Is this a tool, a weapon, or an entire medium?
The elect know the answer. With the race and gender wars settled, only wrestle war remains. Iām unearthing Sandman vs. Sabu at November to Remember, final proof that stimulants are healthier than hallucinogens. Even in wrestling, where sobriety makes you a generational genius.
As a writer, this cause is close to my heart. Coffee and nostril Stevia dominate workshops, yet mushrooms and LSD get all the mass media representation. Granted, I abstained from everything out of lingering Baptist fear of joy. But the insult matters.
I should specify pro wrestling. Wrestling also refers to a real martial art without side flips. Iām told Hercules invented it to make Zeus appreciate his only consensual son, a legend worthy of a pro wrestling storyline. The kind ECW founder Paul Heyman would hear out, reject, and steal on primetime television next week.
Todayās wrestling duopolists, Vince McMahon and Tony Khan, are respectively accused of treating wrestlers like old racehorses and new action figures. This is progress. Paul Heyman treated wrestlers like fireworks: objects burned for crowds and then forgotten.
Mostly literally.
Paul Heyman saw the myth holding wrestling back: paying people. Cutting out that excess let him bring underground wrestling styles to a national audience. ECW stood for Extreme Championship Wrestling, and itās the only product to live up to nineties marketing.
It had everything. Fire. Staple guns. Models that loved awkward loners. Fire again. Attempted murder by a former bounty hunter before a live crowd.
Boldness earned ECW a following. It wasnāt cult-like: cults were ECW-like. Wrestling that delivered on blood and sleaze was like a banner ad sending real widows to your dorm room: an illegal miracle. Thatās harder to televise today, when Roman only inhales with FCC approval.
ECW opened November to Remember by celebrating their biggest crowd yet, which is how you tempt the Fates. The winged sisters cursed the pay-per-view with three generations of CTE, an audience sweatier than the athletes, and a match six percent crazier than intended.
Said match begins with chaos from another match. Transitions anchor every medium, and post-match brawls are wrestlingās shot-reverse shot. In this tortured metaphor, Paul Heyman is Robert Rodriguez, The Rock is The Rock, and Vince McMahon is simultaneously James Cameron and Tommy Wiseau.
Thatās a double nutshot, on referees, because ECW is this blessed worldās highest art. But let he who strikes first also weather the lash:
Perfection.
Nothingās gone off the rails yetāthis is ECW on clockwork time. The revenge killing of Beulah McGillicutty (the testicle assassin above) goes off without a hitch. Beaulahās a woman in ECW, putting her somewhere between a Greek Chorus, stripper, and stuntwoman.
More the latter, today.
The testicle avengerās called Sabu. His own match is in moments, but he makes time to torment the weak with his friends. A display of the brotherhood and esprit de corps missing from the judgemental masses. So who really clotheslined an unarmed woman? We did.
Player 2, a junkyard boxer named Sandman, comes to the rescue. He uses the power of evil stepfathers for good. Our heroās ready to drink, bash cans against his forehead, and probably wrestle too.
Sandman is one of the most distinct, popular, and beloved wrestlers of the era. Heās mostly bad at it.
You see, Sandmanās not into clean moves or unslurred sentences. But he comes out to āEnter Sandman,ā will die for a stunt, and looks like your favorite uncle before AA ruined Thanksgiving. Sandman simply stands out in his environment. After spending Princetonās ābreathing black humanā scholarship, I can confirm that itās a superpower.
His opponentās an omega mutant as well: Sabu reinvented acrobatic self-harm. He didnāt come out to pop-era Metallica, but agility and redneck-agitating headwear made him a fan favorite anyway. For example, hereās Sabu doing a basic chair strike:
Thatās years after his prime, for an audience of āthe guy holding the camera.ā Todayās match is peak Sabu, whoās much more concerned with killing you than surviving the match. He wielded the rare threat of going to the hospital with you.
It looks tough for our hero. But Sabu attacked a bottle blonde during the Attitude Era, a debt to be paid in blood and ruined furniture. Seeing red, Sandman rushes in to dispense justice.
And rushes.
Give him a sec.
ā¦Itās been three minutes. Somethingās off.
Here, we move into the world of myth and conjecture, which I normally embrace like a WSJ editor. But searching āHotdog Lawyerā only returns a gripping Nickelodeon pilot, so Iāll tone down the libel.
The widely circulated story is that Sandman allegedly took acid before the match. It isnāt necessarily true: he method acted an addict, and enjoyed a range of exciting chemicals. Sandman was an icon to everyone that produced, purchased, or confiscated gas station drugs. What matters is that today, heās not entirely there.
Okay, heās on acid.
Itās a tables and ladders match, which lets both competitors wield half a construction site. While Sandman poses on a ladder and contemplates infinity, Sabu decides to start the match. A flashy mistake.
At first, it looks like a normal match for both. Sabu does premium flips, and Sandman flails. Iād call it a metaphor for immigrant and domestic work ethic, but Sabuās from Michigan.
A few minutes in, things break down. Sandman slows down (more), and the objects hitting Sabu in the face look less and less intentional. Sandmanās face is stuck in the blank, stupefied wonder of an adult paying for a palm reading. Itās debatable when the mescaline overtook the adrenaline, but Iām fond of this moment:
The crowd reviews the new tempo with the chant āSandman sucks dick.ā I disagree. Even as he converses with his ancestors, Sandman makes a compelling target for ladders to the skull. Or so a pissed Sabu decides.
At least some part of Sandman remembers the match. He successfully gets in place for an air-mailed ladder to the stomach:
A few other stunts kinda-sorta-almost work. Theyāre just eclipsed by Mr. Bean pratfalls like this:
Thatās when I fell in love with this match. None of the near-obituaries can compete with an adult tripping over a stationary ladder. Itās a visual metaphor for every lockdown relationship. Sabu passing it off as his nefarious plan only makes it better.
Then again, there are some excellent near-obituaries. Hereās Sandman unleashing the ultimate attack:
Some trivia about me: I used to breakdance, because hip kids hung out at the hospital. Thereās a genre of flip called a āsuicideā where you fake a crash landing for effect, only to resume spinning unharmed. This isnāt a b-boy suicide. Itās a normal one.
By now, itās clear Sandmanās mind is out exploring new planets. But Sabu finishes the match anyway, stunts and all. For my money, that puts at least a third of the blame on him.
Half. Sabu gets half.
Hereās the issue: behind all the exploding barbed wire and vascular ghosts, wrestling is driven by rigid professionalism. Wrestlers jump from ballroom balconies because they trust the tack-covered man below can and will catch them.
Not today.
If you pulled this on Jackass Forever, Johnny Knoxville would jam his hand into your chest and absorb your youth. Stunts arenāt just about attaching a car battery to your loins. Theyāre about doing it safely enough to shoot four sequels with bigger cars. I guarantee Steve-O knows what voltage ignites pubic hair.
Alright, so catchingās hard on acid. At least Sandmanās not jumping fromā
No.
Desist.
Goodbye.
The crowd couldnāt love it more. Itās a Barrabas situation: given the choice between fake blood and a real addict falling off a ladder, the hospital wins every time. Nineties wrestling could be simulated grappling or authentic Bumfights.
Alternatively, Street Fighter. Sabu nails Sandman in the face with a fireball. Itās not pitched as magic (thatās Lucha Underground’s beautiful contribution to human culture), but the rule of the streets. Clearly I missed out on Gun Hill Road, where they just threw boring bricks.
The match ends with another ladder spot, or as commentary calls it, an āatomic Arabian facebuster with a lateral press.ā Iāll accept ājumping with a ladderā on tomorrowās test. Hereās the last shot before insurance premiums went up.
At this point, Iāve circled back around to admiring the match. Consider Sandmanās distorted point of view. Heās trapped in South Mordor, and the only thing more terrifying than a beheading is a beheading on a bad trip. We donāt have words for that courage in the square world.
Luckily, we donāt need to stretch our dying imaginations. Feeding AI art generators the sentence āSabu jumping from the top rope with a ladderā provides a convenient window into wrestling-themed hell. Iāve taken the liberty of naming the results.
I prefer reality. No watercolors of a dying universe, just simple, grounded, and familiar pain. Give Sandman some credit for navigating The Ladder Over Innsmouth on Pay-Per-View.
Sidebar: If youāre wondering why NFTs died, generating these took three minutes.
This is my favorite installment of Paul Heymanās Wonderland. Itās not representativeāfor all the manic vision and rebel posturing, wrestlers usually saved acid for the afterparty. But it couldnāt have happened anywhere else.
As humiliarious as this incident was, it didnāt define the competitors. Today Sandmanās sober, and Sabu probably canāt enter Singapore. They had a few (better) rematches, and both occupy the long list of people underpaid for WWEās sugar-free version of ECW:
Youāre not on acid: nobodyās bleeding and Sandmanās touched a gym. If you told me that in 1998, Iād say āAre you the new babysitter? I put a frog in the microwave.ā I didnāt watch any of this until lockdown, long after Iād run out of frogs. Time flows on.
āDrugs make great artā is the two-time world champion of creative cliches, and itās nonsense. My best writing on drugs is the word āAscendā 200 times in red ink. I maintain that drugs simply steal credit for glorious ignorance of consequences. With the right mindset, you can do moonsaults and blow up frogs far, far longer than you should.
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This article was brought to you by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: Hambone, who first taught wrestling to the AIs and is responsible for the upcoming Flying Elbow Robot Apocalypse.