Showing posts with label Botchamania. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Botchamania. Show all posts

Sunday, 28 September 2025

Botchamania 519

 

Enjoy this selection of botches and mistakes from Wrestlepalooza, All Out, Worlds Collide, Raw, The Taz Show Starring Taz, hard tables and everything else keeping wrestling tolerable.

Botchamania is a long-running online video series created by British wrestling fan Maffew Gregg, built around a simple but addictive idea. Each episode compiles the funniest mistakes, awkward moments and technical slip-ups from professional wrestling shows, mixing them with sharp edits, gaming references and a dry sense of humour. Starting in 2007 as a small fan project, it grew into a cult favourite among wrestling fans, known for highlighting the human side of an often over-the-top sport while celebrating the performers with a wink rather than mean-spirited digs.

For more Botchamania check out https://www.youtube.com/@botchamaniaagain7613

Saturday, 7 June 2025

Botchamania 513 - Wrestling Mistakes

If you’ve been around wrestling for more than five minutes, chances are you’ve heard of Botchamania. It’s one of those internet gems that lives in its own little corner of wrestling fandom, quietly collecting every flub, stumble and hilarious miscue that happens in and around the ring. And somehow, it makes all of it feel like a weird kind of love letter to the sport.

The magic of it is that it's never mean-spirited. Sure, it pokes fun at wrestlers messing up moves or forgetting lines, but there’s always a sense that it’s coming from someone who genuinely adores wrestling. Creator Matthew Gregg has been putting the series together for years, editing every blown spot and awkward promo into something strangely comforting. Even if the matches go wrong, Botchamania reminds you why you fell in love with the whole chaotic mess in the first place.

It’s full of running jokes, low-res graphics and little references that long-time fans start to look forward to. You hear a certain bit of music or see that old video game transition and you know exactly what’s coming. It’s almost become its own little universe inside wrestling culture.

What makes it special is how it captures the human side of a business built on big characters and scripted drama. Mistakes are inevitable, and Botchamania doesn't hide them. It puts them front and centre, lets them breathe, and in doing so, gives fans another way to connect with a sport that’s as much about passion as it is about perfection.