Friday, December 29, 2017

Guest Post: 2017 In Review: We're All Heels Now




Friend of the site Ron Felten gives us his thoughts on 2017 in wrestling -- mainly the WWE -- and voices his frustration at the product and our ability to keep coming back. And offers up a little bit of hope. If you like what he says, follow him on Twitter -- @ronfelten. We are hoping to hear more from him soon: 

I used to sincerely and naively say in response to questions about how I was doing that things could always be worse. Now, I’m not so sure.

I suppose I still mostly believe that sentiment when it comes to “real life,” but what about with regard to pro wrestling? (And is there even a difference anymore?)

Sure, there’s a lot to celebrate about what’s currently occurring in the squared circle. New Japan is amazing. I thoroughly enjoy Lucha Underground. And Ring of Honor, when I manage to find it between acne cream infomercials and Green Acres reruns, is usually pretty entertaining.

But what about that slobbering elephant in the room that just took a wet shit in the corner: WWE?

For many of us, right or wrong, WWE is the standard by which we evaluate the state of wrestling in general; it is, after all, that definitely-not-perfect-but-somewhat-tolerable-and-readily-available combination of wrestling and comedy and drama that bred that awful, godforsaken term “sports entertainment.” (I’m more embarrassed to admit I watch “sports entertainment” than “wrestling,” so this branding still perplexes me, as “sports entertainment” makes it sound like we’re all trying to fool ourselves.)

Anyway, what’s going on in the WWE? How’s 2017 been?

Luckily, my memory is a bit hazy; the details, as unremarkable as I trust they were, have slipped from my mind like women from the clutches of Donald Trump’s KFC-greased sausage fingers.

I’ve watched a lot of WWE this year, so you’d think I’d have a lot to reflect on.

Not so much.

What do I remember? A lot of Jinder Mahal. Brock would show up once in a while. Austin Aries was here and then he wasn’t. Luke Harper is now dressed like a confused Juggalo (yes, I know that term is redundant). Dolph is doing Dolph things. American Alpha was inexplicably split up, and then each member was given a new partner that strongly resembled the last. Because of course. Hmm. Let’s see. Shane sweat a lot. Oh, and there’s a new Honky Tonk Man.

There was, we were told, a Women’s Revolution. Yet on the year’s final episode of Smackdown, the former Divas—in this case, Naomi and Ruby Riott, whose name is now spelled with two Ts because, I assume, the alliteration wasn’t already cartoonish enough—were given somewhere in the ballpark of one (1) minute in the ring to do their thing. Holy hell. Cover your heads, folks; that glass ceiling is going to shatter any second now. If we’re lucky, the pieces will fall with extreme force directly into our throats.

Speaking of the women, reports say that Vince has all but given up on Bayley. But we all could have guessed that was going to happen. The bigger surprise: WWE “Creative” has, almost impressively, found a way to make Sasha Banks boring.

And Finn Balor is boring now, too. That’s another thing I remember happening, though I wish I didn’t.

But, hey, it’s not all bad. Down in NXT, Johnny Wrestling is the new number one contender. But don’t get your hopes up, friends. Apply the brakes. There’s a swerve ahead. Even if he wins the title and is eventually called up to the Show, Gargano will surely be cast off to 205 Live, where dreams and talent go to be quietly ignored like a barely tolerated stepchild. Until, that is, people like Neville wise up and hit the bricks.

This is a roundabout (and, yes, very cynical) way of saying that WWE loves withholding. It’s a form of abuse. It really is. Vince seems to thoroughly enjoy pissing off the very people who have supported his company and paid for his tacky suits for the last few decades: us.

But this is the new normal, isn’t it? And what’s the downside for Vince? We still watch. We still subscribe to The Network. And he can exert minimum effort and not worry about “trying” or “continuity” or “common goddamn sense.” We are masochists of the highest and most pathetic order, begging sir for another.


If this last year has revealed anything to me about myself, adult wrestling fans, and our country more generally, it’s that we’re all a bunch of whimpering, drooling gluttons for punishment.

We’re all heels now. But not admirable heels like the Iron Sheik, who was tough and determined and entertaining. No. We’re sad and weak (I believe the historically accurate term is “chickenshits”), and we swore in a new president this year who is the biggest and most cowardly heel of all. Chickenshittiest, if you will. But he puffs out his chest, and I guess that’s the difference. I don’t know anymore.

And like we keep watching the WWE, we keep reading the Dotard’s Twitter feed. We, the weak heels, keep feeding the ostensibly strong heels, i.e. the Trumps and the Vinces. What does this say about us? Do we want to know? Of course not. We are too frightened.

Oh, and the WWE’s version of Nakamura hasn’t been nearly as entertaining or generally as good as he was in Japan. Why? Because screw you, says Vince. And we say OK and Thank You.

Earlier this year, I attended NXT Takeover Chicago. It was a decent show with a few good matches. My friends and I drank not an insignificant number of Lime-a-Ritas so things would seem more entertaining than they actually were and, after the show, we roamed around the building wearing our Asuka masks like a pack of disoriented, poisoned rats, and we stumbled by chance on Frank the Clown’s suite. Remember Frank the Clown? No? You shouldn’t. He’s also a whiny heel. Anyway, we invited ourselves into his suite until I, for one, was bored to tears by the “conversation.”

Editor's note: This guy? Holy shit. 
After we left, we found a group of unkept teenagers loitering in the parking lot. They are aspiring wrestlers, they said. Dear god. Save us all.

One of my friends and I said we were starting our own promotion in the Chicago area. This was no more than half-true, as we had batted around a few ideas earlier in the evening for outlandish show concepts. We asked the teenagers to cut improvised promos for us. A sort of impromptu audition. They were, of course, awful. But they—and I mean the teenagers, not the promos—were also sincere.

Somehow inspired by these soon-to-be Best Buy and Arby’s employees, my friend and I have kept talking about this maybe-to-be promotion. We have a hold on a venue and are planning to put on our first show late in 2018.

Out of all the banal horrors that 2017 brought us, both in and out of the wrestling ring, an idea was born.

Listen, I’m not saying our wrestling promotion idea is a good one. It could very well crash and burn or, even worse, it could survive and fester and stink. In the event that the latter possibility comes to be, we’ll just cash out and become WWE writers. Our failure will be evidence enough of our qualifications.

Unlike Vince, however, we’ll be able to say we tried.

I know I seem angry. And I am, a little. But just wait until Cena wins the Rumble next month.

You ain’t seen nothing yet.

Monday, December 18, 2017

Shameful News


Let's face it: being a wrestling fan is hard at times and not just because people are constantly making fun of you. But because staying up to date on the shenanigans and goings-on of pro wrestling can be tricky, as evidenced by friend-of-the-site Ron Felten's recent experience.




So as a service to you, I'm going to premiere a new feature here at the site: Shameful News. We'll comb through the world of pro wrestling, highlight some things you need to know, and tell you how ashamed you should be.

Tom Zenk has passed away (via Uproxx):  Before we get to the shameful news, a sad story. Over the weekend, Tom Zenk -- perhaps best known as part of the Can-Am Connection with Rick Martel in the AWA and the WWF -- died in Minnesota. Zenk later went on to capture the tag-team and television championships in WCW, and he later appeared in New Japan Pro Wrestling. Rest in peace sir. 

The Rock Keeps Thinking About Running For President (via USA Today):  Fuck it. Why not? I mean why have anyone with political experience in office anymore? I hate everything. 

Unless we can all convince Barack Obama to change his name to "The Rock" and have him run in 2020......

Amore has Issue with Delaware Over Driver's License Signature: You know what you can't teach? You can't teach Enzo how to write an "E" or an "A" without him drawing a penis. 

Dalton Castle is the Ring of Honor World Champ (via Cagesideseats): Some surprising news out of Ring of Honor, where Dalton Castle won the heavyweight championship over Cody Rhodes. I'm honestly surprised at this, given how much good PR Rhodes has been getting recently (especially as WrestleKingdom approaches). Nonetheless, this is cool to see -- even if Castle's run might be a short one. 

WWE Held Clash of Champions (via Twitter): Rick was on our Twitter duty last night and voiced his thoughts about the WWE's show. He seemed to enjoy it! Ziggler won! Flair won! There were 19 referees in one match? Crazy! Shameful? Only when people started chanting "this is awesome."

Macaulay Culkin helped beat Hornswaggle in a match (via Cagesideseats): Sure why not? I guess? Honestly, I've watched clips of this three times, and I still can't decide if I'm annoyed by this match (my inner Jim Cornette comes out from time to time) or if I'm delighted (the paint can on a string is a nice touch). Ask me again in three years when Mac wins the Royal Rumble. In any event, this was tailored made for us here at Wrestling Shame.

McMahon thinking about a new football league (via Deadspin): Ohhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh baby. So here's the big news coming out of this weekend. Vince -- according to several sources -- is considering bringing-back the XFL or is starting-up a brand-new football league (some of the reports I read claimed he's thinking about something along the lines of Unity Football League). 

So here are my two key-takeaways here: I think people in the United States are, in some ways, becoming leery about football: one cannot deny the physical and emotional toll the sport takes on players, participation in youth football is declining, and attendance and ratings for the NFL are down. As such, this seems like a venture that is already on morally-ambiguous grounds at best, so of course the McMahon family would be involved --- not that they've ever given a legitimate care about the health concerns of their wrestlers.

But secondly, if you don't see this new venture -- if it's actually happening and I have my doubts about it -- as part of an effort to diminish the NFL because of the McMahon connection to Donald Trump, then you obviously haven't been paying attention. Just don't act surprised when McMahon announces that Trump has purchased four teams in the league. It's going to be uber-shameful.

Did I miss any? Tweet at us @wrestlingshame or send us a passive-aggressive note on Facebook!


Friday, December 15, 2017

A Shameful Clash of Champions Preview


As Wrestling Shame's Assistant Professor of WCW and ECW Studies, I'd like to remind everyone that Clash of the Champions was an important WCW event. Frankly between this and doing a fucking house-show of Starrcade and then doing a lame-version of War Games on NXT,  I'm tired of the WWE co-opting another WCW event.

And do you know why they are co-opting another WCW event? Because they can't do anything original or cool on their own. The last cool wrestler they had in their company quit the WWE in 2014. All the other cool wrestlers are in NJPW. And this company thought GREAT BALLS OF FIRE was a good name for PPV event.

It's time we as Wrestling Shame fans took a stand. LEAVE WCW ALONE. Go to your windows. Take to the streets. Chant with me. LEAVE WCW ALONE. LEAVE WCW ALONE. LEAVE WCW ALONE.

*HHH comes up to me from behind*

Hey....hey! WHAT ARE YOU DOING?? *struggles for  keyboard*...GIVE ME THAT!!! YOU CAN'T SHUT ME UP!!! WE WILL NOT BE SILENCED!!! LEAVE WCW ALONE --- WHERE ARE YOU TAKING ME???

HHH: Hi everyone -- we are going to have Jay write the Clash of Champions review here.

Jay: I'm "two sweet"-ing Triple H as I type while John has been given a cease and desist. On to the next pay per view!

"The only time Raw and Smackdown Live go head-" Oh I'm sorry are we not doing that anymore?

There's a pretty big event this Sunday, and you're more than likely watching that rather than Clash of Champions. I'm talking about the Steelers vs the Patriots. But if you decide to watch WWE instead, here's what's coming up Sunday. Rick is probably glad this is a Smackdown event so I don't have to somehow talk about Roman Reigns. Oops. Too late.

Rick_City: Boooooooooooo. Okay, to be fair, I forgot this PPV existed until you reminded me like three days ago. Onto the preview!

WWE Champion AJ Styles vs. Jinder Mahal

Jay: Jinder don't want none.

Rick_City: AJ wins and, if there is a God, they somehow set up Nakamura versus Styles for WrestleMania.

United States Champion Baron Corbin vs. Bobby Roode vs. Dolph Ziggler (Triple Threat Match)

Jay: I'm just here to sing along to Bobby Roode's music, and you are too. Don't deny it.

Rick_City: Can we somehow get Baron Corbin out of this match? Can Rikishi hit him with a car or something? Bobby Roode had better win. Either way, it should be a good match because Roode is very good and Ziggler (despite overselling, acting just like a knockoff Shawn Michaels, and having one of the worst ring names in WWE) is entertaining as well. But, yeah, Rikishi should hit Corbin with a car.


SmackDown Women’s Champion Charlotte Flair vs. Natalya (Lumberjack Match)

Jay: I LOVE Lumberjack Matches. There's always favoritism and some chaos, probably from the Riott Squad this time. Why is she Ruby Riott now anyway?? Side note: Women's wrestling is continuing to grow and become amazing. When will we get the women's tag team division we deserve?

Rick_City: This will be a good match because, let's call it as it is, the women's division is the best part of WWE. Charlotte wins because she's Charlotte. We've sure come a long way from Natalya farting, haven't we?

Randy Orton & Shinsuke Nakamura vs. Kevin Owens & Sami Zayn (Shane McMahon and Daniel Bryan as special guest referees - if Owens and Zayn lose, they will be fired))

Jay: Kevin Owens says, "Shane McMahon is the worst McMahon." I beg to differ. But I think this will be a really fun match to watch and things will probably get a little wild. Daniel Bryan is going to fight Shane McMahon over their children.

Rick_City: Why does this match have two referees? How is that even going to work? Unless Shinsuke Nakamura turns on Randy Orton and joins Kevin Owens and Sami Zayn, this is a waste of  three very talented competitors. Orton is incredibly stale and boring. Nakamura, Zayn, and Owens are not. It's unfair that they have to share the ring with him.

Anyway, I predict a Russo level SWERVE where Daniel Bryan turns heel or something, but I wish it was Shinsuke turning. Either way, Owens and Zayn win via ~~SWERVE~~~

SmackDown Tag Team Champions The Usos vs. The New Day vs. Shelton Benjamin & Chad Gable vs. Rusev & Aiden English (Fatal 4-Way Match)

Jay: I want War Games. This is ridiculous. Why isn't this match War Games? I guess these guys don't hate each other's guts enough to kill each other. Happy Rusev Day indeed.

Rick_City: New Day and the Usos have been putting on great matches against one another forever, so this should be a good one. I'll say Rusev and English win because WWE loves wacky tag teams holding gold.

Breezango vs. The Bludgeon Brothers

Jay: Tickets better be flying and arrests need to be made, because as metal as their entrance is, those trailer trash boys have it coming for that look. I'm really just hoping this isn't a squash match like they've been rolling through lately, the Ascension will be cheering on Tyler and Fandango. Annoyingly, but full of genuine love for their best friends.

Rick_City: Wait, this is an actual match? And apparently Zack Ryder is facing Mojo Rawley too? I refuse to comment on these. I'm done.


Tuesday, December 5, 2017

Our Top Five Favorite Wrestlers


Normally, we prefer to highlight the shameful side of wrestling, rather than the parts we enjoy. But it's the holiday season, so we figured we'd be a little more positive today. Besides, after the kind of year 2017 was, some positivity is needed. Something tells us 2018 might just be worse...

Anyway, back to positive. We decided that each of us (JDP2, Rick, and Jay) would list our top five favorite wrestlers of all-time. This isn't "best" wrestlers or "most popular" wrestlers or anything. It's a list of personal favorites.

We hope you enjoy it.

JohnDosPassos2's Top Five Favorite Wrestlers

CM Punk

I've said this before on this website, but Punk was the reason I got back into pro wrestling after a nearly ten-year hiatus. He was compelling as a wrestler for a lot of reasons, but primarily because you genuinely believed him when he said he was pissed-off. I'd also argue that unlike most performers today, Punk would have thrived in the territory area -- a good worker who could earn the love or hate of a crowd so easily and been able to maintain his own persona no matter where he went. If he comes back to pro wrestling, I sincerely hope it's to New Japan because fuck the WWE.

Nick Bockwinkel

I didn't grow up in the AWA's footprint, but I do have some vague memories of seeing Nick Bockwinkel on some WCW broadcasts in the early 1990s. It wasn't until the last few years when I started to watch old AWA footage that I began to understand how great Bockwinkel was both in the ring and on the microphone. The "intellectual heel" is basically an extinct species in professional wrestling, but Bockwinkel was the best at projecting his superiority to any audience (and if you aren't familiar with his work with Bobby Heenan then you have homework to do).

Raven

While I listened to NWA, Nirvana, and Pearl Jam, my major connection to 1990s counter-culture was ECW: it was brash, anarchic, and in-your-face, but it also produced one of my favorite wrestlers. I'm not sure if I -- in 1995-96 -- consciously made the connection that the former Johnny Polo was drawing inspiration for his character from Poe's "The Raven" and Patrick Swayze's character in Point Break, but I was nonetheless compelled by his promos and work in the ring. And when he jumped to WCW, I was legitimately happy for the guy -- even if his time there was sorta underwhelming.

Randy Savage

Savage may be the most unique personality in wrestling history. He was great in the ring. He was great in promos. He projected a wild, yet incredibly complicated character -- one who projected paranoia and arrogance at nearly every turn. And it's unfair that Hogan overshadowed him at every turn.

Rick Rude

When I was growing up, I was solidly behind the "Faces" of pro wrestling -- even though I totally understood why Randy Savage was pissed at Hulk Hogan during the break-up of the Mega Powers. But it wasn't until Rick Rude came on my tv screen that I fully sided with the heel. Rude was certainly arrogant, but he seemed somehow legit to me whereas other wrestlers of the WWE from that area (hello Ultimate Warrior) seemed like total cartoons. When he went to WCW (and eventually helped form the Dangerous Alliance), I couldn't help but root for him.

Honorable mentions: Arn Anderson, Rowdy Piper

Jay's Top Five Favorite Wrestlers

Chris Jericho

I think the first time I was introduced to professional wrestling I was about 11 or 12 years old. Y2J was a thing and I was into it. I used to watch wrestling with a friend from school and I was so happy to see when I came back to watch years later, Chris has aged like fine wine, and still has a wrestling career, still has his band, a podcast. and I believe he posted on Instagram about a food network type show. (I'm team Omega though for the Tokyo Dome match)

Steve Austin 

Same scenario. Steve was pretty popular at the time I first discovered wrestling as a kid and I thought Steve was pretty dang cool. I like when Buzzfeed gets him to do stuff like drink martinis. 

CM Punk 

You probably don't even need me to explain why I feel this way. Punk was a one of a kind incredible guy. He was so genuine and so good at what he did. He made things really memorable and when he left, there was a piece of my heart with him.

Roman Reigns

Because screw you, that's why.
I love garbage.
Stop for a minute though. Everyone always talks about how hes the corporate made heavily pushed guy that Vince likes, and I get that. But at the end of the day, Roman goes out there and he works hard and takes his role as a leader seriously. There is a special chemistry between Roman, Seth, and Dean and its good to see brotherhood bonds in a world where everything is hyper masculine.

Finn Balor 

Obviously this was coming. Shut up. This was the guy who drew me back in. If you've ever seen him wrestle in Japan you know the guy is an incredible heel and an incredible athlete. There's more to Finn than what you've seen on display on Raw, which is drop kicks and Coup De Gras. Hes able to do incredibly technical stuff and keep a chain of moves going at the same time. This guy is absolutely number one in my heart and I hope to see him do great things.

Rick City's Top Five Favourite Wrestlers

Yes, that's favourite with a U. When I was putting together this list, the top four came to me really easily. Picking number five was tough. I first thought of Stone Cold Steve Austin and The Rock, because they were obviously incredibly entertaining, but they each had phases where they really annoyed and/or bored me, so that leaves them off. (Also, Steve Austin is a terrible person. Don't forget that.)

Then I strongly considered Edge. His debut gimmick and Brood phase seemed cool to be back when I was watching as a teenager, and his "Awesomeness" gimmick with Christian was hilarious. He had a terrible face run after that, but the "Rated-R Superstar" and even the "Ultimate Opportunist" were very entertaining runs. Edge could do serious and funny, which is a plus in my opinion. But he didn't make the list either. Find out why later on.

Anyway, here's my list, in no particular order.

Bret Hart

I'm Canadian, so this is kind of a given. But even without the Canadian aspects of the man, Bret Hart was a joy to watch. He made wrestling feel "real." Not "this is an actual fight" real, but "this man wants to hurt you with wrestling moves" real. He wasn't great at promos (though his 1997 run with the Hart Foundation had some great moments on the mic) but he told a story in the ring unlike anyone else could. Everything Bret Hart did felt like it mattered.

Shawn Michaels

While I said that this list was in no particular order, Bret and Shawn are definitely 1A and 1B. They were very different in many ways, which makes it hard for me to choose which was is my overall favourite. While Bret Hart was serious and made his matches look real, Shawn Michaels was a show off and made his matches a highlight reel. Bret wanted you to respect him because he could hurt you, HBK wanted respect for stealing the show.

They were both incredible.

Shawn Michaels put on brilliant performances in the ring. If you're reading this and don't already know that, I'm not sure why you're on a wrestling site. Not only did he have an insane number of great matches and moments, but his return after leaving wrestling following WrestleMania XIV just cemented his legend.

Randy Savage

Randy Savage was the first wrestler that I liked who wasn't Hulk Hogan. And he was better than Hogan in basically every way that mattered. Not only could he "electrify" on the mic long before The Rock did, but he could put on amazing matches too. He was just as skilled in a technical match (such as the Steamboat classic at WrestleMania III) as he was in a brawl (such as the match with Hogan at WrestleMania V) but that wasn't why he was so great. He was great because his character had range.

He got angry. He got jealous. He got sad. He got excited. He sometimes fought as the underdog and sometimes as the favourite. This was unheard of in the 1980s WWF (as well as today, to be honest). It seemed like Savage was an actual person, not a gimmick.

CM Punk

CM Punk brought me back to wrestling. I stopped watching around the Chris Benoit horrors, but his "pipe bomb" brought me back. And I'm not the only one. I've talked to many, many people who feel the same way. (See above) Much like Savage, he had range. He could flawlessly work heel or face. He could be dominant or cowardly. His straight edge gimmick could be adapted to whatever his current personality was without too much adjustment, which meant he was consistent. He didn't totally change everything about himself because he was a heel or a face. He was also cool, which is hard to be. I still miss him in a WWE ring.

Kurt Angle

I almost excluded Kurt Angle because his WWE run was short and I didn't watch him in TNA/Impact Wrestling/Global Force Wrestling/Impact Wrestling/Whatever it's called now. But I included CM Punk, and his WWE run was also short and I didn't watch him in Ring of Honor, so how could I exclude Kurt Angle?

Angle was another guy who could do it all. Heel or face, cool or cowardly, serious or funny, he was great at everything. I mentioned earlier that Edge nearly made the cut for those same reasons, but Angle was even better. I've never had another wrestler make me laugh AND make me mark out as much as Kurt Angle. I've talked about how great he was in length on this site already, so I'll leave it at that.

What's your top five? Tell us in the comments or let us know on Twitter or Facebook.

Friday, November 24, 2017

Wrestling Things We're Thankful For


Usually, we're pretty ashamed of our wrestling fandom around here, but this is a special time of year. It's a time for giving thanks.

*cough* ThatWasInOctoberComeOnAmericaCatchUp *cough*

Yes, I'm Canadian. That explains why this post is a day late. I don't entirely understand your Thanksgiving. So here's a clip of Bret Hart berating America for my enjoyment.


Oh yeah.... that's the stuff. Anyway, where was I? Oh yes, Thanksgiving. In the spirit of this holiday, we thought we would each list a couple of things we are thankful for.

Jay is thankful for.....

Finn Bálor's abs


Drew Gulak’s PowerPoint Presentation


John Dos Passos 2 is thankful for...

NJPW and Mexican wrestling 


Because nuts to the WWE.

Asuka


Rick City is thankful for...

Alexa Bliss


 To be fair, the entire women's division (on both brands) is pretty incredible.


I complain about WWE a lot, but the Network always gives me something to watch and how else would I keep viewing 20-year-old content over and over?

Honourable Mention: AJ Styles


He's so good that he got famous wrestling for other companies and Vince still pushes him.

We hope you had a Happy Thanksgiving!!!



Wednesday, November 22, 2017

Finn Balor: Not Over?

Monday November 20. Monday Night Raw after Survivor Series. Roman Reigns takes the Intercontinental Championship away from The Miz.



My skin is clear. My crops are flourishing. My depression is cured.

Rick: Booooooo

Tuesday November 21, I cruise social media to unfortunately see this:


I suddenly have acne, my crops are dying, and my heart shattered into a thousand pieces.

Roman picking up the IC title gave me hope that maybe there was a chance Balor could go for that Universal Title with Rumble coming up. I discussed it with my best friend, unfortunately before seeing this.

Finn is my favorite and that's no secret, but bias aside, the man is an incredible athlete and in ring performer. Founder of the Bullet Club as Prince Devitt in Japan, 292 day reign as NXT Champion, and of course, first Universal Champion in the WWE.

Balor was injured during his Summer Slam match last year and had to give up the title he was unable to defend. Fast forward to the Monday night after No Mercy in August, he stated he planned to go back for it. Finn was still never given his rematch.

My first thought was, "Not over? Did no one see the match between AJ styles and the demon at TLC?" The same AJ Styles who definitely proved his worth against Brock Lesnar at Survivor Series. AJ and Balor had a match that was full of speed, chain wrestling, and high flying acrobatics. It was incredible to watch regardless of the outcome, and absolutely a contender for match of the year. Not over? A wrestler who seems to have an unlimited amount of merchandise and gets any arena he is in do "the arms thing"? (Does it have a name? I don't care. Its the "arms thing")

Love for Finn aside, lets talk about the current Universal Champion holder. Someone who only shows up, oh I don't know, once every three months to defend it? Yet you hear the announcers ogle over this "feat" of holding the title this long. A guy who was kicked out of the UFC, and is the most boring in ring performer to watch. He's more boring than Baron Corbin, as Rick kindly pointed out in his Survivor Series Recap. Part timer, for sure.

I don't know what Vince sees in this guy, honestly. I'm not even trying to be sarcastic. I sincerely wonder what is so appealing about Brock Lesnar? I also wondered if this was Vince's way of getting back at Hunter? Triple H has found amazing talent and brought them through NXT, but as discussed about Survivor series, this same talent was squashed earlier in the men's match in favor of old rivalries between Kurt, Shane, and Triple H.

Logging on to twitter today, I came across this absolute gem.



Is this a threat to the new Intercontinental Champion, or is Finn discrediting Meltzer?

Is this finally the heel turn I've been waiting to see? I hope so. If you never witnessed anything of his character Prince Devitt, you are in for an absolute treat. He might even top Miz.

Five Petty Things That Were Annoying About Survivor Series 2017


Survivor Series is over and, despite the predictable "It's All About The Game" ending, the show was pretty enjoyable. But, because I am a cynical person who has grown jaded over the years and who always expects the WWE to somehow let me down, today I'm looking at the negatives.

But I'm not talking about the BIG negatives, like the fact that Finn Balor, Shinsuke Nakamura, Samoa Joe, and Bobby Roode were portrayed as afterthoughts to Triple H, Kurt Angle, Randy Orton, and Shane McMahon. I'm talking about the little things that annoyed me during the show.
So here we go.

John Cena Wore Green

Yeah, I said this was going to be petty. But WWE did a very good job of having all of the Raw guys wear red (even HHH, who wore a different shirt, but still a red one) and the SmackDown guys wear blue (even Nakamura, who typically wears red) and then they had John Cena come out in all green everything.

Unless this was done to show that Cena was a hired mercenary and not a loyal SmackDown competitor (and, if that was the case, it's actually great) it looked weird. And I don't have enough faith in WWE to give them the benefit of the doubt here. Or anywhere. Ever.


Heel Versus Heel Matches

I know this was "SmackDown versus Raw" but it's hard for the crowd to get into a heel versus heel match. For example, who were we supposed to cheer for when The Miz faced Baron Corbin? I know, the obvious answer is "The Miz" because Corbin is incredibly boring (fight me, Jay), but The Miz is an excellent heel and he should never be cheered. The same goes for The Usos versus The Bar. Both of these are heel teams. Yes, they're both entertaining, but heels are supposed to be booed and we can't boo everyone all the time. We need to conserve our booing for Roman Reigns. (I will fight you, Jay.)

Both of those matches had worse crowd reactions than the rest of the show because fans aren't used to cheering for any of those competitors. WWE had two title changes in the build-up to this show and they still gave us two heel versus heel matches. Why?


We Knew Lesnar Would Win

I mean, we always know Lesnar will win, but this was more obvious than usual. WWE made a HUGE deal about how it was 3-2 for SmackDown going into this match. We knew the only two matches left on the show were Lesnar/Styles and the men's elimination match, and it was obvious that we weren't going to go into the main event with a 4-2 SmackDown lead (which would have made the match even more pointless than it already was), so the Brock Lesnar victory could be seen from a mile away and it took something away from what turned out to be a very good match.

This show was a good example of modern WWE: Great matches, entertaining superstars, awful storylines and booking.


No Titles on the Line

I'm not counting the Cruiserweight Title because it was on the pre-show and I'm pretty sure Vince McMahon doesn't know it exists.

All of the company's major champions were on the show, and not one of them had anything on the line. So why should they try? I know there's pride and everything but, for example, a title reign should be more important than pride and proving you're the best champion.

AJ Styles knew going into the match with Lesnar that he was going to face Jinder Mahal for the title very soon (wasn't it supposed to happen on this week's SmackDown? Why is it now at Clash of Champions? Sigh.) so what reason did he have to give it his all against Lesnar, and risk injury, when he has an actual title match coming up? Doesn't it make sense to try to avoid injury in a non-title showcase match so that he stays healthy for a match when his title is on the line?

Which brings me to....


Nothing Was at Stake

I really like the idea of making Survivor Series a Raw vs SmackDown pay-per-view. It adds something special to the event, which it has certainly been lacking in recent years. However, it's weird that absolutely nothing was on the line.

If we're supposed to believe that pride is enough to fight for, since Raw and SmackDown hate each other so much, then they shouldn't have had the "Superstar Shake-up" in April. It's hard to believe that these two brands really hate each other when they switch sides all the time. If the intent was to prove who was the better champion, then why did both the WWE and SmackDown Women's titles change just weeks (or days) before the show? That devalues that concept.

Besides, if Raw and SmackDown are bitter rivals, why do they plug each other's pay-per-views and recap each other's shows? Why did SmackDown lend AJ Styles to Raw to face Finn Balor recently? Either treat the two brands like they're WCW and WWF, and they hate each other, or treat them like two sports conferences (like the Eastern and Western Conferences in the NHL, for example) and admit that they don't hate each other, they're just different parts of the same company. You can't have both.

Anyway, something should have been on the line at this show. Maybe the winning brand would get extra Royal Rumble entries, or a guarantee that it would get the 30th entrant in the Royal Rumble or the last match of the night at WrestleMania or something. Otherwise, the show felt more like an all-star game where everyone goes out to put on a show but the final score is ultimately meaningless.

And an "All-Star Game" would have been fine, expect the commentators just kept mentioning what the score was and how "critical" it was that each brand win. Why was it critical? Why was it so bad when Zayn and Owens attacked Team SmackDown if SmackDown didn't actually lose anything by losing the match? Even Bragging Rights had a dumb trophy...


Anyway, it was a good show and even the petty things I found to complain about were pretty petty so, I guess good job WWE. I'll keep waiting for future disappointment.

Friday, November 17, 2017

Survivor Series Preview



Rick_City: Welcome to our Survivor Series preview!

JohnDosPassos2: This is going to be shameful.

Rick_City: I'm not even sure what the card for this show is anymore, they've changed it so often. I just really think that...

Tony Schiavone: WAIT..... HERE COMES @jayyyyynine!!! SHE IS IN THE BUILDING!!!!

Bobby Heenan: BUT WHOSE SIDE IS SHE ON!?

Jay: That's right, I am the third man. Well, not really, but you get the joke right? I'm a lady, and I'm here to present my terrible opinions about wrestling, which if you know Rick, I apologize because I'm worse.

Rick_City: Hey yo!

JohnDosPassos2: Too Sweet.... and such

Rick_City: I think this terrible joke has run its course. Not that running something into the ground has ever stopped me before.

JohnDosPassos2: This is like a twenty-year-old reference, you know that, right?

Rick_City: Nobody can stop me! *Starts spray painting things*

Jay: Anyway.... you can call me Jay or J9, I go by either. I tried to get a feel for how I fit into the wrestling world because I'm new to this, and its kind of a controversy according to Twitter. I'm either a really good heel or a 'tweener, but they cant decide. If you want a feel, I probably hate your favorites and love the trashiest wrestlers. That's just the kind of girl I am.

Rick_City: Oh look who's professional all of a sudden. *Pours another drink*

JohnDosPassos2: So... Survivor Series is this Sunday.  *Pours another drink*

Jay: Survivor series is this Sunday, but lets not forget about NXT Takeover on Saturday night. There's some great matches scheduled for Saturday and Im really excited about it.

Rick_City: I haven't watched NXT in months. This one is all yours, Jay.


Andrade Cien Almas vs. Drew McIntyre: Drew finally gets vengeance for that gross chewing gum Zelina stuck to his nice dress shirt.

Women's Championship Match: I really love Ember Moon. That's it. I have nothing to add.

Aleister Black vs. Velveteen Dream: In the words of my favorite super hero movie: "This shit's gonna have nuts in it!" Velveteen is a lot of drama and Aleister will not be saying his name, but the "blxck mass" will be kicking his face.

Lars  vs Kassius: As long as Kassius wears a cool vintage t-shirt, Im really indifferent.

War Games: My heart will probably stop sixteen times and my stomach will turn every time Adam Cole's face gets smashed into the steel cage.

Rick_City: War Games should be fun to see again after so, so long....

JohnDosPassos2: The 90s WCW references never stop around here!

Rick_City: I'm posting a 1990s Survivor Series logo right now.


WWE Cruiserweight Champion Enzo Amore vs. Kalisto (Kickoff Match)

Jay: The Cruiserweights once again are an aside, and if WWE does not give me any Power Point Presentations, I riot.

JohnDosPassos2: I won't recognize the legitimacy of Cruiserweight division until they bring in KeMonito to beat Endzo.

Rick_City: Everybody hates Enzo, so I'm picking Enzo because, deep down, WWE hates the Cruiserweights and all of us, so they want us to be unhappy.

Intercontinental Champion The Miz vs. United States Champion Baron Corbin

Jay: Who's your daddy, Miz?

JohnDosPassos2: The Miz wins by just mocking Corbin's bald-spot. He's that evil of a heel.

Rick_City: The Miz is incredible. If anybody cheers for him though, I'll scream. JUST LET SOMEONE BE A HEEL, DAMMIT!

Women’s 5-on-5 Traditional Survivor Series Elimination Match

Jay: I know Asuka is a murder machine, but I watched Becky Lynch throw Ellsworth last week in Manchester. Don't mess with Becky.

JohnDosPassos2: Remember when both shows didn't have enough strong women wrestlers to do this? I do. Also, isn't the whole "rival shows" thing kinda silly? Anyway, Team Smackdown wins somehow, Asuka will be pissed, and then she'll kill someone.

Rick_City: How is anyone picking anyone other than Asuka to win this? As an aside, women's wrestling is now one of the highlights of any WWE show. Who could have possibly predicted that a decade ago?

Raw Women’s Champion Alexa Bliss vs. SmackDown Women’s Champion Charlotte Flair

Jay: I'm crying. Don't look at me.

JohnDosPassos2: They are going to have Charlotte win. Call it a hunch. Or call it the fact that someone's dad has an ESPN documentary on currently.

Rick_City: I am actually SHOCKED that they didn't keep Natalya in this match so they could do a "Survivor Series Screwjob 20 years later" finish, but here we are. I say Charlotte wins, even though Alexa Bliss is everything that is great in the world. (Or maybe the only thing that is even close to good in the world. Thanks, 2017.)

The Shield vs. The New Day

Jay: It is no secret I love Roman Reigns (the pinned tweet on the Wrestling Shame account was specifically aimed to make me mad) and you probably just stopped reading, called me about six inappropriate slurs, and tweeted angrily about me. (@ me next time @jayyyyynine)  But if you didn't, bear with me: Big E is going to get power bombed, and I am going to enjoy every second of it.

Don't count out any shenanigans from Kevin Owens or Sami Zayn. I think they'll make some kind of an appearance to cause trouble. Speaking of, how did Raw break in to Smackdown last week?...

JohnDosPassos2: I don't like the Shield. There, I said it. I'd say it again. Also, there's going to be a run-in during this match or a surprise partner for The New Day. I don't know who --- Steve Austin?

Rick_City: Yeah, like Roman Reigns is going to lose en route to defeating Brock Lesnar at WrestleMania.

Raw Tag Team Champions Cesaro & Sheamus vs. SmackDown Tag Team Champions The Usos

Jay: This can't possibly top Cesaro shoving his teeth further into his face at No Mercy.

JohnDosPassos2: I can't root against a tag-team called The Bar. I just can't.

Rick_City: I'm going to say The Usos because SmackDown needs to win something and WWE won't let Cesaro succeed.

Men’s 5-on-5 Traditional Survivor Series Elimination Match: Raw vs SmackDown

Jay: TEAM MURDER! I mean Raw.

JohnDosPassos2: They've changed the make-up of these teams at least seven times in the past two weeks, so I fully expect another nine roster moves by Sunday evening.

Also, Team Raw wins because HHH.

Rick_City: WWE is sure trying hard here, sticking both Triple H and John Cena into this match for basically no reason. I say SmackDown wins because Triple H and Kurt Angle just can't get along and they need to fight at WrestleMania to solve their issues.

Universal Champion Brock Lesnar vs. WWE Champion AJ Styles (Champion vs. Champion Match)

Jay: I have a lot of angry feelings about Brock Lesnar and how many times I've had to listen to Paul Heyman say "BRAHK" lately, and AJ Styles deserves this. Fight me.

JohnDosPassos2: AJ will win here, but only because Roman Reigns will interfere in this. Just accept it folks. People will be pissed. We will be pissed (We being Rick and I).

Rick_City: Yeah, like Brock Lesnar is going to lose en route to losing to Roman Reigns at WrestleMania. God SuplexSuplexSuplexSuplex Brock is boring. Does anyone else feel kind of bad for Jinder Mahal? No? No one? I'll see myself out.

Thursday, November 9, 2017

Throwback Thursday: Thoughts on The Montreal Screwjob



If you're a wrestling fan, you're likely keenly aware that today is the anniversary of arguably the most important event in wrestling history: The Montreal Screwjob.  And no, I don't mean that as hyperbole. It not only capped off one of the greatest rivalries in professional wrestling (Hart versus Michaels), but it also gave birth to wrestling's greatest villain (Mr. McMahon), it helped reinvigorate one company (the WWE), and was perhaps the high-water mark of another (WCW). And depending on who you ask, it served as the moment that "pulled back the curtain" on kayfabe and made "reality in wrestling" a reality. 

But in another sense, I think the real importance of the Montreal Screwjob is not its importance to wrestling history: it's that it actually interests people who aren't wrestling fans.

The last couple years, I've taught an introductory course on performance studies to first-year college students. Over the course of fifteen weeks, we examined norms of social performance, we discussed Judith Butler's writing on gender and performance, and we covered the importance of "theatre" in everything from politics to work.

Right around the end of term, I tried to teach a lesson on professional wrestling. One year, I used promos from figures like Ric Flair, Dusty Rhodes, and CM Punk to illustrate how wrestlers play to the regional and social ideologies of their audiences; the next year, I focused my energies on the importance of Lucha Libre to Mexican culture, emphasizing the mythologies wrestlers present to their audiences.

And each time, my students just stared at me throughout the class periods, their eyes projecting to me a sense of torture and pain I can barely describe.

In hindsight, I probably should have seen these reactions coming. I used to simply chalk my students' ambivalence as a result of semester fatigue, but in a larger sense, I think it was borne out their skepticism about wrestling (or the fact I was wearing a New Japan Pro Wrestling t-shirt under a blazer). Non-wrestling fans do tend to view wrestling fans -- and wrestling itself -- with some degree of suspicion, and to be fair, a great deal of that is justified. 

Despite all this, I think we as wrestling fans do a really poor job of communicating to people why we like wrestling. We sometimes might assert that we are really invested in the narratives being told to us by the wrestlers and the company; or we might say we find the blend of theatre and sport intriguing; we also may note the communal experience of being a fan with people around the world; we could even say it's simply something that has to be experienced live. Heck, I even tried all these arguments with my classes -- and with people in my life --- and it usually doesn't work. 

But a few months ago, I was walking around Milwaukee with my daughter and my girlfriend -- neither of whom are wrestling fans. For whatever reason -- okay, I was trying to embarrass both of them with some wrestling knowledge because they do love making fun of me whenever I pontificate about anything -- I briefly talked about the Montreal Screwjob.  After explaining it a broad sense, my girlfriend said "I can't believe I'm saying this, but that's actually really interesting."

And it IS interesting. And it appeals to a plethora of people because the story of the Montreal Screwjob connects to their interests. They may not like the Tupelo Concession Brawl or Brawn Stroman tipping over an ambulance, but they will enjoy hearing about an employer taking revenge on an employee, of two stars bickering with each other and then putting on a show, the war between corporate giants, and a moment that happened but wasn't supposed to happen -- and how wrestlers, promoters, and fans knew it at the time. And how it impacted a form of entertainment for years afterward and has even sparked its own "truther" movement.

**I really wish I would have done a piece on the Montreal Screwjob Truther Movement now**

The lasting gift of the Montreal Screwjob is that it can provide a gateway for people to maybe not love wrestling, but at least understand some of the elements that makes us enjoy it. And perhaps instead of saying "Here's why I love wrestling!" we, as fans, need to focus on a particular story that shows people why we love wrestling: the stories, the personalities, the context, and the unexpected.






 




Monday, October 30, 2017

The Wrestling Shame Halloween - Wrestling Movie Marathon!


I have a confession.

No, it's not that I like professional wrestling. You probably figured that out already.

My confession is this: I love Halloween. Drinking apple cider. Dressing up. Stealing my kid's candy. And I really love watching a bunch of horror films around this time of year.

I also love having movie marathons. Friends. Drinking alcohol. Stealing more of my kid's candy.

So with all that in mind, I've laid out a horror movie marathon for you, dear Wrestling Shame reader. And because we deal with wrestling here, all of these films have a wrestling connection. I've also suggested an appropriate drink / snack for each film because....well, you need snacks. And drinks.

A couple notes: I didn't include films that featured wrestlers in short cameos (Gremlins 2, The Devil's Rejects), or any Rock movies. Those are my rules.



First film: Santo Vs The Vampire Women

Santo is arguably the most famous professional wrestler from Mexico, and a national icon in that country. Famous for never removing his mask in public, Santo also appeared in dozens of films in his home country that promoted a supernatural, mythic quality to his character. Many of these films are relatively difficult to find and, aside from a few, are in Spanish, but perhaps his most famous film -- Santo vs The Vampire Women -- is found on YouTube and is dubbed in English.

I personally appreciate this film, but it is very easy to give in and make light of it (there's also a Mystery Science Theater 3000 version of this film that has its moments). So, upon first viewing, I'd make a few margaritas, find some good Mexican food, and enjoy.

**If you decide to poke fun at this film, rest assured your jokes are not nearly as funny as you think they might be. Leave the bad jokes to us.



Second film: Pro Wrestlers VS Zombies

So perhaps you're a bit full from margaritas and Mexican food -- and perhaps feeling guilty that you made fun of Santo WHO IS A GOD DAMN NATIONAL TREASURE -- so you want to punish yourself.

Then you need to watch Pro Wrestlers VS Zombies.

There's a plot here (I suppose). Wrestlers fight zombies. Um. Matt Hardy is in it! Roddy Piper is in it! Shane Douglas! Jim Duggin! This movie is so bad! It's ninety minutes long, but feels like 3 hours!

You should avoid eating food or drinking during your viewing because 1) you need to pace yourself and 2) this movie will make you want to fight someone and you don't want to be too full.


Third film: River of Darkness

Okay, back to the fun. But only if you promise to be good.

River of Darkness features Kurt Angle, Sid Vicious, and Kevin Nash. Angle plays a sheriff, and there's a horde of un-dead zombie river creatures who terrorize his town.

To be honest, I haven't finished this movie. I keep falling asleep to it, but you almost want to like it because it's just so bad, but everyone seems to be trying real hard --- kinda like Impact Wrestling! #Satire

You can have some snacks now, and feel free to enjoy a beer or two while you watch this, and break out that popcorn!. Also, you can do this drinking game: every time one of your friends yells "there go his quads!" when Kevin Nash grabs something, they have to take a shot.


Fourth film: See No Evil 1 or 2

See No Evil stars Kane as Jacob Goodnight, the leader of a Puritan family who is banished from his community for going against the church elders. After the family sets up a new home in the woods....

*checks notes*

Sorry, that's The Witch. That's a good film. This is not. Actually, neither of them are. Basically, Kane plays a tortured soul who was burned in a fire set by his brother, and then was involved with a woman named Katie Vick....

*checks notes again*

Son of a...

Actually, you can just skip these films. Or you can watch them, but zone-out when Kane comes on -- just like when you watch wrestling!!! ZING!!!

But have another beer!! Did your friend bring cookies? Have those too!


Fifth film: They Live

Alright folks, it's time to get serious. You've suffered through some pretty bad films to this point. Now, you need a reward.

If you've never seen They Live, you need to watch it. It is -- without question -- the best film starring a professional wrestler. It's also a really solid piece of cinema that actually addresses a number of soico-political issues. Plus, Roddy Piper is fantastic.

You should also see this film because alt-right knuckleheads keep attempting to co-opt the anti-capitalist and anti-bourgeois messages of this film. You want right-wing propaganda from the 1980s? Go watch Red Dawn. 

Sixth film: "It's a Surprise....."

Okay, now you need to end on a bang. Your guests are drunk. You've eaten most of the snacks in the house. You've decided to open up that bottle of pumpkin liquor you bought for some reason.

So -- you need the scariest movie possible.
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Oh, I'm not going to tell you what it is.
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Keep scrolling....but I'm warning you...

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It's scary...
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Okay,
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I warned you....
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IT'S TERRIFYING.....*sobs* I WARNED YOU!!!!

Well, I hope you enjoy these films! Did I miss any? Hit me up on social media! I might respond. And Happy Halloween everybody!