Quoted By:
>The thing is fans have ignored that because they’re conditioned to think about it like that, it’s not that they think women’s wrestling is less important than men’s wrestling but that’s the way they learned since the first time they started watching wrestling. It took a long time for some fans to admit the level of quality certain wrestlers like Iyo Sky, Bayley, Asuka, and many others got to at one point, and that didn’t come without the obvious and apparent post filled with thirst about any of the mentioned above. Wrestling fans have learned to treat women’s wrestling as a bathroom break rather than something important, and this is something that few companies on a few occasions have tried to stop by changing the order of the card to benefit women’s wrestlers and make them feel important by either making them open the show or even main event it. The thing is, we have not seen that anymore, and in each PPV, we see women’s matches being stuck in the middle of the card as some attraction rather than plain wrestling. And, of course, fans are busy talking about the attributes of any of these women in the most uncomfortable and creepy perspective possible, resulting in a blatant objectification of all wrestlers in the division pushed by the company and criticized by any woman who put her life at risk for a chance to be treated as a star, rather than an object only put in screen to satisfy any fantasy whatsoever. One of the most interesting interviews I have seen in the past months was that of Becky Lynch, who, in a masterful way used her platform to criticize the management of the women’s division in the months prior to WrestleMania.