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One bad line as a heel can get a laugh, or it can get a riot. We start the 1998 entries of my wrestling road journal and the memories hit fast: tiny payoffs, long drives, and the constant balancing act of trying to get over while still getting out of town in one piece. I walk through early stops in Georgia and Alabama, including the night in White, Georgia when cheap heat crossed a line and turned into a real-world chase that still makes my stomach drop thinking about it.
From there we jump into a time capsule of early internet wrestling tapings, back when “airing on the internet” didn’t mean streaming and nobody really understood what was coming. I talk about working with Lee Thomas, Ken Timms, and the relationships that kept you sane on the road. Then it’s down to West Palm Beach for a beach-side match that includes Gangrel as Vampire Warrior and Hack Myers, plus the first time I met Madman Pondo and why hardcore wrestling and straight-up wrestling often stay in separate lanes.
We also hit Nashville for Music City TV with Bert Prentice and the behind-the-scenes reality of tryouts, reps, and even getting saddled with a throwaway name on TV while you prove yourself. West Virginia becomes the big focus after that: territory building, papered crowds, promoter math, winning the MSWA title, and the main-event formulas we used to connect towns without social media. And yes, I tell the story of the first time I ever had a true shoot with an opponent because he could not do the basics.
If you like pro wrestling history, independent wrestling stories, and a straight talk look at kayfabe, money, and survival on the road, hit subscribe, share this with a wrestling fan, and leave a review so more people can find “Making the Towns.” What’s the wildest live wrestling moment you’ve ever witnessed?
By 3 crows EntertainmentSend us Fan Mail
One bad line as a heel can get a laugh, or it can get a riot. We start the 1998 entries of my wrestling road journal and the memories hit fast: tiny payoffs, long drives, and the constant balancing act of trying to get over while still getting out of town in one piece. I walk through early stops in Georgia and Alabama, including the night in White, Georgia when cheap heat crossed a line and turned into a real-world chase that still makes my stomach drop thinking about it.
From there we jump into a time capsule of early internet wrestling tapings, back when “airing on the internet” didn’t mean streaming and nobody really understood what was coming. I talk about working with Lee Thomas, Ken Timms, and the relationships that kept you sane on the road. Then it’s down to West Palm Beach for a beach-side match that includes Gangrel as Vampire Warrior and Hack Myers, plus the first time I met Madman Pondo and why hardcore wrestling and straight-up wrestling often stay in separate lanes.
We also hit Nashville for Music City TV with Bert Prentice and the behind-the-scenes reality of tryouts, reps, and even getting saddled with a throwaway name on TV while you prove yourself. West Virginia becomes the big focus after that: territory building, papered crowds, promoter math, winning the MSWA title, and the main-event formulas we used to connect towns without social media. And yes, I tell the story of the first time I ever had a true shoot with an opponent because he could not do the basics.
If you like pro wrestling history, independent wrestling stories, and a straight talk look at kayfabe, money, and survival on the road, hit subscribe, share this with a wrestling fan, and leave a review so more people can find “Making the Towns.” What’s the wildest live wrestling moment you’ve ever witnessed?