She came out of Louisville like a shotgun shell hurled from a homemade pistol, forged in dirt, iron, and a stubborn kind of sorrow only Midwest towns know how to teach. Sarah Rowe, known once upon a squinting spotlight as Crazy Mary Dobson, was never meant to be anyone’s princess. She was the kind of … Read More “The Valkyrie of Kentucky: The Saga of Sarah Rowe” »
In an industry that thrived on archetypes, Winona Littleheart was the feathered mirage that walked straight into the madness of pro wrestling’s golden era—and later stumbled into its dark, sticky underbelly with a mohawk and the scent of sulfur in her wake. Born Winfred Childree on September 5, 1955, she entered the wrestling business as … Read More “The Lock and the Feather: The Tragic, Electric Life of Winona Littleheart” »
In the concrete jungle of professional wrestling, where giants stumble and fall like drunks in an alley fight, there exists a fighter who never needed to be the biggest dog in the yard—just the one with the most bite. Candice LeRae is that dog. A five-foot-nothing, cupcake-baking, elbow-dropping symphony of pain wrapped in glitter and … Read More “Candice LeRae: Wrestling’s Iron Pixie in a World of Giants” »
Anriel Howard didn’t come into professional wrestling like most. She wasn’t chasing childhood dreams of WrestleMania entrances or neon tights. No, her journey started with hardwood floors, rebound battles, and a vertical leap that could shame gravity. She was bred in the high-stakes world of women’s basketball—Texas A&M, Mississippi State, and even the WNBA. But … Read More “Lash Legend: From Glass Backboards to Steel Chairs” »
They don’t make fairy tales like this one. No glass slippers. No enchanted castles. Just a pair of wrestling boots laced with ambition, a woman who danced with pain like it was a former lover, and a business that chews people up and then pretends it never knew their name. Kimber Lee, born Kimberly Frankele, … Read More “Kimber Lee: The Beauty and the Bruise” »
She was born into the wrong decade, maybe even the wrong era. If wrestling had a dive bar, Peggy Lee Leather was the one sitting at the end of it — chain-smoking menthols, draining cheap bourbon, and daring anyone to knock the ash off her Marlboro. She wasn’t cut from satin or rhinestones; her fabric … Read More “Peggy Lee Leather: The Last of the Barroom Brawlers” »
Before the revolution, before hashtags and glass ceilings and red carpets for the Divas Revolution, there was a 5’1” stick of dynamite from Seoul named Kristina Laum, and she didn’t walk into the wrestling business so much as crash it like a Molotov cocktail hurled through a velvet window. You knew her as Kimona Wanalaya, … Read More “The Flashbulb Queen: The Rise and Fade of Kristina Laum” »
If Lady Victoria was born in the wrong era, it wasn’t by accident—it was by design. Wrestling wasn’t ready for her. Neither were the men. And certainly not the mascara-smeared, catfighting sideshow women’s divisions that lived on fluff and floundered in the shadow of the main event. But there she was, spinning out of the … Read More “The Red-Fisted Matadora: The Lady Victoria Story” »
They called her Kong, and that wasn’t a nickname—it was prophecy. Kia Stevens walked into locker rooms like a wrecking ball wearing braids and brimstone, the last honest freight train in a business full of soft hands and silk lies. In a sport where beauty queens learned arm drags and called themselves dangerous, Kong was … Read More “The Gospel According to Kong” »
She walked into Ring of Honor like a slow-burning cigarette—one of those long drags you don’t notice until the smoke chokes your throat and your eyes water. Kelly Klein wasn’t supposed to be the star. She didn’t have the press kit sparkle or the Instagram filters to paint over bruises. What she had was torque … Read More “Kelly Klein: The Iron Rose of Ring of Honor” »

