Category Archives: Featured

Georgia Wrestling Now welcomes The Jagged Edge and Andy Anderson

Team All You Can Eat’s Matt Hankins makes his co-host return on this week’s Georgia Wrestling Now. But that’s not the only return for a GWN regular as The Jagged Edge calls in to talk about his upcoming return to the ring after being injured at an Anarchy Wrestling event a few months ago. In addition to talking to the former Pro Wrestling Resurrection Heavyweight Champion, Wrestling with Pop Culture also hears from NWA Atlanta Tag Team Champion Andy Anderson about the recent change from NWA Action, the promotion’s status with the National Wrestling Alliance and  his upcoming match against Rick Michaels and Bobby Hayes at Saturday Night Rumble IV. Listen live every Monday at 7 p.m. and call 347-324-5735 for questions or comments.

Even while injured, The Jagged Edge has maintained an intimidating presence in Univerasl Independent Wrestling, Anarchy Wrestling and Pro Wrestling Resurrection. Photo by Harold Jay Taylor/Headlocks and Headshots.

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Georgia Wrestling Now welcomes West “Knife” Evans, Larry Goodman and Rick Michaels

While most of us are getting back to the grind after an extended holiday weekend, Georgia Wrestling Now brings you its second installment in a three-part series with Pro Wrestling Resurrection Heavyweight Champion, Peachstate Wrestling Alliance Tag Team Champion and Georgia wrestling veteran Rick Michaels. Team All You Can Eat’s Matt Hankins is still on vacation, so Wrestling with Pop Culture is joined by aspiring Atlanta comedian West “Knife” Evans, who has spent some time in the ring as a referee and designed posters for Platinum Championship Wrestling and Monstrosity Championship Wrestling. Georgia Wrestling History‘s Larry Goodman also stops by to discuss Global Championship Wrestling’s event last Saturday (was WWE‘s Sin Cara there as advertised?) and recent and upcoming events throughout the Georgia wrestling scene. Listen live every Monday at 7 p.m.

Rick Michaels and the Exotic Ones bring carnage to Peachstate Wrestling Alliance's Turkey Bash II. Photo by Harold Jay Taylor/Headlocks and Headshots.

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Fabio Luis Santos springs into amphibious action in Cirque du Soleil’s “Totem”

Born just three years ago, Totem is one of Cirque du Soleil‘s youngest touring shows. Featuring performers from 18 different countries, Totem focuses on the evolution of mankind, as well as the individual potential each of us holds in the larger framework of the history of humanity. Totem features several acrobatic acts unique to this show, including Chinese unicyclists who catch bowls on their heads, a Blue Man Group-like act featuring a scientist juggling illuminated balls inside a clear cone, and a Native American couple performing a roller skating ceremony atop a giant drum. But bookending the entire spectacle are Totem‘s iconic and acrobatic frogs who hop around on a giant 2600-pound turtle skeleton, criss-crossing each other as they leap through the air. One of those frogs is portrayed by Brazilian gymnast Fabio Luis Santos, who takes a moment to talk to Wrestling with Pop Culture about his amphibious transformation.

Photo by Pouya Dianat/Cirque du Soleil.

When you were growing up training to be a gymnast, did you ever imagine that you’d end up portraying a frog?

Not really. I always thought I’d be a gymnast, then a coach. I did my physical education at the university, focusing on the sports side. After the opportunity came to audition for Cirque, which would be more structured and more well payed, I started to look towards the more artistic side.

Each Cirque performer has to do his or her own makeup. Is that something you had to learn specifically for Cirque or had you previously been involved in any sort of theatrical performances?

I never did my own makeup before or even used makeup before. But now it’s such a part of my life to wake up, come here, shave and do my makeup. You get used to it. It’s something new for me, but it’s part of my life.

How long have you been part of this show?

I started with its creation. I think I was the first guy arriving in Montreal in September 2009. The next day a few more frogs arrived and we started the creation. A little later, more people started to come throughout the month. But I’ve been doing it for a little more than three years.

Did you have any creative input on Totem since you were one of the first performers involved with it?

A little, yes. The director, Robert Lepage, is a genius. He was open to new ideas. We know that he’s amazing and we are just learning, so we didn’t try to give him a lot of stupid ideas. But he used to ask and we really participated in the entire evolution of this show as it was growing. Of course we helped with its creation, but it mainly came from his mind and he made the show.

Has the show evolved much since it started touring?

Oh, yes. A lot. Everybody has gotten more experience. I was new in this business and a few other people were, also. The acts have developed a little bit more. We opened with not a lot of problems and it was a great show already. Now we’re even better and I believe within a few years it will only get better and better.

Photo by Pouya Dianat/Cirque du Soleil.

Where all has Totem taken you so far?

We’ve done North America and Europe. Then we’ll move to Australia, back to Europe, Japan, South America. The show has a lifespan of 15 years, but will remain in the U.S. until at least 2014.

How do audiences in different cities and countries react to Totem? Do you tailor each performance to the location you’re in?

The Americans are really crazy. They scream a lot and clap a lot, and that’s pretty cool. In Europe they were a little more reserved, especially in London. They’re great also, but they just clap and keep a little more quiet. Here in the USA it’s amazing. I think USA is a great crowd and I love when people scream and clap and go crazy. It’s a great feeling.

Do you plan on being a frog in this show for the full 15 years?

Not really. It’s a long time and Cirque’s prepared to replace each performer when the artist decides to stop or change shows. I have a few plans for next year ,but for now I am with Totem until the end of my contract.

What are your plans after Totem?

I’m moving to another Cirque show in Brazil. After doing a show for three years, I’m looking for new challenges. I’m doing a show where there’s a lot more acting, so there will be a lot of new challenges. Everybody has their own timing. Some people stay with a show for five years, some people stay 15, some people stay 20. But it’s almost my time to move on, but I’m still with Totem and I will finish my work here before moving on to anything new.

Given your background as a competitive gymnast, what was the transition to this type of performance like for you?

I’m really competitive, so it was really hard for me to become an artist without the competitive side. I like to win, I like to be on a podium, I like people calling, “First place, Fabio Santos.” Now I try to use a similar feeling to being in first place when I am on stage every day with people clapping. It’s kind of a similar feeling, but it was hard for me in the beginning to not compete. But, for me, coming to the best company in the entertainment business, it gives me a new vision of life and work.

How did the opportunity to join Cirque originally arise for you?

Somebody from casting went to Brazil to find new talent. Cirque really likes Brazilian people because we’re really open to new things, we laugh, we have fun and we have something warm inside. So I did the audition at the end of 2008 and the next year they called me to offer me a job.

At this point in your life and career, do you think you’d like to continue doing this type of acrobatic performance or go back to competing at some point?

Photo by Pouya Dianat/Cirque du Soleil.

If I go back to competing someday, it would be just for fun and not really to win. My time has passed. Now I’m an artist and I want to keep doing what I’m doing. One day, when I decide to stop, I can go back to gymnastics just to have fun and enjoy my body and what I’ve learned and done all my life since I was eight years old. Acrobatics is part of my life, so I cannot let it go very easily.

With all the different nationalities, cultures and languages you encounter each day on a Cirque show, what is it like for you as a performer?

We learn a lot about other cultures. It’s great to see people who have grown up in a different way than I did. We have to respect each other. To be an artist in Cirque du Soleil you need to be a little crazy. So at the end, everybody’s a little crazy and we have a good life together. We’re a family even though everybody’s from a different place in the world. We try to understand and be cool with that so we don’t have any problems.

www.cirquedusoleil.com/totem

Georgia Wrestling Now welcomes Brian Alexander “The Great” and Geter

With Thanksgiving just a few days away, Wrestling with Pop Culture has a lot to be thankful for. And with the guests lined up for this week, Georgia Wrestling Now is one of those things. Listen as Team All You Can Eat’s Matt Hankins and I talk to Georgia wrestling veteran Brian Alexander “The Great” about his Thanksgiving night match against Murder 1 for Georgia All-Star Wrestling. We also talk to the mammoth Geter, one half of the reigning Platinum Championship Wrestling Tag Team Season Champions who recently made the biggest impact of his career by aligning himself with the Elite and taking out Mikael Judas at Anarchy Wrestling. We also talk about WWE‘s Survivor Series, Rampage Pro Wrestling, Universal Independent Wrestling, Monstrosity Championship Wrestling and more. Listen live every Monday at 7 p.m. and call 347-324-5735 for questions or comments.

Brian Alexander "The Great" takes on Murder 1 for Georgia All-Star Wrestling on Thanksgiving night.

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The Casket Creatures bring horror rock to Monstrosity Championship Wrestling

Over the past year, The Casket Creatures have emerged from their crypts with a unique brand of horror-inspired rock ‘n’ roll. Clearly influenced by horror punk acts like the Misfits, Blitzkid and Calabrese, as well as hard rock and heavy metal bands like Mötley Crüe, Alice Cooper and Iron Maiden, The Casket Creatures breathe new life into the horror rock genre with a look and sound that is both fiendishly familiar and rottenly refreshing. Having released its debut album Tales from the Unknown a year ago, the band has rapidly gained a strong following by opening for the likes of Wednesday 13, Static-X and former Misfits singer Michale Graves, and performing at events such as Six Flags over Georgia‘s Fright Fest, the Little 5 Points Halloween Festival & Parade and the Rock ‘n’ Roll Monster Bash, where the Creatures were also introduced to Monstrosity Championship Wrestling. Before the band returns to its tomb to focus on an early 2013 release for its second album Sex, Blood and Rock ‘n’ Roll, it plays what is likely to be its final show of the year as Wrestling with Pop Culture presents Monstrosity Championship Wrestling with The Casket Creatures! Vicious vocalist Eddie Cadaver and grim guitarist Derek Obscura talk about all the ghouls they’ve rocked before, performing with monster wrestling and other atrocities.

First, I’d like to thank you for playing this event with Monstrosity Championship Wrestling. With all the national acts you’ve opened for and the big events you’ve been part of, I was glad you guys were willing to be part of this event as such a successful year comes to a close for you.

Cadaver: We had a really good time at the Monster Bash with Monstrosity Championship Wrestling, so we’re really excited about this one.

Obscura: It’s been a really crazy year, especially during the summer and October. The Little 5 Points Halloween Festival was pretty crazy. It’s been an awesome year.

Cadaver:It all started when we got booked at the Monster Bash. It seems like after that, we cannot keep our schedule clear. It’s constantly full. It’s been really cool and we’re having a good time.

Of all these big shows you’ve played over the past few months, which ones would you say got the best crowd response to what you guys do?

Obscura: I think we got our biggest reaction at the Little 5 Points Halloween Festival. It got insane when we played. It was so cool.

Cadaver: The Six Flags show was really cool for a totally different reason. With the Six Flags crowd it was mostly kids, so we played a family-friendly set. But it was actually really bad ass and we had a lot of fun. After we got done playing, we’d pose for pictures with the kids and sign autographs. It was cool as hell. We played three full-length sets throughout the night and they were all completely different. I got to feel like Bruce Dickinson popping out of side doors and running across the stage with a wireless mic. I loved it. Those two shows were our biggest, but for totally different reasons.

What was it like opening for bigger acts like Wednesday 13, Davey Suicide and Static-X?

Obscura: We were a perfect fit with Wednesday and his crowd embraced us right away. The Static-X show as a little tougher crowd, but by the end of our set we had them cheering for us. One of the coolest ones was the Ghouls Night Out Festival up in Jersey where we played with Mister Monster and Blitzkid for their last U.S. show. That was a super cool experience and the place was sold out. We had an awesome time up there.

Cadaver: We also played with Michale Graves and that was a super cool show. He and his crew were really good guys and were really supportive of what we were doing. We made a lot of new fans that night because it was just the perfect fit. I’d say Michale Graves, the Wednesday show and Ghouls Night Out were where we made a lot of new fans and headway in our genre. It was really cool. Static-X was a little different because the crowd was, like, mean mugging us when we started. But I just got in their faces and did my thing, all of us rocked it out and by the end of it everybody was getting into it. I enjoyed all those shows.

When you last saw MCW at the Monster Bash, you had several other bands and various other activities going on. Tomorrow night’s show will just be The Casket Creatures and MCW. What are your expectations going into this event?

Obscura: We’re stoked that we got the chance to play this and it’s really cool that we’re the only band playing. The Kentucky Wolfman is already my favorite wrestler just with the name.

Cadaver: We’re super excited to see the Kentucky Wolfman. We have an older song called “Bark of the Beast” that’s about werewolves an we’re going to play that one for the Kentucky Wolfman. If he wants us to play it as his entrance music, we’ll be happy to!

Georgia Wrestling Now welcomes Professor Morte, Cyrus the Destroyer and A.J. Steele

The world of wrestling is always unpredictable, and this week’s Georgia Wrestling Now is a perfect illustration of that fact. With Monstrosity Championship Wrestling’s event looming this Friday, the Silver Scream SpookShow‘s Professor Morte calls to reveal more macabre details. Wrestling with Pop Culture and Team All You Can Eat’s Matt Hankins also talk to Cyrus the Destroyer about Saturday’s Deep Southern Championship Wrestling event. But perhaps the most shocking development is the reuniting of the Usual Suspects, Murder 1 and our guest NWA Action Heavyweight Champion A.J. Steele, who take on Hot Like Lava in a no holds barred street fight this Sunday at Rampage Pro Wrestling‘s Thanksgiving Week Holiday Spectacular. We also discuss recent and upcoming events in Anarchy Wrestling, Universal Independent Wrestling, Atlanta Midget Wrestling, Platinum Championship Wrestling, Pro Wrestling Resurrection and more. It all begins at 7 p.m. EST and you can call in with questions and comments at 347-324-5735.

Professor Morte reveals details about this Friday's Monstrosity Championship Wrestling event on this week's Georgia Wrestling Now.

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“Manborg” pays homage to low-budget ’80s sci-fi

When the Buried Alive Film Festival opens tonight, horror fans will see absinthe-inspired apparitions (The Transmission), a Kafka-esque transformation from outer space (Decapoda Shock), the gothic horror of Edgar Allen Poe’s The Raven and other sinister celluloid creations. But one film in particular caught Wrestling with Pop Culture‘s attention for its intentionally schlocky special effects and a dystopian storyline that incorporates elements from ’80s sci-fi greats like Flash Gordon, The Running Man and RoboCop with kung fu films and the Dracula mythos to create a dystopian man vs. machine vs. demons battle known as Manborg. It’s not the first time writer/director Steven Kostanski, who does special effects for film and television by day, has created something that is an obvious nod to the low-budget kitsch he grew up on. With a Buried Alive opening-night screening of Manborg tonight, Kostanski discusses his B movie influences, his previous films and possible upcoming projects.

The first thing that jumps out at me about Manborg is the weirdly wonderful special effects. The film has a very low-budget ’80s feel to it. Was that done intentionally or because of budgetary restraints, or both?

All the movies I make are inspired by my love of ’80s sci-fi, action and horror movies, specifically the really low-budget knock-off ones that were inspired by stuff like The Terminator, Aliens and other bigger-budget spectacle movies. I like stuff from Empire Pictures, Full Moon Features, stuff like Arena, Robot Jox, The Guyver, I Come in Peace, the Pumpkin Master movies, Trancers, Abraxas, the Captain Power TV show – all that stuff inspired this movie, and it also fit in nicely with my budgetary restraints. The movie was made for about $1,000.

I can’t help but think that Flash Gordon was also an influence on Manborg, especially those arena fight scenes.

Flash Gordon, to me, is definitely a lost gem because it came right at that time where it was between the ’60s and early ’70s way of doing sci-fi and the post Star Wars system. So it doesn’t really know what it wants to be, and I think it has a lot of really fun, crazy stuff to it. But I’d say that was a pretty big influence on Manborg.

Manborg is part of the Buried Alive Film Fest’s opening night festivities tonight. Where else has the film screened previously?

It’s screened all over the world, pretty much. We had a nine-city tour of Canada and it premiered at Fantastic Fest in Texas in September 2011. Then it did Toronto After Dark, played the Brisbane International Film Festival in Australia and it’s been playing consistently for the past year. And it’s going to keep playing, apparently. It just finished its theatrical run here in Toronto last night, but we’re going to be booking follow-up screenings over the next few months. So it’s going to play once a month. I’m pretty sure tonight will be its premiere in Georgia.

Buried Alive is a horror film festival. Manborg definitely has that aesthetic, but it also incorporates weird sci-fi, kung fu and other elements. What do you expect horror film fans to take away from this movie?

I certainly wouldn’t call it a horror movie, though it has a lot of influences with the creatures and the overall setup of the movie. I’d call it more of an action comedy than anything. With these kind of genre movies, there’s so much crossover with stuff I feel like any audience that has a taste for anything from the ’80s will be all over it. There’s so much cross-pollination of genre tropes that I think it can reach a pretty wide audience.

After the Manborg credits, there’s what appears to be an extended trailer for another horror comedy called Bio-Cop. Is that something that’s actually in the works?

We’ve got some stuff that we’re writing, but a lot of people have told me I should do a Bio-Cop feature film. The short film is attached to Manborg after the credits, much line how trailers would be after the credits on VHS movies. We’re trying to do it properly and get some funding, which takes a long time. But we are writing stuff and pretty soon we should have a big announcement for people. It’s similar to an earlier film I made called Lazer Ghosts 2, which is also a faux trailer/short film that basically condenses the whole narrative into a short running time. That seems to entice people and get them wanting a feature, so we’ll see.