Wikitubia

Warning:

You are not currently logged in. You will still be able to browse Wikitubia, but you will be unable to edit without an account. Please go here to create a Fandom account.

READ MORE

Wikitubia
Register
Advertisement
Wikitubia
     
YouTube magnifying glass
Citations needed
This article needs cited sources to support its information.

JOIN US

―Cultaholic's intro

Cultaholic Wrestling, is an English YouTube channel run by Adam Pacitti (born: August 20, 1988 (1988-08-20) [age 35]), Ross Tweddell (aka King Ross), Jack G. King (aka Jack the Jobber), Sam Driver, and Tom Campbell. The channel is dedicated to wrestling.

Creation[]

Pacitti, Tweddell, King, Driver, and Adam Blampied had all previously worked at WhatCulture, most notably the WhatCulture Wrestling channel and their offshoot wrestling brand WhatCulture Pro Wresting (WCPW) where Blampied, Pacitti, King, and Tweddell all featured prominently, while Driver worked as an editor.

On September 19, 2017, the five announced they were leaving WhatCulture, and the following day Blampied posted a cryptic message on his Twitter reading "Join us", and in the days that followed the others would post similar messages until Cultaholic was unveiled on October 14, 2017, with the channel's launch date was scheduled for November 1, 2017.

Series[]

What Happened to That Wrestler[]

Hosted by Adam Pacitti, who also provided the theme tune...unfortunately, each video traces the lives and careers of every wrestler from a specific point in time, be it everyone who appeared on the first WrestleMania card in 1985 to every single King of the Ring winner to every member of the Nexus from 2010-11 to the inaugural class of the WWE performance Center from 2013.

WTF Moments[]

Hosted by Ross Tweedell, and carried over from their time at (Name Redacted), WTF Moments sifts through every WWE and AEW show to pick out the moments that make no sense or obvious botches.

The Captivating Career Of...[]

Hosted by Jack King, each episode delves into the career of a chosen wrestler, from their pre-wrestling background and training all the way through their career from their earliest matches in whichever company or territory they started out in through to their rise to the status they hold today, with wrestlers such as Andre The Giant, The Rock, Mick Foley, Eddie Guerrero, Kurt Angle, AJ Styles and CM Punk all featuring (plus an April Fool's Day episode for Mantaur)

War Stories[]

Hosted by Sam Driver, this series takes an in-depth look at some of the biggest stories in wrestling history and, most importantly, what was going on behind the scenes that allowed things such as Lex Luger jumping from the then-WWF to WCW so he could show up on the first-ever episode of Nitro to how Scott Hall and Kevin Nash wound up in WCW to kickstart the nWo and the subsequent upturn in WCW's fortunes.

Behind The Match[]

Also hosted by Sam Driver, this series take s a look at specific matches that have their own significance and takes a deep dive into the events that created the situation which led to the match taking place, for example the time the WWE-contracted Taz defeated the WCW-contracted Mike Awesome to win the ECW World Championship, or the match between Bret Hart and The British Bulldog for the Intercontinental Championship which headlined SummerSlam 1992 at Wembley Stadium.

Straight To Hell[]

Hosted by Ross Tweedell, Straight To Hell follows the format of the TV show Room 101 where the guests, who range from Cultaholic's own hosts to the hosts of other wrestling-related channels such as Maffew Gregg of Botchamania or Oli Davis and Luke Owe from WrestleTalkTV, to wrestling journalists such as Dave Meltzer of the Wrestling Observer, to various wrestlers such as New Japan Pro Wrestling's Will Ospreay, AEW's Sammy Guevara and Luchasaurus to NWA's Nick Aldis to former WWE starts Lita and Gail Kim, picking what aspects of wrestling they would happily damn to the abyss for eternity.

Seeing The Best[]

Hosted by Jennifer Louise, the self-proclaimed Advocate of Optimism, Seeing The Best looks at moments in wrestling history such as the WWE's revival of ECW or the Invasion angle and highlights that, while they are regularly held up by wrestling fans as some of the worst things to happen, they did have some overlooked upside that carried on long after the original plans fizzled into nothingness.

TripleJump[]

On January 29, 2019, it was revealed that Cultaholic were expanding beyond wrestling content with the announcement of TripleJump, a gaming channel hosted by former WhatCulture Gaming/Vidiots hosts Ben Potter and Peter Austin, with the channel launching on February 8th 2019.

Subscriber Milestones[]

  • 100,000 subscribers: October 18, 2017.
  • 500,000 subscribers: October 2, 2019.

Gallery[]

Advertisement