Georgia Wrestling Scene Transforms Through Indie Promotions
Georgia Independent Wrestling’s Empire of Entertainment - Flagpole

“I remember just standing there that night, and I could feel this connection between the fans and the performers in a way that I hadn’t really ever felt before, which makes sense now that I know more about wrestling, because fans really have agency over the action in the ring. The louder they cheer, the more the wrestler is going to labor to his feet. Wrestling doesn’t really work without an audience,” says Athens journalist Alison Lyn Miller, who published the nonfiction book Rough House: A Father, a Son, and the Pursuit of Pro Wrestling Glory earlier this year. Miller wasn’t a wrestling fan when she attended the now-defunct Southern Violence And Wrestling match back in 2019, but her passion […]
Athens journalist Alison Lyn Miller explores the explosive growth of independent wrestling in Georgia through her nonfiction book "Rough House: A Father, a Son, and the Pursuit of Pro Wrestling Glory." Miller discovered the unique connection between wrestlers and fans, where audience engagement directly influences performer intensity. Her 2019 experience at Southern Violence And Wrestling sparked a deeper investigation into Georgia's thriving indie wrestling culture.
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