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The High Art of Pro Wrestling
August 2025
|The Atlantic
Yes, it's fiction. So is Moby Dick.

Here's how I know I'm not a real fan of professional wrestling.
Because every now and again, when I'm at a wrestling show in Massachusetts, where I live— whether it’s a World Wrestling Entertainment event at the TD Garden, in Boston (19,000 people), or a Rad Pro Rasslin’ event at the Elks Lodge in Newburyport (78-ish people)—and I’m watching the wrestlers strut and grimace and go flying, and wedge themselves, red-faced, into a wrangle of limbs, and grab the mic and make their speeches, aggrieved or blustering or ramblingly odd, I'll find myself thinking: Uh, couldn't this, shouldn't this, all be just a little bit, you know, better?
This thought would never occur to a real fan of pro wrestling.
But I'm sensing a furrow in the readerly brow: Pro wrestling? Isn't that the fake stuff? Rigged battles, hollow contests, the wrestlers cartoonishly lumbering and bellowing, the crowd in a low-rent delirium of suspended disbelief or hypertrophied half-belief or something? The tights, the glitz, the nonsense? Yes, it is; yes, it is. It's also an extraordinary, and extraordinarily vital, cultural form: essentially American in its clanking, fantastical performance of Self, but also pre-American, reaching back into carnival, burlesque, masks, magic, the dark roots of theater itself. Which is why I love it.
Let me explain.
هذه القصة من طبعة August 2025 من The Atlantic.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
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