Tuesday, December 23, 2014

UCW Wrestling's Eli Black vs. Vincent Stone: Is That All There Is?


     Eli Black had me totally hoodwinked at the beginning of this video (UCW match #375). Standing with his arms folded and glaring like a stern storm trooper at debuting rookie Vincent Stone, Eli remained humorless as UCW founder Michael Bodyslam (wearing an "All I Care About Is Wrestling...And Like Maybe 3 People" t-shirt) rattled off a multitude of quips during the introductions.
     Eli seemed to be putting both Vincent and Bodyslam on edge with his sullen demeanor. Then, as soon as Bodyslam walked away from the mat area, what happened was downright touching.
     Yes, Eli Black not only shook hands with his opponent prior to a match, he embraced him. "I'm so happy you're f'n here, bro!" Eli exclaims. "What everybody in UCW didn't know, my boy Vinnie here and me -- I'm not going to say we grew up together because I am just a tad bit older than his young a--, but I'm like a big brother to this little dude right here." The sentiments that Eli expresses (and Vincent's reactions to them) are undeniably genuine.
     Recently, Blogger Joe has taken note of Eli's ebullient on-screen presence in UCW videos. Blogger Joe even went so far as to call Eli "radiant" in his review of match #379 and that telling choice of words caused me to speculate on a possible romance in Eli's personal life when I composed my review of match #381. After all, "Ringside at Skull Island" enjoys the same type of sycophantic relationship with UCW that Fox News has with the GOP, so naturally Blogger Joe would be privy to inside info.
     Romance or not, Eli Black is no longer the one-dimensional villain that he once was. Match #381 ended with Eli imitating the shedding of tears after his offer of a handshake was spurned by both Ethan Axel Andrews and Quinn Harper. This was a particularly poignant gesture, since Eli had been victimized in that match by some ugly violence from Harper (ugly in the sense of a scrap between two predatory beasts -- in this case, it was like watching a young jackal being torn up by a rabid coyote) but was willing to offer congratulations anyway. After the snub, Eli was left forlorn and alone to stew in the juices of his own hubris; Eli's only real friend on the scene, Vincent, had been kicked off the mat (literally) by Eli in a fit of pique just moments earlier.
     There is a concept of "generosity" that is unique to the world of theater. It involves keeping your ego in check and avoiding scene stealing. In extreme cases, it involves deliberately fading into the background and acting as a foil during dialogues, allowing your co-star to shine.
     In pro wrestling, "generosity" comes into play when you sacrifice your own persona's invincibility, allowing your opponent his moments in the spotlight. It's called helping a wrestler to "get over" -- i.e., achieve popularity and credibility among the fans via displays of ring dominance. In match #375, Eli displays generosity above and beyond the call of duty toward Vincent, his boyhood friend making his UCW debut.
     It's the type of generosity that Eli should have displayed toward Jax Briggs, when Jax won the All-Star Championship in match #361, but Eli's total lack of respect for Jax was mind-boggling. My disgust toward Eli (and UCW) reached its peak after that match. It was the type of generosity that all of the UCW wrestlers should have shown toward My Beautiful Precious Johnny Deep (MBPJD) instead of despising him for his instantaneous popularity and trying to hurt him during matches. (During his lengthy stay in UCW, Johnny was never allowed to experience a single victory -- and guys like Quinn Harper still post Facebook messages to me saying things like "Ya Freddie, why do you always back losers?")
     As was demonstrated in match #381, Vincent has a tendency to smile out of character. As a matter of fact, Vincent and I have corresponded via UCW Fan Mail and Vincent wrote, "My smile was bad and Axel and Eli were mad about that but I couldn't help myself. Some of the stuff said was funny." Well, Vincent, your smile isn't "bad" by any means -- as a matter of fact, it helps to sell videos. When UCW finally posted the link to my last review on their Facebook page, they chose to include this screen cap:
UCW knows a photogenic smile when they see one.

     Also, Ethan has no room to talk, after he incessantly and inappropriately grinned during this Inside Scoop about a UCW All-Star Championship hearing. Here, Vincent -- just click on that link, keep your eyes on Axel throughout the entire video, and you'll feel better about everything.
     At any rate, Eli managed to keep Vincent in character throughout match #375 by inflicting genuine discomfort on the rookie whenever it was Eli's turn to dominate. If you watch those segments utilizing slow motion and stop action, you'll notice the little tell-tale signs of subtle physical contact (a tap on Eli's bicep, a clutching of Eli's hand) indicating that Vincent is being pushed past his threshold of pain, but Eli blithely ignores them. (To be fair, Axel employs the same harsh method acting strategies during his matches; UCW wrestlers are expected to suffer for their art.)
     Since Vincent has been a friend/acquaintance of Eli's since childhood, he is no stranger to the "bullied kid" mentality -- just as the bully shows his toughness via ruthless aggression, the victim demonstrates his own toughness by nonchalantly shrugging off abuse. Trapped in a horrendously punishing crossface maneuver, Vince stoically endures a long, rambling Eli Black soliloquy. Eli bemoans UCW's loss of Johnny Deep, vents his jealousy toward Ethan Axel Andrews (the UCW wrestler who now owns 50% of the federation), and informs Vince that he will play the role of Eli's "puppy dog" in UCW. All the while, Eli makes a grand show of his callousness toward Vincent's suffering.
     Later in the match, Eli gives Vincent a taste of what his "puppy dog" role will entail. With a chain wrapped around Vince's neck (a chain that Vincent briefly used as a weapon after Eli advised him to wrestle like a "heel"), the rookie is led around the mat on his hands and knees, receiving various commands. When Vince asserts his dignity, Eli yells, "Bad dog!" and disciplines the kid. It's like a scene of verbal and physical abuse straight out of a gay S&M video that somehow found its way into sports entertainment.
     I learned from my correspondence with Vince that he has a February 8th birthday, which makes him an Aquarius (the same sign as Quinn Harper, unfortunately). Chameleon-like and innately nonconformist, Aquarius is a relatively thick-skinned sign, so Vincent was probably not seriously traumatized by the treatment he received from Eli (either in this video or during their childhood). Had Eli led Ethan Axel Andrews (a Pisces) or Danny Sticks (a Cancer) around the mat on a leash, there would have been quite a different reaction (both Pisces and Cancer -- along with Scorpio -- are highly sensitive water signs).
     Ah, I just imagined Danny Sticks (aka the Blog Burner) reading my comments in the last paragraph and rolling his eyes in contempt for my belief in astrology. I do believe that it's time for a musical interlude.
     ...and that's the Birth of the Blues!!! That's the Birth of the Blues, ladies and gentlemen, and that song goes out to my friend and yours, the irrepressible Danny Sticks!!! MUAH! (Just had to get that out of my system. Danny has developed an off-camera friendship with Quinn Harper, by the way. Need I say more? Now, let's move on...)
     Because Vincent had proven to be such a plucky competitor, it was somewhat heartrending to see him break (at least to a certain degree) at the end of this video. Eli had just applied his dreaded finishing maneuver, the Shutdown, on Vince and, being a master of overkill (don't forget, this is the same guy who applied a second knockout maneuver on an already unconscious Johnny Deep in video #336), told Vince that he was going to apply it again. This seems more than Vince can handle, and Vince says, "No!" in a weary voice but, of course, Eli shows no mercy.
     As Vince is being set up for his second Shutdown, the rookie struggles to get free. This annoys Eli, so he runs backward, slamming Vince into the cinder block wall.
     After executing the second Shutdown, Eli attempts one of his patently arrogant and humiliating covers, ordering Vince to remain on the mat for the three-count. Does Vince obey? Well, buy the video and find out. (Somewhere Bodyslam is smiling.)
     Without providing any spoilers, I'll simply say this. By the end of match #375, Vincent has been beaten up enough to satisfy Eli's ego, and Eli must resort to his typical, manipulative rhetoric in order to keep Vince as a potential tag team partner. (Shades of Hunter Day! I swear, Eli's initials should be B.S.) Eli fills the rookie's head with delusions of grandeur ("We're going to run this federation!") like a Jim Jones-style character in a sensationalized Hollywood blockbuster:
      Now that we've seen the human side of Eli, he's no longer a monster. Eli isn't Charles Manson or Adolph Hitler or Hannibal Lector (all of whom I've compared to Eli, at one time or another). In reality, Eli is a driven young man who alienates people with his overbearing personality. Everything else about the Eli Black persona is just smoke and mirrors.
     And that's all there is. Blogger Joe already wrote a review of this match, but that pointy-headed pseudointellectual with his legions of community college "disciples" can create his own publicity, for once. Just go to "Ringside at Skull Island" and search for it, if you're that interested.
     I will, however, link to the video offering. It's match #375 and it's available for download at the UCW Wrestling website, on this page (as of this writing).
     NOTE: Vincent told me in one of his emails, "Thank you for buying the video. Seems people like me but I am told its about sales so again thanks for buying." 
     Therefore, let's purchase this video and show support for Vincent...and maybe even Eli, too.


Thursday, December 4, 2014

Ethan Axel Andrews & Quinn Harper vs. Vince Stone & Eli Black: Comedy Tonight


Something familiar, Something peculiar,
Something for everyone: A comedy tonight!

Something appealing, Something appalling,
Something for everyone: A comedy tonight!

Nothing with kings, nothing with crowns;
Bring on the lovers, liars and clowns!

Old situations, New complications,
Nothing portentous or polite;
Tragedy tomorrow, Comedy tonight!

Something convulsive, Something repulsive,
Something for everyone: A comedy tonight!

Something aesthetic, Something frenetic,
Something for everyone: A comedy tonight!

Nothing with gods, nothing with fate;
Weighty affairs will just have to wait!

Nothing that's formal, Nothing that's normal,
No recitations to recite;
Open up the curtain: Comedy Tonight!

Something erratic, Something dramatic,
Something for everyone: A comedy tonight!

Frenzy and frolic, Strictly symbolic,
Something for everyone: A comedy tonight!

Something familiar, Something peculiar,
Something for everybody: Comedy tonight!
Something that's gaudy, Something that's bawdy--
Something for everybawdy!
Comedy tonight!

Nothing that's grim. Nothing that's Greek.
She plays Medea later this week.

Stunning surprises! Cunning disguises!
Hundreds of actors out of sight!

Pantaloons and tunics! Courtesans and eunuchs!
Funerals and chases! Baritones and basses!
Panderers! Philanderers!
Cupidity! Timidity!
Mistakes! Fakes!
Rhymes! Crimes!
Tumblers! Grumblers!
Bumblers! Fumblers!

No royal curse, no Trojan horse,
And a happy ending, of course!
Goodness and badness,
Panic is madness--
This time it all turns out all right!
Tragedy tomorrow, Comedy tonight!


     UCW Wrestling match #381 begins with a standup comedy routine, the humor of which is derived from the spectacle of macho straight guys parodying gay behavior (something with which Quinn Harper is quite familiar -- yes, very familiar). Eli Black is frolicking with his new tag team partner, Vincent Stone, in the UCW mat room when Quinn Harper (Eli's former tag partner) walks in on them.
ELI (to Quinn): "I didn't want you to find out like this."
QUINN: "Find out like this? It's all over the bathroom stalls! Come on!"
ELI: "Look. Listen. You didn't get the hint? Alright, what happened last time? I back stabbed you. I cheated on you. Take a hint!"
QUINN: "And I'm still here. Take a hint that I'm not going anywhere."
ELI: "What makes you think I'd want to take you back? I went to the length of cheating on you because you suck at being a tag team partner and lost every match. What makes you think I'd want you to stay? You don't satisfy my needs! You don't make me happy! (At that point, Vincent breaks up in laughter.) We don't win. So therefore, yes, I've had to go a different route."
QUINN (pointing at Vincent): "That's not how this is going to go."
ELI: "This is how it's going to go."
QUINN: "There are other people..."
     Quinn then beseeches the only other wrestler at the locale, UCW co-owner Ethan Axel Andrews, to be his tag team partner in this match. For some inexplicable reason, Axel agrees to become involved in this asinine domestic squabble.
     When I first heard about match #381, I was dismayed by the tag team pairings. An Axel & Vincent vs. Eli & Quinn match-up would be a classic "face vs. heel" encounter (and I wouldn't be troubled by divided loyalties). Via their Facebook page, UCW posted this message to me: "Axel says to watch the match, and you will approve and understand everything, Freddie Young."
     In actuality, I don't think that even Axel approves of these alliances. At the start of this match, Ethan tells Vince, "Sorry I'm going to have to beat on you but hey, after we kick your asses, why don't you just drop him (pointing to Eli) and come train with me? You need to forget this guy, too (pointing to Quinn)."
     I think Ethan listens to me (he's still wearing the same wrestling gear that I praised in my review of match #374), so let me just say this. Don't be influenced by "heel blogger" Joe from "Ringside at Skull Island." Joe may fantasize about "shuffling off this mortal coil" in the arms of some dastardly brute, but that's not your role, Ethan. When Blogger Joe starts getting excited about how "commanding and tough" you are and begins fawning over your "convincing sneer," then you know that you're heading down the wrong path.
     Speaking of Blogger Joe, even a broken clock is correct once every twelve hours, and Joe had a moment recently. Joe raved about Eli's "sunny" disposition in his review of match #379. I thought Eli was just thrilled to have Pvt. Jack back from the military, but Eli continues to be "radiant" (Joe's phraseology again) in this tag team encounter. I think Joe must have some inside info concerning Eli's personal life.
     Early in this video, Eli taunts Ethan with, "That's right, Axel, be a f*cking bully, baby." The line is delivered passionately, and Ethan seems taken aback. At first, those words seemed hypocritical, coming from Eli. However, as the match progresses, Eli's message gains credibility.
     Like a science fiction film, this video presents us with an Eli Black who is becoming human before our very eyes. In match #381, Eli is not the one-dimensional personification of evil who destroyed My Beautiful Precious Johnny Deep almost a year ago (and Johnny himself told me that Axel's partner Quinn Harper, not Eli, was actually "the worst guy" in UCW). Eli now seems more complex, no longer beyond redemption -- while Axel seems to be sinking to "heel" level.
Is all this really necessary?
     As for newcomer Vincent Stone, he's positively adorable (even if he is slow at answering his fan mail). At the very start of this match, after a stunning display of razzle-dazzle choreography, Vincent finds himself in control of Quinn Harper via the proficient utilization of a Boston Crab. Vince looks right into the camera lens (an unusual and endearing habit of his) with a proud, "hey, look at me" expression.
     From a standpoint of structure, this is a pretty loose production (as one might expect from a UCW tag match with no referee). Spontaneity takes precedence over precision and there are plenty of stumbles and bumbles along the way. For example, at the 9:30 mark, Ethan almost inadvertently pins Vince. The rookie can't kick out and Eli can't make the save in time. In order to produce a match of marketable length, Quinn is forced to interfere on his opponent's behalf.
     Thinking on his feet, Eli exclaims to Quinn, "Touché! I was waiting for that. I like what I saw." Eli (who is really sharp throughout this production) encourages us to suspect that Quinn's desperation move was actually a foreshadowing of an imminent tag team betrayal.
     Despite the gratuitous, over-the-top violence done to Eli during a portion of this presentation, match #381 is basically a lighthearted romp. Ethan insisted that Vincent be given a free pass during most of this video (except for an unfortunate instance near the end, which we'll discuss later). As a result, Vince makes mischief with impunity. For example, when Vince puts Axel in a surfboard, he places his right foot in an inappropriate spot (this titillates Quinn, who admits to having "mixed feelings" about the maneuver).
Oh -- and Vince is staring at the camera again.

     Vince does receive some comeuppance, though, and he takes his bumps like a trooper. While sandwiched in the middle of a double bearhug, Vince can see Quinn positioning himself to deliver a low blow, but there's nothing that the hotboy can do to prevent it.
     Now, once again, I must take exception to a remark that Blogger Joe made in his review of this match. Joe is always far more glib than insightful, but when he says, "Quinn specially targets his young, doomed-looking replacement, Vincent," I have to wonder if Joe even watched this video.
     Both Quinn and Ethan target Eli in match #381. It's all fun and games for Vincent up until the troubling 26:45 mark (which, once again, we will discuss later). For example, here's "doomed-looking" Vincent seemingly having the time of his life (and this is not atypical of most of the action in this match).
     At the 10:44 mark, Eli prepares to deliver his patented finishing move, the Shutdown, on Axel. Eli remarks, "It's a little early, but what the hell." Then Eli says to Vincent, "Do you want to smack his ass for good luck?" Vince is happy to oblige.
      However, Eli isn't satisfied. "Oh, I think you should do it a little bit harder," Eli tells Vince. This time, Axel yelps.
     Now we'll discuss the last seven minutes of this video (the part that Blogger Joe may have actually watched). After quite a bit of opportunistic aggressiveness on the part of Vincent, Quinn begins to yell at Axel from his corner, "Axel, I'm trying to play your game, but I want to play my game, dude. Give me permission to be me. Axel! Give me permission to be me!"
     This is a pivotal point in the match, and maybe in Axel's UCW career as well. I was hoping -- even expecting -- that Axel would respond with a remark like, "No, Quinn, he's just a kid." Instead, Axel acquiesces, turning Quinn loose on Vincent. It's a sop to the sadists in the audience, and it will sell some videos, but Axel willingly permits the tactics that he has always claimed to oppose. Quinn dives out of his corner and lands on Vincent, pummeling the rookie with closed fists.
       Toward the end of the video, Axel will rather lamely attempt to characterize a smile from Vincent as evidence of a betrayal. In fact, the real betrayal occurs at the 26:45 mark, when Ethan betrays his own principles. As Quinn's attack continues, close-up camera work captures Vincent's facial expressions.
     Seemingly on purpose (and perhaps due to guilt), Ethan creates a break in the action. "Quinn, are you the legal man or am I?" Ethan calls out, suddenly objecting to the presence of all four wrestlers on the mat. (Seconds earlier, Ethan had been looking over his shoulder at the action between Quinn and Vincent.)
     "It doesn't even matter anymore," Quinn blurts out.
     However, Ethan is adamant. "Wait. He's the legal man, isn't he?" Axel asks, pointing to Vincent. "Or is Eli? Who am I supposed to pin? Him or him?"
     A befuddled Quinn releases Vincent and the kid grins. Vincent looks to the cameraman, seeming certain that there will be a cut in the filming.
      However, the cameras continue to roll and, thankfully, this fascinating portion of the match remains in the video. Both Vincent and Ethan are completely out of character, but they attempt to go through a few motions pertaining to pro wrestling.
     After several seconds of giggling by Vincent and Ethan, Quinn barks out, "Eli is legal!" and Vincent retreats to his corner. A few minutes later, the match's climactic moment occurs. I won't tell you which team wins (Bodyslam hates when I do that), but I will say that the match reaches its conclusion right after an edit, so there's no telling what actually led up to this action. No one seems to completely understand exactly what happened, or why.
      One thing can be said with certainty. Vincent Stone is the hottest piece of eye candy featured in a UCW production in quite some time. However, even without Vincent, this would be a memorable video. The use of improvisation in match #381 allows us to glimpse the actual personalities of the wrestlers.
       In the final scene of this video, we see Eli Black pantomiming the wiping away of tears. Is Eli being sarcastic or is he expressing genuine regret? Match #381 is open to interpretation on many levels, and the UCW personae are presented in a nuanced manner. I give this match a rating of XOXOXOXOX -- four and a half hugs and kisses out of a possible five (about as close to perfection -- match #336 -- as you can get).
     A message on the UCW Wrestling website reads, "We at UCW-Wrestling are proud to bring you the best young wrestlers (that's us!) in hot, high-energy wrestling action. We are trained performers and skilled athletes who enjoy putting on a show that pleases you, our home viewing audience." 
     Well, you guys succeeded quite well with match #381. It's currently available for download at the UCW Wrestling website on this page. Something for everyone. Enjoy.
    

Saturday, November 29, 2014

UCW Wrestling's Johnny Deep vs. Quinn Harper: Johnny I Hardly Knew Ye



     UCW match #325 is the one and only time that Johnny Deep (at the callow age of 19) fought Quinn Harper. Johnny battled his brutal rival, Eli Black, three times in singles matches (#354, #336, #264) plus once in a tag team encounter (in addition to the impromptu scrapping during match #332). Johnny grappled with federation co-owner Ethan Axel Andrews three times (#295, #277, #269) in regularly released presentations, and once in a "lost video" (a private, custom match which was eventually edited and marketed to the public -- #316). By contrast, during Johnny's lengthy tenure at UCW, the young man avoided Quinn Harper like a plague after this lone match was taped.
     Quinn Harper is also the only wrestler that Johnny singled out to me in a negative manner, back in the days when we corresponded (before I sent Johnny a birthday gift and federation co-owner Michael Bodyslam intervened, explaining to me as diplomatically as possible that Johnny was having difficulty handling all the attention he was receiving from me, and specifically requesting that I no longer send Johnny links to my blog entries).
     I almost quit blogging altogether after that, until Jax Briggs came along and temporarily bolstered my spirits. I put Johnny out of my mind as best I could and never viewed his infamous encounter with Quinn Harper -- until two nights ago.
     The match wasn't what I expected, in many respects. Of course, I had only Ringside at Skull Island's gleeful description of Johnny's suffering ("Johnny is the mischievous pretty-boy...whoop his vanilla ass...") to help formulate my expectations. Since Blogger Joe and I never agree on anything -- especially what constitutes male beauty -- it's no surprise that he and I would view this match from wildly differing perspectives. Joe doesn't even consider Johnny attractive. Joe's masculine ideal is a bearded brute with WWE aspirations named Big Sexy -- the kind of Neanderthal who would knock Joe out with a club, grab a handful of the gentleman's greying locks, and drag him back to his cave for a well-deserved ravishing.
     Whenever I watch a UCW match, I focus on the reality behind the theatrics -- the actual interpersonal dynamic that occurs during these 30-minute S&M improvs. I pay especially close attention to the verbal exchanges and I relate them to what I already know about the two antagonists' personalities. In the case of match #325, I want to know why Johnny came away from the experience considering Quinn Harper to be "the worst guy" in UCW. In short, I want to figure out what makes My Beautiful Precious Johnny Deep (MBPJD) tick.
     As soon as this video begins, before the graphics even disappear, there's evidence of a personality clash in the making. Johnny is exhibiting his brashest, most smart-Alec behavior (probably to camouflage his discomfiture) while Quinn is typically sardonic. (I almost entitled this entry, "The Insolent vs. The Embittered" until I came across that appropriate old Irish Rovers tune.)
     Johnny is almost manic in his reckless mockery of Quinn and his cardboard-and-duck-tape "championship belt." In tone of voice, facial expressions, body language and hand gestures, Johnny reminds me of an old classmate of mine during my junior high / high school days -- a prettyboy who deliberately antagonized bullies and frequently paid the price for his irrepressible sarcasm (needless to say, I loved him to the point of obsession).
          Yes, this is the same adolescent who, according to Michael Bodyslam, is "shy about his body" -- exhibiting teenage bravado toward Quinn Harper as he stands there in his yellow speedo with the cameras rolling.
     Quinn is scary. I'm a middle aged man (nearly a senior citizen) and Quinn gives me the willies, so I can imagine what effect he's having on Johnny. On top of Quinn's typically aggressive, macho biker persona, he's betraying evidence of a latent gay streak which makes him even creepier.
     Johnny is clearly going for broke with the rapid-fire insults, and he immediately succeeds in pushing Quinn's buttons by calling him an "old man." Instinctively, Quinn's lips curl and his sadistic smile becomes even more grotesque. For the rest of the video, Quinn (who has always been self-conscious about being the oldest member of the UCW roster) will reference this personal slight incessantly.
     Quinn uses the phrase "when you were getting your ass changed" (a more vulgar variation of "when you were getting your diapers changed") to point out Johnny's relative immaturity, and Johnny's reaction is both innocent and coquettish. Quinn seems giddy with lust as he observes Johnny's performance.
     Johnny is genuinely, legitimately worried about tying up with Quinn when the bell rings and the banter is finished. Whenever Quinn feigns an attack move, Johnny takes a step backward. Eventually, Johnny finds himself trapped in a corner.
      "I've got you in a corner. Are you a little worried?" Quinn ridicules. "Come on, come on. I'll let you out. You a little scared?"
     Johnny plays off his trepidation by continuing to grin broadly. Later in the match, Quinn will label Johnny, "an old man's plaything" in a game of cat-and-mouse.
     When Johnny finally dares to half-heartedly attempt a wrestling maneuver (still grinning), Quinn slams Johnny to the mat with unexpected force and scrunches the kid up like an accordion. The back pain wipes the grin off Johnny's face and he does very little smiling for the remainder of this encounter.
     This match is basically a conflict on two different levels. First off, we have the ire of a grizzled, mature man who was disrespected by a teenage wise guy. Secondly, we have the undeniable homosexual sadism in an individual who passes for straight in mainstream, indy wrestling circles. Sure, Quinn Harper may seem like any hell-raising, patriotic, blue-collar roughneck outside UCW. However, inside UCW, Quinn has ratcheted up the S&M sleaze factor to unprecedented levels. Nobody forced (or even advised) Quinn to behave in such a manner; what we see during UCW presentations is simply Quinn being Quinn. In Quinn's own words, he "wrecks prettyboys," and that's how he gets his jollies.
      In match #325, Quinn utilizes his repugnant Oil Check "wrestling maneuver" on Johnny -- not once, but twice. On the second occasion, Quinn has Johnny positioned in such a manner that he makes the kid observe the lead-up to his own humiliation. Quinn even tries to make Johnny lick his thumb in preparation for the attack. I won't be featuring photos of this segment, because this blog isn't "hardboiled wrestling kink" and it's not about to feature any warnings for "unsuitable content." (By the same token, UCW Wrestling isn't an age-restricted, adult entertainment site like BG East -- Bodyslam and Ethan, take note.)
     As for Johnny -- please keep in mind that Johnny is a jock, and he has a jock's mentality. Johnny's character was forged on lacrosse fields and on wrestling mats at high school tournaments. As a result, Johnny has developed a stoic personality; he doesn't allow himself to display vulnerability. Johnny is a tough, traditionally masculine young man (and no, Blogger Joe -- "tough prettyboy" isn't an oxymoron).
      Due to Johnny's innate stoicism, "selling" runs contrary to his nature. (That's not to say that Johnny didn't sell videos for UCW; Johnny was a hugely popular wrestler, and his lengthy absence from the fed has to be a financial blow to the company.) "Selling," as it applies in this context, is a wrestling term which means being very demonstrative and extroverted when you are experiencing pain (even to the point of exaggeration, as long as you don't jeopardize your credibility in doing so). Johnny doesn't "sell" -- in this match, or in any other of his UCW appearances. When Quinn applies painful holds (clawing Johnny's pectoral muscles, for example), Quinn actually does most of the yelling, drowning out Johnny's low-key  reactions.
     The above photo captures Johnny's initial reaction of surprise when he first experiences the unexpected twinge in his right pec. Within seconds, however, Johnny was coping with the discomfort and doing his best to appear nonchalant, as unwilling to exhibit physical pain as he is loathe to show fear or embarrassment.
     Ethan Axel Andrews candidly revealed to me that he will seriously hurt opponents who aren't "selling" to his satisfaction. Of course, Ethan and Bodyslam make a living by marketing UCW videos, but Quinn appeared frustrated by Johnny's stoicism on a more personal level. At one point, in an apparent homage to Dahmer-style cannibalism, Quinn actually dives in and bites -- yes, bites -- Johnny's groin area. Johnny screams and seems truly agonized afterward. Given Johnny's ability to shrug off injuries, this segment is troubling. In a UCW career typified by acts of sexual sadism, Quinn has reached a new low.
     I am in a quandary deciding how to rate this video, considering Johnny's reaction to it. It's quite possible that Johnny didn't really experience the full impact of this match until he reviewed the tape. Quinn's actions, outrageous and repugnant in and of themselves, become even more reprehensible in the context of his onscreen remarks. Quinn gloats about Johnny's victimization, reveling in his role as predator. The substance of match #325 is horrid, but the style in which it's presented puts it over the top, even by UCW standards.
      When I suggested to Johnny that Eli Black was UCW's main problem, Johnny was adamant about correcting my misconception. "Eli isn't the worst guy out there," Johnny informed me. Then Johnny went on to say that he'd rather get "slammed into a chair" (Eli's knockout move in match #336) than have to deal with Harper.
     As I mentioned, this match was reviewed by "Ringside at Skull Island" when it was first released. With typical insouciance, Blogger Joe smirkingly entitles his review "Handicapped," and you can read it here:
        
Ringside at Skull Island: Handicapped: In a strange (but, as it turns out, clever) matchup, UCW pits Quinn Harper and Johnny Deep against each other...

     Remember, this is match #325, available for download here at the UCW Wrestling site. Right now, this video is on this page, but it may be moved in the future. (Just keep clicking on the "More Videos" links and hopefully you'll find it.)
"I swear to God, you better quit. This old man will rip your arm right the hell off and I will beat you with it."