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I just want to try it out and see how it is. If I have a couple of matches and if people like me then I might take it a little further. It's a small club we have but they train you and people come to watch. It's fun.

2007-07-31 04:39:26 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Sports Wrestling

5 answers

I was ohio valley champ for two months but if your going to train people you must have a liscense and great insurance because if you get some hurt or dead there a stiff penalty and even jail time

2007-07-31 04:53:25 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No, it doesn't insult my intelligence. That's just the entertainment factor. First off, if you're IQ lowers due to wrestling, I think that's a problem within itself that goes beyond the ring. Intelligence shouldn't be based off of a television show, especially a show for entertainment purposes only. It's show business. I don't look at the things you mentioned as an insult to my intelligence. Since the revealing of wrestling being "scripted", and the introduction of dirt sheets and spoiler sites to the general public, the most illogical mind should know by now that wrestling is not what meets the eye. We all know the punches are open-handed and don't connect as hard as they look. We all know the impact of kicks are only the sounds of the canvas. Wrestling fans, for the most part, watch wrestling for entertainment purposes and look at it through a solely kayfabe lens. If we were to ask and answer questions on this site, repeatedly questioning how somebody like John Cena or Triple H was able to defeat Big Show when it's all "fake" and "scripted", wouldn't that take away from the entertainment itself? Just like movies and television, which aren't much of a reality either, we're supposed to believe the things we see on the screen are actually happening. When John Cena loses, I'm supposed to react, because that's the structure that wrestling was built on. Wrestling would be ten times more uninteresting if I were to question John Cena's inhumane ability to defeat most of his colleagues every time he won a match. Mixed Martial Arts are something very different. People don't need to look at MMA through a kayfabe lens because it's one of the few things on television that's real. The punches, the kicks, the holds, are all actually happening and can literally injure and, in some unfortunate cases, kill the people involved. It's not built to entertain me the way WWE entertains me. The storylines, the talking, the drama, is what's popular right now. It doesn't insult my intelligence if I know what it's about and can identify the differences between real and fake. BQ1: It's all about personal preference and actual ability. The Great Khali is strong, yes, but you'll need much more than strength in MMA. Kicks, holds and speed are also extremely important and Khali lacks those essential requirements. Plus, if being a wrestler is what they want to do, even if they're capable of MMA, wrestling may just be the preference. BQ2: It's honestly a double standard there. Yes, WWE is scripted but everything else on television is fake, right? Am I supposed to believe two teenagers can morph their bodies into vampires and wolves? They're claiming something to be fake even though what they watch on a daily basis is the same thing. Everything on television is for entertainment purposes. Ignore the hypocrisy, there's no need to defend yourself in a fight when people are only insulting themselves.

2016-05-18 23:09:03 · answer #2 · answered by neva 3 · 0 0

hi

2007-07-31 05:01:37 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

yes its good fun

2007-07-31 04:43:00 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

YES

2007-07-31 07:57:16 · answer #5 · answered by BOB 6 · 0 0

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