Many wrestling fans like to throw around the term "jobber," but former WWE Superstar and ECW legend Al Snow doesn't believe fans know what the word means. Al Snow was a recent guest on the It's My ...
In professional wrestling, jobbers or enhancement talents are smaller wrestlers who are hired to lose against top superstars to make the top superstars look stronger. Jobbers have to sell all the top ...
and now, an article that has nothing to do with WWE Last week’s inaugural Job Opportunities pro wrestling jobber retrospective took a look at ten former enhancement talents who’d go on to be big stars ...
Full disclosure: This is a pro-Heath Slater space, we’re just teaching the controversy. Not everyone on the WWE roster can carry main-event status. It’s a weird, complex food chain that’s always in ...
For over forty years, Barry Horowitz has been in and out of the wrestling business, having noteworthy runs in Japan, Europe, Florida, and Memphis throughout his career. And yet, Horowitz appears ...
Tuesday night on WWE SmackDown Live in Philadelphia, the unofficial birthplace of the underdog, one of the biggest reactions of the night went to all 174 pounds of James Ellsworth. Ellsworth is an ...
Any wrestling fan knows what a jobber is -- at least by his role, if not the actual industry slang used to describe him. A jobber is the wrestler who participates in a match and always got his ass ...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ADNugKtjVs Wrestling is an interesting, cyclical business. When attendance is down, TV ratings are in the toilet, and there seem to be ...
Does your 9-to-5 ever make you feel like a jobber? In the world of professional wrestling, a jobber is someone who frequently and deliberately loses matches to help push another performer’s popularity ...
James Ellsworth squirmed under the spotlight while he awaited his opponent. His eyes darted around the ring. His hands slid up to a defensive position. The skinny, pale Ellsworth stood a foot shorter ...
1. While perusing Twitter this morning, I came across this tweet from one of my favorite follows, @ovppodcast: If you grew up in the early '80s watching the then WWF, this clip hits you. It has ...