Post by TDP on Jun 8, 2012 6:29:54 GMT -6
[The scene opens up in a basement that has been turned into a personal home gym. It’s dull, grey and worn out from what seems to be a pretty active occupant. In the middle of the basement, a man sits on a steel chair with a towel over his head cooling down after a workout. The cameras head towards him before he lifts his head to reveal himself to be one of the WpW’s newest additions, Joel Thunder.]
JT: Last week I made an impact that should have sent shockwaves through the entire WpW. I delivered a message that not even the bravest of souls should dare stand in my way to the way to the top. Instead what we got was a bombardment of the same old crap that has weighed the WpW down for the past year and a half. The most imposing man in all of wrestling had arrived in the WpW and all the fans could care about was that their precious Firebomb was back.
[Thunder drops his head in clear frustration.]
JT: It was only 5 years ago now that I use to switch on the TV to amuse myself at the so-called ‘professionals’ running around the WpW. For the most part even they were able to mask their inferiority and create a facade that they were the best in the business. It use to make me laugh knowing that I could squash each and every single one of them in a matter of minutes. Now when I watch the mediocrity of the WpW it just makes me sad to be apart of this industry.
I’ve been wrestling in the business for the past seventeen years and hospitalised every man who has stood in my way. Many have questioned why I’ve sat back in the shadows while I had to watch the lesser talents take the limelight. This is something that I’ve never strived for. When I enter the wrestling ring it’s not for the fame or the prestige. It’s for the good name of wrestling and the legacy that it has and will leave on this planet. What these degenerates fail to understand is that while I’ve been in the shadows, I’ve been playing puppeteer to the industry.
[Thunder looks up with a bit of a smirk at the thought of his power.]
JT: They’ll question and deny this but that’s exactly my point isn’t it. You name any lower ranked company on this continent and I’ve wrestled and dominated in it. Every kid that’s wanted to make it to the big time has had to go through me to get there whether with me in the ring or indirectly. Either way I’ve let them know just what the code of conduct is when it comes to the wrestling industry.
So why leave my post as the master manipulator and make the jump to the pro’s at this age. For the past year and a half it has been unbearable to watch the once titled best wrestling company try ever so hard to be just a fraction of what it was. It’s now time to take things closer into my own hands.
[Thunder now looks down at his open palms as if they had the power to move mountains.]
JT: My legacy in the limelight begins at the Roy Lee Rumble. The WpW thought that they could attract the attention of the world by offering an open match for their All Time Television Title but their going to regret the day that they gave me an open license to wreck havoc. I’ve seen the new generation of young wrestler come into the WpW time and time again thinking that they’re above the law. They think they can coast by and take the accolades as they come. One of those men has been Carlos Bruton. The so-called Caribbean superstar has made a living off his laziness and arrogance. At the Roy Lee Rumble I’m going to give him a wake up call so loud that he never wants to step into the squared circle ever again.
[The fists of Thunder clinch tightly at this thought.]
JT: There’s not a single soul on this Earth that works harder at their profession that me. Carlos Bruton couldn’t walk a day in my shoes and survive the regime I’ve become accustomed to. If he thinks that he can come back to the WpW out of shape and coast by with his lucky win at Goldpush then he’s in for a rude awakening. At the Roy Lee Rumble I’m going to make a debut impact that this company has never seen. The All Time Television Title is as good as mine, it’s what I’m going to do once I’ve got it that’s worth watching for.
[Joel Thunder smirks to the camera while he ponders over his master plan as the cameras fades to black.]
JT: Last week I made an impact that should have sent shockwaves through the entire WpW. I delivered a message that not even the bravest of souls should dare stand in my way to the way to the top. Instead what we got was a bombardment of the same old crap that has weighed the WpW down for the past year and a half. The most imposing man in all of wrestling had arrived in the WpW and all the fans could care about was that their precious Firebomb was back.
[Thunder drops his head in clear frustration.]
JT: It was only 5 years ago now that I use to switch on the TV to amuse myself at the so-called ‘professionals’ running around the WpW. For the most part even they were able to mask their inferiority and create a facade that they were the best in the business. It use to make me laugh knowing that I could squash each and every single one of them in a matter of minutes. Now when I watch the mediocrity of the WpW it just makes me sad to be apart of this industry.
I’ve been wrestling in the business for the past seventeen years and hospitalised every man who has stood in my way. Many have questioned why I’ve sat back in the shadows while I had to watch the lesser talents take the limelight. This is something that I’ve never strived for. When I enter the wrestling ring it’s not for the fame or the prestige. It’s for the good name of wrestling and the legacy that it has and will leave on this planet. What these degenerates fail to understand is that while I’ve been in the shadows, I’ve been playing puppeteer to the industry.
[Thunder looks up with a bit of a smirk at the thought of his power.]
JT: They’ll question and deny this but that’s exactly my point isn’t it. You name any lower ranked company on this continent and I’ve wrestled and dominated in it. Every kid that’s wanted to make it to the big time has had to go through me to get there whether with me in the ring or indirectly. Either way I’ve let them know just what the code of conduct is when it comes to the wrestling industry.
So why leave my post as the master manipulator and make the jump to the pro’s at this age. For the past year and a half it has been unbearable to watch the once titled best wrestling company try ever so hard to be just a fraction of what it was. It’s now time to take things closer into my own hands.
[Thunder now looks down at his open palms as if they had the power to move mountains.]
JT: My legacy in the limelight begins at the Roy Lee Rumble. The WpW thought that they could attract the attention of the world by offering an open match for their All Time Television Title but their going to regret the day that they gave me an open license to wreck havoc. I’ve seen the new generation of young wrestler come into the WpW time and time again thinking that they’re above the law. They think they can coast by and take the accolades as they come. One of those men has been Carlos Bruton. The so-called Caribbean superstar has made a living off his laziness and arrogance. At the Roy Lee Rumble I’m going to give him a wake up call so loud that he never wants to step into the squared circle ever again.
[The fists of Thunder clinch tightly at this thought.]
JT: There’s not a single soul on this Earth that works harder at their profession that me. Carlos Bruton couldn’t walk a day in my shoes and survive the regime I’ve become accustomed to. If he thinks that he can come back to the WpW out of shape and coast by with his lucky win at Goldpush then he’s in for a rude awakening. At the Roy Lee Rumble I’m going to make a debut impact that this company has never seen. The All Time Television Title is as good as mine, it’s what I’m going to do once I’ve got it that’s worth watching for.
[Joel Thunder smirks to the camera while he ponders over his master plan as the cameras fades to black.]