Careercow David Bixenspan / Bix / davidbix / davidbixagain / CactusBix - Pro-Wrestling "journalist" who thrives on trying to end careers, Took money intended for people who do actual work, Drooled all over a girl's arm

Checking up on Bix and I see an article he wrote a few days ago about Vince McMahon stepping down was posted on some garbage and obscure website.

Vince McMahon Navigated Controversy for Decades. What Changed in 2022? (Archive)

The article is basically him bitching about how he's always known an compiled the controversies of Vince McMahon, but the big outlets ignored it until recently with the Wall Street Journal and the hush money settlements.
 
Checking up on Bix and I see an article he wrote a few days ago about Vince McMahon stepping down was posted on some garbage and obscure website.

Vince McMahon Navigated Controversy for Decades. What Changed in 2022? (Archive)

The article is basically him bitching about how he's always known an compiled the controversies of Vince McMahon, but the big outlets ignored it until recently with the Wall Street Journal and the hush money settlements.
No, Bix. They ignored it because all the money was still moving. Nobody cared about NDAs until people learned that the hush money may have come from company funds, and even then they still wouldn't have cared if people outside of wrestling hadn't already been noticing that the old way of Vince living and breathing creative control was killing the product. People like board members, or the rest of the people at the top of the stock scheme, or the fucking SEC.

People whose opinions actually matter, Yenta Bix.
 
Checking up on Bix and I see an article he wrote a few days ago about Vince McMahon stepping down was posted on some garbage and obscure website.

Vince McMahon Navigated Controversy for Decades. What Changed in 2022? (Archive)

The article is basically him bitching about how he's always known an compiled the controversies of Vince McMahon, but the big outlets ignored it until recently with the Wall Street Journal and the hush money settlements.
How fucking old is the display picture he's using on that website?
 
Checking up on Bix and I see an article he wrote a few days ago about Vince McMahon stepping down was posted on some garbage and obscure website.

Vince McMahon Navigated Controversy for Decades. What Changed in 2022? (Archive)

The article is basically him bitching about how he's always known an compiled the controversies of Vince McMahon, but the big outlets ignored it until recently with the Wall Street Journal and the hush money settlements.
I've always wondered how Vince managed to come out of the #MeToo era unscathed whereas prominent indie types like Marty Scurll got cancelled into oblivion. All it would have taken was for a few women to come out with claims simultaneously to turn the heat on him.
 
I've always wondered how Vince managed to come out of the #MeToo era unscathed whereas prominent indie types like Marty Scurll got cancelled into oblivion. All it would have taken was for a few women to come out with claims simultaneously to turn the heat on him.
Because most of the people in wrestling are marks for Vince/WWE and the ones that aren't are like Bix in regards to the credibility.

For whatever it's worth, Meltzer and Keller have covered all of Vince's more public sexual harassment cases. But both of them are so checked out with the company (and Dave's more personal relationship with Vince on and off through the years further complicates any of his coverage) that they aren't really going to lead the way in "taking down" Vince. Maybe if Bix actually tried to have some credibility beyond "terminally online shit-stirrer", he'd have gotten some exposure out of all this like Dave has or Wade did in the past.
 
Bix thinks WWE brought back a wrestler just to sabotage another company? (Archive)

1661255250193.png
 
A Bix thread here? you love to see it.
even the dude that had to put up with outright homophobes (briscoes) and sex perverts (elgin) decided to spend time and go after Bix publicly.
View attachment 3554682

Oh, MOOSE! ever since that tweet Bix has been on a personal vendetta against Impact Wrestling, the company he works for.


ijl.png



1662217688716.png


Like the autistic basement dweller he is, David somehow hasn't still realized that wrestling is fake.

On a sidenote, have some Bix being bitter about people more successful than him.
Either than or he's into femdom, you choose.


tku.png
 
  • Like
Reactions: JAKL II
Bix has been hired by prominent wrestling news site Wrestling Inc. to rewrite wikipedia pages into "OMG Facts About _______ Only Hardcore Fans Know!" clickbait trash. The one exception seems to be an article co-written with someone else. Seems like they don't trust him to do anything bigger than throwaway articles on his own. Dude must have been so excited to finally work for one of the biggest wrestling news sites, only to be forced into churning out this kind of shit.
1671078956464.png
 
An OLC reference! That place was such a valuable reference for turn of the century internet wrestling weirdos. Didn't they have some kind of Keltner/Gordy List for douchebags? I forget what they called it, but the jdw one was great.

Has anyone talked about when he went nuts on the F4W forums calling Alvarez a rent boy? It was still in the archives the last time I subscribed.
It was called the Chernau List, although I no longer remember who Chernau was or why he got to be the namesake of the list.

The funny one I remember was for Mike Sweetser, the DVDVR mod, who trooned out many years later, became "Aria Veronique," and did a couple of BBC-on-tranny porn shoots. (No, really.)
Holy shit, I stumbled across this due to a spam email I came across sending me into an old days google search and I'm blown away. Anyway, Chernau is Dan Chernau, aka CrimsonMask, the head mod of wrestlingclsssics.com who were OLC's sworn enemies at the time. He protected his identity like it was the most important thing in the world to him so he was obviously catfished and had every detail of his life revealed on OLC the same way OA& Forums (several OLC guys were also O&A guys) did to Patrick S. Tomlinson. The list was named after him because WC had the Gordy list to see if a wrestler was HOF worthy or some such shit. I haven't been remotely involved in any sort of wrestling stuff since OLC imploded and I can't believe Bix is still around.

I appreciate the jdw list love since I wrote a big chunk of that.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: JAKL II
JDW is still around too.

OLC was fun,but once it was gone the splinter groups got less and less fun.

Who was the guy the OLC people ragged on cause he sold pecans to Sting?
 
Here's Bix who, even after the reports of the Saudis purchasing WWE were proven to be false, still decides to double down on Vince and the Saudis doing it in secret. This guy is walking proof that God still has a sense of humor.

View attachment 4249262
He probably also believes that rumor tweet of Stephanie and Haitch living seperately for over a year.
 
Looks like Lolcow David Bixenspan is trying to take dow semi-Lolcow Dave Meltzer.

Wrestling Inc. (Archive)

1673654129196.png

Last Friday, the hosts of "Open the Voice Gate," a podcast devoted to Japan's Dragongate promotion and part of the "Voices of Wrestling" network, published, in detail, thorough debunkings of a story that had been reported on by Dave Meltzer in his Wrestling Observer Newsletter since May 2022. Hosts Case Lowe (in his "Definitive Guide to 2022 Dragongate" article) and Mike Spears (in a Twitter thread) laid out in detail how, based on similar emails received by "Voices of Wrestling Flagship Podcast" host Joe Lanza and a separate, unnamed wrestling reporter, as well as their own follow-ups, it appears that Meltzer had been taken in by a hoaxer claiming to be then-Dragongate wrestler Kaito Ishida. Additional reporting by Wrestling Inc. both corroborates and expands on what Lowe and Spears published.

The emails from the person claiming to be Ishida, one of which was published in Lowe's article, detailed alleged upheaval within Dragongate, thanks largely to veteran Japanese wrestler Nosawa Rongai becoming the promotion's new booker — something that, by all other accounts, was never true. The first immediate red flag comes in the last paragraph of the email, where the emailer requests that the recipient not contact them on social media because the Dragongate office has their login information. It's not clear if Meltzer made more of an effort to authenticate the email (which came from a disposable "@tokyo.jp" email address, the kind commonly used by spam accounts), but according to Spears, at least one reporter who got the email followed up and got a picture of a "company ID" that was proven to not exist in Dragongate. Regardless, the emailer's tips were reported near-verbatim in the May 30 edition of the Observer, and Meltzer seemingly continued to rely on the same source for the next several months.

Dragongate announcer: Meltzer ignored attempts to correct the record
1673654287656.png

Dragongate English commentary team member Jae Church told Wrestling Inc. he was one of many who repeatedly tried to set Meltzer straight on this story, which continued to drag out for several months with Meltzer seemingly relying on the same fraudulent source — to no response. However, on November 2, after months of ignoring the denials, Meltzer emailed Church, who shared a screenshot of the exchange with Wrestling Inc. Saying he had received "a weird report that I wanted to check out," Meltzer told Church that the "report" indicated that Nosawa had retired, presumably as a wrestler, but that he and Ultimo Dragon would be jointly running the creative end of Dragongate going forward.

That Nosawa had announced an impending in-ring retirement, with his last match being on the February 21 Pro Wrestling NOAH show at the Tokyo Dome, was already public knowledge. As for how that impacted Dragongate, Church insisted to Meltzer that Nosawa still had nothing to do with the promotion (past occasional appearances as a wrestler), but did not hear back. Despite this, in the next Observer, cover dated November 7, Meltzer ran with what appears to be reporting from the same questionable source as before.

"There are a number of major things going on regarding Nosawa Rongai, who was part of creative both [in Dragongate] and with Pro Wrestling NOAH," he wrote. "Nosawa told Dragon Gate and NOAH that he felt overburdened booking two promotions and also being an active wrestler in both companies."

Reached for comment, Meltzer was hesitant to discuss explicit sourcing details on the record, but conceded that he did rely at least in part on the emails in question.

Hoaxer: 'some of the wrestlers have reached out to Mr. Meltzer of international media'
1673654327409.png

In addition to Meltzer and Lanza, who are mentioned in Lowe's article, Fightful's Sean Ross Sapp received a similar email from "Ishida" on May 26, with the same information that the others got. According to screenshots shared with Wrestling Inc. by Sapp, he quickly responded, calling the emailer's bluff by explaining that he had just messaged "Ishida" on Twitter to confirm his identity. "Ishida" responded by reiterating the claim that "his" social media accounts were not secure, but simultaneously confirmed that they were a Meltzer source in that response.

"There is no need now because some of the wrestlers have reached out to Mr. Meltzer of international media and Mr. Okamoto of Tokyo Sports and told me that they have agreed to write about it in this week," wrote the person claiming to be Ishida. "But anyways thank you for your concern and trying to help us."

Tokyo Sports does not appear to have run with the story, which is in line with their history as an outlet that is used to advance in-ring storylines. And when the actual Ishida left Dragongate two months later, the Tokyo Sports article covering the story — which was not bylined to any specific reporter — attributed his departure to a knee injury.

As for Sapp, he responded to the email that said Meltzer and Okamoto would be covering the Nosawa story by asking if there was any way that "Ishida" could verify his identity over email, which should not have been difficult.

"I wouldn't run with the story without verifying that was the wrestler (send a photo with a paper with the email address written on it, identification, you know knowing the identity)," wrote Mike Spears in his Twitter thread. "English, although taught at schools, I knew wasn't THAT common in [Dragongate]."

Not Meltzer's Only Red Flag in Recent Years
1673654360128.png

This is not the first recent instance in which a spurious Meltzer story should've been checked better. Perhaps the most egregious, given the subject matter, would be his handling of the fallout from Candy Cartwright's June 2020 rape allegation against Matt Riddle. In a claim that eventually fell apart, the Riddle camp accused Cartwright of stalking him, to the point of being removed by security from an "NXT" taping at Full Sail University. As with the rest of his stalking claim, Riddle provided no proof when he tried getting a restraining order, a petition he withdrew after Cartwright's lawyer accused him of fabricating the little evidence he presented.

In the petition, Riddle claimed that the alleged Full Sail incident happened in "February 2020." Days after the story about that case broke, Meltzer wrote in the Observer dated September 21, 2020 that the supposed incident's date "was actually believed to be December 19, 2019," a Thursday, at a time when "NXT" TV shoots at Full Sail occurred on Wednesdays, and after the last such shoot of the year. The following week, Meltzer wrote that the alleged incident "is now said to have been on October 2, 2019." Cartwright's sole tweet that day, at 11:36 am ET, was location-tagged as being in Ronkonkoma, New York, and though that's not entirely dispositive, several hours of travel would've been required, and a source close to Cartwright says she's never communicated with Meltzer for any reason, regardless. Reached for comment, Meltzer didn't deny not contacting Cartwright, but told Wrestling Inc. that "there were a few people on the Riddle story who told me that but would have all come from those would be considered Riddle's side."

Full Sail Security Incident Claim Originated With A Hoaxer
1673654394985.png

The Full Sail claim seemingly originated from a Twitter user, one claiming to be a former "NXT" volunteer, who tweeted about it the day that Cartwright first accused Riddle in June 2020. However, what's believed to be the user's LinkedIn page — his name, location, and job match, and it was deleted after he was contacted — shows that he finished working as an "NXT" volunteer in February 2017, 18 months before Riddle signed with WWE. In addition, in October 2017, he tweeted about "when I volunteered with NXT," using the past tense. Reached by Wrestling Inc., the user claimed to not remember the tweets, then declined comment and deleted all of the posts that were mentioned to him.

A few weeks after the former "NXT" volunteer's initial tweets, Riddle's then-wife repeated the false claim about the purported security incident in a reply to a fan who was arguing with her then-husband. Her stated reasoning for Cartwright throwing a fit — that WWE "wouldn't allow her to be an extra" — refers to something that was months away from happening at the time of the October 2019 taping where the Riddle camp would eventually assert that the "incident" took place.
 
Back