Originally Posted by
Darkside Ron Garvin
I like to think of it as his Joe Montana to my Jerry Rice, but I am American, so I stick with football when I can :cool:
I appreciate the thought you put into your post which is why I took the time to respond properly. However, I respectfully think that your idea is the opposite of what the purpose of wrestling is. The whole point of the art is that the performer connects with his audience on an emotional level. That is why you get lost in a match between two of your favorites; regardless if it’s predetermined, you still pull yourself closer to the edge of your seat after a major move followed by a near fall. Sure, you can still experience this without knowing the back drop, but that moment when/if Tyson Kidd gets a major title is going to mean so much to me since I have followed him for so long. I have been waiting for that moment to come for so long now that when/if it finally happens, I will jump out of my seat with my hands in the air; similar to when a club football team get the final goal on penalty kicks, or when my Houston Texans complete a game winning drive with less than 2 minutes to play. My emotions are fully invested into the franchise/personality that I am following and my actions show that.
By what you are saying, you are informing me to restrict, better yet, hinder my emotional attachment to these people. If this is the case, why do I even bother to watch? It’s all predetermined anyways, so the results are void. There is nothing to affect me on an emotional level, so there is no reason to continue following the program. Sure, there have been a MILLION Lowki’s for every CM Punk, but the fact is that when that one player gets to shine bright, headlining the “Grand Daddy of them all”, that is the moment when all those who have failed before him seem irrelevant to the fact that “my guy” made it to the top. If you had a kid you grew up with become a pro ball player (any sport) and climbed his way out of the minors and into the major leagues, would you not be enthused to tell others how you knew him when he was beginning? And the moment they win the major title, would you not have a piece of you celebrating for him?
I know I am long winded, but it’s because of discussions like this I crave the chance to allow my literary side to take over, so bear with me. The point of wrestling is to get you to invest into a character; cheer them, boo them, love them, hate them. You have a MUCH greater investment into someone you follow through Indies until they become the top of the food chain because of the time you have spent following them. If you choose to avoid following them from the earliest point possible, you prevent yourself from being a fully invested fan, in other words, investing in them on a level seperate than that of a "common" fan. I am saying that you are limiting yourself to truly connect with these “superstars” you seem to follow on a regular basis. If this is the case and you don’t want to fully invest into their characters, why even follow them at all? You could avoid watching and not miss a beat because there is no emotional connection to the product or it's personalities.