eli5 wrestling champions

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Ok I’m not from usa, so I dont really underestand wrestling. As far as I know its a scripted sketch with real phisical skill necessary to perform the act. But I keep reading about old champions or the first xxx race champion etc. What do you mean champion? If those are actors, so to speak, there are no champion, there is a script to follow. Its like saying Arnold swarzneger was the first terminator to defeat the advanced model in terminator2, what
? Please eli5.

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40 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

It’s presented like a real competition. Unlike a TV show about a sports comp that is obviously scripted, you can turn off part of your brain and buy into the fantasy.

Anonymous 0 Comments

It’s presented like a real competition. Unlike a TV show about a sports comp that is obviously scripted, you can turn off part of your brain and buy into the fantasy.

Anonymous 0 Comments

There was an attitude back in the 70’s and 80’s that if fans figured out that wrestling was fake the entire industry would die out. So there’s always been a hard push for it to be perceived as a real sport hence why they often have championships like real sports. Even today WWE pushes this idea to a pretty big degree. No active wrestler will ever talk about the match results being scripted in an interview. Honestly wrestlers don’t like the term fake or scripted either because that’s not entirely accurate. The results are scripted, but a lot of the action is improvisational based on crowd reaction or how the wrestlers are feeling during the match.

Anonymous 0 Comments

There was an attitude back in the 70’s and 80’s that if fans figured out that wrestling was fake the entire industry would die out. So there’s always been a hard push for it to be perceived as a real sport hence why they often have championships like real sports. Even today WWE pushes this idea to a pretty big degree. No active wrestler will ever talk about the match results being scripted in an interview. Honestly wrestlers don’t like the term fake or scripted either because that’s not entirely accurate. The results are scripted, but a lot of the action is improvisational based on crowd reaction or how the wrestlers are feeling during the match.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Professional wrestling is or has been at various points highly popular in Mexico, Japan, and the UK, among other countries with smaller promotions operating today, so not being from the US has nothing to do with it.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Professional wrestling is or has been at various points highly popular in Mexico, Japan, and the UK, among other countries with smaller promotions operating today, so not being from the US has nothing to do with it.

Anonymous 0 Comments

A friend of mine wrote two seasons of GLOW (the original one back in the 80s, which was fictionalized in the recent Netflix series). He said that the wrestlers were always very nice to him because they knew he was the one who decided who won and who lost.

Anonymous 0 Comments

A friend of mine wrote two seasons of GLOW (the original one back in the 80s, which was fictionalized in the recent Netflix series). He said that the wrestlers were always very nice to him because they knew he was the one who decided who won and who lost.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Pro wrestling is considered a cross between a performance art and a sport. The championships still happening even though the outcome is predetermined is part of the sport aspect of it, if there is a sport then there should be something to compete for right?

But in the case of pro wrestling, the right to become champion is determined behind the scenes rather than on the spot. Of course you can’t just let whoever carry a belt. Wrestling champions are usually those who the promoters determine are the ones who are able to get the most reaction from the crowd whether positive (usually by “face” or good guy wrestlers) or negative (“heel” or bad guy wrestlers) and whom they observe is able to draw crowds to begin with. This starts through careful observation of a performer’s growth from show to show.

Most wrestlers start out the same way–losing matches at the bottom of a show’s card and so the people behind the scenes are able to see how well the guy performs at the short end of the stick in a match. Whether he’s able to tell his part of the story well. Then sometimes if they see the guy has potential they let him win matches from time to time and gradually give him more exposure. The chances of him being booked to win a title increase if he is able to develop his “gimmick” or in ring character in a way that the fans respond to. Then they are put to the test in title matches. The more good matches they put on for the crowd and the more that the crowds respond to them compared to whoever is the champion currently the more likely they are to become repeat champions, or keep their title for longer.

Even though it’s staged we need to consider the concept of a pro wrestling championship valid. At the end of the day a belt is still won or lost in front of a crowd and it’s really the only marker of achievement a wrestler will have in their career. It’s bragging rights and their egos and paychecks are on the line everytime a title is defended.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Pro wrestling is considered a cross between a performance art and a sport. The championships still happening even though the outcome is predetermined is part of the sport aspect of it, if there is a sport then there should be something to compete for right?

But in the case of pro wrestling, the right to become champion is determined behind the scenes rather than on the spot. Of course you can’t just let whoever carry a belt. Wrestling champions are usually those who the promoters determine are the ones who are able to get the most reaction from the crowd whether positive (usually by “face” or good guy wrestlers) or negative (“heel” or bad guy wrestlers) and whom they observe is able to draw crowds to begin with. This starts through careful observation of a performer’s growth from show to show.

Most wrestlers start out the same way–losing matches at the bottom of a show’s card and so the people behind the scenes are able to see how well the guy performs at the short end of the stick in a match. Whether he’s able to tell his part of the story well. Then sometimes if they see the guy has potential they let him win matches from time to time and gradually give him more exposure. The chances of him being booked to win a title increase if he is able to develop his “gimmick” or in ring character in a way that the fans respond to. Then they are put to the test in title matches. The more good matches they put on for the crowd and the more that the crowds respond to them compared to whoever is the champion currently the more likely they are to become repeat champions, or keep their title for longer.

Even though it’s staged we need to consider the concept of a pro wrestling championship valid. At the end of the day a belt is still won or lost in front of a crowd and it’s really the only marker of achievement a wrestler will have in their career. It’s bragging rights and their egos and paychecks are on the line everytime a title is defended.