[FONT="]Pro wrestling, it’s fake, right? Well, yes and no. The WWE (formerly known as the WWF) is the largest and most well-known wrestling organization in the world and has held thousands of wrestling matches in its reign for three decades. All of those matches, no matter how small or large in promotion, had predetermined outcomes, that is, all the participants, wrestler and referee, (not to mention the company heads) knew who was supposed to and who was going to win the match. Wrestling shows follow a script and it is a wrestler’s job to follow the script. This makes wrestling the black sheep of sports, as it is the only sport that is not a true athletic competition. However, this writer argues that it is wrestling’s “fake” scripted nature that makes it better than the “real” sports.
[/FONT][FONT="]So if a wrestler knows ahead of time that he or she is going to lose their match, why bother competing (if that word can be used) at all? For entertainment, that’s why. All sports entertain their fans by the thrilling actions that happen in their respective games. When a quarterback throws a 50 yard touchdown pass with the clock running down and the game on the line, it is a miraculous toss-and-catch that almost had no chance. When a wrestler performs their signature finishing move and wins the championship belt, it was planned to happen. Wrestling guarantees the excitement of big moments in specific points that real sports can only hope to offer on arbitrary occasions.
[/FONT] [FONT="] Winning or losing a wrestling match is trivial. What is most important, or arguably how to truly win a match, is to entertain the audience. The three letters in WWE stand for World Wrestling Entertainment. Neither the WWE, nor any other wrestling organization ever claims on-camera or off that their product is a legitimate competitive sport. It’s a scripted show and the fans are smart enough to know that and they play along because it’s fun to pretend it’s real. The same can be said of almost all films and television shows; they are fake in the same way wrestling is fake, but that doesn’t prevent the Netflix audience from investing hours into watching the latest new hit drama or fans buying tickets weeks in advance to see the new summer blockbuster in theaters.
[/FONT] [FONT="] Wrestling is very comparable to stage plays; there are actors performing live in front of an audience trying to sell the story. Like a stage play, stories need characters, and the pro wrestling industry has never been short of colorful, romantic characters, complete with catch phrases, merchandise, and devout followings. Take for instance the Ultimate Warrior, a wrestler who had his heyday in the WWF (as it was known then) in the late 80’s, early 90’s. The Ultimate Warrior was billed from “parts unknown,” had a warrior’s mask painted on his face, and ran to the ring in frenzy. He shook the top rope almost psychotically before every match, beat his chest like a cartoon gorilla, and had a physique that lived up to his name. When he was dressed up in his work clothes, he looked like a man who would fight the sun if it came crashing down onto Earth.
[/FONT] [FONT="] Without fan support of these other worldly characters, pro wrestling as we know it would cease to exist. Wrestling is the only sport that relies on fan input for the product. If a wrestler is well loved or despised, then that wrestler moves forward in the industry because they’re doing something right. Whether cutting good “promos” (laying a verbal smack down on the microphone) and/or doing impressive work in the ring, a wrestler works for the approval of the audience. Wrestlers want to get “over,” an industry term meaning that the fans are reacting in a positive, appropriate way in great volume to what the wrestler is doing. Getting over is what puts a wrestler in more high profile matches, more TV and pay-per-view time, and perhaps a coveted championship title.
[/FONT] [FONT="]The relationship between wrestler and audience is sacred. Without that strong bond, even the greatest athletes can fail to be great wrestlers. It’s not all body slams and chair shots to the head. A wrestler has to make a connection with the audience otherwise they’ll never get over and their career might be short lived or at the very least unfruitful. Without a loyal fan base, a wrestler has no direction.
[/FONT] [FONT="] So what is a wrestler? For one, a wrestler is an actor; they’re on stage playing a character. But of course, a wrestler is also an athlete and must be able to keep up in the ring, whether in grace or crudeness. Where wrestling can actually claim realism where many other scripted programs cannot is in the actual execution of the physical component. There is no faking a fall on the mat or a flip off the top of a ladder. Wrestlers train to get beat up, that’s their job after all and there are no stunt doubles in wrestling. It’s a live action show and a wrestler must be well trained in their craft in order to put on a good match but also avoid seriously injuring themselves or their opponents.
[/FONT] [FONT="]Wrestling is like a dance, choreographed and with a partner. While its cousin boxing has the “sweet science,” wrestling has its own art form. Wrestlers come in all shapes and sizes and each wrestler develops their own methods and signature moves. Since wrestling is about showmanship and not actually maiming your opponent, wrestlers work together to perform the best match that they can. So, essentially, wrestlers take turns hitting each other for the good of the show. Real sports can often end in one-sided, uninteresting blowouts. Wrestling matches, more often than not, offer the best of each competing wrestler.
[/FONT] [FONT="]A wrestler is a modern day song and dance man, albeit a more violent type. The ring is the stage and they throw themselves around it for the sake of entertainment. The primal fun of watching another person in danger goes back to Roman gladiators competing in a visceral slaying of opponents. Violence has become entertainment in many forms. Wrestling offers violence in a controlled and planned environment with a point to it. The violence in professional wrestling is just a part of a story. Professional wrestling is storytelling through combat.
[/FONT] [FONT="]Many stories go with the good vs. evil trope. Wrestling is no different and is reliant on that cliché for their stories. There are “babyfaces” (good guys) and “heels” (bad guys). The lines between each are clear and well defined. Babyfaces are cheered for their heroic and noble actions while heels are jeered for their arrogance and cowardice. Some wrestlers work better as good guy characters and some work well as bad guy characters and stay with that persona for most of their careers, but most wrestlers change sides when the story calls for it. This familiar device of good vs. evil is easily recognizable when watching a wrestling program, just as many other forms of storytelling use it as a backbone to the plot.
[/FONT] [FONT="]The dismissive tone towards wrestling because it is considered fake is undeserved, this writer argues. The practice of suspension of disbelief is necessary for any form of scripted entertainment. It is unjust to reject wrestling’s merit for doing something that is common and accepted in other forms. In one way, wrestling is more real than its more-accepted counterparts. Everything a wrestler does in the ring, whether actually wrestling or just talking in a microphone, happens live. It is being experienced simultaneously by both performer and audience member.
[/FONT] [FONT="]You can call wrestling fake if you want, but what isn’t fake is the emotional ride that an audience takes when watching a wrestling match. It is unrivaled by the likes of football, baseball, basketball, and any other real sport. The real sport athletes are playing against each other and do what they feel is right to do. A wrestler gets into the ring with the audience in their corner and does what the audience wants them to do. When a wrestler takes a [FONT="]death-defying[/FONT] fall, we fall with them and feel the crashing impact. When they win a match, we hold our arms above our heads in celebration with them.
[/FONT] [FONT="]It’s wrestling’s connection with the audience that is its greatest facet. Wrestlers live and die on fan support. When the likeable underdog wins the coveted championship, it is because it’s what the fans wanted. And when the ring announcer declares them the new heavyweight champion of the world, it is the wrestler who crowns the audience champion. As Daniel Bryan, a newly crowned WWE champion, was hearing the cheer of “You deserve it” from a thunderous crowd, Bryan said back, “I might deserve it a little bit, but I think you guys deserve it.” [/FONT]