Mixed Martial Arts Hits a Speed Bump

(April 6, 2009)
Beyond Chron link:
http://www.beyondchron.org/news/index.php?itemid=6774
The seemingly unstoppable mixed martial arts industry hit a major bump last week when the head honcho of Ultimate
Fighting Championship, Dana White, unwisely picked a fight with the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation in
a rant on his video blog. What we will find out in the coming weeks is whether White has stubbed the toe of MMA or
seriously maimed its long-term prospects.

Before Muhammad Ali fought Japanese pro wrestler (and later senator) Antonio Inoki in 1976 in a precursor of the
MMA phenomenon, fellow grappler Gorilla Monsoon sneered that Ali didn’t know “a wrist lock from a wrist watch.” The
late Gorilla, better known to his family as Gino Marella, always had a way with words.

These days you don’t need to know a rear naked choke from Rear Naked Ladies in order to appreciate that MMA is
the new template of late-empire divertissement. David Mamet made a movie about it. Mark Cuban’s HDNet is
investing heavily in it. MMA, once derided by that ultimate out-of-touch troglodyte, John McCain, as “human
cockfighting,” combines the multi-disciplinary fantasy spectacle of wrestling with the intentionally inflicted brain
damage of boxing. It’s that big-screen car wreck you just can’t turn away from.

But now UFC, by far MMA’s biggest brand and the hottest commodity on pay-per-view, is on the defensive over (of all
things) bad taste. For some time, White, a slick proto-skinhead and master promoter, has regaled an adoring
audience of young males with his F-bomb-laced vlog. This week, though, he went too far, so crudely attacking a
female MMA journalist with whom he was feuding, Loretta Hunt, as well as her supporters, that White incurred the
wrath of GLAAD. (See the original tirade and White’s apology all over YouTube.)

The immediate upshot is that White has lowered his public profile – canceling his vlog, abandoning a reality TV
series about his life that was about to go into production, and losing his position as the public face of UFC.

Though the marketing genius behind UFC, White was never really the boss; unlike World Wrestling Entertainment’s
Vince McMahon, he’s not the guy with the equity. The Daddy Warbucks of the MMA revolution are the Las Vegas
casino moguls Frank and Lorenzo Fertitta, who last spring made the cover of Forbes. The Fertittas invested $2
million in UFC in 2001 and watched it explode. There are some who think the UFC franchise on PPV will prove
recession-proof through emerging superstars such as Brock Lesnar (a former collegiate wrestling champion and
defector from pro wrestling).

The UFC juggernaut is all the more remarkable when you consider that it has the tiniest footprint in traditional media;
the main vehicle driving PPV traffic is a program called “The Ultimate Fighter” on the Spike cable network. Many
others are trying, and so far failing, to duplicate that success – CBS most recently via a bad-ass carnival act named
Kimbo Slice, who got exposed as a mediocre fighter in his first match on national TV, and knocked out in less than 20
seconds by a journeyman in his second. UFC’s mission, more so than fending off the competition, seems to be
finding creative ways to extend its own brand and merchandising.

A more important setback than White’s gaffe may be the Fertittas brothers’ financial woes. In the recession-that-
none-dare-call-depression, they are in the midst of defaulting on their share of billions of dollars in instruments
underwriting the new Vegas palace they wanted to build.

Meanwhile, WWE (whose market share of PPV is hurt far worse than boxing by the penetration of UFC/MMA) staged
its 25th annual WrestleMania on Sunday. Despite a creatively lackluster lineup of matches – Mickey Rourke from
The Wrestler bailed out of one of them after being advised that the announcement would hurt his Oscar chances –
Wrestling Observer Newsletter publisher Dave Meltzer projected a live gate approaching $7 million at Reliant
Stadium in Houston, along with something like half a million PPV buys. At this point WWE is huge enough to churn
out megaprofits on autopilot.

The only thing Vince McMahon can’t yet pull off is a truly successful Hollywood-scale movie.
12 Rounds, the latest
WWE studio flick starring John Cena, is another flop that will need to make up its losses in video sales. The proven
winning formula is that of former WWE star and current movie idol Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson – you build your
base in wrestling and then pivot adroitly away from it.

For those of you keeping score, here’s the latest on drugs and death in wrestling:

* Last year filmmaker Christopher Bell released a documentary,
Bigger Faster Stronger, which glorified his steroid
use and that of his brothers. On December 14, one of the brothers, former WWE wrestler “Mad Dog” Mike Bell, died
at a substance abuse rehab facility in Costa Mesa, at age 37.

* One of the wrestlers with cameos in The Wrestler was Paul Fuchs, ring name “Paul E. Normous.” On January 16,
Fuchs was found dead at his parents’ home in Sloatsburg, New York, at 33.

* Real-life drug dealer Scott Siegel portrayed the Mickey Rourke character’s drug dealer in
The Wrestler. On
February 18, Siegel was arrested by Drug Enforcement Administration agents after he rammed their cars and fled on
foot. Read all about it at TMZ.com.

* On March 13, former WWE star Andrew “Test” Martin was found dead at his condo in Tampa, at 33.

* On March 22, former WWE wrestler Steve Doll, a star in other wrestling companies, died in Nashville at 48. He had
been in failing health for years.

Irvin Muchnick is author of
Wrestling Babylon and the forthcoming Chris & Nancy: The True Story of the Benoit
Murder-Suicide and Pro Wrestling's Cocktail of Death
. He blogs at http://muchnick.net/babylon and http:
//freelancerights.blogspot.com. Follow his tweets at http://twitter.com/irvmuch.




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