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LucharesuFan619

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Everything posted by LucharesuFan619

  1. Everything doesn't have to be a technical classic to be a good match. On the Crazy Max boards, a guy did an indepth review that you can still find of the Acid vs. Sonjay match from One More Time (I think it was) in 2002 and explains why it was such a good match. Check it out. It does no good to crap on everything. Wrestling has enough bad shit going for it in the guys like Crash, Stu, Sheik, R. Rock, Petty, etc., dying - don't give it anymore.
  2. You would say that. Not all of us think that Dutt, Acid and AB Luke are the be all and end all Barber, a little less bias in your posts would be nice you do realize that the Dutt/Acid "off the charts good" comment was taken verbatim from an unrelated third party currently at the show, then posted on the RoH board, then cut and pasted here, right....? that may explain the quotes. so any bias belongs to dude's friend Joe in Philly. (although... you are, as far as i'm concerned, correct about Luke, Acid, and to a lesser extent, Dutt.) from the TNA 2004 Wishlist thread, he goes on about wanting AB Luke or Dutt to "save" the X-Division From what I've seen of both XPW and CZW, Acid and Luke are overrated piles of shit, moreso Acid, and Dutt is a spotmonkey who's only saving grace is his higher hit frequency than Teddy Annis I don't mind people expressing their like for a certain wrestler, but calling a spotfest "off the charts good" and calling Whitmer- Stryker boring just reeks of bias You're an idiot. First of all, YOU clearly have a BIAS towards ME. First you bitch about my GQ Money interview when everyone else's feedback was positive. Now this... Dude, those aren't my opinions! I copied and pasted them from the ROH board! Those are the opinions of redishero's friend, Jose, who's AT the show. Jeez...shut up and stop acting like a moron. Luke is a great highspots worker, and is also pretty good technically. I bought the comp of his career from NWA-Wildside.com and he's quite good...even before he was in XPW, he had a feud with Vic Grimes that produced some of the best matches on the So-Cal circuit in BTW, RPW, SPW, and other feds. And Acid, I agree, he's overrated, to a degree, in that he tries to do stuff that he isn't great at, i.e. a Japanese style, but his matches with Homicide have proved to me that he's better than I thought. The guy is very talented, just not QUITE as talented as some people make him out to be. Stop being so pessimistic.
  3. Matt Stryker defeated BJ Whitmer with the Stryker Lock to win the Field Of Honor Tournament. Very slow match. Locker room congratulates Stryker afterwards. I'm not gonna do this anymore. I'm too busy. Updates can be found at the ROH board. If someone wants to take over, feel free to do so.
  4. John Walters defeated Xavier in the Fight Without Honor. F'N Awesome match says Joe. Xavier leaves the Prophecy and joins with... You guys ain't going to believe this... PRINCE NANA!!!!!!!!! Walters & Nana are now known as The Embassy. By the way...this post is no joke. Xavier and Nana are now allied.
  5. Like I said - I know I'll be ridiculed for asking such a dumb question, but... Do the premiere wrestling journalists, i.e. Scherer, Meltzer, Keller, Alvarez, etc. have day jobs, or do they make a living on their newsletters? I'm pretty sure that they must do something else besides writing newsletters to make money, because I can't imagine - even with the number of subscribers they must have - that they could be able to pull in suitable salaries that they could live on. It's been bugging me, though, and I'm interested in a definitive answer...I mean, they update their sites and write newsletters so often... I have vacation now, and I'm balancing doing a bunch of projects (editing the casual transcripts of my interviews with GQ Money/Lee Handsome into something understandable; an extensive feature on the roots, history, and legacy [or lack thereof, whichever you prefer] of XPW; writing questions for interviews with Johnny Webb and former-SWF promoter and mainstream acting star Verne Langdon; working on an ENORMOUS [that probably doesn't do it justice] retrospective looking back on the histories and legacies of both ECW and Viking Hall, both of which to be posted midway through 2004; writing a fantasty card for the next CZW show; working on an ROH NOTG video review; not to mention having a life outside of wrestling, and keeping up with school work) and I'm having some difficulty even doing that...these guys are in their 20s, 30s, 40s, probably even older for some of them, so they must have mortgages, wives, bills, etc....how do they deal with it all and still manage to update their web sites constantly and produce newsletters? I know Bob Barnett is a lawyer, besides doing the wrestling stuff, but what about the other guys? Any help/info would be appreciated.
  6. For what it's worth - when Kendo Kashin worked the SmackDown! taping awhile back (he was in town for a CZW show), his match with Noble wasn't televised. Oh well...it's the holidays (or was), so let's be optimistic...We'll just have to wait and see...
  7. I'll post results until I get bored: Credit: ROHWrestling.com board's redismyhero and his friend who's at the show, Joe Convention Card Sumie Sakai defeated Allison Danger CM Punk cut a promo on Muta Josh Daniels defeated Puma with a Fisherman's Buster. Big Joe said it was a good match. Dunn and Marcos and The Christopher St. Connection went to a No Contest when CM Punk interfered. He hit Mase with the Pepsi Plunge. Deranged and Johnny Kashmere have been replaced in the 4-Way by Hydro and Oman Tortuga. Someone said that Deranged missed his ride, as ironic as it may sound, although I'm not sure how they'd know so soon, unless they know him personally. Kashmere's reason for not showing isn't yet known. Anyway... Hydro defeated Oman Tortuga, Nick Gage and Slyk Wagner Brown in a Four Corner Survival Match with a Pumphandle Piledriver. Joe says the finish was sick. someone threw a streamer at a fan dressed as Muta... despite apologies, the streamer thrower was tarred and feathered Special K and The Carnage Crew went to a No Contest. This is strange as I thought it was a no DQ match. The PA State Athletic Commission supposedly stopped the match. One of the guys who sits at ringside (I always wondered who he was) seemed a bit ticked at the blood. Then came the Carnage Driver through his table. Trent Acid defeated Sonjay Dutt with a Yakuza Kick. The match was apparently "off of the charts good." The Briscoe Brothers defeated The SAT with a Doomsday Device to retain the ROH Tag Team Titles. Afterwards they confronted Samoa Joe and Bryan Danielson. Also the arena is packed. Main card starts at 7:45. I'll be watching London/Styles from NOTG meanwhile.
  8. Thanks. How about these. Anyone know any of the signature moves of Alex Shelley (so far I gather he uses ICFJapan, BCStretch, SShock, a Stretch Plum, Back Suplex, Slingshot Leg Drop, S-board Swinging DDT, Knee Strike, and a Yakuza Kick)? or any of the sig. moves of Jimmy Jacobs, besides the CCode, Huss Boot, Camel Clutch, and Yakuza Kick? Those'll be my last ?'s for awhile, until a couple others start asking some of their own.
  9. Yeah, it's too bad it's not at SmackDown! At least then they could be jobbing to WGTT, Los Guerreros (dream f'n match; I don't have to have seen either of the Japanese guys, because Guerreros can work any style; LOL), etc. Then again, a match vs. the Dudleyz could be *decent*, and don't forget - WWE *LOVES* nationality-based storylines, because they ALWAYS sell (or do they...pooey)...so maybe La Res. vs. TS... Oh, fuck it...let's all just sit back, relax, and watch them get stomped by Cade & Jindrak (both of whom are great workers, but are being overpushed and/or pushed too quickly) like Corey mentioned...
  10. Oh, OK. Wasnb't clear at first. Just signed online and checked my e-mail, to find that Mr. Langdon a.k.a. the world's nicest pro wrestling promoter ever e-mailed me back, saying that he'd be more than happy to contribute.
  11. Courtesy of Kris Z's newsletter: There is talk that Turmeric Storm (Tomoaki Honma & Kazushi Miyamoto) may get a dark match on the WWE RAW tapings next Monday night in San Antonio, Texas. TS will be there with Arashi, Kaz Hayashi, Satoshi Kojima, & Keiji Muto, as they will be working in San Antonio the day before for River City Wrestling. Tonight, though, the AJPW stars will be in Philly for the Ring of Honor Final Battle 203 megacard.
  12. That's why only about 5% of the interview is about his work on the porno side, rather than 90%. Duh. Agreed...I - like most XPW fans - didn't want to think the promotion was dead. That's obviously not the case anymore, because all facts point to it having folded. If that's what you want...you damn sure ain't gonna be disappointed. I'm not gonna give an exact timeframe, but part one of the XPW history - focusing on Black's childhood; his introduction to the porno industry; his rise in the porno industry; his association with ECW; Kleinrock's childhood; and Kleinrock's introduction to wrestling - should be up not too long from now. Webb confirmed to me yesterday he'd be happy to do an interview about his career. Also, Verne Landgdon, who trained Messiah, Angel, Carlito Montana, and D, MAY contribute. I'm not sure yet. Huh? Any other thoughts on this part of the interview? Ways to format it better when I post the next part? Anything?
  13. Over the past nine months, I’ve been fortunate enough to receive a number of opportunities to chat with former-independent wrestling managerial luminary “Devilish” Lee Handsome a.k.a. GQ Money. Until March of this year, GQ had been employed for more than two years by the ever so controversial XPW (Xtreme Professional Wrestling) promotion in Southern California. In XPW, GQ gained nationwide publicity as one of the most charismatic managers on the US indy wrestling circuit. He was the mouthpiece of XPW’s memorable “Enterprise” faction, with whom he has worked among an impressive entourage of pro wrestling superstars, including The Sandman, Shane Douglas, Chris Hamrick, Danny Doring, New Jack, Bill Alfonso, UK sensation “Wonderkid” Jonny Storm, and Sean “Syxx-Pac/X-Pac” Waltman. However, GQ didn’t just play a fundamental role in XPW in its ring; rather, he worked behind-the-scenes for much of his tenure with both XPW and it’s parent company, adult entertainment corporation Extreme Associates. As an employee at E.A., he directed a number of adult films and interacted on a daily basis with two of the most controversial figures in the realm of pro wrestling – Rob Black and Lizzy Borden, who were indicted on federal obscenity charges earlier this year. As a vital member of the backstage team of XPW and E.A., GQ was introduced first-hand to a number of the most discussed incidents on the US indy circuit in recent years, including XPW’s controversies with other federations such as EPIC, ROH, and CZW, its fallout with New Jack, and the much-talked-about Chihuahua/snake incident. Since leaving XPW, GQ has toured the US indy circuit, working with the likes of The Messiah, Christopher Daniels, and Scott Hudson in promotions such as NWA-TNA. GQ was remarkably candid during the many interview sessions he had with myself. We discussed a vast variety of topics that cover his whole career, ranging from his childhood as a pro wrestling fan to breaking into the business as a wrestler to performing as a manager in XPW and other promotions. Many of the subjects that GQ discusses have yet to be talked about by XPW officials, and I wouldn’t be exaggerating in stating that the depth of our conversations are comparable to RF Video’s acclaimed “shoot” interviews, which is why I will be posting our dialogues in segments, rather than in whole. The fragments of this interview will compound a much larger project that I am in the process of constructing, one that explores the controversial history of XPW. Granted – in the end, XPW failed, and eventually folded in 2003. However, during its existence, it produced possibly the most avid debate the world of US indy wrestling has recently witnessed. It all started with a pornography mogul named Rob Black. Along the way, names such as Tracy Smothers, Sabu, The Sandman, Shane Douglas, Chris Candido, Jerry Lynn, Juventud Guerrera, and Abdullah the Butcher worked for the promotion. XPW at one point had a nationwide TV deal with America One and it’s home videos were distributed nationwide before those of ECW were. Even with all of these advantages, XPW eventually shut down, but not even it’s bankruptcy has curtailed the mutterings about it. In the next eight months, learn about the formation, the rise, and the ultimate fall of a promotion that at one point had everything going for it. From the beginnings of Rob Black to his friendship with ECW’s Paul Heyman, from the formation of XPW to the signings of stars such as Sabu, Shane Douglas, and Chris Candido, from the interpromotional agreements with ECW and FMW to the TV deals with America One, KJLA, and WGTW, from the creations of indy stars like The Messiah, “The Rock Superstar” Kaos, and “The Hardcore Homo” Supreme to the controversies of Supreme’s injury, Vic Grimes’ 40 foot fall, and the New Year’s Revolution 2 scandal, from the invasion of Philadelphia to the eventual folding – it, and so much more – is all here…“Five Years Later – The Roots, The History, and The Controversy of Rob Black’s XPW.” Featuring – insightful contributions from XPW alumni such as GQ Money and Johnny Webb; never-before-seen, pre-XPW photos of the XPW stars such as The Messiah, Kaos, Supreme, and Angel; and a great deal more. And now…part one of my interview with former-XPW worker GQ Money, known to some as “Devilish” Lee Handsome… This section of the interview was conducted on March 29, 2003 by LucharesuFan619. ME: Firstly, the obvious question - how did you get involved in the pro wrestling business as more than just a fan? GQ: When I was in college, I always wanted to be a game show host. Well, I always wanted to be in pro wrestling, but I was real small, so that's why I wanted to be a game show host. Well, my roommates were really interested in wrestling like me, and it resparked my passion I started hosting my own talk show on the radio station there and that got me into interviewing various stars, indy guys, promoters and what not. Well, one day, I had these guests on my show who were training people, and then sending them down to Steve Keirn's School of Hard Knox. Steve's school was down in Florida, but we were in Colorado. Well, the two guys got me kicked off the air because they were swearing, and they felt real bad, so they offered me a free tryout. I did great, I loved it, and then they called me with an idea. They said, "Hey, we can train the guys real well, but with your mouth, we may be able to start an indy fed. Are you interested?" I was VERY interested, and we started a school and indy. And that's how I got involved. ME: I read that you worked with Smokey Charmichael - who worked at Hostile Takeover - while wrestling in Colorado, long before he was in XPW. How did you meet him and what was he like? GQ: Smokey is one of my best friends in the whole business, as we both got our starts together. We used to be tag team partners and our team was known as "Ringside-Dreems." I was a much better wrestler back then because of the fact that I trained so much. I mean, Smokey and I would wrestle with each other at least four times a week for like a few hours at a time, I used to kickbox twice a week, and we hit the weights three times a week, so we were in great shape...and together, we could go! The name "Smokey Carmichael" actually comes from way back then when we were being considered to be part of "The Family," which was one of the promotion's big factions. Being part of the Family, he dawned the name "Smokey Charmichael," and I was temporarily known as "Shorty Smalls." The Family was headed by one of my trainers and former-World Kickboxing Champ Dan Magnus, who also was involved in training current WWE developmental wrestler Nikita (who's down in OVW). ME: So, who were some of the big-name guests you had on your radio show? GQ: Chris Candido and Mick "Mankind" Foley were my biggest. The Foley one was the day before WrestleMania when he faced The Big Show. That was a fun WrestleMania. Me and my friends used to go to Target and buy the biggest TV they had just for WrestleMania…and then after, return the TV, because you get like 90 days to return it with a receipt. That was our yearly WrestleMania tradition. Bar-B-Q, keg of beer, big TV from Target, and WrestleMania. GQ Money does not condone underage drinking. Please don't drink and drive. ;-) ME: You met former-WCW manager Sonny Onoo and had a fallout with him. What happened between you two and why did you dislike him? GQ: Now when I look back at it, I guess the answer may have been jealousy, but truth is, once he got involved with my business partner, things for me and my business got bad. He seemed sneaky to me, or at least I thought my partner was feeding him bullshit info about me, and that pissed me off. My heat with him is more comical, exaggerated and played up for the sake of controversy, just as is the heat I "have" with a lot of other wrestlers. ME: When did your first contact with XPW come? GQ: I think it was November-ish of 2000. In August, I was ready to move on and leave Colorado. I went to our show, and shit was chaotic. Everybody and their friends were in their cliques and factions...Everybody was getting everybody else to watch their backs. I was scheduled to work my business partner in a match that had heat from the start of our existence, and before the match I told my partner this would be my last show. He didn't want to do the match, and I was like, "No, we'll do it, because we advertised it, and we're professionals." We did the match; he wasn't really on, and I went out, and it was over. That show had around 1,200 people at it. The next show, which I (nor some friends) wasn’t a part of had about 165. After I left, a lot of the roster left. It was no longer the same vibe as when we started, so a lot of the guys thought it was time to move on, two of which were TJ Rush and The Giant (the guy who attacked Messiah at The Night XPW Stood Still). Buddah Doobie, and Dreemer (Smokey Carmichael), and a bunch of other talented guys took off. The CWO (Central Wrestling Organization) was in disarray. Now, they eventually bounced back. They did a show with (Roddy) Piper headlining and had about 1,600 people, but sadly, they are no longer around. I think it finally folded in like 2001. I left in 2000. We had our string of success. We weren't big time by any means...and we weren't makin' much money...but we were all over. The newspapers, the radio, the TV - it was real cool. Our guys got recognized, and it was a real ego boost to all of us at the "start" of our careers. A couple of real good guys have come from down in my area, and I'm pretty sure you'll hear their names in the future. ME: Are there any other guys who worked for the fed who the guys reading this interview would know? GQ: My buddy Psycho Sarge has had a bunch of WWE dark matches and Velocity tapings. Same with Derek Corpse. Smokey's from down there. Psycho Sarge was working for Thatcher in Heartland. His name was always in the PWI rankings. Nikita – like I said – is down in OVW under developmental. You know Smokey. Corpse wrestled as Derek Selsould on some WWE matches. Sarge is still wrestling. ME: So, after the CWO folded, you began talks with XPW? GQ: Yeah...forgot that that was the point of the question... :-D When I left, I was looking for options, and XPW was one of the prospects. I sent packages to OVW, UPW and XPW. OVW never got back to me, and I made contact with both UPW and XPW. I set up a trip to go to California, so I could meet with both promotions, and check out both of their shows. And the trip became a monstrous headache. My car broke down in Utah...I had to get plane flights, rental cars, and I had like no money. So, I'm trying to call everyone I know to borrow money, and then figure out a way for my sister to deposit that money in my bank, so I could use my debit card. It was just a pain, but I did make it to LA. I saw UPW's show first. It was good - real cool - but something about it wasn't me. I was still interested, but I had a feeling it wasn't the one. The next day, I met with some of their workers, and various office people and I thought they were cool. They had a good vibe, good plans, and I was interested. Keep in mind – I was looking more for office/ behind-the-scenes work, where I would then figure out a way into a talent position. I was also looking for commentary work and we talked about the possibilities of me commentating the UPW TV show in the works. I was real interested, but here was the catch - it was all volunteer. Normally, I'd have no problem with that, but I was moving to Cali with no money, no place to live, no job, and I was supposed to be able to do like 20-30 hours of volunteer work. That was just not an option at the time. LA was just too expensive to live to be able to do that. So, I had my meetings with XPW. I head up to the office at like 5:00 PM (maybe it was 4:00), and was set to meet with Kevin (Kleinrock). I waited in the lobby forever. Kevin kept walking by one the phone, like, "One more minute. I'll be right there.” He was hella’ busy. I met (Homeless) Jimmy - who was real cool - and a lot of the students and ring crew guys. ME: Jimmy worked in the XPW offices, too, besides the in-ring work, right? GQ: Yeah, for a little while. Things were kind of unorganized (go figure), but finally I talked with Kevin. They were interested in using me, talks went well, and Kevin was like, "Come check out the show (this was MetalFest [late 2000]) tomorrow. You'll be on the guest list." I'm staying with my buddy, so him and I drive the two hours or so to go to the show. We get there...and we're not on the guest list. I would have bought a ticket, but my friend didn't want to, so we left. I took off, and I thought, “Nah, this isn't the company for me; I'm going to do UPW.” The next day, I went to Disneyland, and Kevin called me. He was apologetic – real nice and real cool. I wasn't really interested in XPW anymore. I wanted to work for UPW, but knew I needed to save some money to be able to live, and it was my intent to go back home to Colorado, pack up my stuff, and move back home with my parents in Chicago. I'd get back into wrestling some time... and then fate intervened. I was up in Aspen doing some skiing and my phone rang when I was on the chair. I was real down at the time. No home, no job, no money, a hell of a lot of credit card debt...and I was getting ready to move back home with my parents. So the phone rings and it was The Giant. I should say, "the 7-foot Stud," because that's what his old name was. Not the Big Show. We all just called him "The Giant," but I digress, so back to the story. Anyway, he must have pep talked me really good, because at the start of the conversation I wasn't interested and by the end I was like, "Alright, let's go make a run (in XPW)." So we drove to LA again. This time to check out New Year's Revolution. Giant met Kevin. I talked with Kevin and Rob. Things were cool. We get to the show and the shit was smokin'. I mean, it was totally off the hook. It was an awesome show and we knew that that was where we wanted to be. I'm sitting on the stands during the setup and Lizzy came up an introduced herself. She saw me (I was wearing a suit) and was like, "You must be GQ Money." That was the first I had heard of a gimmick, and that's when I knew I was in XPW. Keep your eye out in the coming weeks and months – the rest of my interview with GQ Money/”Devilish” Lee Handsome. Topics discussed include: - Memories of working on the adult entertainment side of XPW affairs - GQ’s background in Internet production/technology (GQMoney.com, webmastering, and Diggin Up Dirt Bert columns) - His and Kaos’ feuds with Angel, Chris Hamrick, Danny Doring, Jonny Storm, and more - The Enterprise – joining it; its evolution; memories of E-TV and the chaotic WarGames Steel Cage Match; the memorable Raw Sewage Match; and more - Why Larry Rivera, Kraq, John Kronus, Homeless Jimmy, Steve Rizzono, Vampiro, Konnan, and others left XPW - The So-Cal Jobbers Union and XPW’s relationships with Revolution Pro - The full story on the happenings between XPW and EPIC - Being a booker of XPW’s product – never-before-publicized angles/storylines that were planned, but never came to fruition - The never-before-seen Sabu Invitational Show at XPW headquarters - Surfing the indies after leaving XPW – working with Christopher Daniels and Scott Hudson; Hollywood, Inc.; and more - For the first time ever - GQ goes on record and gives his detailed accounts of: *Chihahua/snake scandal *the famous Supreme/fire injury *the New Year’s Revolution 2/wrestling media challenge *full responses to a number of the controversies and rumors sparked during XPW’s run in Philly (accounts of the Exit Sandman show and XPW’s dealings with HWA, ROH, and CZW and the talent that jumped to XPW) *Kaos dropping the XPW TV Title to Sean “X-Pac/Syxx-Pac” Waltman *why he left XPW *the full story on what exactly led to his personal fallouts with TJ Rush, Kaos, Altar Boy Luke, and Smokey Charmichael Plus… - GQ answers XPW fans’ two most asked questions ever: Who was the damned MONKEY~?!?!? (yes, you read correctly) and What happened to Altar Boy Matthew? - GQ gives his insightful takes on the following questions – What is XPW’s legacy in the world of pro wrestling? How has pro wrestling changed GQ Money as a person? What is GQ’s future in pro wrestling, and life in general? - Word association - GQ’s opinions on Rob Black, Lizzy Borden, Shane Douglas, Kevin Kleinrock, Veronica Caine, Bill Alfonso, and everybody else who he’s encountered in his pro wrestling career And a whole lot more… Stay tuned. The official web site of GQ Money a.k.a. "Devilish" Lee Handsome can be found at http://www.HollywoodIncDotCom.com/ Feedback would be appreciated.
  14. Gail Kim fucked up some spot in a match with Molly REALLY badly. I forget the details, though, luckily.
  15. What are these moves (So-Cal stuff): Chris Bosh - Maximum Bosh, Booyah Bomb Mike Modest - Modest Driver Quicksilver - Silver Rush submission Scorpio Sky - The Fatal Solution/Fatal Answer/Final Solution/Final Answer (I've heard it named all of those combos) TNA Dusty Rhodes - Flip Flop & Fly Erik Watts - Lights Out Jorge Estrada - Greetings from Graceland Tracy Brooks - Pie from the Sky AMW - Veg-o-Matic
  16. Shit...I don't know why, but at first when I read the title of this topic, I thought it said Low Ki. Suffice to say, I wasn't as shocked at reading it was Parka, but still - I didn't expect it. Ki would've been a bigger shock, though, just because of his respectful, disciplined image.
  17. DLed? Link, please? Are they still online?
  18. Both feds are pretty good, from what I've heard.
  19. Yeah, he's right. They often cut down their appearance prices if the promoter is willing to let them sell merchandise of their's. Mick Foley discusses the concept in his first book. Also - guys that do deathmatches often get more money than they would for wrestling a regular match.
  20. Sabu makes about $1,000 per appearance.
  21. Sonjay Dutt is stealing shows.
  22. World Wrestling Alliance New England? It's web site is WWANewEngland.com. They have a really solid roster. They regularly use Abunai, Balls Mahoney, Julio Dinero, Damian Adams, Al Snow, and Tough Enough Jonah and have in the past featured Sabu, Perry Saturn, Stevie Richards, Mike Bell (Saturn pretty much killed him on Jakked/Metal awhile back), Sgt. Slaughter, Doink the Clown, Ruckus, Rob Eckos, OVW's Aaron Stevens (the guy Paul London faced in his OVW debut), Dunn & Marcos, Z-Barr, Nick Berk, D'Lo Brown, Derek Frazier, Big Dick Dudley, Eddie Guerrero, Hardyz, Jamal & Rosey, Bossman, A-Train, Kurt Angle, Jeff Jarrett, Edge, Brutus Beefcake, Rick Steiner, Josh Daniels, Kid USA (worked ECW's reunion show), Chri$ Ca$h, and others. I heard about them awhile back, but didn't really follow up, but I just found their site today, and they look really solid. Do they sell videos? If so, has anyone seen any of their videos? Anyone been to their live events? Are they any good? They look like a solid alternative to WWE, TNA, CZW, ROH, Japan, IWA-MS, etc.
  23. Steve, Thanks for coming on the board and straightening the issues out. Quick couple of comments... Absolutely agreed. He wasn't just "not all there." He wasn't there at all during his second run. In his HIH2 match vs. Konnan, about midway through, Konnan tried a lariat or something, and Steele just stood there for about five seconds, while Konnan punched him or something. It was one of the worst sequences in wrestling I've ever seen. Steve - when you get a chance, please link me to your three articles on XPW's history, and I'll show you what I mean about Onita. I'm searching and searching on your site, and neither of those articles are coming up. Ace - your turn to admit you were incorrect in your assertion, just as I did with Steele's XPW firing. I may not be blocked anymore, but you said at one point that I was. Our dealings have always been professional, Steve. You and I both know that. The reason you would likely ignore my emails would be because you don't like me due to the differences we've had, not because of any previous, unprofessional dealings we've had, none of which have been unprofessional. Face it - you don't like me, and that's why you would ignore my emails, as you've done before when I contacted you about if Supreme ever worked FMLL (I think that was the fed; there was one fed he was signed to work and I wasn't sure if they ever followed through and brought him in), and a couple of other questions.
  24. I don't know much about XPW because I have never liked it. I think Steve knows more about it than you though since he has been to their shows and knows people in the promotion. To prove that point just look at his interview with Kevin Kleinrock where they talk about previous conversations the two have had. I would think knowing the number 2 guy in xpw and talking with him beats out whoever you instant message. I also dont believe the Basils are the same guy and the brden of proof is on you to prove it since Steve is far more credible than you and knows more about socal and xpw than you. Thanks for playing. The number of times I've conversed with GQ Money is in the 30's, maybe 40's. I've spoken to John Zandig about 5 times, each of which for more than 20 minutes, about XPW's Philly run. I've interviewed Chris Hamrick, Angel, and Supreme. I've also talked to Vic Grimes a number of times. I've talked to Johnny Webb once, but for about an hour, and recently got back in contact with him and am conducting an interview with him that should be up in a few weeks. I know just as much about XPW as Steve does, if not more. You don't have to go to a promotion's shows to do something about them. To base your reasoning on that is ridiculous. I've showed proof - photos don't lie. You seem to be confused with common sense - because I've shown photos, the burden of proof would be on you and Steve; I've relieved myself of it by posting those photos. Good luck in developing some intricate excuse, Ace. You're gonna need it.
  25. I can't believe no one mentioned his matches vs. his bro, Justice Pain. 90% of their matches together were a minimum of good and a maximum of fantastic.
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