Mauro

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Mauro

@GenMaruo

Solo retwitteo lo que me hace feliz c:

Viña del Mar, Chile Katılım Temmuz 2016
408 Takip Edilen68 Takipçiler
Mauro retweetledi
Red
Red@kitsuneredFES·
Messing around with Remy in 3rd Strike and I honest to god wonder what Capcom was thinking with this button
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Norman Caruso
Norman Caruso@GamingHistorian·
After more than 15 incredible years of making Gaming Historian, I’m moving on to new creative adventures. Thank you for an unforgettable, life-changing journey. I will cherish it forever! youtu.be/nV_Aww8_6wQ
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Mauro
Mauro@GenMaruo·
You forgot you have a trans stepson? So much for the "progressive" AEW, thankfully you're in ROH, so tony khan won't even care about this, coming from a veteran, what the fuck dude
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(8/100) seibaa.bsky.social
(8/100) seibaa.bsky.social@SeibaaHomu·
@JustinWhang I haven't seen a single clip or screenshot of the WWE bit they're supposedly ripping off. WWE fans really don't seem to understand that a lot of people don't watch their product. People generally aren't taking pointers from them on match quality in their current state
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Allan
Allan@allan_cheapshot·
#OnThisDay in 1998: WWF RAW aired: Steve Austin with his own Fargo Strut after hitting Jeff Jarrett with a Stunner.
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John Romero 🤘🏽
John Romero 🤘🏽@romero·
It's DOOM’s 32nd birthday today! It amazes me how far this rebellion of a game has travelled. We wanted to build the the greatest game we could imagine playing, and generations of players have kept it alive. It’s one of the great privileges of my life.
John Romero 🤘🏽 tweet mediaJohn Romero 🤘🏽 tweet media
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GrappleClips
GrappleClips@GrappleClips·
Eddie Guerrero & WWE VAULT RULES!!!
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Kurt Angle
Kurt Angle@RealKurtAngle·
In 1999 I had the privilege of wrestling the legendary Owen Hart in a dark match in the WWE 5 days before his unfortunate death. Til this day, I haven’t seen any video footage of it. If anyone has ever seen the footage of my match with Owen, message me in the comments below. Someone had to record it. #itstrue
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Anti WWE
Anti WWE@ProtectTonyKhan·
Don't think we FORGOT how you WWE fans treated Mariah May while she was in @AEW 🚨Now you're all acting like MASSIVE fans of hers 🥱🙄 🚨Typical IWC behaviour. HYPOCRITES 😴
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Allan
Allan@allan_cheapshot·
Andy Kaufman: The Brief but Brilliant Wrestling Career of Comedy's Chaos Merchant Kaufman's run against Jerry "The King" Lawler was remarkably brief, spanning less than two calendar years from April 1982 until late 1983. The comedian's appearances were sporadic at best, typically limited to Saturday TV pre tapes followed by Monday night shows at the Mid-South Coliseum. For someone whose wrestling legacy has endured for four decades, his actual time in the squared circle was astonishingly brief. What makes Kaufman's wrestling career so fascinating wasn't its longevity but its revolutionary approach. Unlike traditional heels who travelled the territory, Kaufman functioned more as a special attraction, bringing mainstream attention to Memphis wrestling through his unconventional performances. The July 1983 handicap match featuring Kaufman teaming with Jimmy Hart against Lawler, followed a week later by Kaufman facing Hart, represents the peculiar narrative twists of his wrestling storylines. Kaufman reportedly worked for free, sacrificing lucrative acting opportunities simply to live out his childhood dream. His devotion to wrestling allegedly began in the early 1960s, with Nature Boy Buddy Rogers cited as his favourite performer. Rare is the celebrity who embraces wrestling with such genuine passion rather than treating it as a promotional stepping stone. He instinctively understood wrestling psychology without formal training, generating authentic heat from Memphis audiences through his provocative "Inter-Gender Wrestling Champion" character. Though his appearances never quite sold out the Mid-South Coliseum or dramatically increased attendance figures, the Lawler-Kaufman programme transcended regional boundaries through national television appearances, most famously their confrontation on Late Night with David Letterman. The feud could have reached even greater heights had it been featured on Superstation TBS. Kaufman's contribution represents one of wrestling's most successful mainstream crossovers, a blueprint for celebrity involvement that prioritised storytelling credibility over mere star power. The comedian who made his name pretending to be a wrestler ultimately became one of wrestling's most authentic performers.
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