Okay, this is the decades old tradition of "extreme" or "hardcore" pro wrestling. I was a proprietor for the UK's first extreme pro wrestling promotion, Extreme World Warfare, from 1998 to 2001. The style has its roots in Japan, where some American wrestlers and future WWE superstars Mick Foley (Cactus Jack/Mankind etc) and Terry Funk went out to make their names. It then came to America and made it to mainstream success via Extreme Championship Wrestling, which also introduced adult-orientated storylines, and was eventually bought out and assimilated into the WWF/WWE. CZW (Combat Zone Wrestling) is perhaps the most famous of the independent extreme/hardcore wrestling promotions.
All matches are obviously fixed (c'mon guys is not news, it's a game the pro wrestling community has been playing since the 1950s and came completely out of the closet with in the 1990s), but the danger is very real. For example, you get whacked full force in the head with a metal chair - no faking that. The chair is relatively light/thin and the impact area is the hardest part of the head and you know when it is coming - that's all your concessions. The barbed wire is real. I know I got thrown into some on a few occasions. C4 explosives are real. Glass - certainly in our case - was sugar glass, but the bleeding - as is the case in all pro wrestling - be it extreme or otherwise - is real. The practice is known as blading. If you read books like Simon Garfield's "The Wrestling" you find out all about this.
The extreme pro wrestling has been the subject of Louie Thoroux's "Wild Weekends" and also a Ruby Wax "Investigation". Neither presenter was a wrestling fan by any stretch of the imagination and gave no quarter regarding its fake side; however, both were shocked by what was actually real in the extreme stuff. Everyone thinks they know the truth about pro wrestling, but few really do and sometimes that even includes people in the business
