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P
Mystic Meg

tinyurl.com/3sbbwd4

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Originally posted by Red Night
Is there anyway you can get a wider screen on your avatar?

I hate watching the game on those battery operated jobs.
tinyurl.com/yo8ne3

RN
RHP Prophet

pursuing happiness

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Originally posted by Phlabibit
tinyurl.com/yo8ne3
Sorry, I don't follow the links.

I'm almost always dissapointed.

N

The sky

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Originally posted by Phlabibit
There really isn't much you know, is there Noodles?!

P-
LMAO!

cashthetrash
PoPeYe

This is embarrasking

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Originally posted by Ragnorak
Could somebody please alert this disgusting filth?

Remember, this is a family site. Red Night, your brand of pornographic writing isn't welcome here. If you must write of your fetishes, find a site where you're not aiming it at children.

D
Stop singing in the rain. You always come around like clockwork...Orange that is.

P
Mystic Meg

tinyurl.com/3sbbwd4

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Originally posted by Nordlys
LMAO!
PYABO,N!

d

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:'(:'(

I've just been informed that the Fabulous Moolah passed away this week.

:'(:'(

d

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From the New York Times:

The Fabulous Moolah enjoyed the mayhem, but she especially coveted the money.

When she started in pro wrestling in the early 1950s, the promoter Jack Pfeffer decided a name change was in order. As she told it in “The Fabulous Moolah: First Goddess of the Squared Circle” (Regan Books, 2002), written with Larry Platt, Pfeffer told her “the name Lillian Ellison wouldn’t do. Not flashy enough.”

He asked her why she was wrestling, and, as she recalled: “Annoyed, I blurted out: ‘For the money. I want to wrestle for the moolah.’”

First, she apprenticed as a valet for Nature Boy Buddy Rogers; she was billed as Slave Girl Moolah and clad in a leopard-skin outfit. Soon, she was wrestling as the Fabulous Moolah, and she won the championship belt in 1956. On July 1, 1972, when the New York State Athletic Commission lifted a ban on women’s wrestling, she was the featured attraction at Madison Square Garden.

Mary Lillian Ellison was born in the country town of Tookiedoo, S.C., near Columbia, the 13th child and only daughter in her family. When she was 10, her father took her to pro wrestling matches in Columbia and she was inspired to become a wrestler by watching Mildred Burke, the reigning women’s champion.

The Fabulous Moolah was only 5 feet 4 inches and 118 pounds when she began wrestling as a professional, and her physique did not seem particularly imposing. But her maneuvers wowed the crowds.

“Flying drop kick is when you jump flat-footed from the floor up as high as the person you’re looking at and kick them in the face or in the chest, wherever you want to kick them, and then you fall to the floor,” she told National Public Radio’s “Fresh Air” program in 2005.

“And then the flying head scissors is where you jump up, put both legs around their head and throw them forward as you come down. And a flying mare is when you get a girl by the hair of the head and pull her over your shoulder, then slam her to the mat as hard you can. And I love doing that.”

Her jet-black haired dyed strawberry blonde, Ellison remained active in World Wrestling Entertainment into her last years, writing commercials for it. She was profiled in the 2004 Ruth Leitman documentary “Lipstick & Dynamite,” a history of women’s pro wrestling.

In addition to her daughter, of Conway, S.C., she is survived by six grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. Her five marriages ended in divorce. She lived for many years with Katie Glass, a former midget wrestler known as Diamond Lil, who joined with her in training wrestlers.

The Fabulous Moolah said she never minded the booing inspired by her roughhouse antics.

“I loved when they got mad at me,” she told The State newspaper of Columbia in 2005. “They called me all kinds of names. I said: ‘Call me anything you want. You don’t write my check.’”

b
Buzzardus Maximus

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Originally posted by darvlay
From the New York Times:

The Fabulous Moolah enjoyed the mayhem, but she especially coveted the money.

When she started in pro wrestling in the early 1950s, the promoter Jack Pfeffer decided a name change was in order. As she told it in “The Fabulous Moolah: First Goddess of the Squared Circle” (Regan Books, 2002), written with Larry Platt, Pfeffer tol ...[text shortened]... ey called me all kinds of names. I said: ‘Call me anything you want. You don’t write my check.’”
You kinda get the sense that it wasn't really play-acting for her. I don't think I'd want to be on the receiving end of one of those flying drop kicks.

JJ

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Originally posted by cheshirecatstevens
Its not about rules, son. Its about being a big boy. Like going to the potty by yourself, and being able to stick to a idea without getting distracted, and spouting the first thing that pops in your thick little noggin. Thats why you keep peeing on the floor. OK buddy.
Has someone upset you?

JJ

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Originally posted by darvlay
:'(:'(

I've just been informed that the Fabulous Moolah passed away this week.

:'(:'(
Fabulous !!!

P
Upward Spiral

Halfway

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Originally posted by Phlabibit
PYABO,N!
DSHNAO? 😲

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