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Making the Towns

Making the Towns

Written by: 3 crows Entertainment
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Brian Logan has spent over thirty years in the business of professional wrestling. Though the history of his journals, he retells the stories about his experiences.

© 2026 Making the Towns
Combat Sports & Self-Defence
Episodes
  • Thirty Bucks And A High-Speed Escape
    May 15 2026

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    One bad line as a heel can get a laugh, or it can get a riot. We start the 1998 entries of my wrestling road journal and the memories hit fast: tiny payoffs, long drives, and the constant balancing act of trying to get over while still getting out of town in one piece. I walk through early stops in Georgia and Alabama, including the night in White, Georgia when cheap heat crossed a line and turned into a real-world chase that still makes my stomach drop thinking about it.

    From there we jump into a time capsule of early internet wrestling tapings, back when “airing on the internet” didn’t mean streaming and nobody really understood what was coming. I talk about working with Lee Thomas, Ken Timms, and the relationships that kept you sane on the road. Then it’s down to West Palm Beach for a beach-side match that includes Gangrel as Vampire Warrior and Hack Myers, plus the first time I met Madman Pondo and why hardcore wrestling and straight-up wrestling often stay in separate lanes.

    We also hit Nashville for Music City TV with Bert Prentice and the behind-the-scenes reality of tryouts, reps, and even getting saddled with a throwaway name on TV while you prove yourself. West Virginia becomes the big focus after that: territory building, papered crowds, promoter math, winning the MSWA title, and the main-event formulas we used to connect towns without social media. And yes, I tell the story of the first time I ever had a true shoot with an opponent because he could not do the basics.

    If you like pro wrestling history, independent wrestling stories, and a straight talk look at kayfabe, money, and survival on the road, hit subscribe, share this with a wrestling fan, and leave a review so more people can find “Making the Towns.” What’s the wildest live wrestling moment you’ve ever witnessed?

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    1 hr
  • The Night A Dollar Bill Hit A Dancer
    May 11 2026

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    A local pollen strain in the Smoky Mountains can derail your whole week, and somehow that is still not the strangest part of my day. I’m Brian Logan, and this chapter of Making the Towns moves fast: a quick life update, a big wrestling booking announcement, and then a deep dive into the kind of behind-the-curtain territory history fans rarely get explained clearly.

    I talk about going full time with Wildfire Championship Wrestling in Hi Hat, Kentucky, why certain towns become “home,” and what it feels like to rebuild momentum after stepping away. Then I share a major content move: World Fighting Showcase TV episodes are now up on YouTube in order, totally free. No paywalls, no streaming gimmicks, just an archive for wrestling fans who love match history, indie wrestling footage, and the stories that connect it all. I also shout out our sister podcast The Ride Home with Dallas Danger, plus a bonus WFS intro to give new listeners the background.

    The listener mail segment turns into a mini masterclass on old-school regional wrestling: how WAY Wrestling in Oak Hill could run a strong TV show and occasional house shows without operating like a full territory, what a “territory” really means, and why TV power can carry a whole region. After that, we hit my 1997 wrestling journal with money, miles, opponents, and road stories, including a parking lot show where broken glass changes the match, the reality of hometown support, and a “family” angle I still regret trying.

    If you like wrestling territories, independent wrestling stories, and honest lessons from the road, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review so more fans can find the show.

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    58 mins
  • From WCW Retakes To WWF Tryouts A Wrestler’s Road Journal
    May 1 2026

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    Three tries. One TV match. Zero room for excuses. When we hit WCW TV in Gainesville, Georgia, the night turns into a crash course on what “getting it right for television” really means and why veterans get asked to call the match when the wheels come off. I’m flipping back through my wrestling match journal and laying out the receipts: the towns, the opponents, the paydays, and the miles that built my career long before anything looked glamorous.

    From there, the stories get even more real. I talk about the indie grind where you might drive hours and still not get paid, then pivot to one of the nastiest moments I’ve ever lived through: passing out at a dollar movie theater, breaking a rib on a toilet, and still finding a way to get through the wrestling booking because the show has to go on. If you love behind the scenes pro wrestling stories, this is the stuff that explains the mindset of 1990s independent wrestling better than any highlight clip.

    We also get into trying to establish a West Virginia territory, learning how TV tapings worked on a short-run promotion, and how a promo with no direction can accidentally level you up. Bo James becomes a big part of the road, from nonstop travel talk to first-time gimmick matches like a street fight, a Texas death match, and a pole match. Then comes the payoff: a WWF Shotgun Saturday Night tryout against Leaf Cassidy, better known as Al Snow, and what it feels like when the locker room gives you that nod of respect. Subscribe, share this with a wrestling fan, and leave a review, then send me your questions so we can read them on air.

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    55 mins
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