American Professional Wrestling, Theory Of

Prepare To Be Confused

by JuggyNot (JuggyNot@aol.com)
written 21 Sep 1997

This article is classified "Real"


On the whole, professional wrestling, though quite entertaining and brutally
violent, has turned into a hobby of a limited audience; namely drunken white
trash [1].  Bear in mind, this is still quite a large audience, but such
focus excludes several otherwise adoring fans.

Why are people so eager to plop down in front of the set and watch two
ballerinas punch and kick the air directly in front of (sometimes quite a
few feet to the side of) someone's face?  Because of the reactions caused,
of course.

          1) For one, the other "wrestler" winces in mock pain and sometimes
             screams some obscenity.

          2) Secondly, the commentators will exclaim "Goodness gracious!" or
             "Wrestler X sure is takin' a wallopin'" in a pseudo-Texas
             accent.

          3) Thirdly, the audience, if not out buying cotton candy or giant
             foam hands, will yell, in stereo mind you, "OH!" Sometimes,
             particularly if one of the wrestlers is being "beaten" in the
             corner, the audience will spontaneously, and of its own
             volition, count.  Traditionally, the audience counts along with
             the "punches" being delivered which usually amounts to 10
             "punches."  When the number either exceeds or falls short of
             ten, however, the maddened audience becomes confused.  Most
             will keep counting to about 8 full seconds after the barrage of
             "punches" has stopped.

             In some federations of wrestling, it is customary to buy 5 U.S.
             dollars worth of soda only to heave it, and the cup containing
             it, at the combatants.  Here, it becomes painfully obvious that
             the wrestlers are trained for just such a situation, as they
             will never react to being smeared with such soft drinks.

          4) Fourthly, and most often overlooked, is the referee's
             reaction.  The ref will either make a futile attempt to
             reprimand the wrestler delivering the punch (most often by
             reproducing the offensive manoeuvre in mid-air), will wince
             himself in mock surprise (as if he doesn't see a bodyslam every
             other night), or be spontaneously knocked unconscious. The
             latter of these phenomena is outrageously hilarious.  The
             reaction of this is the same as those listed above.

This is where it gets confusing.  Reactions causing counter-reactions which
will likely set off a chain reaction of events that will undoubtedly end the
match in some unfair fashion, causing some wrestler to get a shiny oversized
belt.

For instance, say a ref was slightly tapped by Monster KahunaMokka, the
challenger to the belt.  The ref is, of course, knocked cold.  Now, fate
chooses one of the four aforementioned reactions to occur. If (1) occurs, he
is made to look quite foolish, as the ref was the one knocked unconcious,
and not him.  (2) is the most common reaction, the common statement being a
calm retort of, "Well, there goes the ref."  Of course, in any other
refereed sport, like boxing or tennis, a KO'd ref would make headlines the
following morning.  (3) very infrequently occurs in this instance, as the
ref does not draw any sympathy from the crowd.  If anything, the crowd will
give a feeble cheer at the demise of an official.  They are, after all,
drunken white trash.  Why is this?  It is simply because the referee is
already in the ring when the wrestlers arrive.  If the referee got theme
music or fancy tights, he might get a tiny bit of respect.

Now, we get to counter-reaction (4), which can be dangerous in this
situation.  A knocked out ref can, in theory, still reprimand a wrestler. 
"How?" you may ask.  Through karma, of course.  Very rarely, a wrestler
charging his dazed opponent with a chair will trip over the inert body of
the referee, causing all sorts of reactions and thereby counter-reactions. 
A KO'd ref can wince too, though it is often independent of the wrestlers'
reactions and looks very much like a twitch.  Finally, and here's the tough
part to grasp, a KO'd ref can be KO'd.  A ref getting up from previously
being KO'd is still considered KO'd as he is not able to officiate.  Upon
his first recovery attempt, it is preordained that the referee will be
bumped into or slugged again.  Thus, the referee has been knocked out twice.

All of these counter-reactions, of course, cause more reactions,
counter-counter-reactions as it were.  This is far too complex to go into
here.  One question remains:  If this article has utterly confused you,
which it undoubtedly has, why is wrestling a "sport" for drunken white
trash?  The world may never know...

[1] `What is ``drunken white trash''?' asked Alex McLintock when this
    article came up for discussion.  `Is this some American term which means
    something to Americans but not Europeans?  Is it safe to use in polite
    company?'

    Robert A. Uhl ([MAILTO uhl@red.netexas.net]) answered this as follows:

    `If there were such a thing as polite company, no.  But it's a phrase
    used even by James Carville (an associate of Pres. Clinton).

    `White trash are the poor white people, generally from the rural South,
    whom everyone looks down on.  They are the ones who are featured on the
    various talk shows (next week on Springer: I'm Dating a Black Man But My
    KKK Grand Dragon Father Objects).  They are viewed as drunkards, dirty,
    superstitious, ignorant and illiterate (much the way the Irish were
    viewed last century in the US and, I believe, the UK).

    `Of course, the reality is quite different.  Most poor rural white
    Southerners are no different from people anywhere, save that they are
    pretty well-nigh universally looked down upon and are aware of the fact.
    I tend to feel sorry for them; they don't deserve the disdain they get.
    'Course, it doesn't help that they keep on trying to get ``creation
    science'' admitted into the school system...

    `To answer your question, though: it's a phrase which most Americans
    (esp. the Yankee and coastal elites) would not hesitate to use, although
    it is rather offensive.'

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