Welcome to TurnbuckleZine.

Feel free to check out the tabs above for info about me, my more in depth thoughts and opinions that I have written on this site, and my tribute to two of my favorite professional wrestling icons

FYI

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The Intercontinental Podcast

Feel free to check out my pocast with my friend Brayton. He lives in Illinois, USA, I live in the Czech Republic. We have created the world's only trans-continental wrestling podcast.

The argument that

"wrestling isn't real"

is so obtuse, so dull to the point at hand, so willfully ignorant of the concept of reality.

What's so real about any game?
What is real in any way about putting men in bizarre clothes, giving them an oblong ball, and asking them to run it across a line for 60 minutes?

Worse yet, what's real about paying them millions of dollars to do it?

-Read On-

This video will be relevant for always.

Video posted at 10:36 PM (1 year ago) | Permalink

I feel like I’m finally at the point where when I see images like this, I do not think that it’s “cool,” as I did 15 years ago.  Obviously I am a bit “brainwashed” by the WWE style and banishing of intentional bleeding, but I’ve forgotten what the point is in blading altogether.  It seems no-win to me:
1) Your company upholds the idea of “legitimate” fighting… so what’s legitimate about taking a knife to your forehead, that you hide from the audience, halfway through a match to simulate an injury?
2) You acknowledge that wrestling is fake but that the art of the staged fight is still important and central to the story and theatrical element that is professional wrestling.  How often can blading be justified as necessary to tell a story?  As a musician and artist, I understand that art is art, but it has to justify itself.  The more I see blood these days, the more I question how well it can be justified as an artistic statement.

I feel like I’m finally at the point where when I see images like this, I do not think that it’s “cool,” as I did 15 years ago.  Obviously I am a bit “brainwashed” by the WWE style and banishing of intentional bleeding, but I’ve forgotten what the point is in blading altogether.  It seems no-win to me:

1) Your company upholds the idea of “legitimate” fighting… so what’s legitimate about taking a knife to your forehead, that you hide from the audience, halfway through a match to simulate an injury?

2) You acknowledge that wrestling is fake but that the art of the staged fight is still important and central to the story and theatrical element that is professional wrestling.  How often can blading be justified as necessary to tell a story?  As a musician and artist, I understand that art is art, but it has to justify itself.  The more I see blood these days, the more I question how well it can be justified as an artistic statement.

(via droptoehold)

Posted at 10:55 PM (1 year ago) | Permalink

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