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#Alex Wright
silveragelovechild · 1 month
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fixaidea · 2 days
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Coffee orders of some OCs:
Alex Wright (ex-agent): Large, black, kinda watery serving with a tonne of sugar for energy boost.
Dr. Vynes (Halfway-reformed supervillain, botanist, genetic engineer, hobbyist medic, Love Interest): More of a tea guy really. Will accept coffee, but only the kind of Turkish brew that's thick and strong enough to get up and walk away on its own.
Sven (Head Henchman, 2m x 2m bald Viking): Only the finest Italian espresso served in a teeny-tiny porcelain cup is Real Coffee. No sugar or syrups other such perversion, though for certain blends he will allow just a spot of milk to bring out the flavours.
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wrestlingarsenal · 2 months
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Jericho finishes off Das Wunderkind with this gorgeous "Lion Tamer" -- his patented finisher. "Bring out the chair and the whip!" we hear Bobby Heenan say (giving me a kinky, provocative picture in my head.)
You wanna pull hair and fight dirty, this is what you get! Alex taps out to avoid being snapped in two. Full match is available on YouTube and this finishing hold is, of course, the "most replayed" scene according to the little heat chart under the video. Perhaps I'm not the only fella in the world turned on by the Lion Tamer submission hold.
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russellwynn · 1 year
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everything is in motion. everything is changing — room to room, wall to wall, door to door.
don’t get too close. there’s nothing there.
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blackmensuited · 7 months
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rainingmusic · 11 days
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Kiev - Ariah Being
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the-football-chick · 11 months
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blowflyfag · 5 months
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Pro Wrestling Illustrated: 1995 THE YEAR IN WRESTLING. March 1996
PWI ACHIEVEMENT ‘95 AWARDS 
The time for waiting is over. The time for discovery has begun. You’ve made your decisions, and here are the results. On the following pages, we proudly present our choices for the PRO WRESTLING ILLUSTRATED Achievement ‘95 Awards!
In 1995, wrestling enjoyed one of its most exciting, dramatic, and controversial years, and PRO WRESTLING ILLUSTRATED brought all that excitement, drama and controversy to you. Of course, readers created plenty of excitement themselves. More than 70,000 helped to choose the 11 winners of the 1995 Achievement Awards.
Alex Wright rebounded from a shaky start to capture Rookie of the Year honors. Among the runners-up were a woman, Madd Maxine, and a retired football great, Lawrence Taylor. What happened to The Renegade? Seems that although he won the WCW TV belt in 1995, voters were convinced it was a fluke.
Fans had no problem choosing Barry Horowitz as Inspirational Wrestler of the Year. Also receiving strong consideration were the legendary Antonio Inoki and the wild Sabu, who offered inspiration of a different spot. 
Readers were less than thrilled, however, with the choices for Manager of the Year. Jim Cornette won in a walk, but many believed it was a pretty lame year for managers. They were right.
The year was anything but lame for Shawn Michaels who captured Most Popular honors, was the first runner-up for Wrestler of the Year, and was involved in the Match of the Year with Diesel. Michaels has participated in the Match of the Year three  straight years.
To know Jerry Lawler to lathe him, say our readers. This Most Hated monarch was “King” of nothing in 1995. Voters were also dismayed with a man they once considered a hero, Davey Boy Smith.
From broadcaster back to wrestler–that was “Macho Man” Randy Savage’s big Comeback in 1995. He didn’t win big, though. One of the runners-up was The Ultimate Warrior, who five years ago was one of the most celebrated men in the sport.
When fans voted Diesel Most Improved Wrestler for 1994, they may not have realized just how improved he was. The WWF World champion capped off a terrific 1995 by winning Wrestler of the Year honors.  His buddy Shawn was a fairly close second, but this year, Diesel was the man. He left us asking “Vinne Who?”
Any team that wins four WCW World tag team titles in less than 12 months is going to get serious consideration for Tag Team of the Year. Harlem Heat received more than consideration, they won the award, but not by a huge margin. The Steiners came back from Japan to capture a runner-up spot.
“Diamond” Dallas Page did win Most Improved by a comfortable margin, making a successful transition from manager to wrestler. Harlem Heat got a mention here, too; they were second runner-up. Booker T and Stevie Ray also were first runners-up for Feud of the Year, thanks to their thunderous confrontations with The Nasty Boys.
Ian and Axl Rotten’s violent and bloody ECW war wasn’t nationally televised, but it did get international attention, so no surprise it was voted Feud of the Year. Hey, in one match they taped shards of glass to their fists. That’s a brotherly feud!
For the second time in three years, neither Hulk Hogan nor Ric Flair won an Achievement Award. They once dominated these honors, but this year, they were only runners-up (Hulk in Popular and Wrestler, Flair in Feud). One must begin to ask: Will it soon be time for these two great athletes to step aside? You know what their answers are.
Sting deserves a special mention. The “Stinger” didn’t win a big prize, but the WCW U.S. champion was first runner-up in the Most Popular balloting and second runner-up in Wrestler voting. There is no doubt that he is still a major force in this sport.
Finally, this year’s Editors’ Award goes to Rick Steamboat. For 18 years, “The Dragon” fought the good fight with courage, honor, and intensity. Forced to retire due to injury, Steamboat remains an inspiration to fans who remember that he never took the rulebreakers’ route.
The only thing left to do is turn the page…and enjoy.
ROOKIE OF THE YEAR ALEX WRIGHT: 26,192 votes
When Alex Wright arrived in WCW, he immediately began to establish himself as a candidate for a top award alright: Modest Annoying Wrestler of the Year. Fans and wrestlers alike were turned off by the manner in which “Das Wunderkind'' danced around the ring before and after matches. He came in with a lot of good press, but he began squandering it on his first day. 
Several months later, however, it became evident that Wright was indeed one talented wrestler. His aerial style was effective and exciting. And a few months after he arrived in WCW, he killed the dance routine. In his first pay-per-view appearance at Starrcade ‘94 he defeated Jean-Paul LeVeque (a.k.a. Hunter Hearst Helmsley). His defeat of Brian Pillman at The Great American Bash proved he belonged in WCW, and though he lost to the-TV champion Arn Anderson at Slamboree, Wright demonstrated he was a contender for championship gold. 
Solid showings against men like Sabu, Dean Malenko, and Chris Benoit further buttress the arguments of those fans who voted Wright Rookie of the Year.
“I thought Wright was just a pretty boy when he came to WCW,” wrote Sandra Olson of Macon, Georgia. “But I ended up voting for him. He deserves the honor more than anyone else.”
Even Ric Flair, who nearly lost to Wright several times in ‘95, was eager to praise the rookie.
“He still has a long way to go,” Flair said, “but there’s a lot of promise there. He’s got the stuff. He’s on his way to becoming a major player in WCW.”
For that, Wright gives a lot of credit to his father, former pro wrestler Stephen Wright. “My father was always able to give me really good advice without pushing me,” Alex said. “I am able to handle what happens in the ring so much better because of what he taught me.”
Wright added that he was determined not to become a victim of the sophomore jinx. One wrestler, who was a victim of Wright’s stunning moonsault, doesn’t think that is going to happen either. 
“I can’t stand the guy,” he offered, “but I know that somewhere down the road, I’m going to have to deal with him, and so are a lot of the other guys.” Wright can deal with that.
RUNNERS-UP SGT. CRAIG PITTMAN: 15,219 votes
First runner-up: The former Marine brought his peculiar brand of discipline to WCW, and so far he has had success with it. Opponents cringe at the thought of being put in Pittman’s “Code Red” armbar, and they respect the fact that he is well-schooled in the basics. A feud with fellow former Marine Cobra promises to enliven Pittman’s second year.
LAWRENCE TAYLOR: 12,995 votes
Second runner-up: We already know Taylor is the greatest linebacker in the history of professional football, but we didn’t know he could wrestle…until this year. Okay, he’s no  Lou Thesz, but LT was solid in his victory over Bam Bam Bigelow at WrestleMania. We suspect that if he ever takes to the ring full-time, he’d do very well indeed. 
MADD MAXXINE: 5,230 votes
Third runner-up: Maxxine became only the third woman to be included in the “PWI 500.” She deserved the distinction; the fearsome 5’9”, 195-pound rulebreaker has beaten almost every man in North Carolina’s PWF. Maxxine’s unexpected success has made her a prime target, but foes first will have to figure out a way to counter her effective choke-slam.
VOTES FOR OTHERS (17,425)
Some of the top vote-getters who did not capture a runner-up spot include: The Renegade, The Gargoyle, Colorado Kid, and Ubas. 
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bemybaebaebae · 1 year
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Alex Wright
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jasvvy · 2 years
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What turned me gay (not really) - Alex Wright
A while back, I came across the sidelineland.com blog and while you would think that the heavy themes around erotic wrestling would interest me, I was mainly intrigued by the author's tongue and cheek thoughts on "What turned me gay".  The intention here was not a serious exposition on the root cause of "turning someone gay" but rather what "gay" impressionable moments have led us all to be the people we are today.  Although the author doesn't regularly post anymore, this blog is still worth checking out and in honor of these impressionable "gay" moments I bring you - 
What turned me gay (not really) ... 
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WCW jobbers, specifically Alex Wright turned me gay.  And I know a lot of gay adults out there probably have similar experiences fantasizing about Alex when they were a kid but this is different, he was literally the first guy I recall having feelings for.  Up until that point in my life I just thought that I was a "late bloomer" or that one day heterosexuality would magically click or whatever self-deluding nonsense I fed myself at the time.  But for me, watching Alex was a turning point.  Alex Wright to me, was my first male lust.  
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Alex with chest hair!
If you've read my other posts then you know that for me, it's not just about the hot body, although Alex had that 10 times over.  There was just something in the way his opponents dominated him and accentuated each and every long and flawless muscle on his torso, or his arm, or his back.   
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Alex Wright v Chris Benoit (WCW)
Lusting for Alex lead to interest in other wrestlers and while my friends were avid fans of WWF due to the storylines and production values, I was a hardcore WCW enthusiast because of Alex and the other fresh jobbers their programing offered.  This was another turning point as well because it was at this point that I started to have less and less in common with my "straight" friends and I began to look for other interests that were separate from them.  So whatever the spark, the impetus, for my eventual embrace of being gay - Alex Wright was pivotal to that transformation.  
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Alex v Buddy Wayne (WCW)
I read later that Alex is training or coaching wrestling and I'm glad that he has avoided the fate that sadly so many other professional wrestlers have fallen into.  But in any case, I try not to read too much about my heroes/inspirers (are those the right words?), because for me, Alex Wright will always be that strapping, high flying, sucker for punishment, sex idol, that started it all for me in my youth.  
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Selected Appearances [Not all shown]
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Alex Wright v Rey Mysterio Jr. (WCW)The size difference in this match was so hot to me at the time
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Alex Wright v The Gambler (WCW) Beefy and slightly hairy, yum.
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Alex Wright v Doc Dean (WCW)  Alex as a heel! One of my favorite matches.
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"Flyin" Brian Pillman vs. Alex Wright (WCW) I used to have endless thoughts about him in this position
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Alex Wright v Pat Rose (WCW 1995)  I vividly recall taping this match on the family VCR and hiding the tape in my bedroom
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2 minutes into this match and Paul Roma is already going for the low blow.
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Alex Wright v Paul Roma (WCW) - Superbrawl VThere was some sexually charged rivalry between these two.  In my mind, I liked to pretend that they were going through a messy break up, with Alex cheating on Paul and Paul wanting to humiliate Alex. 
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blackmensuited · 9 months
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Crotch chops in British.
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techaddictsuk · 2 years
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Fast Money (1996)
A look at Fast Money from 1996 by Alex Wright starring Yancy Butler, Matt McCoy, John Ashton, Trevor Goddard. An action comedy I once suggested was an all time great!
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