In the neon-lit twilight of professional wrestling, where the costumes get louder as the hopes get smaller, Jessica Nora Kresa—known to the world as ODB—walked into the ring like a wrecking ball in fishnets. She wasn’t some cookie-cutter, diva-model hybrid spritzed with glitter and told to smile. Nah, ODB was the type who would spit on the canvas, crush a PBR on her chest, and then headbutt you into next week just for blinking wrong.
She didn’t wear high heels or glitzy sequins; she wore attitude like brass knuckles and a sports bra. Somewhere between bar brawler and blue-collar superhero, ODB fought her way through the plastic veneers and polished personas of her era to become one of the most unapologetically raw figures in wrestling history.
Born in Maple Grove, Minnesota in 1978—a state soaked in ice rinks and Lutheran guilt—Jessica Kresa was raised on hockey and hard knocks. She was a captain, an athlete, and a beer-slinger, all before stepping into the squared circle. Her father pointed her toward the ice, but pro wrestling grabbed her by the soul and never let go. Watching the Killer Bees on TV as a kid, she didn’t just want to play with the boys—she wanted to body slam them.
She tried out for WWE’s Tough Enough and nearly made the cut. Close but no cigar. She went back to Minnesota, pissed off and hungry, and started punching her ticket on the indie circuit. She didn’t get by on looks—though she had a charisma you couldn’t bottle, even if you mixed moonshine with dynamite. She wrestled guys like Ken Anderson and Daivari, making it clear from the start: she wasn’t here to play nice or play pretty. She was here to fight.
ODB got her first taste of national exposure in 2003 with Total Nonstop Action (TNA), and while she wrestled under different aliases early on—Poison, Jessica Jones—it was the ODB persona that stuck. That name alone sounded like a middle finger in lipstick. One Dirty Bitch. The type of name that made advertisers sweat but made fans howl with approval.
But she wasn’t all brawn and booze. Underneath the brass and bravado was an underrated technician, a ring general who knew how to tell a story with a hip toss and a haymaker. She was a throwback to a time when pro wrestling wasn’t a pageant—it was a bar fight in a bingo hall.
In Ohio Valley Wrestling, the WWE’s old developmental territory, ODB cut her teeth and carved her niche. She feuded with Daisy Mae and Serena Deeb, cutting promos that sounded like drunken poetry and winning the first-ever Miss OVW crown like it was a slap in the face to the glam factory WWE had become. But the suits in Stamford didn’t see a future for her in the Divas division. Johnny Ace didn’t get it. Triple H told her to take a hike—to TNA. Best move she ever made.
In TNA, ODB thrived. While other women were trying to look like centerfolds, ODB was pouring whiskey down her cleavage and suplexing the establishment. Her feuds with Awesome Kong, Gail Kim, and The Beautiful People were slobber-knockers in sports bras—violent, gritty, and unfiltered. She didn’t have five-star classics, she had street fightsdressed as wrestling matches, and that’s what the fans came to see.
She became a four-time Knockouts Champion and a Knockouts Tag Team Champion. But the gold was never the story. The story was that ODB made you feel something. She made you laugh, made you wince, made you believe. In a world full of plastic, she was solid steel—rusted and dented, but built to last.
The partnership with Eric Young was part Jerry Springer, part vaudeville, part redneck romance. They got married in-ring, won tag gold, and shared turkey legs like it was Thanksgiving in a Waffle House. And when they were stripped of their belts because EY had a Y chromosome, it was less scandal and more satire—the kind of boneheaded move only wrestling bureaucracy could invent.
ODB wasn’t just a wrestler. She was a bartender, a businesswoman, a traveling carnie with a food truck. “ODB’s Meat & Greet” was her next act—a rolling bar and BBQ pit that fed hungry fans and fueled the myth. When that truck burned down, fans and fellow wrestlers chipped in to help her rebuild. Because you don’t let legends go out like that.
She popped up everywhere—Ring of Honor, AEW, NWA, even Animal Planet, where she showed off her off-the-hook fishing skills like a Minnesotan MacGyver. But no matter where she went, she was still ODB. Still the woman who would kick your ass and then hand you a shot of whiskey to help you forget it.
Her run in TNA—now IMPACT—was filled with more returns than a boomerang on meth. But every time she came back, she brought the same energy: full-throttle, chain-smoking chaos wrapped in a sports bra and sarcasm. She wasn’t a nostalgia act. She was a reminder that wrestling, when it’s done right, should sting. It should be fun, wild, unpredictable—and real in all the wrong places.
ODB didn’t do this to become famous. She did it because some part of her knew she didn’t belong anywhere else. Not in an office, not behind a bar, not even on the ice. She belonged under the lights, on the mat, raising hell. And she did it on her own terms, her own way, with a flask in one hand and a crowd in the other.
She didn’t smile for the cameras unless it was after punching someone in the throat. She didn’t beg for your approval. She kicked the door down and made you remember her name. And if you forgot it, she had three letters that spelled it out loud and proud—like a brass nameplate on a busted jukebox: O-D-B.
No, she wasn’t your standard-issue wrestler. She was a woman forged in bar fights, fried food, and the fumes of burnt rubber. A Bukowski poem in a sports bra. A stiff drink in a world that’s gone soft.
And that’s why we loved her.
Because in a world full of posers and pretenders, ODB was the realest thing in the room—middle finger raised, whiskey bottle empty, and ready to throw down again.