Wednesday, December 19, 2018

For that Special Someone Who Tells You "Wrestling Isn't Real"

As a fan of professional wrestling, something that requires a thick shell to repel the dynamite drop-ins from those unenlightened, one thing I'm often told is 'wrestling isn't real'. There's something about that phrase. People who come up to you almost say it as if to convince themselves. "Wrestling Isn't Real". Like... okay, kayfabe died a long time ago when Vince McMahon took it out back and shot it square in the face, but like... really? Wrestling isn't real? Are you sure? A demonic Undertaker who can fire bolts of lightning with his entrance music and you're telling me it's all made up? Are you sure? "Wrestling Isn't Real". Oh sure, now you'll tell me the Oscars Ceremony is nothing more than a politically driven advertising vehicle instead of an actual council rewarding great movies for their success... ha ha ha... LOL.

Then when they think you're being cheeky, they feel the need to follow-it up. Like they feel like you're so dense for believing in something fictional, they feel the need to hammer the point across. Some possible follow-ups you may get:

"The storylines make no sense" - Oh I'm sorry, I guess every TV show you watch has had a perfectly flawless story told start to finish and you've agreed with everything it's ever done ever.
"They don't really hit each other" - Are you telling me men don't normally whack each other eleven times in the head unprotected with metal folding chairs and drive each other's faces into piles of thumbtacks? Oh fuck off!
"Guys don't flip around in fights" - Bruce Lee would dare to call you a chicken shit and kick you twelve times in the balls in three seconds for that remark.
"Their characters are so fake" - So Robert Downey Jr. really was flying around in a metal suit all these years?
"It's Not a Real Sport" - I would venture to say that pro-wrestlers have more of a chance breaking their necks in the ring on a pile driver than softly trotting around a baseball diamond or throwing layups into a basketball hoop. You know, unless something blatant happens.

Is it really something worth saying? That's like pointing at a picture of Batman and saying "Batman's not real, you know." Like of course Batman isn't real, you nimrod, but thank you for pointing that out. Boy, I sure was confused on that. I don't get why people feel the need to point out that wrestling is fake when so many other things are fake. Like... wrestling's a show. Just like any other live-or-TV show. The term 'fake' is incorrect; 'scripted', 'pre-determined', 'staged' are terms that would moreso suffice, but those can also be designated to anything. What is it about professional wrestling that people feel the need to point out its illegitimacy moreso than other illegitimate things? Is it the fact it's presented as a platform of genuine competition? Hey, so is The Bachelor/Bachelorette, but if you buy into that then... well, I have some unsettling news.

You should go out of your way to really explain some of the finer details about pro-wrestling to them, see if they still believe you then that it's "absolutely fake". Have them look up "blading", "potato", "Owen Hart", the background of the "Montreal Screwjob", Mankind at King of the Ring 1998, Shawn Michaels' 1998 back injury and wrestling with said broken back at WrestleMania XIV that year... and what 'fake' fall he went through, and other legitimate wrestling terms and see if they think wrestling's so fake. It's entertainment, but with a twist of semi-legitimacy. There's always the risk that an athlete competing in the ring could get seriously hurt, or even die, just like any regular sport. A drastic neck or brain injury could easily happen on any complex move or series of moves. A wrestler could get hurt on a bad fall or taking a chair shot the wrong way, falling off a ladder, getingt set on fire (happened a couple times, look up Kane and his "inferno" matches), falling off the stage, through the ring, off the freaking titantron. "Jeff Hardy's 2008 Monday Night Raw Swanton". So many things about pro-wrestling make it both a show and for realsies. Granted, in all fairness, it is pretty cheesy with its storylines, characters and dialogues. Where professional wrestling is professional wrestling is in the ring, during a match. I think a lot of what people consider to be "professional wrestling" is when they're backstage talking to each other with sexy female wrestlers by their sides and saying stupid things to one another.

...and hell if they're still not convinced, if they still go out of their way to enlighten you as to the already well-apparent illegitimacy of a lot of the sports entertainment of professional wrestling, well then you can now go out of your way to enlighten them that there are a few other things that are also completely phony and made-up as well:
  • Spider-Man
  • Batman
  • Superman
  • The Simpsons
  • Star Wars
  • Star Trek
  • Harry Potter
  • Marvel movies
  • DC movies
  • Pretty much the idea of 'super powers'
  • Dawson's Creek
  • Saved by the Bell
  • Family Guy
  • F*R*I*E*N*D*S
  • Seinfeld
  • Santa Claus
  • Heat index
  • Wind chill
  • The Walking Dead
  • Vampires
  • Frankenstein
  • The Mummy
  • The Wolf-Man
  • The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
  • The Power Rangers
  • Breaking Bad
  • Doctor Who
  • Pokemon
  • Fifty Shades of Grey
  • Digimon
  • Super Mario Bros
  • Game of Thrones
  • The Legend of Zelda
  • Star Fox
  • O.J. Simpson's innocence
  • Casey Anthony's innocence
  • Dragon Ball
  • Naruto
  • Dungeons & Dragons
  • Televangelists
  • James Bond
  • Much of "reality" TV
  • Resident Evil
  • Scientology.
...and then some.

Monday, October 9, 2017

A Review of WrestleMania


The pay-per-view that started it all. The grandest stage of them all was broadcast live to millions of viewers for the very first time on the last day of March, March 31st, in the year 1985. Back to the Future was due out that summer. The original Star Wars trilogy had ended just two years prior. In terms of the timeline of professional wrestling, we were eleven years from the birth of "Austin 3:16", twelve years from D-X and the Montreal Screwjob, and sixteen years from WrestleMania X-Seven, the greatest pro-wrestling PPV in the history of ever.

I just want to go through the event and give my usual two-sense on it. I just want to go match-by-match and give it a review. I won't necessarily "Dave Meltzer" this shit, but I will give it an honest look-over. I mean hell, I'm watching it right now.

Match #1: Tito Santana vs The Executioner
The night opened with Tito Santana wrestling the "Masked" Executioner, who looked an awful like like Buddy Rose, wacka-wacka. Tito, Mr. "Ariba!" himself, definitely was in the prime of his career when he took to this match. The Executioner gave a fumbling promo backstage, stumbling over his words. Tito came out on top, forcing the Executioner to tap to a figure-4 leglock. Tito stood in front of the Madison Square Garden crowd and shouted "Ariba!" as he went backstage. Decent match. Hard to believe this was the first match in WrestleMania history. Rating: 3 out of 5

Match #2: "King Kong Bundy" (w/ Jimmy Hart) vs. Special-Delivery Jones
Following next was a young and very bald King Kong Bundy as he took on "Special Delivery" Jones. Sure enough, "Mean" Gene Okerlund gave the in-between match interviews where King Kong Bundy gave quite a strong promo, though S.D. Jones wouldn't be denied. He gave one that was just as energetic, and you thought this was going to be an even affair straight down to the wire. Not so. Bundy gets the pinfall win in just nine goddamn seconds. There was a body-slam into the turnbuckle and then a body splash by the four-hundred-plus pound Bundy, who squished S.D. Jones like a jello-mold. Funny story: S.D. Jones was booked to lose in four seconds, but intentionally didn't do the drop in the turnbuckle, as he hated losing to Bundy in such a short amount of time. Bundy held heat for Jones in the years since. The match? Nothing special, just a squash match. Rating: 0.8 out of 5

Gorilla Monsoon & Jesse "The Body" Ventura on commentary


Match #3: Ricky Steamboat vs. Matt Borne
Coming up next on the WrestleMania card, is wrestling legend Ricky "The Dragon" Steamboat taking on Matt Borne. Borne would be more famous in the future WWE of the 90's for being Doink the fucking Clown. The match was pretty solid, Steamboat definitely was booked to win because his in-ring manuevering is outmatched, even by many people today. Ricky was one to improv a lot of the moves in the ring, and regardless of Borne's future as a damn clown, he gave a good match with Steamboat. It was that slow, 80's style of wrestling, but Steamboat scored the pinfall victory with ease by flying across the ring. Rating: 3.2 out of 5


Match #4: Brutus Beefcake (w/ Johnny Valiant) vs. David Sammartino (w/ Bruno Sammartino)
This was the first really energetic match of the night. David Sammartino, the son of the longest-reigning WWF champion of all time and wrestling legend Bruno Sammartino (who also happened to be in David's corner this night) wrestled against the future maniacal barber himself, Brutus Beefcake. Brutus and David showcased several wrestling manuevers that were less on power and moreso on speed and finesse. A ton of energetic wrestling flips and suplexes that the likes of Shawn Michaels and Bret Hart would make popular again years later. There's even parts where David turns into a brawler and boxes a weary Beefcake. The two men fought so well, and yet the match ended in a double-DQ when both men's managers got involved. Valiant scoop-slams David Sammartino, and his father Bruno loses it and dives into the ring to beat up Valiant, forcing the ref to call for the bell and DQ both men. Crazy bout and it serves as a wake-up match for the crowd. Rating: 3.6 out of 5
Cyndi Lauper talking trash in front of Wendi Richter


Match #5: The Junkyard Dog vs. Greg Valentine (w/ Jimmy Hart) for the WWF Intercontinental Heavyweight Championship
Junkyard Dog's promo sounded like James Avery and looked like someone who wanted to win the title but didn't really know how. He was the first one of the night to enter with entrance music, though, something that became a staple for literally every other WWF/E performer in subsequent years. Valentine had a very "Ric Flair" persona about him, coming out in the sequined bathrobe and being accompanied by "The Mouth of the South" Jimmy Hart. Junkyard Dog's also said "Thump" for a mysterious reason that escapes me. Junkyard Dog carried himself in the match with soul and finesse, except the part with the headbutts looked a little weak to me. Valentine didn't even look like he knew where he was until a minute-or-so in. This match was more like a brawl than a wrestling match, but still had some trademark wrestling moves. In the end, Valentine ended up winning the short championship brawl and retaining his WWF Intercontinental Heavyweight Championship by putting his feet on the ropes and cheating to secure the pinfall, thus the ref rendered his pinfall mute and counted him out. Junkyard Dog gets the win, but since it was a count-out, the title does not change hands. Rating: 2.5 out of 5


Match #6: Nikolai Volkoff & The Iron Sheik (w/ Freddie Blassie) vs. The U.S. Express (Mike Rotundo and Barry Windham) (w/ Lou Albano) for the WWF Tag Team Championship
This match started off all over the place. Volkoff and Sheik came out, hailing from the Soviet Union and Iran, respectively, and igniting the crowd into a sea of chants and boos. Volkoff then gets on the mic and sings the fucking Soviet Union national anthem. Then, the two most anti-American guys on the WWF roster at the time wrestles a team literally called "The U.S. Express", who come out a standing ovation and the second entrance music we've heard tonight. Sheik started off the match showing why, despite his Iranian gimmick, was one of the best in-ring workers in history. Windham moves and let's Sheik dropkick Volkoff in the face, hinting at a double-cross ending. Sheik throws Rotundo over ten feet into the air in one of the most beautiful body flips I've seen. It becomes apparent as the match goes on that Sheik is the better wrestler of him and Volkoff, and carries the most star power in the ring. As Volkoff beats up on Mike Rotundo, the crowd starts chanting "USA! USA!" since WrestleMania takes place right near the end of the Cold War. There's a couple of times the dropkicks from Mike Rotundo don't connect and Sheik air-fakes the hits. The match ends when Sheik steals a cane from Freddie Blassie and whacks Windham over the noggin, allowing Volkoff to secure the pin and score the win and the championship for the anti-American duo. Quick match, very energetic, if not a little sloppy. Rating: 3.7 out of 5
Ricky "The Dragon" Steamboat vs. Matt Borne


Match #7: Andre the Giant vs. "Big" John Studd (w/ Bobby "The Brain" Heenan) in a $15,000 BodySlam Challenge
A goofy promo kickstarts this gem. Legendary WWF manager Bobby "The Brain" Heenan holds up a WWF dufflebag stuffed with $15,000 cash, which the winner of the BodySlam challenge will win if one of the giants can body slam the other."Mean" Gene Okerlund keeps trying to reach into the bag like a child reaching for a cookie to comedic effect. When Andre the Giant hit the ring for his first WrestleMania appearance, it was super surreal to me. I love watching Andre tower over other people, and watching him stand toe-to-toe with "Big" John Studd was a spectacle. Per the prematch stipulation, if Andre can slam Studd he wins the $15,000 but if Andre fails to slam him, Andre would retire from professional wrestling. Being a match of two giants, the wrestling was sluggish and knowing what Andre's gigantism was putting him through around this time is also gut-wrenching. Every move required painful effort. The crowd comes alive whenever one giant tries to slam the other, but quickly dies down when they resume trading submission holds. Being big guys, even irish whips felt sluggish and in slow-motion. Once Andre actually slams Studd, the entire MSG erupts into a ruckus cheer. Andre retains his professional career, but Bobby Heenan runs into the ring and steals the money-bag and escapes with Studd. Rating: 2.7 out of 5


Match #8: Wendi Richter (w/ Cyndi Lauper) vs. Leilani Kai (w/ The Fabulous Moolah) for the WWF Women's Championship
Fucking Cyndi Lauper is the manager of this bout here, she follows Wendi Richter out to the ring as Wendi is serenaded with a Cyndi Lauper hit, the third dose of entrance music heard tonight.The funny thing is that the Fabulous Moolah, who accompanied WWF Women's Champion Leilani Kai to the ring, looks as old then as she did in the late-90's during the Attitude Era. Cyndi Lauper, surprisingly, gave a super-great promo that any professional wrestler could give, intense and commanding. This women's match felt reminiscent of the GLOW (Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling) TV series, though with better choreography and skill and less buffoonery. These two girls showed intense skill and earned the spot of the pre-main event. They moved around on the ring mat better than half the guys on the show that night. The only hiccup is the over-reliance on extended submission holds, but they would ten roll out of it and brawl for a bit here and there. Some of these submission holds didn't even look like they were doing anything, like Wendi's leg-scissor submission hold. One of the biggest "wtf" moments is when Lauper actually gets involved in an outside-brawl. She got really involved in this event. The topsy-turvy ending sees Leilani do a great crossbody off the top rope, but Wendi rolls her over afterwards like it was nothing, pinning her and regaining the WWF Women's Championship from her. Even after the pinfall, Cyndi couldn't resist going after Moolah for good measure. Rating: 2.5 out of 5
"Rowdy" Roddy Piper makes his way to the ring

MAIN EVENT: Hulk Hogan & Mr. T vs. "Rowdy" Roddy Piper & Paul Orndoff (w/ "Cowboy" Bob Orton)
In one of the weirdest real-life celebrity plugs, former New York Yankees owner Billy Martin comes out to be the special guest ring announcer for the main event. The main even also gets its own "officials" introductions. Oh, then Liberace decides to come out with a kick-line and do their dance-kicks in the middle of the ring, further delaying the main event. Then, just when you thought you'd had enough, Muhammad Ali is named the special referee for the main event and he enters the ring. After that a conga-line of bagpipe players preced "Rowdy" Roddy Piper and Paul Orndoff as they enter the arena to take part in the main event. As the arena quiets in anticipation, it happens. As its done for the past thirty years, "Real American" blasts in the arena and ignites the crowd. Soon, Hulk Hogan follows Mr. T out of the locker room into the ring, three years after the two of them were in Rocky III. Future McMahon stooge Pat Patterson would be the refereee of the match, interestingly enough. The bell rings, and both teams immediately tag so the Scottish shoot machine, Piper can come face-to-face with Mr. T, whom he had real-life beef with for entering the ring as a non-wrestler. A few minutes later and shit just hits the fan. Tags are thrown out the window and everybody storms the rind and starts brawling. After the brawl, Piper and Orndoff duck out of the ring and head for the locker room. Patterson starts counting, but Hogan pushes him off and beckons them to come back, which they do. They get into the ring and all four start brawling once again. Each and every move Hogan does receives a vicious pop from the crowd, no wonder he was the John Cena of the 80's. Mr. T's wrestling ability very much surprised me. He was able to arm drag Orndoff and convincingly clothesline Roddy Piper. He could even floor-wrestle Orndoff and slither out of his grasp. Just when Orton thought he could sneak in and attack Hogan, "Superfly" Jimmy Snuka gets in the ring and headbutts him, sending him flying. With the pandemonium, Hogan sneaks a pin on Orndoff and secures the victory for him and Mr. T. Thus ends the first of at least thirty-four WrestleMania events...Rating: 4 out of 5

Tuesday, June 7, 2016

My Top 10 Favorite Wrestlers

Welcome to my professional wrestling blog. That's right, not only am I obsessed with Star Wars, but I'm obsessed with professional wrestling too! I'm a regular nutcase, alright.

So what can I say? Professional wrestling has had a huge impact on my life. I grew up watching the World Wrestling Federation, continued to watch it when it became the World Wrestling Entertainment and then when it was officially named just "WWE". I was a huge fan of the stars of the Attitude Era and the post-Monday Night War Era. Watching stars like "Stone Cold" Steve Austin, The Rock, Triple H, The Undertaker, Chris Jericho, Edge & Christian, and so many more just continued to enthrall me from week-in to week-out. It wasn't until I was older and got a subscription to the WWE Network that I recently rediscovered my love for professional wrestling by not only watching more reruns of WWF Monday Night RAW, but also watching WCW Monday Nitro episodes as well, finally getting the view from the other side, always being a WWF/E fan anyway.

So how is my inaugural post in By Gawd! Going to go? I figured I'd do a quick top ten of my favorite performers of all time. These are the performers I get enthralled and obsessed with and I root for every week I watch. Most of these guys, if not all of them, are from the past when I was young, but they tend to stick with you even throughout the course of time. Let's get it started!

#10 - Goldberg
Goldberg, WCW
Bill Goldberg was a star of WCW in 1998, known for coming in and destroying an opponent in roughly one to two minutes. He'd walk into the ring, spear them, Jackknife Powerbomb them, pin them, and leave the arena in victory. Amassing a kayfabe record of one hundred and seventy-three match winning streak, Goldberg was billed as being unstoppable; a truly powerful force. His charisma and his destructive power always sticks with me.

#9 - The Ultimate Warrior
The Ultimate Warrior debuted as a huge mountain of muscle. His face-paint, his colorful attire and his arm tassels defined his look. He'd come in, overpower the sometimes much larger opponents and walk out of the arena the victor like it wasn't even a challenge. In 1990 at WrestleMania VI, the Warrior defeated Hulk Hogan and won the WWF Championship in the illustrious title-for-title match, forever securing his legacy as one of the greatest WWF Legends of all time.

#8 - The Undertaker
The Undertaker has been a dominant force in the WWE for close to thirty years. Debuting at Survivor Series 1990, "Cain the Undertaker" wrestled into the hearts of millions of fans around the world. Mark Callaway continued to evolve the Undertaker character throughout the early and mid-1990's, winning the WWF Championship and amassing an undefeated streak throughout twenty-one WrestleMania appearances. Re-debuting in 2000 with a biker gimmick, the Undertaker breathed new life as he continued to be a formidable force in the arenas. When he resurrected the the "Deadman" character in 2004 at WrestleMania XX, it was clear that the Undertaker would stick around for even more time, become a permanent staple of not just professional wresting, but also of pop culture.

#7 - "Macho Man" Randy Savage
"Macho Man" Randy Savage was always known for his crazy interviews and colorful attires, much like the Ultimate Warrior. However, unlike the Warrior, Savage wasn't all charisma. He had all of the in-ring prowess and skill you could want in a performer like him. A 2-time WWF Champion, an Intercontinental Champion, and the 1987 King of the Ring winner, Randy Savage was always powerful on the mic and in the ring. You could barely find a flaw in a Savage brawl. Truly missed.

#6 - Goldust
Goldust
Goldust is on here purely for his craziness. Dustin Runnels, the son of Virgil "'The American Dream' Dusty Rhodes" Runnels, began wearing the gold and black face-paint in 1995, and since then has been a constant presence in the WWF. Goldust is known for his finishing move, the "Shattered Dreams", where by he positions his opponent in the turnbuckle and kicks them square in the nads. Hilarious angles involve teaming with Booker T in 2002 and his brief feud with Val Venis in 1998 over the infidelity of his then-wife Terri Runnels.

#5 - "Stone Cold" Steve Austin
Literally the most popular star of the 1990's and arguably the biggest star of professional wrestling of this past century, "Stone Cold" Steve Austin hit the gas after winning the 1996 King of the Ring tournament and didn't slow down. After a masterful match at WrestleMania 13 with Bret "The Hitman" Hart, a tremendous showdown with Shawn Michaels at WrestleMania XIV, and count them THREE WrestleMania headlining matches with The Rock at XV, X-Seven (17) and XIX, he always brought his A-game, even after his career near-ending injury at the hands of a botched piledriver.

#4 - Chris Jericho
One of the few carryovers from WCW that made a name for himself in WWF, Chris Jericho "Y2J" debuted rather greatly, using a "millennium-style" countdown to reveal himself. Chris became a permanent staple having a feud with the McMahon-Helmsley faction, having several stellar matches with Triple H. Jericho is also known for being one of the best men on the mic, trash talking like nobody else, second only to the Rock. Jericho was given permanent future legend status when he want the WWE's very first Undisputed Championship at Vengeance 2001.

#3 - Sting
"Crow" Sting, WCW Monday Nitro 1996
Probably the most badass superstar of our time, Sting debuted in a beach-blonde, face-painted outfit that would result in most of the world labeling this era's Sting as "Surfer Sting". Sting's fate would change forever when he would abruptly leave Nitro in late-1996 and re-debut wearing all black & white facepaint, paying homage to the 1994 film The Crow. Forever labeled as "Crow Sting", Sting would go on to feud with the nWo and defeat "Hollywood" Hogan at Starrcade 1997 for the WCW World Heavy Championship. The most notable thing about Sting is that like the Undertaker, he never jumped ship and went to the other company, choosing instead to remain with WCW until March 26, 2001, when it was sold to WWF.

#2 - The Rock
The Great One. The People's Champ. The Brahma Bull. The guy with the badass sideburns. The Rock debuted in 1996 as "Rocky Maivia", a combination of his father and grandfather's stage names. After joining and leaving the Nation of Domination, the Rock became a phenomenal, trash-talking singles competitor that would win the WWF Championship at Survivor Series 1998, and have THREE stellar WrestleMania main events with "Stone Cold" Steve Austin. After disappearing in 2004 to conquer Hollywood, Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson would return to the company that made him famous in 2011, winning the WWE title once more in 2013 and headlining WrestleMania's XXVIII and XXIX with John Cena.

#1 - Shawn Michaels
Shawn Michaels entering WrestleMania XIV
The Heartbreak Kid. The Showstopper. Shawn Michaels couldn't be any more my favorite wrestler if we tried. Shawn's charisma and his catch-as-hell entrance music always make him a sight to behold. After bouncing back from an originally career-ending back injury, despite wrestling with it at WrestleMania XIV, Shawn Michaels had one of the best career comebacks in history. His match with Triple H at Summerslam 2002 was outstanding. Michaels is also credited with being a cornerstone of the WWF's Attitude Era, forming the hot and popular stable "D-Generation X" with his real-life close friend Triple H.