CM Steel
A REAL American
The WWE is slowly getting back to bringing back the old school managers like they had back in the day. With people like Zeb Colter, Ricardo Rodríguez, and AJ Lee. But for years now in the WWE there's always one superstar of Caucasian decent who has a manager or a bodyguard type of goffer at their side who happens to be african-american.
Like now we have Dolph Ziggler as a rising superstar in the WWE who is currently the WWE world heavyweight champion. With his personal bodyguard Big E. Langston. Who was recently called up from NXT to the main roster right before 2013. Big E Langston was known for being a babyface in NXT as the NXT champion. But now on the main WWE roster he's a heel by affiliation with Ziggler. This has been a thread in wrestling for years.
"The Million Dollar Man" Ted Dibiase & Virgil
John Bradshaw Layfield & Orlando Jordan
"The" Brian Kendrick & Ezekiel Jackson
Chris Jericho (circa '99) & Curtis Hughes
This is a cycle that has been going on for too long. So for an african-american wrestler to be a star (no pun intended) in wrestling he has to get under a white wrestling superstar first? Is this old wrestling stereotype ever going away in wrestling for good or is it just wrestling nature?
Like now we have Dolph Ziggler as a rising superstar in the WWE who is currently the WWE world heavyweight champion. With his personal bodyguard Big E. Langston. Who was recently called up from NXT to the main roster right before 2013. Big E Langston was known for being a babyface in NXT as the NXT champion. But now on the main WWE roster he's a heel by affiliation with Ziggler. This has been a thread in wrestling for years.
"The Million Dollar Man" Ted Dibiase & Virgil
John Bradshaw Layfield & Orlando Jordan
"The" Brian Kendrick & Ezekiel Jackson
Chris Jericho (circa '99) & Curtis Hughes
This is a cycle that has been going on for too long. So for an african-american wrestler to be a star (no pun intended) in wrestling he has to get under a white wrestling superstar first? Is this old wrestling stereotype ever going away in wrestling for good or is it just wrestling nature?