Taurus to Impact, luchadors for mayor, other less random notes

Black Taurus is scheduled to appear on upcoming episodes of Impact Wrestling. He was at their tapings this weekend (and revealed as much on a private social media account). Impact has not announced his debut. Taurus previously appeared on Impact tapings in Mexico City; he likely would’ve been back sooner had Impact been able to tour and run more shows there. I’m not sure what Taurus’ role will be or how soon he’ll turn up.

Taurus was, by his choice, working as a freelance with AAA and not under contract; there’s a chance the Marvel deal might have changed that. The deal with Impact appears to be direct with Taurus and not through AAA. Any AAA deal in the US seems like it’d have to go through Lucha Libre FMV at the moment, so it’s useful for everyone that Taurus not be an AAA wrestler for the purposes of an Impact deal. It also means anyone under contract to AAA might not be able to work a US TV show – or at least, AAA can’t send them to the US on their behalf. (I don’t think anyone, including myself, knows what the hard rules are here but most promotions tend to play it safe when it comes to an ongoing lawsuit.)

The viral lucha libre story of the moment is Blue Demon Jr., Caristico, and Tinieblas Jr. running for political office and insisting they will not reveal their true identities as doing so. All three have been a public part of the Redes Sociales Progresistas in recent months. Tinieblas is running for Venustiano Carranza mayor, Caristico for Cuauhetmoc mayor, Demon is running for Gustavo A. Madero mayor. Celebrity is a theme for this political party: the Tlalpan candidate is an actor/TV host, the Iztapalapa candidate is a singer, and so on through the rest of the country. All the candidates say they’re taking their first-time candidacy and possible elections seriously, but it comes off at the least as a brand-building exercise; I’m left wondering which billionaire is secretly funding all of it.

Demon says he will be listed on the ballot as “Blue Demon Jr.” and will govern while still wearing the mask. Demon does say the election officials know his name and would be able to confirm he’s the actual Blue Demon should he win, but he’s not going to reveal his name publicly. Mexico’s elections allow running under a nickname or alias, so “Blue Demon Jr.” can appear on a ballot. Blue Demon Jr., Tinieblas Jr., and Caristico’s real names are simple to find for any journalist who’s interested in and would likely be revealed if they’re competitive in the election.

The next step appears to be officially entering as a candidate between February 17th and March 3rd. The full list of candidates are set on April 4th, they’re allowed to campaign until June 2nd, and voting day is June 6th. There’s a long time before this goes anywhere (or before these names are actually on a ballot.)

The new CMLL show Heraldo Television appears to be airing two-year-old matches, previously broadcast on YouTube. It’s not important for people who follow CMLL closely, but it’s another way for CMLL to make a little extra money.

Leo Riano’s column in Record says AAA & CMLL revenues dropped by “more than 70 percent.” Riano’s facts aren’t always accurate and he’s doesn’t list a timeframe; it’s at least a decent guess.

Ultimo Guerrero and Diamante Azul had a title match on Sunday in Oaxaca. It’s listed as Diamante Azul’s title, though the angle to set it up suggested it would be Guerrero’s on the line. I haven’t seen results.

MexaWrestling seems to have taped some secret shows. Mas Lucha will air Origen Part 1 on Wednesday with Toxin vs Alan Extreme vs To Be Announced. I don’t entirely understand the purpose of a surprise wrestler for a taped show.

DTU’s Poza Rica show, airing Sunday on Mas Lucha’s ad-supported service, is now being pitched as a return to DTU running one show a month, as they did earlier in the pandemic. Those previous shows tended to be on the premium channel; this one appears to be sponsored.

Jalisco luchador/trainer Monje Cavernario passed away Friday. Facebook posts indicate he’s related to CMLL luchador Difunto.

Mini Psicosis (Jorge Ruiz) passed away Sunday. A few people have wrestled as Mini Psicosis; this one appears to have taken the name from Psicosis Ripper (the second Psicosis) and started under that name after Ripper joined CMLL. This Mini Psicosis wrestled indie dates primarily and isn’t one of the TV ones.

Miguel Reducindo’s Mas Lucha column has a crazy bit of trivia: the movie Tlayucan was nominated (though did not win) in the 35th Academy Awards; it was going for the Oscar for Best Foreign Film. It was based on a book of the same name written by Jesus Velazquez. He’s better known as luchador Murcielago Velazquez, lucha libre star of the 30s and 40s who switched to writing after he left wresting.

Indie Mexico wrestling promotions love announcing alliances with other promotions even more than running shows. Revolucion Lucha Libre Iztapalapa, a group with only four shows in my database and all during the pandemic, announced a promotional agreement with a Estelar Wrestling in Brooklyn. RLLI says they also have agreements with promotions in Salvatierra, Queretaro, and Cancun, while the Brooklyn group has agreements with groups in Panama, Russia, Chile, and India. This is all silly; I assume agreements mean “they’re friends on Facebook” because no explanation is given. the Mexico City group says they’re going to bring in people from New York but they’re definitely not going to run shows until they get health permission. Pretty sure they had been running shows without permission already, but Fantasma was there to endorse them anyway. Luchadors wrestling for RLLI appears at the press conference; none are mentioned in ESTO’s article. (Box Y Lucha also covered the press conference in a note and mentions many names.)

An attempt at a show Saturday in Arena Gomez Palacio was shut down by the authorities.

Generacion XXI hopes to run a show in Guanajuato on 01/31.

Pale Pro Wrestling in Texas on 02/12 has Psycho Clown versus Sam Adonis.

NVINoticas’ writes about Furia Poblana, who wrestled in Oaxaca & Puebla in the 90s and is the cousin of Mogur.

El Siglo de Durango talks to local wrestler Siniestro, who says he’s wrestling a closed door show at the end of the month. It’d be his first match since last February.

Jesus Zuniga posting a video of the AAA Arena Mexico invasion from two decades ago was somehow enough to get people to write about this being a sign AAA and CMLL about to work together. We are all very bored and grasping at straws.