SamSuka
Wrestle Me!
Wrestle Me!

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Do you want me to come out as anything? Royal Rumble 98 - Part 3!

Why is it covered in talcum powder? Maybe we'll never know...

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aOSUdh8S8L0&pp=ygUXc3RldmUgYmxhY2ttYW4gc3RhbXBlZGU%3D https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6N6TeLAQ-Nc&pp=ygUXc3RldmUgYmxhY2ttYW4gc3RhbXBlZGU%3D https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=492EEFXHaeo&pp=ygUXc3RldmUgYmxhY2ttYW4gc3RhbXBlZGU%3D

John Lister

Oh my GOD I had NO IDEA Steve Blackman had a back history as a pro wrestler! I always assumed he was a Glacier type hire where they thought they could turn a martial artist into a wrestler. I HAVE to see his old matches, any idea where to track them down?

Hugh Overend

How bail and bondsmans work (an example): When you get bail, you have to post a bond, eg $100,000. If and when you show up for your trial, you get the $100,000 back. If you can't give them $100,000 you have to stay in jail till the trial (what we'd call remand.) Because most people don't have $100,000, they use a bail bondsman. That's a company that pays the $100,000 to the court on your behalf. You give the company a fee, eg $10,000, which you don't get back in any circumstances (and is how they make their money.) When you show up to the trial, they get the $100,000 back from the court. If you don't show up to the trial, they would normally lose their $100,000, which they don't want to happen. However, if they are a licensed bail bondsman, they are then given a deadline to find you and return you to the court, at which point they'll get the $100,000 back despite your original no-show. In this scenario, they send Steve Blackman to find you and "encourage" you to hand yourself in at the court before the deadline.

John Lister


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