Thursday, November 26, 2015

Thanksgiving reflections of a lucha fan

After picking up my fiancée from the airport for her first Thanksgiving with my family, I reflected on the last couple years of my life, and how different they've been from the previous 30.

Most of you reading this probably know that I'm engaged to @conjuarez, and that we met because of mutual interest in lucha. The crazy thing about this is that several years ago, neither of us had that interest. It's a rather convoluted way to meet. On top of that, both of us are generally happy people (even as snarky as I can be at times), and both of us were happily single. That changed in October 2013, when we moved beyond being just friends.

As much as I might deride certain promotions or people involved in lucha, my fandom has been -- and continues to be -- an unbelievable experience that has completely rewritten large parts of my life. And as perhaps melodramatic as the previous sentence might sound, I'm completely confident that I'm not overstating this.

I'm thankful for the way that lucha has been able to make me emotionally vested, to bring out the little kid in me that temporarily puts aside some unfortunate aspects of the business I've learned.

I'm thankful for our ever-expanding circle of great friends whom we've met by virtue of lucha and who have helped to make every trip to Mexico City special -- especially the first in September 2014, which was for me the trip of a lifetime.

But most of all, I'm thankful for the incredible way in which lucha managed to make fans out of @conjuarez and me and to bring us together based on an interest that neither of us had previously. To this day, we can't figure out how this happened; we're sure only that it was meant to happen, and that lucha libre was the vehicle.

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

November 7 CaraLucha

BTJr. likes it when I do these write-ups of my weekend trips. Hopefully some others of you do too.

I made an overnight trip to see CaraLucha's November 7 show in Arena San Juan Pantitlán. The show started and ended strong and was overall pretty solid throughout. You can't ask for much more.

Nominal start time was 6pm. Doors opened a little bit after that, and I have the first match entrances starting at about 6:33pm.

Friday, July 31, 2015

July 19 Chilanga Mask

Finishing up my series about the July 18-19 trip to Mexico, this post will cover the last of three shows that we attended, the Chilanga Mask show.

Chilanga Mask
July 19, 2015, 2pm, Coliseo Coacalco, Coacalco, Estado de México

The nominal start time was 2pm, but as BTJr. mentioned to me for planning purposes, the show always starts a about half-hour later, and this was indeed the case here; I have the first match starting at 2:37pm local time.

Thursday, July 30, 2015

July 18-19 non-show trip notes

Continuing my series about the July 18-19 weekend trip to Mexico City, for which I've already written posts about the shows that we attended on Saturday (Lucha Mutante and Arena Coliseo), this post will cover our activities outside of the shows themselves. This is mostly a bunch of scattered notes that jump around in time.

Saturday, July 25, 2015

July 18 Saturday Arena Coliseo

This is the second in a series of posts covering my last trip to Mexico City, on July 18-19. After the Lucha Mutante show, which I wrote about previously, one of Black Terry Jr.'s cousins very kindly gave us a ride to Arena Coliseo. We arrived in time for the fifth match (Tritón vs. Okumura), the last of the one-fall singles matches on the card.

Thursday, July 23, 2015

July 18 Lucha Mutante show

So, as most of you reading this are likely aware, I did another of my crazy weekend trips to Mexico last weekend (July 18-19), to watch the Lucha Mutante (Saturday, 4pm), Arena Coliseo  (Saturday, 7:30pm), and Chilanga Mask (Sunday 2:30pm) shows with my fiancée, Cecilia. Black Terry Jr. (BTJr.) kindly asked if I could write up something about the trip, so here goes.

This post will be the first in a series of three or four, depending on how verbose I end up being.

Lucha Mutante Experimento I
July 18, 2015, 4pm, Deportivo 18 de Marzo, Mexico City

The first show that we attended was Lucha Mutante. Deportivo 18 de Marzo is essentially a park in the northern part of Mexico City. The show itself took place inside a large tent. The nominal start time of 4pm was, in reality, when they started letting people in; the first match didn't start until around 5:25pm local time.

Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Some notes about my March 20-23 Mexico trip

As some of you may already know, my fiancée Cecilia and I went to Mexico City for a long weekend of lucha. We were originally going for the Chilanga Mask 2nd Anniversary show, but CMLL's Homenaje a Dos Leyendas ended up being the Friday before, and XMW put up an attractive card on Saturday, so it ended up being a weekend of three different shows.

If you're expecting full-on match reviews, you can stop reading here; I'm going to point out various things that impressed (or annoyed, etc.) me most, and other random notes.

CMLL Homenaje a Dos Leyendas, 2015-03-20
Dragon Lee vs. Kamaitachi was easily the best match on this show, but the hairs match exceeded my expectations, with Máximo doing way more than you would expect from him. (Volador Jr. did too, for that matter. A plancha into the crowd is always insane.) The straight-fall matches (1 and 5) were skippable, but 2 and 3 had their moments of fun. Hearing the "thwack" and seeing the shaking of the barricade up close from a The Panther tope was something, and Titán/Caveranario bits are always fun. Overall, this was the worst show of the three that I attended, but it was also by far the shortest, and still fun.

One thing to note is that security was strict about not loitering in the parking garage, both before and after the match. They did allow fans to enter through the garage, but you couldn't just wait around and watch luchadores come in. We weren't there to do that, but we had agreed to pick up our tickets there, so that was slightly worrisome as the security guards kept bugging us to leave. (We did end up getting to stay long enough for the tickets, obviously.) I'm not sure whether this protocol was followed because H2L was a big show, or whether it's standard for all Arena México shows now.

XMW, Gimnasio Gloria, 2015-03-21
Black Terry Jr. called Gym Gloria "the real lucha underground", and with due respect to the American version, he's right. Gym Gloria is in Tepito, famous for being a rough neighborhood. The gym holds about 500 people, I'd say, and there are enough seats for maybe 50, which means that if you don't arrive super-early (we didn't), you were going to be standing for four hours, or at least until people shuffled around enough such that you could get a temporary seat. It's a great atmosphere for watching lucha, but a horrible one for trying to take pictures, with the people standing all around and large pillars partially obstructing view in a lot of places.

The best match of the show (and of the trip) was the four-way tag match. Definitely seek that out when Black Terry Jr. has it available. I didn't really watch the main event too closely, because lucha extrema generally bores me, and it was disappointing that Virus wasn't there, but the card was otherwise strong. Overall, this was the best show of the three.

Speaking of Virus... Cecilia picked up on the fact that, before the match, XMW blamed Virus publicly for not accepting the match he was booked for. Really poor taste. The XMW/CMLL booking situation seems terribly fragile at best. The four-way tag match was great, and I would like to see matches like that happen again, whether in XMW or elsewhere, so it makes me sad that people seemingly want to burn bridges.

Chilanga Mask 2nd Anniversary, 2015-03-22
This was a weird show for me. It was significantly better than CMLL, but it also disappointed me in that the matches that I was looking forward to most (4-way, Fulgor/Navarro) seemed too short, and a couple others seemed to take too long to get going. I actually was kind of amused by Violento Jack vs. Herodes Jr. for being tamer than normal, but the crowd was not. If you had anyone but Violento Jack there, that might have gone over better. The opener was a nice spotfest though, and Extreme Tiger vs. ACH was very good.

For the mixed feelings that I had about the matches on this show, the atmosphere was excellent, and the best of the three shows that I attended. The packed Coacalco crowd was quite boisterous the entire show and it felt like a classic Yankee Stadium Bleacher Creatures atmosphere, except in Spanish and at no time anywhere close to being PG. The effects of alcohol as the event went on were probably comparable. Putos a quienes se quiten ("Fuck those who get out of the way" [of dives]) might be my new favorite lucha crowd chant.

As I mentioned on Twitter, the crowd was predominantly rooting against the Traumas during their match, and one of the Traumas responded with the middle finger. They seem to care less and less about professionalism as time wears on. It's kind of sad.

Other notes and thoughts
  • Perro Aguayo Jr.'s death was, of course, big news everywhere. It was cringeworthy to see how it was treated in the general media in Mexico, but more heartwarming that the lucha world  universally paid tribute in some way at practically every show.
  • Everyone we met, as usual, was extremely nice to us, especially Black Terry Jr. and his family. We also spent a disproportionate amount of time with Hechicero (who happened to be working all three shows) and his significant other. At H2L, we also got to meet Guapito, who was hanging out with Titán before the show.
  • Indy lucha crowds tend to be vocal in their dislike of anything CMLL, but Hechicero was super-over at both the XMW and Chilanga Mask shows.