Popularity of Professional wrestling is to a large extent not viewed too favorably by parents. While children love this phenomenon, parents find certain wrestling styles to be offensive and disturbing. In many homes, children are banned from watching professional wrestling on television. This does lead us to the question of - Is all the fuss justified, or is professional wrestling really just a soap opera for boys?

There will practically be no one who entertains the idea that the wrestling that we see on national television is real. The mere word Professional wrestling annotates that it is fake. We feel that these wrestlers are very good actors and what they do is not too difficult. However, the fact is that there always is a great possibility of someone getting hurt in the sport of professional wrestling.

Where the controversy lies is not in whether professional wrestling is real or fake, but people wonder what it's teaching our children. Wrestling is extremely violent, that much is true. But in recent years wrestling seems to have taken a shift into uncharted territories. Wrestling has always played on certain stereotypes of race and ethnic background but many parents are objecting to the sometimes verbal, and even physical, abuse towards the women of the wrestling world.

Most male wrestlers have often had their female counterpart, a scantily clad girl with certain fake body parts, huge hair, and way too much makeup. Where many think the turning point is came several years ago, when a pimp character was introduced and his entourage was prostitutes. The girls would often be made to do demeaning acts and many parents were shocked.

Even if the children had no idea what was really being portrayed, many adults believed that shows with children in the audience should take more responsibility for the content. Before long wrestling was banned in a lot of homes. Parents have been wondering why the already violent sport featuring people with wild names, changed into something even worse. They decided that their children shouldn't be exposed to this behavior.

A second issue in this controversy was the fact that professional wrestling was being shown on TV in the early afternoon. Kids were often home from school while their parents were still working. Parents believed the networks should schedule these programs later. The parents would then have the option of either turning off the television, or at least explaining to their children what was going on.

Regardless of the issues surrounding wrestling, it continued to gain in popularity. Major wrestling events which traveled throughout the US and Canada would fill stadiums to capacity. And major matches were even shown in large movie theatres. New spin off shows were added and even a football league. In the past few years wrestling mania has slowed somewhat but it is still a hit with many kids.

Despite the choice of parents, children would continue to love professional wrestling and would continue imitating their favorite wrestler with suitable merchandise. The issue at hand is that parents need to explain it to their children that none of this is real.

Article Directory : http://www.articlecube.com

About the author: Burt Dymond is the your host at FAQ Wrestling, the #1 source on the internet when you're looking for fresh up to date advice and reviews to do with Wrestling. For more articles on Wrestling why not visit: http://www.faqwrestling.com/articles Why not sign up for our free Wrestling newsletter at: http://www.faqwrestling.com/newsletters ~ai432
Click here to get your own unique version of this article: Uber Articles directory.