward, no need to brag" or by simply writing down "Matthew 6: 1-4." If Andrews didn't know exactly what verse it was, hell, I bet he could have asked any random person in the locker room, since wrestling is only surpassed in number of loud and proud Christians by non-worked sport.

But the thing is that Andrews' assertion is wrong anyway. British Wrestling's biggest problem isn't what he terms "virtue signaling" anyway. First, the looming specter of WWE is threatening to choke the United Kingdom's scene from the inside out. If you think that its goal isn't complete world domination of professional wrestling, think again. It started by getting its hooks into PROGRESS and Insane Championship Wrestling, and now it has NXT UK. If you're not with the WWE bloc, you better hope you can catch a break in RevPro and thus segue into New Japan Pro Wrestling (and hope you don't run afoul of that shithead gatekeeper Will Ospreay), or that All Elite Wrestling gives you a shot. Neither one of those promotions is sucking up talent at the rate WWE is.

Even ignoring that, BritWres has two social problems that are way bigger than people not shutting up about the good things they do. For example, it seems like folks on the scene love themselves some underage sexual companionship. I'm not naming names right now, because I don't have any concrete evidence outside of everyone talking about it, but uh, at least one prominent BritWres guy is KNOWN for ignoring when a prospective partner say they're not 18 yet. The other one is that they really, really, REALLY love them some domestic abusers. I mean, look at the wholesale autoimmune response from everyone from Viper down to Flash Morgan Webster, to Bram's return to the British indie scene from Impact Wrestling. Hell, Webster even had Bram on his fucking podcast! I'd say Andrews maybe should read the police reports from Bram's domestic abuse arrests and realize that a frightened victim not wanting to press charges doesn't mean the abuser is innocent, but judging from his choice of words in this case, I'd say he probably wouldn't even dream of trying.

The Wrestling Blog's OFFICIAL Best in the World Rankings for July 29, 2019

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Did Cassidy put someone in a bodybag this weekend? No, no he didn't.
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
Welcome to a feature I like to call "Best in the World" rankings. They're not traditional power rankings per se, but they're rankings to see who is really the best in the world, a term bandied about like it's bottled water or something else really common. They're rankings decided by me, and don't you dare call them arbitrary lest I smack the taste out of your mouth. Without further ado, here's this week's list:

1. Orange Cassidy (Last Week: 3) - Not only did he retain the Independent Wrestling Championship last night, HE PUT A GUY IN THE GROUND. Wait, what you saying, RD Evans isn't dead, he's just retired? Well then, don't I look foolish.

2. YUU (Last Week: Not Ranked) - Not to be topped by Maki Itoh, YUU started learning words in English too. As it turns out, YUU IS ANTIFA, BABY!

3. Maki Itoh (Last Week: 7) - However, it's not like Itoh really is lagging in this department. In fact, in what can be considered "a mood,"she relays the same feelings I have towards this season, especially since my home air conditioner is broken.

4. Tomohiro Ishii (Last Week: 6) - Ishii split the last two G1 events with Tetsuya Naito (lost) and Juice Robinson (won). Even though Jon Moxley holds the tiebreaker over him, Ishii can still win the bracket if Moxley loses three or more matches and he wins out. Or, what could happen is Ishii could headbutt Gedo so hard he forgets he even has Mox on the roster, and thus Ishii wins by default. In that case, everyone wins! Except Mox, but he's used to it.

5. Kris Statlander (Last Week: Not Ranked) - Not only is she one of the top wrestlers not signed yet (yet, sad face), but she also brought the Muta Scale to Americanrana, and additionally, got vegan Kimber Lee to violate her principles when she licked Statlander's blood. Gross. I guess that's why Lee lost. No vegan diet? No vegan powers. Didn't anyone learn a lesson from Scott Pilgrim Vs. the World?

6. Officer Magnum (Last Week: 2) - His mommy brought home the Feast Championship Wrestling last night at Americanrana, so you know what that means? MORE TREATS FOR THE GOODEST BOY IN WRESTLING YAY!

7. White Pizza with Spinach (Last Week: Not Ranked)OFFICIAL HOLZERMAN HUNGERS SPONSORED ENTRY - Everyone loves pizza with the sauce, but what if I told you there's a whole world out there where pizza has oil and garlic instead of the red stuff? It's a gorgeous place with piquant bites and leafy toppings that will leave you speechless to how versatile the noble pie is.

8. Odell Beckham, Jr. (Last Week: Not Ranked) - Beckham has to be happy now that a real quarterback is throwing balls to him. Baker Mayfield may only have one year under his belt, but it's better than the junk Eli Manning was tossing his way, that's for sure.

9. Toru Yano (Last Week: 1) - So what if Yano didn't pick up any points in his last two outings? He's still selling DVDs, and as Kevin Kelly revealed to the world, isn't paying royalties to anyone whose name is on there aside from his. When a ruthless capitalistic corporation does that, it's shitty. However, when Toru Yano does it? It's comedy, baby!

10. Otis Dozovic (Last Week: 10) -

The Defending Trios Champs Want to Run It Back

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Will the Ants run it back?
Graphics via ChikaraPro.com
No one has ever won two straight King of Trios tournaments. It's a hard slate to crack. The Colony team of Fire Ant, Soldier Ant, and Green Ant v. 1.0 made consecutive finals. In 2010, they fell victim to the villainous Bruderschaft des Kreuzes team of Claudio Castagnoli (Cesaro), Ares, and Tursas. In 2011, they won the whole thing over their arch-rivals, Team FIST (Chuck Taylor, Icarus, and Johnny Gargano). What is more germane to this next team though, even though it is a variant of The Colony, is Team Sendai Girls, featuring Meiko Satomura, Cassandra Miyagi, and DASH Chisako. In 2016, they became the Queen of Trios team by defeating fellow Joshi squad Team JWP. They had a strong bid to repeat in the infamous King of Trios tournament in England in 2017, and they went all the way to the finals. However, British Strong Style, the trio consisting of Pete Dunne, Tyler Bate, and Trent Seven, felled them they were, in effect, the closest team ever to repeat.

Last year's winners made history in that it was the first time a single person repeated as a King of Trios winner. Fire Ant, as he did with his brothers in 2011, led two of the new breed of ants, Thief Ant and Green Ant v. 2.0, to the promised land. That team will, as the kids say, try to run it back this year, and they will do so in a field that might be favorable to them. Granted, the Ancient Order of Nations will look for some revenge. The Crucible is already lurking with its A-team of Ophidian, The Whisper, and Lance Steel. Much in the same way the BDK sent two teams to the tournament in 2010, might a B-team be in play with some of Ophidian's acolytes? And of course, there's Team FIST. There's ALWAYS Team FIST. The Kevin Steen to the Colony's El Generico, they have a receipt they want to give the ants for beating them in the quarterfinals last year.

Still, if any team is built to win the whole damn thing again, it's gotta be The Colony, right? I mean, Fire Ant has now been to the top of the mountain twice, and the only wrestler in the game with less fear than him is Pentagón, Jr. His teammates, though still young, now have the experience of going all the way under their belts. They know how to get the job done. They know the rigors. So what if Ophidian and Whisper have a legion of wastrels at their disposal. So what if Scott Steiner is on the horizon. They're the Colony. In many ways, they are Chikara. If anyone can repeat, it's them.

Even more intriguing an announcement, Alex Zayne was named as the second competitor in the Rey de Voladores tournament. You may have heard the name before on this very blog, as he was the dude who jumped off a trailer only to have Tony Deppen throw a chair at him at the Game Changer Wrestling backyard show. He's also been a regular at Pizza Party Wrestling. His legend is growing and growing, and now, he's got Chikara on his resume. Will he be able to wow yet another crowd? Well, I guess that remains to be seen.

The Colony is the ninth team to enter the King of Trios Tournament. The rest of the field is as follows:
  • Team Pump (Scott Steiner, Jordynne Grace, Petey Williams)
  • The Ancient Order of Nations (Mick Moretti, Adam Hoffman, Jack Bonza)
  • The Carnies (Kerry Awful, Nick Iggy, Tripp Cassidy)
  • The Embassy (Prince Nana, Jimmy Rave, Sal Rinauro)
  • The VeloCities (Mat Diamond, Jude London, Paris DeSilva)
  • Team FIST (Icarus, Tony Deppen, Travis Huckabee)
  • The Crucible (Ophidian, The Whisper, Lance Steel)
  • The Creatures of the Deep (Oceanea, Merlok, Hermit Crab)
Zayne will join Boomer Hatfield in the Rey de Voladores tournament. Catch both of those tourneys, the infamous Night 3 Tag Team Gauntlet, and much, much more between October 4-6 at the Goodwill Beneficial Association in Reading, PA. Tickets are on sale now.

Joey Janela Got Into Another Fight at a Blink-182 Concert, Only Less Embarrassing

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Janela and Blink-182, at it again!
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
Worked shoots suck. Blurring the line between real and fake in wrestling by going to the "real life" well just muddles the narrative and only impresses dickheads who still think pulling back the curtain while the cameras are rolling is cool for some reason. However, that doesn't necessarily mean all ports of real life incidents into kayfabe are bad. For example, remember when Joey Janela approached Enzo Amore at the Blink-182 concert in North Jersey, and the worst non-fight of the year erupted? Yeah, well, All Elite Wrestling decided it was going to use that as grease for the machine of building its card for All Out. Thankfully, nZo wasn't involved, but Janela was:



The best part about this was Blink-182's Mark Hoppus at the tail end exasperatedly noting Janela getting into it at one of his concerts again. The second best part was SURPRISE DARBY ALLIN leaping into the fray with Janela and Jimmy Havoc. Leaning into that incident is the smartest thing AEW has done in regards to building All Out so far, and it's not even close. I don't know if they should be leaning into everything that happens notably in real life, because I'm not sure the people in charge are entirely with it. That being said, this is a good way to set up a match.

WWE Writers Should Unionize

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McMahon's utter tyranny is reason that not only the wrestlers should unionize, but the writers too
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Unions in wrestling are a touchy subject, mainly because promoters have "the boys" brainwashed into thinking that unionization would destroy every company outside of WWE and All Elite Wrestling, and maybe even them too. The reasons as to why wrestlers should unionize are obvious, plentiful, and well-documented. If not for noted rat bitch Hulk Hogan, they may have done so already. It's a shitty situation that hopefully the locker room in All Elite Wrestling will remedy. They probably won't, though. Still, the need for unionization has never been more apparent in wrestling given the obscene amounts of money at play here with both AEW and WWE.

If you could believe it, there's another group in wrestling that needs unionization like I need to lose about 80 pounds from my frame, and that's WWE writers. The stories that emanate from former writers about how it is to work for psychopath capitalist Vince McMahon make you wonder how they haven't tried to band together already. The latest bit of malfeasance comes courtesy of a report from Ryan Satin that McMahon called for a rewrite of Smackdown hours before the show was to go on the air. While Dave Meltzer clarified on his audio show that it was "only" the opening and closing segments. Regardless of how much of the show needed a rewrite, either portion is still too major for a script overhaul hour before air.

The thing is that this demand isn't anything new. McMahon is reported to demand rewrites the day of the show more often than someone retweets @dril on Twitter. Anecdotes from former writers paint an even more damning picture with details that corroborate McMahon as megalomaniac. The average length of employment for writers seems to be months, if not weeks. Guys like Ryan Ward or Dave Kapoor are the exceptions, not the rules. From all accounts, the writers' room appears to be a place that could be improved by collective bargaining to force McMahon to give them better treatment. The writers should unionize. In fact, even more than the wrestlers, they have an easier path to unionization as they could probably more easily join the Writers' Guild of America than wrestlers could, say, the Screen Actors' Guild. It takes some convincing the wrestlers let alone SAG to classify them as actors based on wrestling alone, but there's no denying WWE's writers write a television show. They should be in that union already. Why aren't they?

With collective bargaining, writers would be able to force McMahon to accept scripts as they are instead of demanding constant rewrites. It's true that for as bad as RAW and Smackdown can be with McMahon's heavy influence that it could be worse given some ex-writers going public with their ideas. That being said, it's not like that angle where Heidenreich would be an unfrozen Nazi with Paul Heyman (a Jewish guy) as his manager would be the norm. Quality control still needs to happen even with union organization. That being said, how many actual ideas from the writers actually make it to screen without override? How many of those ideas are actually as bad as that Heidenreich one? It's a small sample size to judge an entire group of people, and McMahon's famous megalomania seems to make it likely more than half the show is filled with his ideas. Unionization would not only stop egregious actions like rewrites hours before the show, but it would give the writers more backbone to get their ideas on screen rather than having a show dominated by the McMahon brain.

I can't think of any reasons why the writers shouldn't unionize, but again, selling them on the idea that they need it would probably be difficult. So many people in creative consider themselves management anyway, and thus they don't think they need union protection. Still, for as much as the wrestler need collective bargaining, the writers not only need it as well, but they have an easier way to get there. If they want better treatment from McMahon, they gotta join the WGA. No matter how much they think they don't need one, every report that says McMahon demands a rewrite hours before a show goes on the air, or hell, even the story where Robert Evans was fired from his writer's job because Bret Hart said McMahon's name during his Hall of Fame speech, says otherwise.

Beyond Wrestling Uncharted Territory Season One Finale Reader's Digest

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YOU LEAVE THIS GOOD BOY ALONE
Photo Credit: TH
Hey, I watched this episode live!

Anthony Greene, Angel Sinclair, Ava Everett, and Josh Briggs vs. Cam Zagami, Kenn Doane, Richard Holliday, and Christian Casanova - It started as a trios match without Briggs or Holliday, but the latter attacked the Platinum Hunnies, so Briggs exclaimed that only he was allowed to mess with them and Greene. Man, Briggs really likes the word "motherfucker." I wonder if that's why he hasn't been signed yet. Ah well. The match was stock atomicos craziness and never really got started. It served more for set-up for the end of the show. The biggest eye-opener was that the Hunnies were actually pretty good in the ring, especially Sinclair. Hopefully they get to be more than just arm candy for Greene going forward.

Wheeler YUTA vs. Chuck O'Neil - I'm shocked that they pulled a WWE and put a rematch from the pay-per-view on the weekly show, but the story reason checked out. O'Neil beat YUTA at Americanrana, but it was via technical knockout, and the angle is that he's been incredibly horny to put YUTA in his armbar. YUTA has escaped in every situation, including in this match. YUTA has become one of the surest things on the indies, and it shone through here with a rematch opponent. He also created perhaps one of the best visuals in wrestling of the year when he locked in the YUTAgatame on O'Neil using "Big Bacon" Brad Hollister's crutch. While that seemed like an emphatic end to their feud, I have to wonder if it will continue given O'Neil's desire to armbar the shit out of YUTA. I guess that will be addressed when Uncharted Territory returns on October 3.

Bullet Joe vs. Daniel Garcia - I don't wanna shit too much on Garcia, but this is the second week in a row that I found him to be plodding and robotic, almost like a meaner Davey Richards. His opponent Bullet Joe, one of the best names I've heard this year, didn't do any favors. I don't want to spend too much time describing this one. Hopefully, the Discovery Gauntlet picks up when the show comes back.

Brandon Thurston vs. Jay Freddie - This one was a rematch from Episode 4, and holy shit, Thurston came out swinging like Freddie fucked his wife or killed his dog. It felt like manufactured enmity, but at this point, I'll take it over supposed blood rivals starting the match in the collar and elbow. Thurston, who's known mostly for his Wrestlenomics Radio and financial takes on Twitter, is showing he's one of the best underexposed talents in the damn country, and I think he could have a worse couple of guys to showcase against than YUTA a few weeks ago and Freddie here. Honestly, someone should do a grapplefuck round robin and let Thurston do his thing there. I think he'd be a great foil for someone like Timothy Thatcher.

The Top Dogs (Davienne, Skylar) and Sierra vs. Leyla Hirsch and Team Sea Stars (Ashley Vox, Delmi Exo) - First, this was the first match I've seen Hirsch involved in where she wasn't the focus, but that's okay given that her teammates have come such a long way and deserve the spotlight, Exo and Vox started out as wet-behind-the-ears rookies in Chikara and looked uncomfortable in a ring. Fast-forward to now when they look confident and impose their presences so well, it's astounding to see. The match itself was both crazy and more a furthering of the story of the Top Dogs bullying Sierra just because she wanted to be part of their clique. She's probably at the place now where the Sea Stars were in 2016. Either way, it was an enjoyable match, even though it had the cliche tower of doom spot that every multiwoman match seems to have, either on the indies or in WWE.

Milk Chocolate (Randy Summers, Brandon Watts) vs. The Butcher and the Blade (Andy Williams, Pepper Parks) - It never fails that every Butcher and the Blade match I've seen leaves me both impressed with Williams but underwhelmed with the match on the whole. Is it the opponents or is it just that BatB is difficult to have tag chemistry with? I probably need to see them against Bear Country to really get a feel for them. Anyway, this match was inoffensive, even if I continue to be unimpressed with Milk Chocolate. And again, Williams is one of the most unique wrestlers on the indies.

Alex Reynolds vs. Solo Darling - I can't really process this match because Reynolds' manager Mark Sterling KIDNAPPED OFFICER MAGNUM AND THREATENED TO THROW HIM OFF THE BALCONY. MY GOD, WHAT A SHITHEAD. I'M SO MAD, MAD MAD MAD MAD. In all seriousness though, it was a matter of time before someone used Darling's dog against her in a heel move. It's quite brilliant, and I'm shocked it hasn't happened before now. Right now, Reynolds and Sterling have surpassed even Club Cam as the biggest villains in Beyond Wrestling. That was probably the aim given what happened in the next match...

Nerder Death Kill (Nick Gage, Thomas Santell) vs. Bear Country (Bear Beefcake, Bear Bronson) - Although this match was some good stuff while it was going on, including Beefcake hitting a tope con hilo that got me all hot and bothered, the non-finish was probably the point. While one could bemoan the lack of a conclusive finish in the main event of the finale, it should be noted that neither NDK nor Bear Country should be losing clean right now, and the big finish, Santell and the gang getting their physical revenge on Club Cam, was bigger catharsis. It probably clears the slate for season two, and for as charming as the White Eagle was as a venue, the new Beyond exclusive building in Pawtucket will be interesting to see.
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