A-Show: A show featuring the
biggest stars of a promotion, while at the same time the promotion is running a show in
another town with lesser percieved wrestlers by the fans. |
| A-Team: Group of wrestlers on an
A-Show. |
| Abortion: A failed angle or match. |
| Angle: An event or
series of events that is usualy a confrontaion between two or more wrestlers that
intensifies a fued. |
| Apter Mags: 1. Word
used to describe the magazines in which Bill Apter is part of the staff (PWI, The
Wrestler, etc). 2. Used to describe magazines that contain fictional tales about wrestling
that pertain to the storylines. |
| Arm Color: An arm that is
bleeding. |
| Around the Horn: The
trip to each town or series of towns that the promotion runs events in. |
| B-Show: A wrestling
event featuring wrestlers that are percieved by the fans as being not as big as the
wrestlers who appear on A-Shows. |
| B-Team: Group of
wrestlers on a B-Show. |
| Baby: Short word for
"babyface". |
| Babyface: The
"fan favorite" or "good guy". The person who is in a position to be
cheered. |
| Blade: The process in which a
wrestler takes a razor blade and runs it along his skin to produce a cut that bleeds. |
| Blow Off: To end a feud. |
| Blow Up: To become
cardiovascularly exhausted in a match. |
| Book: To schedule a wrestler for a
show. |
| Booker: Person in an
organization who books and hires wreslters, plans the long term direction of the company,
plans angles, decides who wins and loses. Example: Eric Bischoff, Kevin
Sullivan, Terry Taylor, Vince McMahon. |
| Bootleg: An item that is illegaly
sold or traded, such as video tapes, T-Shirts, etc. |
| Bounce: The move that leads to the
pin. This term is old and rarely used. |
| Boys: The wrestlers. |
| Bozark: A female wrestler. Old,
rarely used term. |
| Brass: Management. |
| Bull: Promoter. Old and rarely
used term. |
| Bump: When a wrestler falls to the
mat after recieving a blow to the body or a wrestling maneuver by his opponent. |
| Bury: 1. To attempt to defame
someone or to criticize him. 2. To lower someone in the eyes of the fans or promoter. |
| Broadway: A draw. |
| Business, The: A term used to
describe the wrestling industry. |
| Call a Match: To inform opponent
of upcoming moves or spots throughout the match. |
| Canned Heat: Crowd cheering that
is piped into the sound system or into a pretaped TV show during post production. |
| Card: The line up of the
matches. |
| Carney: Short for
"carnival terminology". It is the root for many of the terms found on this page
from when wrestling had its roots in the early 1900's. |
| Carry: 1. To call a match. 2. To
make a green opponent look good in the fans eyes. |
| Cheap Heat: Usualy
refered to as heel heat, when the heel swears, insults, or makes obscene gestures to the
fans in order to get himself over as a heel. |
| Color: Blood. |
| Comeback: The point in the match
where the babyface takes over offense after the heel has been dominating him. |
| Cut a Promo: 1. To do an
interview. 2. To demean someone skillfully. |
| Dagger: A razor blade with more of
the razor exposed than necessary. |
| Dark Match: A match at a TV taping
that is not taped for broadcast. |
| Deal, The: Sometimes a title belt
is refered to as The Deal. |
| Do Business: To do the job. |
| Doing Business on the
Way Out: To do jobs when one wrestler who is on his way out of a promotion in order to get
other talent that are staying over. |
| Double Juice: When both wrestlers
blade in the match. |
| Draw: 1. A time limit
draw with no clear winner of the match. 2. Cash payment on the night of the show as an
advance on the earned paycheck that will be paid later. |
| Dusty Finish: After a
second referee comes into the match and makes the 3 count leading to a pinfall after the
original referee has been knocked down, the original ref overrules that
decision. This finish was not exactly invented by Dusty Rhodes, but Dusty used this finish so often during his term as a booker, the finish took on his
name. |
| Enhancement Talent: A 1990's term
for the word jobber. |
| Face: Short word for babyface. |
| False Comeback: The
point in a match where the face starts back on offense after a heel has dominated him for
several minutes, only to be stopped by the heel who goes back on
offense. |
| Feeding: The role the
heel plays during a babyface's comback where he repeatedly is fended off by the face with
a series of bumps that is hoped to generate heat. A face can also feed
the heel in hopes of gaining fan support. |
| Fued: A series of battles between
two or more wreslters. |
| Finish: The ending of a
match. |
| Finisher: Move that leads to the
win. |
| Foreign Object: An
object that is illegal to the match, such as a chair, brass knuckles, garbage can, etc. In
the late 1980's, Ted Turner had a policy on his news networks that all commentators were
to not use the word "foreign", but instead use the word
"international". Wrestling announcers on TBS picked up on this, and a foreign
object is still occasionaly, jokingly called the
"international object". |
| Garbage Wrestling: A
style of wrestling that consists of wrestlers frequent use of blading, foreigh objects,
gimmick stipulations in matches and brawling without much athleticism or ring
psychology. (Ex. FMW, many ECW matches) |
| Gas: Steroids. |
| Gate: Ammount of money the is
generated from ticket sales. |
| Geek: To cut one's self. |
| Gig Mark: A scar from blading. |
| Gimmick: 1. The persona that a
wrestler has. 2. Slang for a foreign object. |
| Gizzmo: An old term for a
gimmick. |
| Glob: To stiff someone. |
| Go Home: When a wrestler says this
to his opponent, it means to go to the finish of the match. |
| Go Over: To beat someone. Another
term is to "put over". |
| Go Through: A time limit draw. |
| Going Bush: When a wrestler moves
from a full time, major league type promotion to the independant scene. |
| Good Hand: A wrestler
that other wrestlers like to work against. This wrestler is usualy in complete control
during the match, he does not get lost, and he does not work too stiff or too
light. |
| Green: A term for an inexperienced
wrestler. |
| Gusher: A deep cut that bleeds
alot, usualy caused by blading. The severity of the cut may or may not be intended. |
| Handles: Names that the wrestlers
usualy use themselves. Usualy not the names that they use in the ring. |
| Hardway: A cut that is usualy
unintentional, with out the use of the razor. |
| Heat: 1. The crowd
reaction to a wrestler, usualy cheers or boos. 2. To "have heat" with someone
else in the promotion is not good. |
| Heavy: A wrestler that is hard to
lift, usualy that wrestler does not want to cooperate with his opponent.
|
| Heel: The "bad guy" or
"rulebreaker" who the promoter books in the position of being booed. |
| Highspot: A move that is percieved
to be, or is, high risked. |
| Hold Up: When a wrestler refuses
to wrestler untill he is paid more than what was originally agreed upon. |
| Hood: A masked wrestler. |
| Hope Spot: When a baby
face is being beaten by the heel, he teases a comeback with a highspot or two, only to
have the heel take over on offense again. It is just like the false
comback. Usually, the hope spot is just minutes away from the face making a full fledged comeback. |
| Hot Tag: When a babyface who has
been on the reciving end of a heels offense makes the tag to his partner. |
| House: Number of fans in the
building. |
| House Show: 1. A show
not taped for TV. 2. An arena that is consistanly visited by an organization. (ECW Arena,
MSG) |
| Job: A planned loss. |
| Jobber: A wrestler who loses in
order to put over a pushed wrestler. |
| Jobroni: Slang for the word
jobber. |
| Juice: 1. another word for
blading. 2. Slang for steroids. |
| Kayfabe: Generaly referring to the
protecting of industy secrets. |
| Lead Ass: A wrestler who will not
cooperate in the ring. |
| Light: When a wrestler
works light, or lightly, it gives the audience the impression that the wrestler is not
laying in his kicks or punches. |
| Loose: A wrestler who applies
moves or holds with less force than usual. |
| Mark: 1. A person who
belives that wrestling matches, and angles and everything to do with wrestling, is real.
2. A fan of or participant in the wrestling industry who belives that a
part of any aspect of the industry is more important than making money. Some people
say that the word "mark" comes from the old carnival days. When the operator of
some scam spotted a real sucker, he would mark the back of that
persons back with a piece of chalk, which would literaly be "marking" the "mark". Other sources say that the term "mark" come from when
the scam "hits the mark", meaning that it was successfully done. |
| Mark Out: When a smart fan gets
into an angle or a match and enjoy it as if you were a mark. |
| Marriage: A feud between
wrestlers. |
| Marshmallow: An old, rarely used
term for a fat wrestler. |
| Mouthpiece: An on camera
manager. |
| No Sell: When a
wrestler stops selling moves for a moment to give the fans the impression that he is
invincible. (Ex. Hulk Hogan, the Ultimate Warrior) |
| No Show: When a wrestler does not
show up for a scheduled appearance. |
| Office: The headquarters of a
wrestling organization (CNN Center, Titan Towers). |
| Over: To be popular with the
audience. |
| Paper: To give away tickets to an
event, often done for TV tapings. |
| Paying Dues: Term for gaining
experience by showing respect to other wrestlers, doing jobs to veterans, etc. |
| Pencil: A booker or promoter. |
| Plant: A wrestler, or
someone who works for the organization, who is placed in the audience who preteneds to be
a fan, yet participates in an angle. |
| Policeman: A wrestler
that is intimidating enough, and skillfull and strong enough, who is able to shoot with
another wrestler in a match to make a point with an unruly opponent. |