POLITICS
Trump’s Coup Attempt is Ripped Straight from Pro-Wrestling’s Playbook
Trump’s attempts to overturn his election loss are part wrestling grift, part coup attempt

In the late 60s, our family lived with my grandparents for a time. I was in elementary school; the youngest of my three younger brothers was practically a newborn. As if the four of us weren’t enough occupants for their small home, my grandmother’s cousin came to visit during the summer.
Cousin Ola was a cheerful, gray-haired lady, slightly younger than my grandmother— and she was crazy about wrestling. One weekend, she insisted we watch Championship Wrestling, a regional forerunner to Vince MacMahon’s WWE. The ordinarily mild-mannered little lady shouted louder and louder with each match, urging on her favorite wrestler with each match.
Soon, my brothers and I realized that Cousin Ola truly believed Championship Wrestling, with its flashy heroes and staged violence, was the real thing. As one of the ‘fights’ came to its predictable crescendo, Cousin Ola cheered so loudly it was as though she was at ringside.
Just as the excitement reached its peak, one of my brothers shouted, laughing, “Cousin Ola is going crazy! It’s not real!” Suddenly, a dark look of seriousness fell over the little old lady’s face, as if my brother broke the spell. Before we understood what was happening, my grandmother’s cousin packed her bags, grumbling under her breath.
Just like that, Cousin Ola’s visit came to an abrupt end. The idea that a child called wrestling fake while also questioning her sanity was too much. I still recall the sight of her leaving grandmother’s house, her blue Samsonite suitcase in hand.
Decades later, the story of Cousin Ola, the wrestling superfan, is part of our family’s lore.
Trump’s relationship with the wrestling industry goes back decades
What if I told you that the thing that played the most significant role in shaping President Donald Trump’s political persona was not his role-play as a successful businessman on The Apprentice, but his decades of involvement in professional wrestling?
Media critics often refer to him as a ‘carnival barker’ or a ‘former reality television star.’ But the most accurate way to view Trump’s approach to politics is through the lens of professional wrestling. Nearly every aspect of Trump’s norm-busting behavior — his mercurial persona, constant lying, the feuds, name-calling, self-aggrandizement, and even his over-the-top rallies are, at their most basic level, steeped in wrestling-influenced storytelling. Trump presents his alternative reality to his supporters in much the same way that the WWE works a storyline.
Trump has a years-long connection with World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) and its owner, Vince McMahon. McMahon’s wife (and former WWE CEO), Linda, even served as an original member of Trump’s presidential cabinet.
In 1988 and 1989, Trump hosted WWE’s annual “Wrestlemania” event at his Atlantic City hotel and casino. Trump’s recurring role in WWE storylines was so consequential that in 2013 he was honored with induction into its Hall of Fame.
What Trump is doing is one part coup attempt, one part wrestling-style grift
Professional wrestling’s scripted storylines revolve around two basic character archetypes: heroes, i.e., ‘faces’ and villains, or ‘heels.’ Like Trump, wrestling’s rhetorical heel also plays the victim: If they lose a match, then someone rigged the game. There’s always a conspiracy. And what of wrestling’s true believers that think it’s all real? They’re called ‘marks.’
The sport relies on what wrestling insiders refer to as kayfabe, wrestling parlance for the presentation of staged events as real or ‘true,’ specifically the portrayal of competition, feuds, rivalries, and relationships between participants genuine and not staged.
Kayfabe depends on the suspension of disbelief, the abandonment of critical thinking, in much the same way that rabid Trump supporters buy into claims of election fraud, despite mountains of credible evidence to the contrary. What’s happening in the lead-up to Georgia’s January senate run-off election is a perfect example of Trump-induced suspension of disbelief:






