Wired.com looks at Lucha Libre wrestling

Wrestleview’s Gregory “Grash” Walek passed along an article by Wired.com looking at Lucha Libre.

“Well, Sol, in the early 1900s, professional wrestling was mostly a regional phenomenon in Mexico until Salvador Lutteroth founded the Empresa Mexicana de Lucha Libre (Mexican Wrestling Enterprise) in 1933, giving the sport a national foothold. The promotion company flourished and quickly became the premier spot for wrestlers. As television became a viable entertainment medium during the 1950s, Lutteroth could broadcast wrestling across the nation, subsequently yielding a popularity explosion for the sport. Moreover, the emergence of television allowed Lutteroth to turn lucha libre’s first breakout superstar into a national pop-culture phenomenon.”

Editor in Chief of Wrestleview.com since 2009, Wrestleview.com reporter and co-webmaster from 2001-2008, podcast host (Wrestling News Live from 2002-2009, Wrestleview Radio from 2009-2013, The Trey and Adam Show from 2014-present)

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