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Your Midweek Links: TLC for You and Me

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Get all your hot TLC takes here
Photo Credit: WWE.com
It's hump day, so here are some links to get you through the rest of the week:

Wrestling Links:

- John Cena, Ring Boy: WWE TLC 2013 Review [The Wrestling Blog]

- The Best and Worst of TLC 2013 [With Leather]

- Bang for Your Buck PPV Review: WWE TLC 2013 [Juice Make Sugar]

- WWE got crazy on the eve of TLC, and it was glorious [Grantland]

- The Best and Worst of RAW: Selfies, Maggle [With Leather]

- Is there anybody out there? [International Object]

- An interview with Ophidian and Hayley Jane [Explorations in Pro Wrestling]

- On the road again [Irresistible vs. Immovable]

- The worst back tattoos in wrestling [Wrestling on Earth]

- Ten things you didn't know about the WWE Performance Center [International Object]

Non-Wrestling Links:

- The Evster reviews the new Wawa turkey club [The 700 Level]

- Cookin' ATVS Style: Roast beef debris [And the Valley Shook]

- Foodball: Zesty Za'atar White Bean Dip [Kissing Suzy Kolber]

- Seinfeld'Festivus' writer calls bullshit on Fox News grievance [Gawker]

- Megyn Kelly is a race-hustler [Gawker]

- 11 insane things you didn't know about Santa Claus [io9]

- Hey, everyone, let's send 400 kids to the Texas Bowl [Troy Nunes Is an Absolute Magician]

- End cruelty to coaches on the hot seat [Good Bull Hunting]

- How Tampa won the 2017 Championship Game [Every Day Should Be Saturday]

- The Read-Option: Best and worst matchups of bowl season [Campus Union]

- Quantifying the best and worst of NFL announcers [Sports on Earth]

- A collection of verbs used as synonyms for passing [Kissing Suzy Kolber]

- NFL quarterback controversies: A study of two organizations [the Mighty MJD]

- The 2013 Haters' Guide to the Williams-Sonoma Catalog [Deadspin]

- The 12 Best Games for the DS [Kotaku]

- The Toplist Results: The 20 Best Mortal Kombat Kharacters [Dorkly]

- Good morning, sweet world: A relatively brief history of The Basketball Jones [The Classical]

- The best unfilmed scripts of 2013 according to The Black List [io9]

- Four movies that followed the wrong character [Cracked]

- The top 18 pop culture dragons who aren't Smaug [Topless Robot]

- Eight types of Tolkien fans [Dorkly]

- The secret origin of nerd, dork, and all the other things you've been called [io9]

Help Bring Armchair Booking to iOS

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Graphics Credit: Geoff Munn
Kickstarter for Ringmaster

One thing I've learned about human beings through my now 32 complete years of existence is that when they're truly passionate about something, they tend to want to have some modicum of control over it. Professional wrestling is one medium of entertainment where fans want to exert that control, but the business itself seems super-restrictive for entry. Games like EWR and TEW have scratched those itches over the years, and now Brian Papa is looking to bring that experience to iOS with Ringmaster. He needs help, however. To develop his app, which will allow you to play fantasy booker in a cathartic and entertaining fashion, he needs financial backing. That area is where you will come in.

He's set up several different backing options with perks, obviously. Give as much as you want or as little as you can afford to help get this interesting and fun concept off the ground. You'll be supporting a cool app with original illustrations. Nothing not to love about that.

Best Coast Bias: They Came To Sleigh

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'Tis the season to be Foley claw claw claw claw claw claw claw claw claw
Photo Credit: WWE.com
'Twas the week before Christmas, and on Ion TV
Was the final Main Event of 2013
It started off with an ex-Cactus dressed in red and white
Set to bring toys to the good boys and girls tonight

A reference point was searched for, but then I had to pause
As the chyron informed me it was straight up Foley Claus
But before a cheap pop he could elicit from his lips
Here came AxelBack to inform him he'd eaten too many chips

Suddenly, the Miz appeared singing mocking tunes
To put in their places these churlish goons
(Is he a face or heel?  It's hard to say
I suppose it depends on the situation, or even the day.)

So the main event was set up with this as a begin
Axel to be backed up by Ryback and Santa in corner Mizanin!
About the only thing that was truly scary
Was that it put A-Ry on commentary

But the main event happened and went off without a hitch
As back and forth on offense two former IC Champs would switch
Though I'm sure in some cases your core would get tickles
To find the most over man was jolly old St. Mickles!

Though Axel hit sweet neckbreakers and dropicked Mr. Must See
Not to mention throwing a lariat with the phylum enzui
He'd find that it was a woof ticket he sold
When he couldn't apply his dad's finishing hold

There went the hamstrings, and then the knee
All to set up a basement DDT
Not even a handful of tights could save Curtis now
Nor could the man who used to always have a deficit of chow

When the former Nexus member tried to stop the figure four
He'd be dropped by a Miz baseball slide all the way to the floor
The Big Guy would barely have pulled himself up from going south
Before he got a visit from Santa and Mandible Claused in his mouth!

And so this is the way Main Event ended the story
On the familiar ground of the good v. evil allegory
A Skull Crushing Finale, and a three count later
Foley stood proud in the ring, and Miz had temporarily silenced his haters

On a night where the ex-Chickbusters fell to blows
And Kaitlyn made her in-ring reappearance on WWE shows
Where the Sambo Voltron took down McMahal
It was the former WWE Champ who stood most tall

Whether going past 9k or tapping out former best friends
It brought the year in Main Event matches to a conclusive end
And I thought giddily to myself with another spike of the nog
Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays right here on the Wrestling Blog!

2013 Year in Review/2014 Year in Preview: Pro Wrestling Guerrilla

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Devin Chen: PWG DDT4 2013 1/12/13 &emdash;
All the feels
Photo Credit: Devin Chen

Promotion: Pro Wrestling Guerrilla

What Happened in 2013: PWG said farewell to three mainstays in 2013, two who made their splashes more recently, and a third who has been a staple of the company forever and a day. El Generico, the ebullient masked marvel who made PWG his main home away from home in Quebec… err I mean Mexico, said goodbye to the indies at the first event of the year, the annual DDT4 tag team tournament. He teamed with longtime rival and longertime friend Kevin Steen and made it to the finals before losing to the Young Bucks. After the match, Steen and Generico finally buried their hatchet and embraced. Many feels were had by those watching, whether live in attendance or months after on DVD. Yes, I shed a few tears. Shut up.

The other two who left were Sami Callihan and Samuray del Sol, both of whom were signed to WWE developmental contracts like the aforementioned Generico. Callihan was in prime position to end Adam Cole's reign as PWG World Champion, but in light of his signing, his best of three series for number one contendership for the title was won by Drake Younger instead. He was unsuccessful. Callihan would get one last crack at Cole, whose feud spanned across an entire country and over two promotions at least. They clashed one last time in a 60 minute Iron Man match, which Cole won.

After PWG celebrated its tenth anniversary at the aptly named show TEN, the tide of the company shifted. The Battle of Los Angeles Tournament was the biggest in a few years, and featured name talent from around the country like Anthony Nese, ACH, Tomasso Ciampa, Trent?, and Michael Elgin. However, Cole's Future Shock tag team partner, Kyle O'Reilly, ended up winning, putting the two squarely at odds with each other. While O'Reilly and Cole were long broken up in ROH, in PWG and other indie promotions, they were still pretty friendly with each other. So, their eventual title match would be amicable, right? Well, not exactly.

Devin Chen: PWG Is Your Body Ready? 6/15/13 &emdash;
The end of another era
Photo Credit: Devin Chen
After winning the tournament, Cole assaulted O'Reilly along with the Young Bucks. Candice LeRae made the save, but she got beaten down as well, which drew out Joey Ryan. Ryan proclaimed that no one would push around LeRae but himself, so he intervened on her and O'Reilly's behalf, only to get beaten down himself. Drake Younger and Kevin Steen were both drawn out as well, only instead of Steen fighting against his longtime rivals, he did the unthinkable and aligned with Cole and the Bucks. The group dubbed itself Mount Rushmore and began to reign terror on PWG, and their tyranny has continued unabated until this weekend, where Chris Hero will return to try and wrest the title from Cole. I'm sorry for writing these before promotions hold their final shows of the year.

2013 MVP: As much as Steen, Younger, Cole, or even Callihan were important to the PWG narrative, the co-MVPs of the company had to be the Young Bucks. Would El Generico's final match in PWG worked against anyone other than the Bucks? He already went out against Steen in ROH anyway. Would Steen have worked as a heel there without the Bucks behind him? Hell no. They're the most effective heels in the world, which is attributable to their expert way at walking the line. They don't have bad matches, they don't waste movement, and they're dedicated to the craft. PWG would be a far colder place without them.

What's Going to Happen in 2014: A lot of what happens in 2014 probably will hinge on All-Star Weekend X. I don't expect Cole to lose his Championship, although facing off against both Hero and Johnny Gargano in one weekend is not ideal for keeping one's title. Both guys could conceivably carry a Championship for a company of this stature, but I still believe the money match would be an ultimate blowoff between Cole and Drake Younger.

Devin Chen: PWG DDT4 2013 1/12/13 &emdash;
Best
Photo Credit: Devin Chen
Younger's stature in PWG has grown exponentially since his debut last summer, and I was absolutely shocked that he DIDN'T win the title at any time before the formation of Mount Rushmore. For whatever reason, PWG has pulled back on him, but he's still mega popular among the crowd in Reseda. Unless someone like ACH, Ricochet, or AR Fox catches absolute fire in the early months of next year, Younger has to be the guy to unseat Cole, maybe sometime in the summer after Cole has run through some other all-star type opponents.

PWG having a show this late in the year has also clouded their plans for the new year. Last year, they kicked off their slate with DDT4, which for my money is the best active tournament in professional wrestling (Missin' u, King of Trios). Either way, the tournament probably won't happen later than March, and that event should be where Mount Rushmore shows the first deficiencies in their armor. I forecast new Tag Team Champions, although at this point, I'm not sure if that team will be the Unbreakable Fucking Machines, the Inner City Machine Guns, or even the team of Joey Ryan and Candice LeRae.

Five Wrestlers to Watch in 2014:Candice LeRae - LeRae's popularity within PWG is the biggest argument against Super Dragon's public opinion of women in wrestling. While her non-title match with Adam Cole was bumped from All-Star Weekend X, I doubt that the crowd will stop supporting her. While having her be the one to unseat Cole for the title would be the best story if told correctly, I think that she'll at least get a hot Tag Title main event in the future against the Young Bucks.

PPRay - In the grand tradition of the Young Bucks and RockNES Monsters, the team of Pretty Peter Avalon and Ray Rosas could be the next big native team to break out and take PWG by storm. Avalon is almost as good a heel as the Brothers Jackson, and Rosas has the kind of reckless abandon and disregard for his own body that would suit him well against big bruisers like Johnny Goodtime, Willie Mack, or Kevin Steen.

ACH - While ROH was busy putting ACH into cooldown matches or facing him off against the same two tag teams at every show, PWG threw him to the wolves in only his second weekend with the company. Fans in Texas, Chicagoland, and Ohio know what ACH is all about. PWG fans and brass seem to have the same savvy, and I can totally see big things for him as a result.

Devin Chen: PWG TEN 8/9/13 &emdash;
Next World Champ?
Photo Credit: Devin Chen
Ricochet - You want a dark horse name for who can end 2014 holding the PWG World Championship? Ricochet is your man. His worldwide stock has skyrocketed in the last two years, and he's been associated with PWG for far longer than I even realized at first. I would pencil him in as the far-too-early-to-tell favorite to win the Battle of Los Angeles, and shortly thereafter, he could end up unseating Adam Cole (or the guy who does end up unseating him) for the gold in the aftermath.

Silas Young - Weird to include a guy who has yet to make his PWG debut, but he's making some waves in ROH. Generally, when someone starts to get big in ROH, they bafflingly pull back to the point where they need some external spark to get going. PWG has been ahead of the curve on countless guys ROH would later pick up the pace on. Young has a great look, works stiff, and has buzz around him from his days hossing around the Midwest. I would be shocked if he didn't get at least a look from PWG in 2014.

Three Things I Want to See Happen in 2014:1. A full-fledged PWG show at WrestleCon - Touring doesn't make sense for PWG, even within SoCal, because the Legion in Reseda is such a signature place for them (on top of cost addition, etc.). Internet pay-per-view doesn't work for them because the fussin'-and-a-feudin' between Gabe Sapolsky and Joe Koff would absolutely kill any chance for them to have that reach and keep the roster that makes them great. With those riders being mentioned, I still think PWG can export their show viably through WrestleCon.

A lot of what makes the promotion great is the crowd, but if any group of people can come together and replicate Reseda as faithfully as possible without transplanting the entire mass of fans miles east, it would be the mass of hardcore fans gathered in New Orleans (or insert city here) for Mania weekend. SHIMMER provided a good precedent. They'll never leave the Eagles Club on a regular basis, but one show in a marquee area? Their WrestleCon venture worked so well last year that they're doing it again this year. I see no reason why PWG can't do the same.

Devin Chen: PWG All Star Weekend 8 Night 2 3/23/13 &emdash;
The year of Younger in 2014?
Photo Credit: Devin Chen
2. Don't pull back off Candice LeRae - As much as I think LeRae is destined to be the next big thing in PWG, I thought the same thing about wrestlers like Brandon Gatson and Willie Mack who didn't have the stigma from the front office of being a woman. Whatever happens, PWG can't hold back on her. Even if she doesn't hold a single belt ever, she still can't go back to opening match multi-person tags or even worse, away from the company altogether.

3. Lucha libre integration, please - PWG has always had a reputation of being on the cutting edge. One reason has been their willingness to import wrestlers from various places around the globe. Mexico is right next door, and Southern California is a lucha hotbed. The art of lucha may be the hardest to understand and the most mysterious of all the different styles. Combining it within the fabric of PWG could be the best way to educate even more people, replace the gap left by Chikara (even though I would argue the company has never been an avenue for straight lucha), and bring a new wrinkle into what that company has to offer.

Throwback Thursday: "What Do You Mean He Bought Santa Claus?"

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Xanta Klaus is widely regarded as one of the worst characters in WWF/E history. I'm not sure if he was meant to be a character with staying power or just a device to show how much of a scrooge Ted DiBiase could be. However, regardless of who the character Balls Mahoney was supposed to be in WWE after that segment, the actual swerve and attack was pretty brilliantly done. Of course, Jerry Lawler drops some casual, ignorant racism towards Savio Vega's way, but his general crappiness was cancelled out by Vince McMahon's general cheese. God, I miss that Vinny Mac.

The Wrestling Podcast, Episode 124: Dylan Hales

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Orton is one subject reviewed with a fine-tooth comb
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Episode 124: Auld Lang Spynebuster

Dylan Hales of the Wrestling Culture podcast is back on the show this week to discuss the year in review. We go through some of the best in-ring guys first, and agree that that consensus top three are Daniel Bryan, Antonio Cesaro, and Sami Zayn. We get into the weird case of The Shield from an in-ring standpoint, and wrestlers like Kevin Steen, Athena, and Goldust, who also have stood out at various points during the year. We discuss WWE in detail, including a comparison of Bryan and Randy Orton. Dylan thinks that Bryan gets the benefit of the doubt from a lot of fans, but that ultimately, he will be fine as a main event guy. He also floats the theory that Bryan got as big as he's gotten because WWE hasn't gotten behind him like they did Orton. We talk about what needs to be done to help TNA get out of its doldrums, and Dylan gives a quick and dirty review of the year on lucha libre. We finish up by looking ahead to where wrestling will be in the coming year.

Direct link for your downloading pleasure

Pro Wrestling Only

The 2013 Bloggie Award Nominations: Moment, Wrestler, Promotion

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Henry had me fooled
Photo Credit: WWE.com
I was going to do these nomination posts separately, but I've just been so goddamn busy this week...

Moment of the Year

This award is for the point on a show that provided emotional impact, memorability, and contribution of overall quality to the show.

Prior Winners:
2009 - Jeff Hardy gives CM Punk a Swanton Bomb from the top of a ladder in the ring to the announce table
2010 - The Nexus debuts
2011 - CM Punk exits Chicago with the WWE Championship held hostage
2012 - Matthew Palmer leaps from the balcony at the Mohawk and takes Rachel Summerlyn with him

And the nominees are...
Bully Ray Reveals He Is Aces and Eights President - Sometimes, even a blind squirrel finds a nut, and sometimes, TNA can stumble into a coherent, well-done story with a sensible swerve. The Aces and Eights angle may have died with a whimper, but Bully Ray working the Hogan family and then making the reveal at Lockdown was a rare stroke of brilliance that stood with the best things to happen in any company all year.

Damien Sandow Double-Crosses Cody Rhodes and Wins the World Heavyweight Championship Money in the Bank Match - Sandow coming out of the shadows to sucker his then-partner was one of those "Holy shit!" happenings that not only worked within the moment but set in motion the rest of the year in WWE. However, putting aside the aftermath of the actual turn, Sandow coming out of nowhere and Rhodes bumping off the ladder made this an excellent moment on execution alone.

Mark Henry Suckers John Cena into Believing He'd Retire and Attacks Him - Henry wasn't just believable and earnest in a wrestling sense. If he wasn't sending tapes of his tearful retirement speech-turned-assault on the WWE Champion to the Emmys and Golden Globes for consideration, then he wasn't being ambitions enough. Henry showed that execution was absolutely vital towards pulling off a successful swerve, and dammit, he even had me believing he was really hanging 'em up.

Mount Rushmore Forms at the end of Battle of Los Angeles, Crushing Drake Younger, Candice LeRae, Joey Ryan, and Kyle O'Reilly Under Its Foot - For a company that doesn't run many angles, they sure do know how to kick forceful ones off. Four different babyfaces met glorious death in battle in the establishment of their big heel stable, capped off by a turn many thought impossible in Kevin Steen.

Sami Zayn Executes a Leaping, Through-the-Corner Tornado DDT on Antonio Cesaro to the Floor during Their Best Two-out-of-Three Falls Match - High spots in wrestling can be numbing for how frequently they happen, but Zayn in his magnum opus in developmental to date, combined his amazing, athletic plancha DDT with an uncanny handle on the moment in what could have been the biggest NXT match of 2013 and created a singular place in time to remember. Sure, he lost, but this spot hopefully made damn sure that everyone watching knew he put up a spectacular fight.

Wrestler of the Year

This is the award for the wrestler who excelled highest critically inside and out of the ring.

Prior Winners:
2009 - Chris Jericho
2010 - The Miz
2011 - CM Punk
2012 - Daniel Bryan

And the nominees are...
Chuck Taylor - Dragon Gate USA, EVOLVE, Chikara, Pro Wrestling Guerrilla, and most importantly, Instagram Video. Chuck Taylor has mastered all these promotions and media in 2013. I would dare say he's been an innovator. Sure, how others might judge how positive his innovations are would depend on whether they enjoyed the 24/7 Championship, but I thought all the different ways the titles changed hands, from traditional to the arcane, were outstanding.

Daniel Bryan - Bryan took his 2012 and at least held serve in 2013. Arguably, his in-ring output this year far surpassed what it was last year, and his character development was on a main event level. Where he shone most was in crowd manipulation, which at any stage of the game is vastly important. Bryan, despite physical limitations and sometimes counterintuitive booking, has grown his character.

Randy Orton - For a decade-plus veteran who has been mostly a creative flop to come on as strongly as Orton has in the last year is impressive. He's had two stretches this year where his character was intriguing to say the least. The first was when he was almost a sympathetic figure when he was uneasy allies first with Sheamus and Big Show and then again with Team Hell No. Second occurred starting during the RAW in Manchester when the Authority was on vacation. He developed his bratty streak, and became the best character on RAW for the last two months of the year.

Sami Zayn - He showed up to Full Sail and electrified the future of both NXT and WWE. His in-ring action, even at DDT4 before dropping the El Generico mask, spoke for itself, but he took to his maskless character so seamlessly. His backs-and-forths with Bo Dallas, his cocksure bravado towards challenging Antonio Cesaro, and especially his flirtatious chemistry with Renee Young, among other things, have made him the cult of personality within NXT.

The Shield - On one hand, nominating three dudes for a Wrestler of the Year award might come off as a cop out. On the other hand, their entire existence, until the friction towards the end of the year, has been couched in their fluid teamwork. They are a unit, and everything they did as characters was to further their own collective agenda rather than making anything about their own individual personae. They are perhaps the most unique stable in WWE history, and their mission has been to be three parts of one greater character.

Promotion of the Year

For the company who best furthered the creative, critical, and/or qualitative boundaries of professional wrestling in the calendar year.

Prior Winners:
2009 - ECW (WWE)
2010 - Chikara
2011 - Chikara
2012 - Anarchy Championship Wrestling

And the nominees are...
Beyond Wrestling - No company made a bigger leap in 2013 than Beyond Wrestling, who took their mostly underground operation public in a big way. Their slate of shows in the second half of the year showed great ambition, ambition that paid off with a larger fanbase, a cash-in of creative potential, and the establishment of the newest marquee arena in independent wrestling. Their rise this year deserves, no, demands recognition.

Chikara - They're running with less than half a year of in-ring, active promotion, but for as controversial as their shutdown has been, I would be lying if I said I didn't find any artistic merit in what they were doing. Plus, the action before the shutdown was on par with what they have been producing in prior years.

Pro Wrestling Guerrilla - PWG has set such a high bar for themselves that taking them for granted can be dangerously easy. Not only did they consistently produce some of the best in-ring action in America, the angles that they did implement were solid. Southern California's flagship promotion continues its residence at the top of indie wrestling's quality heap.

World Wrestling Entertainment - Their creative direction may have been spotty at times, but they deserve all the credit in the world for taking such a large chunk of their television time and dedicating it to wrestling. Their free TV was jam-packed full of some of the best wrestling action in the country. Allowing guys like Daniel Bryan, The Shield, Antonio Cesaro, Sheamus, CM Punk, and the various other cast members they have to create art in the ring is a plus. Even though their overall stories have been turbulent, they have also created several iconic moments on their programming. All in all, WWE had a solid year.

WWE NXT - Obviously, NXT is owned and operated by WWE, but by and large, the goings on at Full Sail University are in a parallel universe from the main WWE narrative. In many ways, the developmental territory has it over the big company. While the wrestling action wasn't as consistent on a week to week basis, the top level matches (Kassius Ohno/William Regal, Antonio Cesaro/Sami Zayn, etc.) are more than comparable with WWE's best. They also have created stories and characters that are among the best of any promotion in America.

Any Shows This Weekend? Christmas Chaos!

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Devin Chen: PWG TEN 8/9/13 &emdash;
The Bucks will be front and center this weekend during a double shot of PWG shows
Photo Credit: Devin Chen

'Twas the weekend before Christmas, and all through the land, all the wrestlers were stirring with shows, oh so grand! Just because the calendar has reached single digits between the current date and Christmas doesn't mean that wrestling will have visions of sugar plums dancing in their heads. Check Pro Wrestling Events for the full slate of shows, but for the marquee slates this weekend, well, I've got you covered.

FRIDAY

Pro Wrestling Guerrilla is the main event of the weekend with All-Star Weekend X. Head to the American Legion, Post #308 in Reseda, CA for an 8 PM bell time. Chris Hero returns to PWG, and he gets to cut to the front of the line to face Adam Cole for his title. The rest of Mount Rushmore - the Young Bucks and Kevin Steen - will be in action against AR Fox, Ricochet, and Rich Swann. Davey Richards indie farewell continues against Johnny Gargano, while his American Wolves partner Eddie Edwards teams with his Dojo Bros. partner Roderick Strong against Chuck Taylor and Trent?, otherwise known as the Best Friends. ACH will attempt to topple the power pack known as Michael Elgin, while Tomasso Ciampa battles Drake Younger. Candice LeRae and Joey Ryan tackle the RockNES Monsters, while Brian Cage and Anthony Nese will tangle to round out night one.

NWA Houston's Crimson Christmas has a bell time of 7:30 PM local at the VFW Post 8905 in Cypress, TX. Byron Wilcott will defend his LoneStar Championship against Lance Hoyt. Also on the show will be Carson, Jax Dane, and Raymond Rowe.

SATURDAY

All-Star Weekend X continues for PWG at the same venue with the same bell time, only on Saturday. The Champion will defend against Johnny Gargano, be it Adam Cole or Chris Hero. The loser of that match from Friday will draw ACH. The Young Bucks and Kevin Steen will be in trios action again, this time against Candice LeRae, Joey Ryan, and Drake Younger. AR Fox and Rich Swann take on the Dojo Bros., while Davey Richards' ostensible farewell match to PWG will be against Ricochet. The Best Friends take on the Unbreakable Fucking Machines of Brian Cage and Michael Elgin, while three way tag action will throw PPRay (Peter Avalon and Ray Rosas), Willie Mack and B-Boy, and the RockNES Monsters into the fray. Finally, Tomasso Ciampa will take on Anthony Nese.

New York Wrestling Connection's Tour de Circus takes place at the NYWC Sportatorium in Deer Park, NY. Doors will open at 6 PM local time. The show will feature an extreme rules match between Justin Credible and Matt Striker. Also scheduled to appear will be Mikey Whipwreck, Stockade, Mike Mondo, The Big O, Jesse Neal, Marti Belle, and Francis Kipland Stevens.

SUNDAY

IWA Mid-South and Evolution Pro Wrestling will be teaming up to present For the Love of Leanna, a benefit show to be held at the Jammerz Skate Zone in Clarksville, IN at 7 PM local time. If you cannot make the show and want to help raise funds for Leanna, a 14 year old battling cancer for the third time, you can donate directly to their Go Fund Me page. For those who are heading out to the show, be prepared for action featuring Reed Bentley vs. Zach Gowen, Jimmy Jacobs against Christian Rose, and appearances from Mickie Knuckles, Sabu, Ian Rotten, the Submission Squad, and Jonathan Gresham.

When you're a wrestling fan, every weekend is the most wonderful time of the year. But to keep it wonderful, you need to go out to shows. Even if you're not familiar with the companies in your area, take a chance. Remember, the art of wrestling only grows when you support it. Besides, your favorite wrestlers or promotions may be out there; you just don't know it yet.

Year End Sorting Bins, 2013: Heck Yeah, I'll Buy Your T-Shirt

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Photo & Video Sharing by SmugMug
Missin' u, Tozawa
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
Once again, this is going to be a big one. Twenty-five will get writeups, and the rest will be listed after the jump. I like being positive. SO WHAT? Here are the creme de la creme of wrestlers, the guys who are awesome, more than worthy of praise. These are my favorite wrestlers.

Akira Tozawa - Absence makes the heart grow fonder, y'know. I haven't seen Tozawa at all this year, and unless Gabe Sapolsky either takes the ridiculous rental limit off his VODs or actually starts releasing DVDs, I probably won't get to see him. None of those reasons diminish how awesome Tozawa-san is, though.

Kevin Steen - Steen is the old reliable of the indies for me. No matter the card's providence is, if Steen is booked for a match, that show is going to have one redeeming quality. He's also, by far, the best interaction on Twitter among indie wrestlers.

Tommy Dreamer - I've always had a soft spot for Tommy Dreamer, going all the way back to 1996. I don't know if he's gotten better with age, but he seems to bring the right mixture of nostalgia and bona fides to back his nostalgia up. I guess he gets points for being the one guy who hangs onto his ECW legacy but isn't doing it embarrasingly.

Brock Lesnar - I am serious. I will start a Tumblr page dedicated to shipping Lesnar and Jimmy John's sandwiches. Also, "SAY SOMETHIN' STUPID, PAUL."

Frightmare - Of all the wrestlers I watch, Frightmare most resembles a pinball. While his reckless style of bumping makes me fear for his well-being, I admit that it's very fun to watch.

Prime Time Players - They're the ultimate '80s tag team. One guy can wrestle his ass off (Young), and the other guy has +10 in charisma (O'Neil). Plus, PANCAKE PATTERSON.

Willie Mack - I'm so psyched that he got to wrestle Samoa Joe this year (I'll watch it eventually, I swear!). He fell off the map inexplicably in PWG. He should be one of those dudes wrestling all the big names from back east. I guess he'll have to do that in CZW, hopefully.

All Angel Blue Everything
Photo Credit: Texas Anarchy
Angel Blue - She's naturally such a great heel that it's entertaining to watch her needle both her opponents and the crowd. She's an artist if the medium was "inciting negative feelings in a mass of people for show."

AJ Lee - What does WWE do the one legitimately gifted female performer who gets over because she's good at nearly everything she does? They shit on her at every turn. She's too good for WWE. I kinda hope she shoot-quits in the middle of the ring and flips everyone off on her way out the arena.

Eric Young - Young is legitimately one of the funniest dudes in wrestling.

Brian Cage - I've seen a lot of feats of HOSS in my life, but the ring-in superplex he does standing on the second rope is Goddamn amazing. I wanna see it live one day.

Dusty Rhodes - I do the "Dusty voice" on Twitter whenever WWE decides to grace us with his presence. The action might come off as mocking to some, and I guess I get that. However, imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, and I pay tribute to Big Dust through humor. Believe me, if I wanted to make fun of Dusty Rhodes, for one, I would be dead because God would strike me down with a lightning bolt, and two, I wouldn't show it through rapt transcription of things he says or things I would imagine him saying through tweet form.

Rich Swann - I've seen him do the standing 450 more than a few times, and each time, it gets more and more impressive. Then I see him break dancing or needling his teammate or leading the Reseda crowd in an a capella rendition of Lionel Ritchie's "All Night Long," and I forget about how impressive the standing 450 is.

Santino Marella - I thought he lost his groove, but this year, he came back pretty strong. I guess comedy just needs a chance to recharge the batteries.

Mask or no mask, the best
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Sami Zayn - Like many other fans, I bemoaned the independent scene's loss of El Generico, because that character was special and made entire shows worth going to just by his presence. I never thought he'd flounder in WWE, because his brand of likeable magnetism seemed to be able to translate past all kinds of gimmicks. The mask didn't define Remi Sebei, the person, so why wouldn't he be able to succeed regardless of what the WWE NXT Chop Shop would do to him? Not only has he become the face of NXT, but he might be the most transcendent wrestler ever to come through developmental. I could not be happier.

The Canadian Ninjas - The funniest thing about the Ninjas is that both of them can be not only believable good guys, but super-effective ones as well. Portia Perez showed it in ACW last year, and watching Nicole Matthews work in ECCW has been a revelation.

Summer Rae - Yes, she's an attractive, leggy blond, and I can recognize that all day long. However, I can't imagine the Fandango character being as great as he is without her as a manager. Her scowl game is on point.

Marion Fontaine - The Extravaganza of Wrestling Exhibitions was at least tied for the most unique and innovative concept of the year with Chuck Taylor's 24/7 Championship run on Instagram video. You don't understand how happy dudes like Fontaine make me who aren't just happy to do the same old shit that every promoter has ever done since the dawn of the business.

Bob Backlund - Once, just one more time, let me see Backlund lock someone in the crossface chicken wing. I will die happy.

Bobby Fish - The best part about his character is that in most social circles, he'd be considered stylish and cool. But to the sweaty dudes who sit in the front row at ROH shows and wear knockoff Affliction shirts and wing quarters at the Hoopla Hotties? He doesn't even have to open his mouth to get heat.

Fred Yehi - God, I really want him to work in places where you people (YOU PEOPLE?) will actually see him wrestle. He has to be seen. Has to.

Aww yeah, Bobby B
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Jakob Hammermeier - In hindsight, Aniversario: Never Compromise should have ended after the Donst/Loudspeaker match, if only because ending the show with the birth of "Stone Cold" Jakob Hammermeier would have been equally as epic as shutting the whole place down.

The Young Bucks - The Bucks have pretty much defined themselves not only by doing the most blatant old school heel shtick, but by completely and absolutely throwing themselves into it. I defy anyone to name a more entertaining move than Matt Jackson's handspring backflip corner back rake.

Gavin Loudspeaker - Only two ring announcers are worth noting, ever - Howard Finkel and Gavin Loudspeaker. Everyone else might as well be the trumpet-voiced teachers from Peanuts. (Notable exception is Brandon Stroud, whom I haven't had the pleasure of listening work yet.)

Chris Jericho - I will always love Chris Jericho, but his Cool Dad stuff from this past year gave me major pause about including him in his normal, top-favorite-guys-ever bin. Still, any wrestling show is richer for having him perform on them.

The Osirian Portal
Matthew Palmer
Dasher Hatfield
Jock Samson
Chuck Taylor
Damien Sandow
Evan Bourne
RD Evans
MsChif
Tyler Breeze
The Wyatt Family
The Submission Squad
Mat Fitchett
Jigsaw
Uhaa Nation
Solomon Crowe
Jessicka Havok
Paul London
Kana
Sylvester LeFort
The RockNES Monsters
Jervis Cottonbelly
Icarus
Leva Bates
William Regal
Allysin Kay
Veronica Ticklefeather
Antonio Cesaro
Bo Dallas
Los Ice Creams
The Hooligans
Jojo Bravo
Veda Scott
Goldust
C&C Wrestle Factory
Glaad Badd
Crossbones
Tim Donst
Tony Nese
Bad Influence
CIMA
Big E Langston
Christian
Ricardo Rodriguez
Athena
Dan Barry
Scott Stanford
AR Fox
Amazing Kong
Always love Jericho
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Kaitlyn
UltraMantis Black
Rick Knox
Oleg the Usurper
Food Fighters
Tara and Jesse Godderz
Renee Young
Lloyd Cthulhuwitz
Bravado Bros.
Drew Gulak
Jack Jameson
Enzo Amore and Colin Cassady
El Torito
Crazy Mary Dobson
Layla
Kimber Lee
Forever Hooligans
Kyle Matthews
Madison Eagles
Estonian Thunder Frog
Mike Cruz
LuFisto
Green Ant
Alexander Rusev
The Swamp Monster
Zeb Colter
El Hijo del Bamboo
Ryback
Terry Funk
Adam Cole
Knux
The Shield
Kellie Skater

Twitter Request Line, Vol. 58

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Photo & Video Sharing by SmugMug
Jessicka Havok is among those selling gear to fans of questionable motive
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
It's Twitter Request Line time, everyone! I take to Twitter to get questions about issues in wrestling, past and present, and answer them on here because 140 characters can't restrain me, fool! If you don't know already, follow me @tholzerman, especially around Friday night after Smackdown, and wait for the call. Anyway, time to go!

First up, @HummerX asks if the market for ring-worn gear from women wrestlers exists, or should he feel good that they're able to make an extra buck?

Real talk, women in wrestling, much like in any other field, shouldn't have to do gross stuff to help make ends meet because the pay gap is wide. Granted, in many fields, the money earned for either gender has been converging over the years, but society hasn't arrived to a point of acceptable relative equality. So yeah, wrestlers feel the need to auction off their gear, any number of women work the customs circuit, and yeah, they have Amazon Wish Lists. None of the above are necessarily wrong, and if anything, I don't blame the supply-side, because they wouldn't be offering these things if a demand didn't exist.

But why does the demand exist? I will touch on this in my ROH Year in Review, but a lot of indie companies cater to a pretty skeezy crowd, a vocal minority of fans who will react to all the base tropes and whose vociferous reactions end up keeping otherwise decent people away after they sample a show once, especially in a market where those regulars are ingrained. I am not speaking in generalities or making assumptions. I've been to shows and I've seen the people who act this way. Green Lantern Fan is probably the most notable among them, and he's the only one who has any kind of identity. I don't know if he's one of the ones buying these things, and if he is, I don't know the reason. But while I don't want to play psychoanalyst for people I don't know, I will say that the demand side of this equation feels very creepy.

Are the women who participate on the supply side exploitative? To a degree, they may be, but let's be honest here. Wrestlers are the most exploited people in the business. The promoters use them and the fans may or may not appreciate what they do. Women especially are by and large treated like absolute scum, so if they can get some of it back, more power to them.

@GayWrestlingFan wants to know my thoughts about Green Ant's sudden uptick in chattiness.

I actually haven't noticed the uptick, to be honest. Green Ant has always been The Colony's mouthpiece, a role which he inherited from Worker Ant. Neither Fire Ant nor Soldier Ant have ever been much for conversation, although if I talk about why, I may get into big trouble. Either way, the new mask he's acquired is better for him to talk out of, and I'm surprised he hasn't always had one that allowed him to more easily convey his verbal messages.

@OkoriWadsworth asks what my favorite WarGames match ever is.

My secret shame is that I've never seen a WarGames match. I was always a WWF kid growing up, and of all the classic WCW matches I've seen on tape, none of them have been the iconic double cage match. With that in mind, the match did inspire the Elimination Chamber, and my favorite one of those matches happened in 2009, when Edge speared the pants of Kofi Kingston to force his way into the World Heavyweight Championship Elimination Chamber after losing his WWE Championship in the first match that evening.

Fellow Fair to Flair alumnus Razor of Kick-Out!! Wrestling asks what I think the main event of WrestleMania XXX is going to be.

As I noted last week, this year's Mania has been the hardest to predict in at least five years down to what the main event will be. A report from backstage says that Shawn Michaels has a standing offer to break his retirement stipulation for one match against Daniel Bryan, but those backstage RUMORZ always come with heavy skepticism involved. So, with a healthy grain of salt being taken and the rider that I may foreseeing this with my heart and not my head, I think Daniel Bryan vs. Randy Orton in some kind of gimmick match, be it steel cage, Hell in a Cell (even if they've already done that gimmick match months earlier), or something I'm whiffing on, will be the main event for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship. Of course, the title may not be in play. All kinds of names are floating around, from Brock Lesnar and Undertaker to even Dave Batista. But I'm old school enough to believe the title should be the main thing.

Cybernetic ally @robot_hammer requests Vegas-style odds on WWE giving a look to AJ Styles.

I would place them at 50-1. I imagine some people within WWE would want to kick the tires on Styles, who knows how to wrestle and is about as much of a name commodity as one could get from a wrestler whose only other experience in WWE, WCW, or ECW came as a cup of coffee at the very end of the middle of those three. However, he's in his late 30s, would probably require a lot of reprogramming, and would probably need gear that covered up his side tattoo. I think Styles will run the string on the indies until either he or Dixie Carter cave, leading to his return to TNA.

@jessecaz hypothesizes that King of Trios will one day return, and when it does, what team do I want across the ring of a theoretical trio consisting of myself, Brandon Stroud, and Danielle Matheson.

Well, first off, I have had zero training as a wrestler, and neither has Danielle (to the best of my knowledge at least), so I hope Brandon's cool with taking all the bumps!

Second, I would have to ask myself whether I would want the experience of wrestling someone legendary, or whether I would want an easy win to move on. Ah, wrestling's staged anyway. Let's go with the former and book ourselves against Manami Toyota, Tsubasa Kurigaki, and Kaori Yoneyama. I can say that I was in the ring with three veritable joshi legends, and seeing Kurigaki pick my fat ass up with no problem whatsoever would be a treat for the crowd.

Kyle Kensing, the head of Bleacher Report's Pac-12 Blog, asks if Kevin Steen is a future WWE'er?

I hope to God that he is, because he deserves a run with the big bucks before his body gives out. Realistically though, his knees reportedly are ailing him, and WWE's weird image fetishization makes it hard for me to see them giving him a contract. However, all of that could change if the American Pitbulls end up lighting the world on fire and giving the people going to bat for the indie guys more of an open look into the company. Never say never, but I think a lot of things have to break his way before he gets a developmental contract.

@Jessico09, the man who shops at the same ice-fishing supply depot as Brock Lesnar, asks if I've seen Ready to Rumble, and if so, what my thoughts are on it.

I've only seen the opening scene, when David Arquette's character teamed up with Jimmy King to take on Randy Savage and the jackass store clerk. I thought it was amusing. Maybe some day I'll watch the rest of the movie.

Cheese enthusiast @erinprovolone asks which NXT wrestlers I feel could make a Bo Dallas-esque run in the Royal Rumble this year.

None literally, I hope. Dallas' entry into the Rumble was ill-plotted from the start. Using Dallas, an ill-fitting, rejected babyface, against RED BELLY, a floundering heel with a title that really didn't mean a whole lot at the time, was poor planning from start. However, I do think some NXT wrestlers are ready for the big stage. Sami Zayn is the obvious choice, seeing as he's currently the most transcendental talent ever to wrestle for NXT at least, the entire history of developmental at best. Other choices would be Adrian Neville, Corey Graves, Leo Kruger, and Alexander Rusev. The dark horses, however, would be John Cahill (Eddie "Eddie Edwards" Edwards) and Derek Billington (Davey Richards). The "unprecedented deal" they got upon signing apparently promised them a fast track through NXT and onto Smackdown. The Rumble wouldn't be the worst place to debut them.

@PureGristle wants to know what I think should have happened in the WWE main event scene after SummerSlam.

Well, for one, I wouldn't have done what they did. I would have left SummerSlam unchanged, but at Night of Champions, I would've had Bryan lose due to shenanigans. The Authority would then bar Bryan from any future title matches until he proved himself again. Bryan would be put in a series of matches against the entire roster. In the meantime, he would be the advocate for those wronged by Authority through run-ins, building a Survivor Series army. The main event would be Bryan, Dolph Ziggler, Cody Rhodes, Goldust, and Big Show vs. Randy Orton, The Shield, and Wade Barrett. Bryan would be the sole survivor, tapping out Orton with the YES! Lock. Of course, Triple H would still deny Bryan his shot at Orton, instead opting for unification. The events at TLC are unchanged, actually. From now, my plan would be to have Bryan win the Rumble and then go onto WrestleMania to beat Orton for the WWE Undisputed Championship.

The folks over at Explorations in Pro Wrestling want my rampant speculation on whom I think will get the call for the next WWE developmental tryout.

If I go by the common logic that the American Wolves got their "unprecedented" tryout because William Regal was able to talk folks in the front office into giving more indie dudes a tryout from going to PWG, then Brian Cage would have to be the next on the list from a commonsense standpoint. Cage is already familiar with WWE standards and practices, is a freak of nature in terms of strength, and has a look that is allegedly coveted by Vince McMahon (even more so since he was dismissed). From a pure performance standpoint, the Young Bucks would have to be considered as well, regardless of whether or not they shake anyone's hand on the way in or not.

One half of Irresistible vs. Immovable and future TWB writer Scott T. Holland asks how I would populate the Royal Rumble in the next few weeks.

Thirty slots are open. Let's fill all of them!

Potential Winners: (Assuming John Cena vs. Randy Orton is the WWE World Heavyweight Championship match, and the loser doesn't enter) Daniel Bryan, CM Punk, Cody Rhodes, Roman Reigns

Marquee Eliminations: Mark Henry, Ryback, Rey Mysterio, Big Show, Bray Wyatt, Goldust, Seth Rollins, Dean Ambrose

"The Diesel Push" Candidates: Big E Langston, Antonio Cesaro

Surprise Returns: Batista, Sheamus, Alberto del Rio

Nostalgia Entry: Jake "The Snake" Roberts

Spot Fillers: Heath Slater, The Miz, Dolph Ziggler, Damien Sandow, Jack Swagger, Kofi Kingston, Drew McIntyre, Jinder Mahal, Santino Marella, El Torito, Brodus Clay

NXT Showcase: Adrian Neville

And, if WWE happens to try a 40-man experiment once more, the ten extra that I would throw in would be as follows: Curtis Axel, Luke Harper, Erick Rowan, Jimmy Uso, Jey Uso, Booker T, Ricardo Rodriguez, Bad News Barrett, Xavier Woods, Sweet T

The other half that fine blog, Dave Kincannon, asks if I think any significant development will happen in Chikara between now and National Pro Wrestling Day.

Apparently, tomorrow's the drop-dead date for the sale of all Chikara merchandise and intellectual property. So someone could still come along and purchase it from the Titor Conglomerate. After that, I'd say six weeks is a long time for any other wrestling company, but in Chikara parlance, that might as well be one week in WWE programming. I wouldn't hold my breath for anything major, but hopefully, they'll kick the Ashes series in the butt and move it along a bit quicker.

The esteemed LOBSTER MOBSTER of LobsterSting fame, Jessica Hudnall, asks what I think of Lawyer Mike's "Holidays" video.

Uh...

All-around good dude @Pile_of_Derp asks if he should have one more bourbon.

Only if you also have one scotch and one beer with it. Also, pay your damn landlady.

@ThrashRich asks what food, if any, I would fight another human being to get.

I am a peaceful man. I prefer the soft touch of a woman's skin rather than the harsh thud of another pugilist's fist upon my face. I believe in sharing food and living and letting live. However, if I were to reach for the last piece of my mother's baked macaroni and cheese and someone were to snatch it from my grasp, well, I would be more ready for war than the 300 Spartans were after they were threatened by Persia.

My certified public accountant on retainer, @KnoxTheFourth asks what I think of Archibald Peck, noting that he thinks he's a dirty, no-good cheater.

I don't know if he's a no-good cheater, or at least more so than, say, pre-crisis Icarus, Chuck Taylor, the Batiri, or other acceptably devious rudos. However, I am skeptical about his intentions behind the scenes, and by "behind the scenes," I mean lost in the spacetime continuum. I'm not sure I completely trust his judgment in going back in time, and I'm afraid all this chatter in the Chikaraverse is all his fault.

@wildvulture asks if any way would exist for a wrestling company to have an audio-only option for streaming for their wrestling shows.

As noted in the What-A-Maneuver podcast, WCW tried doing this all the way back in 1997, back when the Internet was still primitive in its streaming capabilities. Today, I'm not sure it could work with the saturation of video options, but if wrestling still had primacy on radio, for those who wanted to keep up in the car, so to speak, I think that company would need a strong play-by-play announcer, and a completely different one than what is required for televised wrestling. The "what-ifs" and the different needs make it hard for me to imagine audio-only wrestling as anything more viable than, say, a fantasy wrestling podcast.

Still shocked by the announcement of AJ Styles coming to CZW, @RealRobPandola asks whom I'd most like to see him face: Drew Gulak, Chris Dickinson, or Alex Colon?

I know fairly little about Alex Colon, so I'll plead ignorance and omit him. On one hand, I feel like AJ Styles has been in a safe zone for so long that he has almost forgotten what wrestling against a dude who kicks like maybe he forgets wrestling is a work would be like. Chris Dickinson might be the size of two Low Kis, but their styles are similar. I would love to see Styles have to react to that kind of opponent again. On the other, Drew Gulak seems like the kind of guy who has great matches with everyone. Let's go with Dickinson, just because I smell a Gulak/Masada match on the horizon, and I quite fancy the idea of that rematch.

@KevinNewburn is in the Christmas spirit and asks what the best gifts I've ever received and given are.

The best gift I've ever given, hands down, was my wife's engagement ring. I guess technically it wasn't a Christmas present, but I proposed to her on Christmas Eve in 2006. The best gift I've ever received? Well, that question is a bit tougher to answer, since I have been blessed with a myriad of great Christmas gifts over the years. For sentimentality, however, I am going to go with my go-to travel coffee mug, which I got in 2011, the year my son was born. My wife went and got a personalized travel mug with all pictures of my son on it. The coffee always tastes a little better coming out of that one than any other means of conveyance.

This Week in Sid chronicler The Masked Lutefisk asks which pro wrestler would be the worst dodgeball referee.

Great Khali, by a longshot. He's immobile, unintelligible, and he probably doesn't even know the basic rules, let alone all the bylaws.

@mikepankowski asks if rainbow cookies are the best food or the bestest food.

I have to plead ignorance on the rainbow cookie too. Man, where have I been all my life?

@IAmDarsie wants to know what The Rock was cookin' before he left to be a big movie star.

I honestly don't know. Rock strikes me as a guy who knows how to do two things: wrestle and ENTERTAIN (whatever that means). However, whatever he cooked before his most recent comeback wasn't nearly as fresh upon reheating, that's for damn sure.

Noted porkpie enthusiast @el_spriggs asks me to match wrestlers with the following beverages: stouts, IPA, bourbon, gin, rum, moonshine, tequila, and orange soda.

Stout: Mark Henry - Stouts generally taste thick and heavy, but often have great body and satisfaction associated with them. Sounds a lot like the World's Strongest Man.

IPA: Kana - She might be a smoke bomb, but then the bell rings and she kicks her opponent so hard that you, the viewer, feel it. Much in the same way, IPAs usually have florid aromas and promise hints of all kinds of sweet flavors, but then the bitterness kicks you in the palate like, well, a Kana roundhouse to the face.

Bourbon: Jack Swagger - Bourbon is the most American of whiskeys, and Jack Swagger is most American of wrestlers.

Gin: Johnny Saint - Both are classic vestiges of an older generation who are making small comebacks nowadays.

Rum: John Cena - Hardcore fans will drink rum straight/watch John Cena matches for the artistry. Casual fans mix it in with every kind of juice possible/cheer Cena because of the star power.

Moonshine: Jay Briscoe - A backwoods drink for a backwoods wrestler, and I'm still not convinced that prolonged exposure to Briscoe won't make you blind.

Tequila: Davey Richards - Sure, you might have a little fun in the beginning of watching a Davey Richards match/drinking tequila, but the proceedings get out of hand way too quick, and the next day is full of regret.

Orange Soda: Emma - She's overly sweet, exceedingly effervescent, but at the end of the day, she's also totally satisfying.

@chudleycannons asks what my favorite Christmas special is.

The Year without a Santa Claus without a doubt. What can I say? The Miser Bros. are great. Plus, have you ever seen some of the other Rankin-Bass specials? American Dad's portrayal of Santa Claus is way less awful than how he was shown in the beginning Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer. And don't get me started on Burgermeister Meisterburger as a low rent Adolf Hitler. They laid it on thick.

Rich Thomas, the dual threat podcast host of both International Object and Sad Salvation, wants to know if the mindset of "if you're not in wrestling to win the title, you shouldn't be there" is harmful to storytelling.

While I love the idea of titles and sporting tropes in wrestling, yeah, that idea is odious and antithetical to having a good wrestling show. The fetishization of Championship belts degrades the very idea that wrestling can provide catharsis through other stories that have nothing to do with wrestling for a title.

@Tvs_Tim_Biewald wants me to use some #HolzermanDevilMagic to help out the Detroit Red Wings.


(Sorry, 1997's wounds are deep.)

Notable member of Philadelphia sports Twitter @treblaw wants to know the best mustard to put on a ham sandwich.

Ham has a natural sweetness, which makes honey mustard a natural choice. However, depending on the providence of your spread, you might make the sandwich a bit too cloying. I would go with MR. Mustard Sweet Hot, which adds in some heat to go with the sweetness.

@LPishko asks what wrestling experience got me hooked.

WrestleMania VII was the event. The moment was right after the Randy Savage/Ultimate Warrior match. Savage lost, and Sensational Sherri was berating him something fierce, even to the point of physical violence. Miss Elizabeth was watching from the crowd, distraught to the point of tears until she couldn't take it anymore. She hopped the barricade, vanquished Sherri, and reunited with Savage. The emotionally cathartic resonance made me a wrestling fan for life.

Finally, @DethlikeSilence asks how awesome a match Brock Lesnar vs. Daniel Bryan would be.

Dude. Dude! DUUUUUUDE! That match is one of the remaining WWE dream matches that I have in mind for the next two years. I feel their shared interest in MMA would provide a common ground, while their size disparity would make for a killer David vs. Goliath matchup. Additionally, Bryan has had almost no bad matches since getting to WWE, and both of Lesnar's non-Triple H matches were superb. If this match happened, I would be SHOCKED if it wasn't good.

Best Coast Bias: I Am Tyler's Smirking Revenge

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BOO THIS MAN (no, seriously)
Screen Grab via Predadora the Explora Tumblr
Let us now add an entry to the NXTPedia (which, bee tee dubs, Totally Needs To Be A Thing) in commemoration of the 200th episode, shall we?

Chekov's selfie is a dramatic principle requiring that every element in a major Championship match centered around Tyler Breeze be necessary and irreplaceable to the finish; i.e., if you focus on Neville slapping Breeze going to the commercial break when he's trying to do his job as the one notable lumberjack in the match, then Breeze should bail out Bo Dallas from the Red Arrow and cost him the Championship in the process.

You could almost feel it in the air the entirety of the match even before that ending. The crowd was happy to see Neville, per usual, but they were more about "somebody for the love of Crom please beat Bo Dallas" than throatily in The Man Gravity Forgot's corner like they would be for, say, Sami Zayn. But this is all part of the plan, as is having a bunch of seemingly random unnamed roster talents around the ring except for the sole solitary case of the King of Vain. While Bo showed a fear of the lumberjacks keeping him from losing by countout again, or being restricted from perhaps loosening another turnbuckle, Neville went about his normal aerial defiance of logic including a sweet leg lariat out of a handspring. But when he slapped Tyler, the gun went from being on the mantlepiece to on the table.

Outside of two blink-and-you'd-miss-them shots before the ending, Breeze wasn't seen again. This allowed the focus to be on the title match, and moreso on Adrian's offense. When he wasn't tuning up the hamstring with some kicks, he was unfurling standing Shooting Star Presses and monster Owenzuigiris. When Bo got hemmed up by the nameless horde when it looked like he was trying to leave the ring, Neville cut the middleman out and tope con hiloed the entire lot of them. (Bo's look of terror into impending doom really should've been the jpg, and yet no one had it!) Thus having removed every obstacle to the big X in his mind, the Englishman brought the fight back to the ring, and then Chekov's selfie snapped. That's not the only thing it did, however.

This now adds to Bo's legacy as NXT Champion as having a small strand of undeservingness running through it the entire run but still having the ring savvy to profit off of openings, whether he creates them or not. It opens the door to maybe hopefully fiiiiiiinally getting Zayn/Dallas II for the belt in play when NXT starts their 2014. It gives Neville a talented guy to have beef with in Breeze. And somehow, almost incomprehensibly, it's done what the staff has been trying to do for quite some time--and that's give the fans a reason to boo Breeze. It remains to be seen if that'll happen due to the contrarian nature of the average Full Sailian, but the dominoes all seem to be in place to fall perfectly.

Speaking of perfectly (or things in the vicinity of said utopia), the first 15 or so minutes of the show were absolutely peerless. Triple H came out and while only talking for five minutes (!) made it all about the NXT Constellation, the roster, and the small but proud history of the enterprise. He easily guided the crowd out of chanting for him and into chanting NXT before mentioning this being the virtual birthplace of Sandow, Cesaro, the Shield, and the Wyatt Family. But those references weren't enough for the fans, natch. They needed five, and after letting the Big E chant ring out Helmsley noted it was also the launchpad for the new Intercontinental Champion. After literally noting they were there to see action and not to hear him talk the show kicked off with Leo Kruger and Antonio Cesaro v. Sami Zayn and Tyson Kidd.

Hey, surprise, all four of these guys are good at the professional grappling! Before Sami and Antonio could even get to renewing hostilities the Match of the Year and This Is Awesome chants were going. Cesaro even used his thigh wrap to eye rake Zayn almost as if he were preparing to try to out Regal Regal next week. Hell, he's such a master of making the exemplary look routine that his snatching Tyson Kidd out of the air and smoothly converting him into a tilt-a-whirl backbreaker was just par for the course. Even Byron Saxton had to agree about the skillset while still feeling salty about the Swiss Superman'd done. The crowd wanted, and got Sami, who then resembled a domicile ablaze with monster Steamboat body presses and Blue Thunder bombs. In the end, Team Canada got the duke with Kidd tope con hiloing Cesaro through the ropes and Sami flatlining Kruger with the Respectable Japanese Businessman's Kick. Any and all permutations and combinations of this should continue in the future.

The thing about the future is no matter how much you hope that you have a handle on it, it doesn't adhere to your hopes and sometimes it can conjure up things that would've ruptured the brain even in the recent past. How else to explain the weirdness of the Ascension's open challenge being answered by two men closely resembling David Richards and Edward Edwards calling themselves the American Pitbulls? Perhaps El Generico sent them as emissaries to see how his number one fan Sami was doing. Either way, while the visual dissonance was strong the rechristened Derek Billington and John Cahill went back to making their new names.

The Champs eventually laid them both out with the Fall of Man, but before then Richards lived up to his rebranding in both good ways (the howl before the top-rope headbutt was like hearing Bray Wyatt sing about time being on his side) and bad (an accidental slip off a backdrop counter attempt where he landed head first in a hypercringeworthy moment) while John "John Cahill" Cahill hit possibly the best WWE-branded Shining Wizard in years. Hunico and Camacho came out after the match to smacktalk the Champions, but to be honest the idea and the weird feeling of the Not Wolves around makes them far more compelling challengers and possible eventual Champions. The Ascension is at the ceiling of their prowess, if I were to guess. Camacho is not about to turn into Roman Reigns, at least right away, and is just an outgrowth of the criminally underrated Hunico. If we're living in a world where ginger generic luchadors get more awesome by unmasking, why not the Pitbulls?

This is the same institution in which going evil turned out to be the best thing to ever happen to Sasha Banks' career, as she keeps rising up the elevator and putting on increasingly better matches. While Emma and Natalya traded barbs and snips leading to a future #1 contendership match (and boy, there are enough parallels between the GIVE ME THE EFFIN' REMATCH ALREADY betwixt this and Zayn/Dallas to build a house on), Sasha got in the ring and got vicious. Even her sleeper had a bodyscissors and her 100 Hand Slap flurry of open-handed chops to the chest looked like a tornado with fashion sense. Unfortunately for her, she was going in against Paige, and even more unfortunately, she took out her backup when she was aiming to separate Paige's head from her shoulders. Paige then proceeded to almost to do that to Sasha, folding her up like a 7-3 offsuit with a Paige Turner No Not Her out of a backslide setup. Believe when I say the last thing the rest of the division wants to see is Paige not only finding new ways to transition into her denouement but pulling them off more crisply and more viciously.

There's going to be an English/Big Cass sing-off, a Breeze/Neville showdown, at some point in the near future sizzling Championship rematches for the Championship as well as the Women's belt, and in the mother of all dark Christmas presents, REGAL/CESARO NEXT WEEK. In a land where Chekov's selfie was born, the consistent narrative cohesiveness and top-shelf wrestling means that roster deserved each and every bit of that praise that I, Triple H and Full Sail gave them to kick off the show.

Here's to another 400, minimum. (AND REGAL/CESARO NEXT WEEK AWWW YISSSSSSSSSSSSSS)

2013 Year in Review/2014 Year in Preview: Ring of Honor

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The start of something devious...
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein

Promotion: Ring of Honor

What Happened in 2013: The year started with Kevin Steen as Champion with the backing of the SCUM stable. The group moved on from feuding with Jim Cornette to various challengers to Steen's title. Along the way, the group picked up a number of malcontents and also-rans, including but not limited to Matt Hardy, Rhyno, Cliff Compton, and Rhett Titus. The group was cruising along until Supercard of Honor during WrestleMania weekend. Jay Briscoe was getting his long-overdue traditional title shot against Steen. He wasn't expected to win, as he'd challenged nearly every other Champ in the past unsuccessfully. This time, however, he actually got the job done.

The loss sent a shockwave through SCUM, shaking the renegade group at its core. Steen and Hardy got at each other's throats even before the title loss, but after it, the group decided that the former WWE and TNA standout was more of an asset to their cause than the newly deposed Champion. They booted Steen, but their survival was short-lived without him. They would go on to lose a cage match for their primacy in the company, even though some of the remnants of the group would stay on.

As for Briscoe, his title reign would last through Best in the World in June after a match against his brother Mark. Both brothers' contracts ended, so injury angles were cooked up. Jay Briscoe was stripped of the title, and a tournament was set up (curiously enough, Mark Briscoe was the 16th entrant announced for it). The final four would be Adam Cole, Michael Elgin, Tomasso Ciampa, and Steen, with the semifinals and finals playing out at Death before Dishonor in Philadelphia. Briscoe the elder returned to the company, and was there on hand to surrender the ROH World Championship in person. In a hard-fought final, Cole triumphed cleanly over Elgin.

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Hero back? Hero back.
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
After the match, Cole attacked both Briscoe and Elgin, cementing a heel turn and becoming the company's new big bad. Both wrestlers had axes to grind. Elgin took the brunt of Cole's attack, while Briscoe lost the title without ever losing a match. The latter took the opportunity to get his own title belt made. At Final Battle, the three men were entered in the same match, and Cole escaped with the title thanks to some timely interference on his behalf by Hardy. However, his good feelings subsided as Chris Hero made his ROH return, staking his claim to Cole's Championship.

2013 MVP: Many deserving choices come to mind, but I have to go with Kevin Steen. His in-ring quality didn't waver, despite rumors to the contrary. He also provided a rock-solid anchor for the main event for two-thirds of the year before lending his star power to help put over Michael Elgin during the tournament to crown a new Champion. He was one of the only things keeping a company-wide SCUM angle from going tits-up, and his feud with Michael Bennett into Final Battle was pretty entertaining.

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Still the man
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
What's Going to Happen in 2014: Hero/Cole will certainly be the big title match that will be built up first. I doubt Hero will end up winning the title, although Ring of Honor has never really been a company to follow traditional wrestling booking patterns for better or worse. I still think the endgame, whether happening at WrestleCon or at Best in the World in June, will end up with Elgin as the Champion. They've been delaying the payoff with him taking the belt almost for too long. Most of the fans seem to want him on top.

The Tag Team Championships are ripe for picking as well, although Kyle O'Reilly and Bobby Fish don't have obvious challengers ahead of them. The team dubbed reDRagon has beaten the tag ranks several times over. Adrenaline Rush (ACH and TaDarius Thomas) and the team of Caprice Coleman and Cedric Alexander have spent the year middling around the division with no real success, and the Outlaw Inc. team of Eddie Kingston and Homicide seemed to flop at Final Battle. One dark horse team could be Alabama Attitude. The team of Mike Posey and Corey Hollis has gotten an extended look in 2013, and their role could increase as a fresh challenger for the dick heel duo who has held serve for most of the year.

The Top Prospect Tournament will make its return as well, featuring eight up-and-comers in the indie world. Hollis will take part in the tourney, as well as Cheeseburger, Bill Daly, Andrew Everett, Ray Rowe, Hanson, Kongo, and a mysterious masked guy named The Romantic Touch, who looks like he might be Rhett Titus under a mask. Last year, Matt Taven won the tourney and ended up getting an extended run with the Television Championship. Whoever wins might get a big look. If I had to guess, I would pick either Romantic Touch or Rowe.

Five Wrestlers to Watch in 2014:Tomasso Ciampa - Ciampa is the current Television Champion, but he got an extended look in the World Championship tournament. I wouldn't be surprised to see him as the challenger at Final Battle, with a bevy of extended looks in showcase matches. Ciampa could be ROH's next big star, and I wouldn't be surprised if he's fitted for his crown all this week.

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A psychopath on the rise?
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
Raymond Rowe - Rowe has a fantastic look and a big bruising style that I think works against the hard-hitting offenses found within the company. He can be a solid anchor for the midcard, as well as a spot challenger against Elgin in an indie wrestling HOSS FIGHT during ROH's excursions down South.

Barrister RD Evans - Evans is finally getting a shot to wrestle, which has been long overdue in ROH. Many regard him as the best in the world, or at least one of them, and I would be hard-pressed to disagree. His theatrical heel antics work well to get some portions of the crowd to hate him and others to worship him. He and Veda Scott can be a solid midcard/Television Championship attraction for a company that could use the middle of its shows to have a bit more flesh on their bones.

Mark Briscoe - I feel that ROH was right to kick the tires on the younger Briscoe in June. He's got a unique wrestling style, and arguably he's more charismatic than his big brother. ROH could do a lot worse than to have him feud with Ciampa over the Television Championship through to WrestleCon and then give him a few spot World Championship matches throughout the rest of the year.

Kyle O'Reilly - Both he and former tag partner Cole are heel now, but I wouldn't put turning O'Reilly into a feelgood babyface after reDRagon loses the Championships. I mean, they borrow so many other feud ideas from PWG, why not this one? Either way, ROH needs to figure out what they have with O'Reilly as a singles guy, and if they decide to delay pulling the trigger on Elgin again (or if Elgin gets signed), O'Reilly could be their man.

Three Things I Want to See Happen in 2014:1. An end to contracts, or at least change the way they're done - The only company that should be offering ironclad contracts in wrestling is WWE. They can afford to offer them, and even then, the way they conduct business is still really disadvantageous to the wrestler in the grand scheme. A company like ROH that pays its talent, in the words of Colt Cabana, "worse than a janitor," and restricts their revenue streams through bookings or merchandise sales not approved through the office is offending on a similar scale. I understand the need to have continuous, reliable employment from persons for a weekly televised product, but precluding wrestlers from lucrative dates because of Internet pay-per-view (a medium where ROH has failed miserably) and cutting down their independent merchandising possibilities, while technically legal, is abusive and exploitative. ROH, or more importantly and accurately, Sinclair Broadcasting Group should be a little more understanding towards the wrestlers who put their bodies on the line every weekend for them in what amounts to some as a hobby, a passion, or a dream to be chased rather than a career.

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Ol' Chicken ready to bust out of big bro's shadow
Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
2. Better policing/tempering of the crowd - I could talk about the sweaty assholes in the crowds who chant lewd bullshit and cross the line into abusing the talent, but the truth is that they are allowed to behave that way by ROH. If women are to be treated with respect by the crowd, then why was Cheeseburger introduced as a babyface through sexually assaulting Maria Kanellis? Why wasn't the fan who threw a quarter at Seleziya Sparx thrown out of the Armory at Death before Dishonor? Why is Nigel McGuinness, the matchmaker (and thus kayfabe boss of everyone) and apparent babyface announcer, degrading Veda Scott on commentary by talking about whether or not she's wearing underwear as if that's any of his fucking business? In this day and age, especially for a company who is trying to put on a televised product, exclusionary rhetoric and storytelling just does not cut muster. Those sweaty jerkoffs who go to every ROH show will continue to attend every ROH show whether or not their manchildish whims are catered to at every turn. Wouldn't cleaning up the product, being more open to other groups, especially women, make better business sense, in addition to it being the right and good thing to do?

3. Make the big companies copy you, not the other way around - Once upon a time, ROH was innovative for American wrestling, and that innovation is being seen in WWE today with how alumni like Bryan Danielson, CM Punk, and Tyler Black are revolutionizing the narrative. Instead of continuing to find new ways to conduct business, or at least finding other companies to import ideas from that aren't saturated all over the American airwaves. Invading stables, feuding authority figures, and the shoot owner of the company as a tangible character are all things that have been beaten the fuck to death by WWE and TNA in the last two decades. For a company striving to be known as a "third big company," they should not be looking to do a cheap imitation of either big promotion, especially since TNA is a cheap imitation of WWE itself, and since WWE isn't above returning the favor in terms of copying.

The Airing of Grievances: Burn the Strawmen

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Ah , fictional character played by Jerry Stiller, your holiday is awesome
"I got a lot of problems with you people." -- Frank Costanza

Today is Festivus, a holiday for, as the above-quoted fictional character intended, the rest of us. The Festivus pole is set up with care down by Florida State Capitol (fuck you, Gretchen Carlson), the Feats of Strength are lined up for RAW tonight (or maybe they aren't, I haven't read spoilers). However, I have grievances, and I feel the need to air them. Today is the perfect time in which to give them life.

Normally, during this time of year, families head outside to build snowmen, but all year long, I see folks within the wrestling community building effigies using a different building material. The strawman is as old as verbal discourse itself, a key tool for the purveyors of rhetoric to aim their rage with efficacy in terms of riling people up. However, when making accord or accurately describing what someone is actually feeling about a certain subject, all a strawman accomplishes is providing tinder for destructive flame wars, mainly because those strawmen are set up as groups of fans.

Whenever WWE especially does something polarizing, I see terms like "smark" and "IWC" bandied about in regards to the fan reactions to them, always in a negative connotation. I've been aware of both of those terms for as long as I've had an awareness of a wrestling fandom deeper than simply watching it, but I've never really been able to pin down a meaningful definition for either. The word "smark" seems to be a wrestling fan who isn't a "mark" but who isn't in the business, but that includes an entire cross-section of people. "Internet Wrestling Community" literally means everyone who is on the Internet who likes wrestling.

So, the folly in setting up strawmen with those names should be apparent, but at the same time, what reason would someone have for compartmentalizing a group of people who think differently from them? Well, the whole basis of debate and conflict in recorded human history is based off putting everyone who doesn't agree with you in a neat box for easy attack. But wrestling discourse is not deciding on healthcare or disputing boundaries. It is literally talking about what sweaty humanoids in varying degrees of clothing pretend fight on top of some plywood enclosed by steel ropes. Why should anyone care about who disagrees with their take on the show?

I get that basic human nature pulls people towards wanting agreement with their point of view. I know from experience. But wrestling talk is not a matter of life or death. If civility and temperance could be used to make political dialogue better, then why the fuck is anyone trying to play sides or be hostile in terms of interpreting what Vince McMahon and his braintrust are providing? Either you agree with your fellow fan, or you don't. Smarks do not have a uniform profile from person to person because they are not a type of person who exists. IWC is a wrestling promotion in Pittsburgh.

Furthermore, trying to discuss wrestling in terms of who prefers what out of a company is lazy and robs said discourse of any critical meaning. If all the "smarks" are complaining, then maybe they have a legitimate gripe from their point of view. Instead of dismissing, why can't people explain why they're defending the product that McMahon (or Dixie Carter or Hunter Johnston or Mike Quackenbush or Jedo and Gado or any promoter/booker/auteur) is producing? Dismissal only leads to fighting. Fighting over interpretation of a wrestling show is borderline sociopathic.

Everyone who is a wrestling fan has one thing in common, and that is a shared passion for the art. The type of wrestling or the companies watched are irrelevant. Aside from that passion, the book on every individual wrestling fan is different. No two people think exactly the same way, and that is perfectly okay. Wrestling is not meant to be interpreted one dogmatic way. If Brandon Stroud doesn't want to play wait and see with WWE or root for only the undercard heels, that is his prerogative. He lays his opinions out bare and actually shows his work. If Sawyer Paul (GET THE K OUT!) doesn't think titles are worth anything, he's allowed to think that, and by golly, he actually has reasons for it other than "SMARKS BE CRAY CRAY IF THEY DON'T AGREE." If you, yes you, have an opinion that is different from anything else you've seen in print or heard over bandwidth, then go crazy with it.

When you start to attack others for opinions by dismissing them in the army of the strawmen though, or even worse, when you invent an opposition group to an opinion that you've formed in your head among the throbbing hordes of commenters on the Web who may or may not do the same thing, then that's where I start to get testy. You're entitled to your own opinion, but so do I, so does Danielle Matheson, so does Dylan Hales, and so does everyone the fuck else. If you want to talk about wrestling with me, then you had best be prepared to talk about ideas and tropes and wrestlers and companies. Having a conversation about what a group of fans may or may not like is boring and intellectually lazy.

Basically, you should do you, and when you come across someone you don't agree with, you should battle that person with civility and above all else a basic notion of why you feel the way you do. If your best answer is "Well, I like it because it's not what the smarks like and the smarks ruin wrestling," then go home and think about the life decisions you've made to get to such a flawed perspective.

The Wrestling Blog's OFFICIAL Best in the World Rankings, December 23

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Merry Christmas from Down Under!
Photo Credit: Emma
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. AJ Lee (Last Week: 1) - Oh man, her turn on commentary Friday night on Smackdown was ether. STRAIGHT ETHER. Tell me again why she's not one of the faces of WWE - not just the Divas, but the entire WWE - again?

2. Rachel Summerlyn (Last Week: 2) - I had really good Texas-style brisket on Saturday night. I know the link between Texan cuisine and Summerlyn is tenuous at best. I just had to tell you guys that.

3. George Costanza (Last Week: Not Ranked) - In honor of the holiday season, I have made a GENEROUS donation in your name to the Human Fund. The Human Fund - it's money for people. Happy Festivus, everyone!

4. Daniel Bryan (Last Week: 3) - Honestly, if I were Bryan, I would have cracked John Cena in the jaw for trying to speak on my behalf Monday. Then again, I guess the gesture of friendship was nice, y'know?

5. Cookies (Last Week: Not Ranked)OFFICIAL HOLZERMAN HUNGERS SPONSORED ENTRY - Twitter has this insane war between pie lovers and cake aficionados, and I think it's silly. For one, cake and pie are both great, but the main reason is that neither can hold a candle to the cookie. The holiday season is prime cookie season. My wife baked like a shitload of cookies, and I have been trying my hardest not to eat all of them.

6. Mark Henry (Last Week: 7) - After an unfortunate incident where Henry accidentally ate all Santa's reindeer, he personally volunteered to pull the sleigh himself. I expect Christmas deliveries to be made with time zones to spare this year.

7. The Krampus (Last Week: Not Ranked) - Watch the latest Christmas episode of American Dad and you'll understand.

8. Eddie "Eddie Edwards" Edwards (Last Week: Not Ranked) - Sure, he made his NXT debut and got a new name, but his biggest achievement of the week? Performing a hotel room Perfect-plex. WUUUUT.

9. Emma (Last Week: Not Ranked) - Of all the NXT women who took pictures in elf costumes, Emma looked the most believable. I wonder if her dance is really just a secret elf toy-making technique...

10. Sara del Rey (Last Week: 10) - SARA DEL REY FACT: She celebrates every holiday possible so she can stock up for gum for the entire year.

The Best Moves Ever: The Zack Attack

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Zack Ryder may be a bit pudgy from the underuse, but his finisher before he started using the leg lariat. Maybe the move, which is a spinning neckbreaker using his leg, doesn't seem like a match-ender, but I still think it's way cool.


Your Midweek Links: Merry Christmas!

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Showing off, interview style
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Hump day is on Christmas, so here are some links to get you through the rest of the week a day early:

Wrestling Links:

- The Wrestling Podcast, Episode 124: Dylan Hales [Auld Lang Spynebuster]

- Exclusive interview with former WWE World Champion Dolph Ziggler [Washington Times Communities]

- The High Spot: AJ Lee, Michelle Beadle, and the top stories of the week [Place to Be Nation]

- Here's Brock Lesnar posing with Jimmy John's in grandpa pants [With Leather]

- Fact: The Shield are the highlight of 2013 [The Only Way Is Suplex]

- Why Randy Orton is the Champion we now need [Grantland]

Non-Wrestling Links:

- Here are the worst movies of 2013 [Film Drunk]

- Don't sweat the technique [Butch Corp]

- Even former MRAs think MRAs are embarrassing [Jezebel]

- The problem with Riley Cooper's redemption [Deadspin]

- The Toplist: The 25 greatest Pokemon of all time [Dorkly]

- 25 more of the greatest Pokemon Fusions [Dorkly]

- 25 facts you didn't know about Saturday Night Live's venerable Bill Brasky [Pajiba]

- Keep the change, ya filthy animal [Brother Darkness Soundcloud]

- Cookin' ATVS Style: Bacon-wrapped stuffed jalapenos [And the Valley Shook]

- How to make a ragu, which has nothing to do with jars [Foodspin]

- The eggnog you've been drinking is crap; here's the perfect eggnog recipe [Playboy SFW]

- Dinosaurs could be brought back by "devolving" birds [io9]

- McDonalds to employees: Don't eat our food, it's bad for you [Gawker]

The Past is Prologue: The GLOW Documentary

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Mountain Fiji: Larger than life, both in her career and in the tragedy after it ended
Photo via Pro Wrestling Wikia
While Total Divas enjoys its vacation from nonstop reality television coverage, we'll toil away at the fruits of wrestling-related work on Netflix. A majority of these works are WWE fluff, but we've found a few gems inside that deserve discussion. The top of these is arguably the 2012 documentary on GLOW, the Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling, a great companion piece to another doc we'll talk about soon, the 2004 women's wrestling-centric Lipstick and Dynamite.

It's hard not to feel this weird fondness about campy things. We're fans of professional wrestling, something patently absurd on description anyway, and yet something like GLOW is beyond even that level of camp. It's hard to even define what GLOW is on the grander scale of pro wrestling history. Despite being one of the few showcases with exclusively women wrestling, no one discusses GLOW as a feminist or progressive movement (because, if anything, it was kind of the opposite in both cases). Even as the documentary pointed out that TV ratings were solid, neither of the big two (WWF and NWA/WCW) attempted to even approach a semi-serious women's division until years after the company's demise. So what the hell does it mean?

It's hard to get that answer in GLOW: The Story of the Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling, which is fair when a lot of things are considered. While GLOW came out of the late 80s boom period, the doc hints that the promotion was more described as an infomercial for the Riviera Casino or as a tax writeoff. Even the principal personalities are more or less surprised that it took off the way it did at all. In this pre-Baywatch syndication era, any television success in the arena was more or less occupied by the talk shows of the time. Ultimately, this aspect of GLOW is vague in the documentary, but it mutates into something far more interesting.

When the film shifts from the kitschy history of GLOW to the accounts of the women involved with the promotion, it suddenly gains a much needed emotional involvement. The most effective and tragic portrait is that of arguably the most fascinating figure in GLOW's history, the powerful Mountain Fiji. Fiji is argued as the main star of GLOW, something that felt right from watching an episode earlier this year. She is about like a pre-heel Andre the Giant, a larger-than-life figure beloved for her size as well as her infectious personality. This makes it especially brutal to learn that she is currently in a nursing home due to how her knees have buckled from her frame.

To be fair, GLOW's alumni have only seen hints of the open tragedy of the wrestling business, although Fiji's injuries as well as stories like how Matilda the Hun is mostly confined to a wheelchair based on a toe amputation never get any easier to hear. But director Brett Whitcomb manages to create emotion that feels contained entirely in the film's final third. The reunion scenes of the cast, complete with a strangely heartwarming version of the infamous GLOW rap, shine strongest. The interviews, relegated mostly to the cast since owner David McLane and head writer Matt Cimber declined to be formally interviewed for the film, speak to this vision of just how weird and taxing GLOW could be and how those women miss that anyway. In most cases, this was the most prominent thing these women were ever a part of and certainly most of their involvement in the wrestling business.

Ultimately, these women just went back to the lives. A few stayed in the business at least in the custom video market (and the obvious case of Tina Ferrari, the WWE). But the rest went back to their lives, left with the type of surreal experience that they fondly recollect. When Mountain Fiji returns to be reunited with the rest of the former cast, it doesn't feel cheap. It feels exactly like reality in all of its cliches. And for its 78 minute run time, GLOW kind of leaves you wanting to live with these women for just a little bit longer, which is not me deriding the film. If anything, it's the best compliment I can give it.

Year End Sorting Bins, 2013: I Will Follow Them, Follow Them Wherever They May Go

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Here we are, the highest level, the pantheon, so to speak. These are the wrestlers and personalities for whom I have rabid and some would say irrational level of adoration for. They're the folks that really stoke the flames of my wrestling fandom.

Screen grab via Impact Wrestling.com
Joseph Park - If one person could keep me watching Impact, he would be Joseph Park. I can't explain how one guy could be so illuminatingly awesome in one role and dreadful in another, but Abyss' alter ego is causing this dichotomy in character. He's warm, innocent, eminently likeable, and his secondary occupation is that of a lawyer, the most evil wrestling character that usually exists. I wish I could just rescue him from TNA and put him into a company that would better appreciate his talents like Chika... oh wait.

Photo Credit: Joel Loeschman
Rachel Summerlyn - Summerlyn has been gone most of the year, but she's certainly not been forgotten. Rumors of retirement are swirling about her, but she's certainly earned the right to proceed however she wants, regardless of whether she's in this bin or elsewhere. Hopefully, whatever she does, she'll keep her bromance with Jessicka Havok alive, because that's just the best thing ever.

Photo Credit: Texas Anarchy
ACH - My impression of ACH this year was that he took a step back in perception, but then again, I haven't really watched AAW or AIW from this year yet. ROH doesn't know what they're missing out on.

Photo via @WWESashaBanks
Sara del Rey - I'm legitimately sad that del Rey seemingly doesn't want to wrestle in front of a camera anymore, but the way that everyone speaks so highly of her in developmental, how she's the best teacher and all, makes me smile at least.

Screen grab via WWE.com
Mark Henry - I legitimately got a little dust in my eye when he made his retirement speech the night after Wrestling Match or whatever that fucking pay-per-view before Money in the Bank was called. Even though in the back of my mind I knew it was all a work (especially with John Cena needing to be out in the ring with him), I got so sad at the thought of a WWE without the threat of the Hall of Pain to split the wigs of those who needed a good lesson taught to them. Of course, when he pulled Cena in, gave him the World's Strongest Slam, and proclaimed that he still had a lot in the tank, I simultaneously marked out and breathed a sigh of relief.

PS, Mark Henry IS the one true Santa Claus, and fuck anyone who works for Fox News who gets offended by that opinion.

Photo Credit: WWE.com
Daniel Bryan - I don't need Daniel Bryan to be in the main event to love him. I'll take him getting to wrestle anyone, whether it be Randy Orton or Heath Slater, CM Punk or a broomstick, one guy or five guys, tag team or singles, gimmick match or straight up broadway, on television every week. This past year, I got peak Bryan, a maniac who wrestled multiple times a week, most of the time in the showcase match on the card, so yeah, I have been just the happiest wrestling fan ever. God bless us, every one.

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Photo Credit: Scott Finkelstein
Bryce Remsburg - Still the podcast logo for a reason, folks.

The Most Interesting People in Wrestling of 2013

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The WWE's most improbable success story
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Barbara Walters does, or at least she used to do, her "Most Fascinating People of [insert year here]" list around this time every year. I think that's a pretty neat feature for me to unequivocally rip off borrow, as there have been plenty of interesting personalities in pro wrestling. Here are my Most Interesting People in Wrestling of 2013.

AJ Lee - For as much pub as Total Divas has gotten from the promotional machine of WWE, I find it curious and satisfying that the only woman, aside from Vickie Guerrero, who continues to get consistent, vociferous reaction from the crowd is Lee. Her repayment is bullying backstage, humiliation on screen (in the form of getting that vomit dropped on her... Be A Star, Cena!), and status as a jump-starter to get those reality TV stars over. Regardless, Lee works hard in every scene she's in, and despite being cast as a heel, is more of a positive role model to the young girls watching at home than anyone else on the roster. Her realness is not a fit for WWE, but that's more the company's fault than hers.

Billy Corgan - Corgan's been dabbling in wrestling for over a year now. His money and name have been lent to the Baron Bros. Chicago wrestling outfit, Resistance Pro, and to be quite honest, they weren't doing him any favors by their showing at National Pro Wrestling Day. I guess that reason is why he'd be so linked to buying yet another company that deals in misogyny every day, right? I found Corgan being Impact Wrestling's savior to be a bit hilarious given that he's only involved in R-Pro on the figurehead level. Still, the frenzy that he whipped the fans up just by leaking his intentions to buy TNA was a testament to how godawful that company is in the hands of the Carters.

Chris Hero - He went from golden child, wrestling William Regal in a showcase match, to released in a matter of six months. What happened to Kassius Ohno in NXT that made his stock plummet? The very action of his release has been the spark for many debates among fans in the last month, although in that time, he's provided a short-term spark for several indies, whether in the spotlight or off the beaten path. Clearly, people want to see him, so what made the people within WWE change their minds so quickly? The DIRT SHEETZ reported that he didn't show enough dedication going to the gym. Of course, the "sources" used by these reporters are of such varying providence that I'm not sure that was the case. Either way, WWE fucked up. Not Hero.

A turbulent but excellent year for the Swiss Superman
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Antonio Cesaro - Cesaro, in many ways, has been a part of the same referendum that Daniel Bryan has been made part of, only on a smaller scale. WWE seemed to lose faith in him as a singles performer, but he never left the eye of his former bosses down in NXT, who took him and used him as a bouncing canvas to launch Sami Zayn into the stratosphere of Full Sail. Meanwhile, he found life in a tag team and then got over on his own by doing the Giant Swing on people of various sizes. He won't be WWE Champion any time soon, but he's making his superiors at Titan Towers take notice of him, whether they want to or not.

Candice LeRae - Super Dragon doesn't like women wrestlers, a point he made in type on the PWG message board. That fact makes LeRae's ascendance in the company all the more compelling, since she clearly fits the profile of a woman who wrestles. She may have been helped by her friendship with Joey Ryan or the fact that she's been grandfathered in by wrestling in the company in the past. Regardless, LeRae's appearance on the shows and her crowd reactions for when she's been doing important things on them show that PWG fans seem not to care what kind of gender their performers are.

Christy Hemme - Austin Aries sexually harassed Hemme on live television this year, and predictably enough, the wrestling world, both fans and performers, started piling on her for making a big deal out of the whole thing. I shouldn't be surprised that people who consume and participate in a business where companies regularly put women in degrading positions for babyface pops are terrible towards performers, but Hemme was strong enough to start some kind of pushback against Aries' behavior at all. Nothing really came of the incident; Aries still has his job and a sustained push. However, the outcry on Hemme's behalf and the reaction from the network against the lack of judgment against Aries for his overreaction showed that maybe, things are slowly changing for the better.

The hero we didn't expect
Photo Credit: Zia Hiltey
Icarus - A year ago, I never would have imagined going to a Chikara show and hearing more than a smattering of ironic cheers for the man dubbed as The Worst in the World. His transformation into a folk hero has been one of the strangest and yet most oddly satisfying arcs in wrestling in total. I don't know whether his transformation has redeemed Chikara's overall narrative on the whole, especially since I kinda dig the viral aspect of it so far. However, Icarus' story in 2013 has shown that every leopard, even the most outcasted one of them all, can change its spots in this strange and wonderful world of professional wrestling.

Marion Fontaine - Fontaine decided he would innovate by turning back the clock, a paradox, but one that produced maybe the most critically acclaimed one-off show of 2013. His in-ring character was already retro by design, but when he decided to take it a step further and actually produce a show that was ripped straight from Prohibition-era America and plant it right in the middle of modern Ohio, he was taking several risks. However, they've all seemed to pay off, mainly thanks to his incredibly sharp vision and execution of it.

The Estonian Thunder Frog - I honestly don't know if the Thunder Frog was supposed to be a jokey jobber character in the vein of Los Ice Creams or whether he was supposed to take off the way he did. However, from the moment I first heard that such a wrestler existed, my heart filled with joy. The first time I saw him in action, I was the opposite of disappointed. An anthropomorphic wrestling amphibian from the Baltic States is something I would have created as a high-concept comedic character for a random e-fed I'd participate in, but the Thunder Frog owned that persona, worked the crowd, and actually had great matches along the way. I don't know how probable his success was, but I'm glad he did get a chance to break through.

Not just a title shot inside, but a character too
Photo Credit: WWE.com
Randy Orton - Orton arguably became an interesting figure in wrestling for the first time in the five years I've been watching regularly. Across the board, the man whose gimmick up until this year had been simply "winning" or "having a famous dad" has drawn critical acclaim. His character's improvement to me began around WrestleMania and has been knotted to Daniel Bryan, Big Show, and The Shield all year, and each of those entities served to bring the best out of Orton until he could take his final form. Over the last two months of the year, Delusional Champion Brat Orton has morphed into someone who needed a canvas to a guy who was a self-sustaining, scene-stealing diva. He might have taken longer to get to main event caliber performer than anyone would have liked, but now that Orton's become a creative force to match his push, I'd say he's been worth chatting about around the water cooler every Tuesday.

2CW's Next Show to Feature the Young Bucks vs. Some Extreme Nostalgia...

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Coming to 2CW in April
Photo via 2CW Facebook
Living on the Edge 9 Event Page

Squared Circle Wrestling of Upstate New York is on a well-deserved hiatus after the year they had (end of their last Internet pay-per-view notwithstanding), but they're already back to the drawing board planning their return for 2014. They announced the Young Bucks earlier on this month, which is a big enough get with which to start. Today, their opponents were named...

Mikey Whipwreck and Yoshihiro Tajiri

The underdog standbys from ECW will reunite to take on the best tag team in America (if not the world) on April 19. Tajiri has been wrestling and promoting various promotions in Japan, most notably the defunct SMASH Wrestling, where Kana threatened to castrate him. Whipwreck has remained in the New York City area, training wrestlers out of the New York Wrestling Connection camp and staying active in that promotion. Both guys are still in fighting shape from what I hear. As long as they can still go, this dream match could turn out to be a reality, one that will play out in Watertown, NY.
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