Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First Person Shooters

2013-12-20 Thread Charles Rivard
That's it exactly.  If it is staged and prearranged for spectator enjoyment 
rather than a competition with set rules, it should not be called a 
professional sport.  I don't watch what is known as professional wrestling 
because I'm not into that sort of thing.  I would, however, like to watch a 
good honest professional wrestling bout if it were verbally described.


---
Be positive!  When it comes to being defeated, if you think you're finished, 
you! really! are! finished!
- Original Message - 
From: "Thomas Ward" 

To: "Gamers Discussion list" 
Sent: Friday, December 20, 2013 11:56 AM
Subject: Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First 
Person Shooters




Hi Charles,

Fair enough. You are right that the classification is wrong because
while pro wrestling is treated as a professional sporting event the
way the events are staged it is often anything but professional in the
way the performers behave or conduct themselves. In this case the term
professional simply means paid rather than amateur which is unpaid
wrestling events. In short, I gather your disagreement is with the
wording rather than the programming itself.

Cheers!


On 12/20/13, Charles Rivard  wrote:
I guess my beef is with the classification rather than what they do.  It 
is


"sports entertainment", but nonprofessional tactics are allowed in a 
sport,


that sport is not professionally done, and I expect a professional sport 
to


be professional.

---
Be positive!  When it comes to being defeated, if you think you're 
finished,


---
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Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First Person Shooters

2013-12-20 Thread Thomas Ward
Hi Charles,

Fair enough. You are right that the classification is wrong because
while pro wrestling is treated as a professional sporting event the
way the events are staged it is often anything but professional in the
way the performers behave or conduct themselves. In this case the term
professional simply means paid rather than amateur which is unpaid
wrestling events. In short, I gather your disagreement is with the
wording rather than the programming itself.

Cheers!


On 12/20/13, Charles Rivard  wrote:
> I guess my beef is with the classification rather than what they do.  It is
>
> "sports entertainment", but nonprofessional tactics are allowed in a sport,
>
> that sport is not professionally done, and I expect a professional sport to
>
> be professional.
>
> ---
> Be positive!  When it comes to being defeated, if you think you're finished,

---
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Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First Person Shooters

2013-12-20 Thread Charles Rivard

Sport Entertainment would be accurate.

---
Be positive!  When it comes to being defeated, if you think you're finished, 
you! really! are! finished!
- Original Message - 
From: "Thomas Ward" 

To: "Gamers Discussion list" 
Sent: Friday, December 20, 2013 2:12 AM
Subject: Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First 
Person Shooters




Hi Charles,

I guess you said it yourself. You are a purest and are taking the term
wrestling too literally here. You are trying to compare pro wrestling
to another sport like football, basketball, bowling, etc when that
really is comparing two totally different things and trying to say
they should be equal.

What I mean by that is pro wrestling is not really a true sport in the
way something like football or baseball is because all of the matches
are fixed and scripted by the company to work into a larger storyline.
I think most pro wrestling fans are aware by now that many of the
matches are rehearsed and the winner is decided upon days possibly
weeks before the match is televised on TV. For that reason it is not a
true sport because it is purely for entertainment and there is no real
competition in it. Therefore it doesn't matter if people cheat or not
because it was all scripted before hand.

When you talk about bowling, basketball, baseball, whatever that is a
totally different situation. All of the games are about real honest
open competition between two teams. Therefore cheating does matter
because it is not contrived for the audiences benefit and cheating
really would be cheating in those sports.

So to get to the point if pro wrestling was really about competition
then I'd agree with you that cheating and people busting up furniture
should not be allowed, but it is not actually a sport. Everything you
see on TNA Impact, WWE Raw, WWE Smackdown, whatever is less about
competition than artistic stunt work as you pointed out in an earlier
message. If that is not wrestling in your opinion fine, but I believe
most fans of pro wrestling would tend to disagree with you as there
currently is no other term to describe it right now.

Cheers!


On 12/18/13, Charles Rivard  wrote:
Yes, there are very legitimate wrestling holds and moves that are done, 
and


I am not ignoring them.  However, my point is that, to me, professional
sports should be just that; professional.  Throwing someone through
furniture or busting furniture across someone's head is not wrestling. 
If
crossing the fowl line is not allowed in amateur bowling, it would also 
not


be allowed in professional bowling.  Professional wrestlers should 
wrestle,


not do anything that is not wrestling.  Maybe I am a purist, but 
shouldn't
they stick to reasonable rules?  If not, then the sport should be renamed 
to


better classify what is and is not allowed.  I think that a lot of 
fighting


and illegal play should be clamped down on in a lot of professional 
sports.


The NHL and NBA are prime examples.  If these athletes are in a 
professional


sport, they should be penalized for not being professionals.  If you put
your shoulder down and ram into someone who is in front of you who is a
defender, you should be called for charging rather then the defender 
charged


with blocking.  If you hit an opponent with a hockey stick, you should be
out of the game.  They should act like, and be, professionals.  You can 
have


a very entertaining hockey, basketball, or wrestling match even if you
follow the rules.  Illegal and unnecessary violence, merely to keep the 
fans


interested, is not needed.  If it is, then there's something wrong with 
this


picture.  I prefer seeing basketball rather than basketbrawl.

---
Be positive!  When it comes to being defeated, if you think you're 
finished,


you! really! are! finished!


---
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Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First Person Shooters

2013-12-20 Thread Charles Rivard
I guess my beef is with the classification rather than what they do.  It is 
"sports entertainment", but nonprofessional tactics are allowed in a sport, 
that sport is not professionally done, and I expect a professional sport to 
be professional.


---
Be positive!  When it comes to being defeated, if you think you're finished, 
you! really! are! finished!
- Original Message - 
From: "Thomas Ward" 

To: "Gamers Discussion list" 
Sent: Friday, December 20, 2013 1:50 AM
Subject: Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First 
Person Shooters




Hi Teresa,

Exactly. The big companies like the WWE don't even pretend to treat
wrestling as an actual sport or  claim that the competitions are real.
They call pro wrestling sports entertainment which basically
emphasizes the fact it is entertainment like a sport but is not really
a sport the way football, basketball, etc is. It is if anything, as
you said, just some mindless fun watching some burly guys or a couple
of hot women tossing each other around the ring for a while
occasionally using a foreign object like a steel chair to knock out
the opponent for the win. It is all for show and is all for fun. Leave
it at that.

Cheers!


On 12/18/13, Teresa Cochran  wrote:

Pro wrestling doesn't pretend to be a sport in the same way that hockey,
basketball, and don't forget football. You take or leave the violence,
because it's an inherent part of the experience. It's not meant to be
competetive. It doesn't even pretend to be that. It's mindless fun, IMO. 
I

like a little mindless fun every once in awhile.

Teresa

Sent using Alpine messaging system in Mac OS X Terminal


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Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First Person Shooters

2013-12-20 Thread Jacob Kruger
Another real sport is amateur wrestling - which they generally include in 
things like olympics, etc.?


Stay well

Jacob Kruger
Blind Biker
Skype: BlindZA
'...fate had broken his body, but not his spirit...'

- Original Message - 
From: "Thomas Ward" 

To: "Gamers Discussion list" 
Sent: Friday, December 20, 2013 10:12 AM
Subject: Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First 
Person Shooters




Hi Charles,

I guess you said it yourself. You are a purest and are taking the term
wrestling too literally here. You are trying to compare pro wrestling
to another sport like football, basketball, bowling, etc when that
really is comparing two totally different things and trying to say
they should be equal.

What I mean by that is pro wrestling is not really a true sport in the
way something like football or baseball is because all of the matches
are fixed and scripted by the company to work into a larger storyline.
I think most pro wrestling fans are aware by now that many of the
matches are rehearsed and the winner is decided upon days possibly
weeks before the match is televised on TV. For that reason it is not a
true sport because it is purely for entertainment and there is no real
competition in it. Therefore it doesn't matter if people cheat or not
because it was all scripted before hand.

When you talk about bowling, basketball, baseball, whatever that is a
totally different situation. All of the games are about real honest
open competition between two teams. Therefore cheating does matter
because it is not contrived for the audiences benefit and cheating
really would be cheating in those sports.

So to get to the point if pro wrestling was really about competition
then I'd agree with you that cheating and people busting up furniture
should not be allowed, but it is not actually a sport. Everything you
see on TNA Impact, WWE Raw, WWE Smackdown, whatever is less about
competition than artistic stunt work as you pointed out in an earlier
message. If that is not wrestling in your opinion fine, but I believe
most fans of pro wrestling would tend to disagree with you as there
currently is no other term to describe it right now.

Cheers!


On 12/18/13, Charles Rivard  wrote:
Yes, there are very legitimate wrestling holds and moves that are done, 
and


I am not ignoring them.  However, my point is that, to me, professional
sports should be just that; professional.  Throwing someone through
furniture or busting furniture across someone's head is not wrestling. 
If
crossing the fowl line is not allowed in amateur bowling, it would also 
not


be allowed in professional bowling.  Professional wrestlers should 
wrestle,


not do anything that is not wrestling.  Maybe I am a purist, but 
shouldn't
they stick to reasonable rules?  If not, then the sport should be renamed 
to


better classify what is and is not allowed.  I think that a lot of 
fighting


and illegal play should be clamped down on in a lot of professional 
sports.


The NHL and NBA are prime examples.  If these athletes are in a 
professional


sport, they should be penalized for not being professionals.  If you put
your shoulder down and ram into someone who is in front of you who is a
defender, you should be called for charging rather then the defender 
charged


with blocking.  If you hit an opponent with a hockey stick, you should be
out of the game.  They should act like, and be, professionals.  You can 
have


a very entertaining hockey, basketball, or wrestling match even if you
follow the rules.  Illegal and unnecessary violence, merely to keep the 
fans


interested, is not needed.  If it is, then there's something wrong with 
this


picture.  I prefer seeing basketball rather than basketbrawl.

---
Be positive!  When it comes to being defeated, if you think you're 
finished,


you! really! are! finished!


---
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Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First Person Shooters

2013-12-20 Thread dark
Interestingly enough, from friends of mine who do the more harsh and serious 
sorts of mixed martial arts, (I have one friend who even das krav maga,   
and yes, she is down right Scary!),  since in those situations you are 
dealing with people who are  capable of doing real and serious damage to 
each other,  anyone cheats, uses illegal moves  or the like, or uses a 
foreigne object like a steel chair and they'd be kicked out faster than you 
can say broken jaw!


Indeed my  friend  has stated that in both training bouts and competitions 
for  krav maga it's necessary for the  referee to stand with a stop watch, 
since if one person gets the other in a  choke hold  there is a real risk of 
actual death if the hold goes on for more than about 20  seconds,  and 
unconsciousness is apparently frequent, indeed according to my friend, half 
of her Krav  maga training involves learning the holds, blows etc, the other 
half involves learning how not! to  get  broken bones, crushed joints and 
innumerable other injuries from doing  such.


Beware the grue!

Dark. 



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Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First Person Shooters

2013-12-20 Thread Teresa Cochran
I periodically watch pro wrestling cards with friends of mine who are fans 
and have written pro wrestling columns. We talk a lot more about the 
stories than we do about the wrestling moves. We all like tNA best these 
days, because its storylines seem more creative.


Teresa, whose favorite is mi-i-i-i-i-isterrr An der sonnn
(and who'd better stop now before this thread wanders even further 
astray.)

:)
Sent using Alpine messaging system in Mac OS X Terminal

On Fri, 20 Dec 2013, Thomas Ward wrote:


Hi Charles,

I guess you said it yourself. You are a purest and are taking the term
wrestling too literally here. You are trying to compare pro wrestling
to another sport like football, basketball, bowling, etc when that
really is comparing two totally different things and trying to say
they should be equal.

What I mean by that is pro wrestling is not really a true sport in the
way something like football or baseball is because all of the matches
are fixed and scripted by the company to work into a larger storyline.
I think most pro wrestling fans are aware by now that many of the
matches are rehearsed and the winner is decided upon days possibly
weeks before the match is televised on TV. For that reason it is not a
true sport because it is purely for entertainment and there is no real
competition in it. Therefore it doesn't matter if people cheat or not
because it was all scripted before hand.

When you talk about bowling, basketball, baseball, whatever that is a
totally different situation. All of the games are about real honest
open competition between two teams. Therefore cheating does matter
because it is not contrived for the audiences benefit and cheating
really would be cheating in those sports.

So to get to the point if pro wrestling was really about competition
then I'd agree with you that cheating and people busting up furniture
should not be allowed, but it is not actually a sport. Everything you
see on TNA Impact, WWE Raw, WWE Smackdown, whatever is less about
competition than artistic stunt work as you pointed out in an earlier
message. If that is not wrestling in your opinion fine, but I believe
most fans of pro wrestling would tend to disagree with you as there
currently is no other term to describe it right now.

Cheers!


On 12/18/13, Charles Rivard  wrote:

Yes, there are very legitimate wrestling holds and moves that are done, and

I am not ignoring them.  However, my point is that, to me, professional
sports should be just that; professional.  Throwing someone through
furniture or busting furniture across someone's head is not wrestling.  If
crossing the fowl line is not allowed in amateur bowling, it would also not

be allowed in professional bowling.  Professional wrestlers should wrestle,

not do anything that is not wrestling.  Maybe I am a purist, but shouldn't
they stick to reasonable rules?  If not, then the sport should be renamed to

better classify what is and is not allowed.  I think that a lot of fighting

and illegal play should be clamped down on in a lot of professional sports.

The NHL and NBA are prime examples.  If these athletes are in a professional

sport, they should be penalized for not being professionals.  If you put
your shoulder down and ram into someone who is in front of you who is a
defender, you should be called for charging rather then the defender charged

with blocking.  If you hit an opponent with a hockey stick, you should be
out of the game.  They should act like, and be, professionals.  You can have

a very entertaining hockey, basketball, or wrestling match even if you
follow the rules.  Illegal and unnecessary violence, merely to keep the fans

interested, is not needed.  If it is, then there's something wrong with this

picture.  I prefer seeing basketball rather than basketbrawl.

---
Be positive!  When it comes to being defeated, if you think you're finished,

you! really! are! finished!


---
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Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First Person Shooters

2013-12-20 Thread Thomas Ward
Hi Charles,

I guess you said it yourself. You are a purest and are taking the term
wrestling too literally here. You are trying to compare pro wrestling
to another sport like football, basketball, bowling, etc when that
really is comparing two totally different things and trying to say
they should be equal.

What I mean by that is pro wrestling is not really a true sport in the
way something like football or baseball is because all of the matches
are fixed and scripted by the company to work into a larger storyline.
I think most pro wrestling fans are aware by now that many of the
matches are rehearsed and the winner is decided upon days possibly
weeks before the match is televised on TV. For that reason it is not a
true sport because it is purely for entertainment and there is no real
competition in it. Therefore it doesn't matter if people cheat or not
because it was all scripted before hand.

When you talk about bowling, basketball, baseball, whatever that is a
totally different situation. All of the games are about real honest
open competition between two teams. Therefore cheating does matter
because it is not contrived for the audiences benefit and cheating
really would be cheating in those sports.

So to get to the point if pro wrestling was really about competition
then I'd agree with you that cheating and people busting up furniture
should not be allowed, but it is not actually a sport. Everything you
see on TNA Impact, WWE Raw, WWE Smackdown, whatever is less about
competition than artistic stunt work as you pointed out in an earlier
message. If that is not wrestling in your opinion fine, but I believe
most fans of pro wrestling would tend to disagree with you as there
currently is no other term to describe it right now.

Cheers!


On 12/18/13, Charles Rivard  wrote:
> Yes, there are very legitimate wrestling holds and moves that are done, and
>
> I am not ignoring them.  However, my point is that, to me, professional
> sports should be just that; professional.  Throwing someone through
> furniture or busting furniture across someone's head is not wrestling.  If
> crossing the fowl line is not allowed in amateur bowling, it would also not
>
> be allowed in professional bowling.  Professional wrestlers should wrestle,
>
> not do anything that is not wrestling.  Maybe I am a purist, but shouldn't
> they stick to reasonable rules?  If not, then the sport should be renamed to
>
> better classify what is and is not allowed.  I think that a lot of fighting
>
> and illegal play should be clamped down on in a lot of professional sports.
>
> The NHL and NBA are prime examples.  If these athletes are in a professional
>
> sport, they should be penalized for not being professionals.  If you put
> your shoulder down and ram into someone who is in front of you who is a
> defender, you should be called for charging rather then the defender charged
>
> with blocking.  If you hit an opponent with a hockey stick, you should be
> out of the game.  They should act like, and be, professionals.  You can have
>
> a very entertaining hockey, basketball, or wrestling match even if you
> follow the rules.  Illegal and unnecessary violence, merely to keep the fans
>
> interested, is not needed.  If it is, then there's something wrong with this
>
> picture.  I prefer seeing basketball rather than basketbrawl.
>
> ---
> Be positive!  When it comes to being defeated, if you think you're finished,
>
> you! really! are! finished!

---
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Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First Person Shooters

2013-12-19 Thread Thomas Ward
Hi Teresa,

Exactly. The big companies like the WWE don't even pretend to treat
wrestling as an actual sport or  claim that the competitions are real.
They call pro wrestling sports entertainment which basically
emphasizes the fact it is entertainment like a sport but is not really
a sport the way football, basketball, etc is. It is if anything, as
you said, just some mindless fun watching some burly guys or a couple
of hot women tossing each other around the ring for a while
occasionally using a foreign object like a steel chair to knock out
the opponent for the win. It is all for show and is all for fun. Leave
it at that.

Cheers!


On 12/18/13, Teresa Cochran  wrote:
> Pro wrestling doesn't pretend to be a sport in the same way that hockey,
> basketball, and don't forget football. You take or leave the violence,
> because it's an inherent part of the experience. It's not meant to be
> competetive. It doesn't even pretend to be that. It's mindless fun, IMO. I
> like a little mindless fun every once in awhile.
>
> Teresa
>
> Sent using Alpine messaging system in Mac OS X Terminal

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Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First Person Shooters

2013-12-19 Thread Thomas Ward
Hi Dark,

I think "show wrestling" is an accurate description. Obviously,, there
is a lot of wrestling involved such as various grapples, submission
holds, and technical throws, but unlike in Olympic wrestling the WWE,
TNA, etc employ a lot of theatrical stunts such as attacking people
with chairs, throwing people off ladders, throwing them through
tables, etc  which is used to add more drama to the matches. It isn't
so much that it is not wrestling but that the matches are contrived
for the audiences benefit to fit into a larger storyline and rivalry.

For example, for several months now Daniel Bryan and Randy Orton have
been in a contested rivalry for the WWE Championship.
Now in football, baseball, basketball, or any real sport nobody would
get away with the various things Randy Orton has done to hold onto the
championship. Much less have the COO of the company knock out the
competition to help him win as Triple H did back at Summerslam or have
the guest referee knock out the opponent like at Hell in a Cell. All
of that is obviously just for show, and is merely there to entertain
the audience and make them want to see the next PPV to see how the
rivalry turns out.

My basic point is that it is wrestling in a very broad sense. It is
just that pro wrestling is more show wrestling rather than wrestling
as a sport. If someone wants a more pure sport oriented wrestling then
they need to watch the Olympics, go to their local high school and
watch their high school wrestling team, or go to college wrestling
matches. It all depends on how black and white you view the situation,
and I think Charles is being a bit too black and white when he said
pro wrestling is not wrestling.

Cheers!

On 12/18/13, dark  wrote:
> I do sort of  see charlse point here, that pro wrestling with the staged
> matches, supposed foul moves etc isn't exactly the same as another
> professional sport, even another combat sport like boxing or   olypic
> wrestling or   competitive martial arts.
>
> I wouldn't say it's not wrestling though since as has been pointed out it
> does employ many legitimate wrestling holds, move and throws, and indeed
> wrestlers like Curt Angle actually have done both the WWE style of wrestling
>
> and the real thing in  the Olympics.
>
> I have heard people who do mixed martial arts and the like who utilise many
>
> wrestling holds describe it as "show wrestling" which seems an accurate
> description.
>
> Beware the Grue!
>
> Dark.
>
>
> ---
> Gamers mailing list __ Gamers@audyssey.org
> If you want to leave the list, send E-mail to
> gamers-unsubscr...@audyssey.org.
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Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First Person Shooters

2013-12-19 Thread Kenny
I agree here as well. I also listen to professional wrestling, and there is
wrestling involved. I once asked my cousin what the RKO was like, and he put
the move on me, but didn't do it full force. 
Kenny Peyatt

-Original Message-
From: Gamers [mailto:gamers-boun...@audyssey.org] On Behalf Of Thomas Ward
Sent: Wednesday, December 18, 2013 10:38 AM
To: Gamers Discussion list
Subject: Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First
Person Shooters

Hi Charles,

Yes, I do see  your point, but as I pointed out in professional wrestling
there is both wrestling and a lot of the extra stuff you mentioned. The WWE
is definitely one for having a lot of artistic stunt work such as throwing
people through tables, people getting thrown from ladders, being beat over
the head with steel chairs, the reff getting knocked out during a critical
point in the match, and I agree that stuff is not wrestling. That stuff is
just stunt work to keep the fans interested in the ongoing storyline.

However, at the same time there is some very technical wrestling involved
here which you seem to be ignoring. Every pro show I have ever watched has
some basic wrestling such as reverse chinlocks, headlocks, arm drags, hip
tosses, and so forth which are just as apart of an amateur match as a pro
show. If that stuff is not wrestling then what is it?

I guess it sounds to me you are making a case for all or nothing which I
don't think it is that black and white. From what I am getting from your
messages  if pro wrestling is half wrestling and half stunt work then it is
not wrestling. However, if you go to your local high school match which has
no stunt work and 100% wrestling that is wrestling.
That is just too black and white for me as I think there is a gray area here
that you seem to be overlooking.

Cheers!


On 12/18/13, Charles Rivard  wrote:
> When I used to watch the wrestlers on TV, they would use something to 
> cut the opponent, break chairs on heads, put the referee out of 
> commission, and
>
> stuff like that.  This is not wrestling.
>
> ---
> Be positive!  When it comes to being defeated, if you think you're 
> finished,
>
> you! really! are! finished!

---
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Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First Person Shooters

2013-12-18 Thread dark
I do sort of  see charlse point here, that pro wrestling with the staged 
matches, supposed foul moves etc isn't exactly the same as another 
professional sport, even another combat sport like boxing or   olypic 
wrestling or   competitive martial arts.


I wouldn't say it's not wrestling though since as has been pointed out it 
does employ many legitimate wrestling holds, move and throws, and indeed 
wrestlers like Curt Angle actually have done both the WWE style of wrestling 
and the real thing in  the Olympics.


I have heard people who do mixed martial arts and the like who utilise many 
wrestling holds describe it as "show wrestling" which seems an accurate 
description.


Beware the Grue!

Dark. 



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Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First Person Shooters

2013-12-18 Thread Teresa Cochran
Every pro wrestling fan knows it's not wrestling. But it's a good show, 
though. :)


Teresa

Sent using Alpine messaging system in Mac OS X Terminal

On Wed, 18 Dec 2013, Charles Rivard wrote:

When I used to watch the wrestlers on TV, they would use something to cut the 
opponent, break chairs on heads, put the referee out of commission, and stuff 
like that.  This is not wrestling.


---
Be positive!  When it comes to being defeated, if you think you're finished, 
you! really! are! finished!

- Original Message - From: "Thomas Ward" 
To: "Gamers Discussion list" 
Sent: Wednesday, December 18, 2013 8:27 AM
Subject: Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First 
Person Shooters




Hi Charles,

To be honest this sounds like another one of your categorical
statements without evidence or reasons to back it up. Why exactly do
you think professional wrestling is not wrestling?

The reason I take issue with your opinion is this. I have been
watching or listening to professional wrestling for 30 years and have
watched AWA, NWA, WWE, TNA, WCW, etc and while there is certainly what
you call "artistic stunt work" involved many of those professional
wrestlers use the same holds and  moves you would find in amateur
wrestling. I use to watch amateur wrestling matches such as high
school wrestling, it is different, but not so different that pro
wrestling should not be called wrestling. The main difference I see in
pro wrestling is the companies like WWE fix matches, write storylines,
and of course use a lot of flashy moves that are for show along with
traditional wrestling holds and throws. Where with amateur wrestling
nothing is scripted and the wrestlers win or lose by skill alone. So I
am just interested to know what your opinion is based on.

Cheers!

On 12/17/13, Charles Rivard  wrote:

What they do is artistic stunt work, I think.  Although it is an art form,
and some wrestling moves and holds are used, it is not wrestling.

---
Be positive!  When it comes to being defeated, if you think you're 
finished,


you! really! are! finished!


---
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Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First Person Shooters

2013-12-18 Thread Teresa Cochran
Pro wrestling doesn't pretend to be a sport in the same way that hockey, 
basketball, and don't forget football. You take or leave the violence, 
because it's an inherent part of the experience. It's not meant to be 
competetive. It doesn't even pretend to be that. It's mindless fun, IMO. I 
like a little mindless fun every once in awhile.


Teresa

Sent using Alpine messaging system in Mac OS X Terminal

On Wed, 18 Dec 2013, Charles Rivard wrote:

Yes, there are very legitimate wrestling holds and moves that are done, and I 
am not ignoring them.  However, my point is that, to me, professional sports 
should be just that; professional.  Throwing someone through furniture or 
busting furniture across someone's head is not wrestling.  If crossing the 
fowl line is not allowed in amateur bowling, it would also not be allowed in 
professional bowling.  Professional wrestlers should wrestle, not do anything 
that is not wrestling.  Maybe I am a purist, but shouldn't they stick to 
reasonable rules?  If not, then the sport should be renamed to better 
classify what is and is not allowed.  I think that a lot of fighting and 
illegal play should be clamped down on in a lot of professional sports. The 
NHL and NBA are prime examples.  If these athletes are in a professional 
sport, they should be penalized for not being professionals.  If you put your 
shoulder down and ram into someone who is in front of you who is a defender, 
you should be called for charging rather then the defender charged with 
blocking.  If you hit an opponent with a hockey stick, you should be out of 
the game.  They should act like, and be, professionals.  You can have a very 
entertaining hockey, basketball, or wrestling match even if you follow the 
rules.  Illegal and unnecessary violence, merely to keep the fans interested, 
is not needed.  If it is, then there's something wrong with this picture.  I 
prefer seeing basketball rather than basketbrawl.


---
Be positive!  When it comes to being defeated, if you think you're finished, 
you! really! are! finished!

- Original Message - From: "Thomas Ward" 
To: "Gamers Discussion list" 
Sent: Wednesday, December 18, 2013 9:38 AM
Subject: Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First 
Person Shooters




Hi Charles,

Yes, I do see  your point, but as I pointed out in professional
wrestling there is both wrestling and a lot of the extra stuff you
mentioned. The WWE is definitely one for having a lot of artistic
stunt work such as throwing people through tables, people getting
thrown from ladders, being beat over the head with steel chairs, the
reff getting knocked out during a critical point in the match, and I
agree that stuff is not wrestling. That stuff is just stunt work to
keep the fans interested in the ongoing storyline.

However, at the same time there is some very technical wrestling
involved here which you seem to be ignoring. Every pro show I have
ever watched has some basic wrestling such as reverse chinlocks,
headlocks, arm drags, hip tosses, and so forth which are just as apart
of an amateur match as a pro show. If that stuff is not wrestling then
what is it?

I guess it sounds to me you are making a case for all or nothing which
I don't think it is that black and white. From what I am getting from
your messages  if pro wrestling is half wrestling and half stunt work
then it is not wrestling. However, if you go to your local high school
match which has no stunt work and 100% wrestling that is wrestling.
That is just too black and white for me as I think there is a gray
area here that you seem to be overlooking.

Cheers!


On 12/18/13, Charles Rivard  wrote:

When I used to watch the wrestlers on TV, they would use something to cut
the opponent, break chairs on heads, put the referee out of commission, 
and


stuff like that.  This is not wrestling.

---
Be positive!  When it comes to being defeated, if you think you're 
finished,


you! really! are! finished!


---
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Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First Person Shooters

2013-12-18 Thread Charles Rivard
Yes, there are very legitimate wrestling holds and moves that are done, and 
I am not ignoring them.  However, my point is that, to me, professional 
sports should be just that; professional.  Throwing someone through 
furniture or busting furniture across someone's head is not wrestling.  If 
crossing the fowl line is not allowed in amateur bowling, it would also not 
be allowed in professional bowling.  Professional wrestlers should wrestle, 
not do anything that is not wrestling.  Maybe I am a purist, but shouldn't 
they stick to reasonable rules?  If not, then the sport should be renamed to 
better classify what is and is not allowed.  I think that a lot of fighting 
and illegal play should be clamped down on in a lot of professional sports. 
The NHL and NBA are prime examples.  If these athletes are in a professional 
sport, they should be penalized for not being professionals.  If you put 
your shoulder down and ram into someone who is in front of you who is a 
defender, you should be called for charging rather then the defender charged 
with blocking.  If you hit an opponent with a hockey stick, you should be 
out of the game.  They should act like, and be, professionals.  You can have 
a very entertaining hockey, basketball, or wrestling match even if you 
follow the rules.  Illegal and unnecessary violence, merely to keep the fans 
interested, is not needed.  If it is, then there's something wrong with this 
picture.  I prefer seeing basketball rather than basketbrawl.


---
Be positive!  When it comes to being defeated, if you think you're finished, 
you! really! are! finished!
- Original Message - 
From: "Thomas Ward" 

To: "Gamers Discussion list" 
Sent: Wednesday, December 18, 2013 9:38 AM
Subject: Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First 
Person Shooters




Hi Charles,

Yes, I do see  your point, but as I pointed out in professional
wrestling there is both wrestling and a lot of the extra stuff you
mentioned. The WWE is definitely one for having a lot of artistic
stunt work such as throwing people through tables, people getting
thrown from ladders, being beat over the head with steel chairs, the
reff getting knocked out during a critical point in the match, and I
agree that stuff is not wrestling. That stuff is just stunt work to
keep the fans interested in the ongoing storyline.

However, at the same time there is some very technical wrestling
involved here which you seem to be ignoring. Every pro show I have
ever watched has some basic wrestling such as reverse chinlocks,
headlocks, arm drags, hip tosses, and so forth which are just as apart
of an amateur match as a pro show. If that stuff is not wrestling then
what is it?

I guess it sounds to me you are making a case for all or nothing which
I don't think it is that black and white. From what I am getting from
your messages  if pro wrestling is half wrestling and half stunt work
then it is not wrestling. However, if you go to your local high school
match which has no stunt work and 100% wrestling that is wrestling.
That is just too black and white for me as I think there is a gray
area here that you seem to be overlooking.

Cheers!


On 12/18/13, Charles Rivard  wrote:

When I used to watch the wrestlers on TV, they would use something to cut
the opponent, break chairs on heads, put the referee out of commission, 
and


stuff like that.  This is not wrestling.

---
Be positive!  When it comes to being defeated, if you think you're 
finished,


you! really! are! finished!


---
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list,
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Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First Person Shooters

2013-12-18 Thread Thomas Ward
Hi Charles,

Yes, I do see  your point, but as I pointed out in professional
wrestling there is both wrestling and a lot of the extra stuff you
mentioned. The WWE is definitely one for having a lot of artistic
stunt work such as throwing people through tables, people getting
thrown from ladders, being beat over the head with steel chairs, the
reff getting knocked out during a critical point in the match, and I
agree that stuff is not wrestling. That stuff is just stunt work to
keep the fans interested in the ongoing storyline.

However, at the same time there is some very technical wrestling
involved here which you seem to be ignoring. Every pro show I have
ever watched has some basic wrestling such as reverse chinlocks,
headlocks, arm drags, hip tosses, and so forth which are just as apart
of an amateur match as a pro show. If that stuff is not wrestling then
what is it?

I guess it sounds to me you are making a case for all or nothing which
I don't think it is that black and white. From what I am getting from
your messages  if pro wrestling is half wrestling and half stunt work
then it is not wrestling. However, if you go to your local high school
match which has no stunt work and 100% wrestling that is wrestling.
That is just too black and white for me as I think there is a gray
area here that you seem to be overlooking.

Cheers!


On 12/18/13, Charles Rivard  wrote:
> When I used to watch the wrestlers on TV, they would use something to cut
> the opponent, break chairs on heads, put the referee out of commission, and
>
> stuff like that.  This is not wrestling.
>
> ---
> Be positive!  When it comes to being defeated, if you think you're finished,
>
> you! really! are! finished!

---
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If you want to leave the list, send E-mail to gamers-unsubscr...@audyssey.org.
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Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First Person Shooters

2013-12-18 Thread Charles Rivard
When I used to watch the wrestlers on TV, they would use something to cut 
the opponent, break chairs on heads, put the referee out of commission, and 
stuff like that.  This is not wrestling.


---
Be positive!  When it comes to being defeated, if you think you're finished, 
you! really! are! finished!
- Original Message - 
From: "Thomas Ward" 

To: "Gamers Discussion list" 
Sent: Wednesday, December 18, 2013 8:27 AM
Subject: Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First 
Person Shooters




Hi Charles,

To be honest this sounds like another one of your categorical
statements without evidence or reasons to back it up. Why exactly do
you think professional wrestling is not wrestling?

The reason I take issue with your opinion is this. I have been
watching or listening to professional wrestling for 30 years and have
watched AWA, NWA, WWE, TNA, WCW, etc and while there is certainly what
you call "artistic stunt work" involved many of those professional
wrestlers use the same holds and  moves you would find in amateur
wrestling. I use to watch amateur wrestling matches such as high
school wrestling, it is different, but not so different that pro
wrestling should not be called wrestling. The main difference I see in
pro wrestling is the companies like WWE fix matches, write storylines,
and of course use a lot of flashy moves that are for show along with
traditional wrestling holds and throws. Where with amateur wrestling
nothing is scripted and the wrestlers win or lose by skill alone. So I
am just interested to know what your opinion is based on.

Cheers!

On 12/17/13, Charles Rivard  wrote:
What they do is artistic stunt work, I think.  Although it is an art 
form,

and some wrestling moves and holds are used, it is not wrestling.

---
Be positive!  When it comes to being defeated, if you think you're 
finished,


you! really! are! finished!


---
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list,
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Re: [Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First Person Shooters

2013-12-18 Thread Thomas Ward
Hi Charles,

To be honest this sounds like another one of your categorical
statements without evidence or reasons to back it up. Why exactly do
you think professional wrestling is not wrestling?

The reason I take issue with your opinion is this. I have been
watching or listening to professional wrestling for 30 years and have
watched AWA, NWA, WWE, TNA, WCW, etc and while there is certainly what
you call "artistic stunt work" involved many of those professional
wrestlers use the same holds and  moves you would find in amateur
wrestling. I use to watch amateur wrestling matches such as high
school wrestling, it is different, but not so different that pro
wrestling should not be called wrestling. The main difference I see in
pro wrestling is the companies like WWE fix matches, write storylines,
and of course use a lot of flashy moves that are for show along with
traditional wrestling holds and throws. Where with amateur wrestling
nothing is scripted and the wrestlers win or lose by skill alone. So I
am just interested to know what your opinion is based on.

Cheers!

On 12/17/13, Charles Rivard  wrote:
> What they do is artistic stunt work, I think.  Although it is an art form,
> and some wrestling moves and holds are used, it is not wrestling.
>
> ---
> Be positive!  When it comes to being defeated, if you think you're finished,
>
> you! really! are! finished!

---
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[Audyssey] professional wrestling - Re: The Psychology of First Person Shooters

2013-12-17 Thread Charles Rivard
What they do is artistic stunt work, I think.  Although it is an art form, 
and some wrestling moves and holds are used, it is not wrestling.


---
Be positive!  When it comes to being defeated, if you think you're finished, 
you! really! are! finished!
- Original Message - 
From: "Teresa Cochran" 

To: "Gamers Discussion list" 
Sent: Tuesday, December 17, 2013 12:26 AM
Subject: Re: [Audyssey] The Psychology of First Person Shooters


Yeah, and pro wrestlers are perfectly capable of killing, but don't. 
Wrestling is a great combination of performance art and athletecism, IMO.


teresa

Sent using Alpine messaging system in Mac OS X Terminal

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