https://twitter.com/Himanshu_Doi/status/1588221439529734144 Post Match Interview with Mina Shirakawa, after her teeth and jaw got injured during a Stardom show. Content Warning for Blood and Dental stuff
Wrestling is dangerous. Recently two of my favorite wrestlers had a match in with Saya Kamitani messed up her finisher, the Phoenix Splash, and kneed Mina Shirakawa right in the face. This is not the first time something like this has happened, and won't be the last. Supremely talented wrestlers mess up moves, especially "blind" aerial moves from time to time and those who seem perfect are only perfect due to all the experience they've had screwing up in the past. Saya, as gifted as she is, has only 3 years of experience and WILL make mistakes. Many of these girls are learning on the fly to lead an ever growing company that isn't dominated by a lot of center stage legacy talent.
Mina is, to me, a supremely underrated wrestler. Her star is starting to shine more as people realize how good she is, but she suffers from... Hot Girl Sydrome. Mina is hot. Mina has big boobs. Mina was a gravure model. She dances to the ring. Being hot is part of her character. But many, due to social stereotypes, don't look at wrestlers like this the benefit of the doubt, or assume they''re tough. Mina is talented, she is coordinated and a strong wrestler who is excellent with drama, emotions, and story telling. I love Mina.
So here she is, the hot girl ex model, sitting there post interview. Teeth are in shambles, her jaw might be broken, she's bleeding everywhere. She's in pain and crying... and it feeds into her loss, her inability to get the belt and blends with the reality of the hurdles she legitimately goes through and the hurdle she is going through right now, just letting her heart out. In a situation where people would rush themselves to the hospital and be unable to talk, Mina continues her story, in tears, because she's actually hard as nails. She later was said to be spotted in the hospital in her ring gear. Pro Wrestlers are just built different.
"If I can't show fans that I'm going to crawl out of this hell, then I'm not a pro wrestler!"
edit: Just de-previewed the interview so the whole thing wouldn't be behind a content warning.
tbh I've never really been super interested in pro wrestling and know very little about it but reading this made me appreciate how talented and badass the people that participate in it are, sounds like she really loves what she does even if it comes with its risks and I respect that a lot
Gonna use you to shill cause I wonder if you'd enjoy joshi stuff more! Boy wrestling has a lot of big tough boy emotions and while it can be emotional and dramatic.... it's... a way. Even women's wrestling in the US falls into this because they wrestle in male dominated companies and appealing to many of the same fans.
In Japan, it's separate. Some people look at this as a negative or say stuff like "Stardom should fuse with New Japan!" to appeal to western expectations and tastes but this, imo, is foolish (I'll get into why some other time).
Stardom, and womens wrestling shows in Japan in general are opened by women, closed by women, are filled with fans who want to see these women, and are not trying to wrestle some 'blended style' meant to get them hired by some Japanese WWE equivalent that doesn't exist. And yeah, the booker who decides the matches is a guy but the talents are the one filling out the details of their stories and furthering them in the ring. They tell more emotional stories, they have more meaningful friendships, betrayals feel more like bad breakups than comedic villain heel turns. The shows are increasingly more catering to female fans. I can't remember the quote, but my pound for pound Best Wrestler in the World, Tam Nakano said to some effect that men don't get wrestling like women do. They miss all the emotional details and subtly. So it might still not catch your interest, but if anything is gonna catch your interest in wrestling, maybe it'd be this.
Oh yeah it's also kinda gay.
