tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1546665963755719151.post9014556358312320566..comments2023-07-15T07:17:49.535-04:00Comments on Professional Wrestling in U.S. Popular Culture: Watching Too MuchSam Fordhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17233749268141980625noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1546665963755719151.post-46618558808560566352007-02-21T11:27:00.000-04:002007-02-21T11:27:00.000-04:00Your questions are ones many wrestling fans face a...Your questions are ones many wrestling fans face and raise questions about spoilers in general. I am also very interested in soap opera, and fans of the soap opera genre often struggle about whether or not to read the spoilers. In this case, the feeling is that the reason most people enjoy soaps is not the plot but rather the performances in acting that plot out, so people feel they don't lose much by knowing what is planned to happen.<BR/><BR/>Wrestling is a genre, and it has a lot of familiar formulas. The best way to act those out is either to execute the tried-and-true formula so well that you get pleasure in seeing the story progress, even though you know what will happen, or else to give it some interesting twists and turns along the way.<BR/><BR/>Some people feel that a plot should always surprise you, that there should always be a new variation, but I think this loses sight of why people enjoy wrestling. Maybe it's like Michael Ball said in the documentary, when he claimed that it's all about ritual, but I think it's more than just ritual. People like "the psychology of booking," of being able to know what's about to come because of proper foreshadowing and cheer on when it is executed to perfection.<BR/><BR/>Think again to that moment we've talked about when the heel has cheated and the referee has seen it. Fans want to see the good guy bend the rules as well, to get revenge, and they cheer when they see this happen. Goffman, when he briefly wrote about wrestling as an example of his framing theory, said that it was this moment that drove the wrestling fan's passion, to see the good guy cheat, "fight fire with fire." <BR/><BR/>And I think that captures part of the magic. I enjoy when a story progresses so well that I know where's it's going, and them I'm satisfied when they give it to me. Think about how wrestling fans often know how they want the final chapter of a story to be. At <I>ECW One Night Stand</I>, fans had a large banner that said, "If Cena Wins, We Riot." Of course, since these fans know wrestling is booked, they are saying to the promoters, "You should finish this story like we want it to end."<BR/><BR/>So, while surprises are good, I think part of the enjoyment of wrestling is to see the story progress and to be satisfied with the ending you feel they've been building for. Unfortunately, the wrestling storylines sometimes feel like <I>Lost</I>..that the writers are making it up as they go, and that angers these fans who want to see the completion of the storyline and foreshadowing along the way.Sam Fordhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17233749268141980625noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1546665963755719151.post-42386833406747615672007-02-21T08:38:00.000-04:002007-02-21T08:38:00.000-04:00I think your experience speaks a lot about how the...I think your experience speaks a lot about how the interest in wrestling has evolved over the years. From the many matches we've seen from the 50's and 60's era it becomes pretty apparent that the audience then had a different interest in wrestling than we do today. I mean, some of those matches lasted over an hour and still the crowd's eyes were still glued to the ring. I think that since then, wrestling was evolved to give us different reasons to keep watching. The advent of the television made it possible to make wrestlers well-known in many of the territories in a matter of days where it would often take months of traveling around the country. I believe that this is what led to the focus on wrestlers' personas and the development of a storyline as a means of specializing interest in different wrestlers. After years of seeing many of the tricks played out to make and break champions in the ring, I suppose you really can't help but to know what is going to happen next.Omarhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14586811474858202484noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1546665963755719151.post-77327757845286414132007-02-21T08:15:00.000-04:002007-02-21T08:15:00.000-04:00After analyzing five hours of WWE a week for the p...After analyzing five hours of WWE a week for the past 6 year, I get mad at myself if I cannot predict plot lines at least 5-6 months in advance. I SHOULD be able to figure that out by now, is how I manage this issue! But what I enjoy is seeing how the plot unfolds -- the smaller contests that will be created to build the interest in what's to come; seeing how any one performer sells (or doesn't) the plotline, and of course, the sometimes sudden changes that have to happen with injuries, stars falling out of favor, etc.<BR/><BR/>So for me, I enjoy the insider knowledge and testing it against what is actually happening. BUT -- reading your post made me realize -- I tend to watch it in a solitary fashion or else with my husband and he's heard me talk about wrestling so much that he knows just about as much as I do. So I don't have the perception that I am "ruining" it for someone else who is in a different category of audience, like you did. So perhaps that is a variable to consider -- the kind of viewer/fan with whom those of us with more insider knowledge watches.Kathe Lowneyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01701641846534031448noreply@blogger.com