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CWWF: Femme Fatale Faction


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[ Welcome to an attempt at an on-line journal of the exploits of Victoria Stone and the offshoot spinoff Canadian Womens Wrestling Federation ]

 

The Story So Far....

 

While the frustration had become noticeable in the presentation of the womens division during the NOTBPW 2008 television program year cycle, there was going to build towards a confrontation that would shake up the wrestling industry. Victoria Stone, who hand picked some of the finest womens wrestlers in North America, was beginning to be marginalized along with the womens division by shortening the time allotment on the NOTBPW Championship Wrestling program.

 

A mysterious woman known as Kate Avatar reportedly got the ear of Victoria Stone-McFly and presented her with a powerful persuasive argument that the women of NOTBPW were going to have to stage a protest if they were to be taken seriously as a division. Kate said that if they do this, then more independent voices would make themselves known in support.

 

... and in early December 2008, Victoria Stone-McFly had finally stood up to her father Dan Stone Sr. and brother Dan Stone Jr. presenting them with the desire to create the spin-off CWWF show for which Victoria would then prove to her father that there was enough demand and enough room for womens wrestling in the male dominated sport of pro wrestling entertainment.

 

Dan Stone Sr. refused.

 

On that following show, Victoria Stone, Melody, Sally Anne Christianson, and a fourth masked anonymous female (later rumored to be either Emma Bitch or Kate Avatar) announced that they were forming the CWWF. Victoria Stone-McFly gave the interview of a lifetime that resonated within the crowd. They believed that the protest they were seeing was all kayfabe. Victoria slammed her own father and her own family for letting this come to pass and more important to her own self, break from the family and company that she loved. "I've got Daddy Issues!" became the rally cry of a woman determined to prove her point and prove her father wrong. An all-womans wresting promotion was, in Victoria's mind, capable of not only self-sustaining, but she could grow the company to National status on it's own creative merits.

 

It was not kayfabe to Dan Stone Sr. He allowed the revolutionary protest to continue to gain ground on his own show. Dan Sr. read the internet chatter, the insider blogs, and the trade publications after the show ended. If Victoria was serious, she was in breach of her own contract if she left the company.

 

Dan Stone Sr. let it go.

 

Suddenly, support from all over the world came in to support Victoria Stone and her fledgling pioneer company. One of the first people to promote the CWWF was Heidi Brooks, a female wrestler from the 70s. She signed a contract with the CWWF agreeing to work without pay as a road agent for several months to not only scout and recruit new female talent, but train them too. Once well-respected Heidi Brooks was aboard, Victoria began to sign up a number of blue-chip female workers as well as pluck several ladies from the competing companies who bought in to the "womens wrestling liberation" movement.

 

The game changer in the CWWF revolution was the meeting in early January 2009 that took place between Victoria Stone-McFly and Japanese wrestling sensation Kit Hatoyama. Reportedly clad in her ring attire at the meeting, Hatoyama agreed to a short term contract with the CWWF confessing that her career could not be complete without a run in North America. Victoria Stone was ecstatic that a huge overseas name was going to lend their legacy to help build the company.

 

The first CWWF shows in Canadian and select few Northwestern American cities were both considered a critical success because of the initial hype in the trade publications and for the curiosity of the audience. In February 2009, a one shot PPV card that featured Sherrie "Cherry Bomb" Guthrie and Kit Hatoyama wrestling for the CWWF championship. A week later, the match began to take on a life of it's own with some critics calling it the "most exciting" and "greatest womens wrestling match in history."

 

A rematch between the two was set for May of 2009 in Montreal. Though great on it's own, Hatoyama v. Guthrie 2 did not live up to the first match. However, it did introduce the brand new Quebecois championship title to the CWWF company and marked the arrival of Rebecca Petty. The CWWF was able to carve a niche audience in the Quebec province.

 

The year went on as CWWF sustained successful events, but soon they were losing momentum creatively. Before Victoria could establish themselves with some presence in America, another revolution took place that brought out the QAW (Queens of American Wrestling). Suddenly, Victoria Stone-McFly and her head booker Kate Avatar found themselves with suitable competition along with the pressures of proving themselves to the Stone family patriarchs.

 

In the fall of 2009, Victoria, under the advisement of Kate Avatar, moved the CWWF management offices to the media centric Southern Ontario market (known as the GTA). Victoria Stone began to grow under the spotlight leading the CWWF from show to show. Her public persona began to change from happy mother, to boardroom power executive, to sports biker babe. Her self confidence grew as long as she had Kate Avatar whispering in her ear along the way. Also, there were some rumors around the Internet that Kate had a Svengali-like hold on Victoria, something that Victoria has to date never addressed in public.

 

In late 2009, Dan Stone Jr. and Victoria's husband Sean McFly confronted Victoria in her offices concerned that the Stone family money was dwindling away with the just as dwindling novelty that was the CWWF. Dan Jr. pleaded with Victoria to come back to the NOTBPW and sell the CWWF franchise. Dan Jr. claimed that their dad was promising that CWWF would be it's own show under the NOTBPW brand where Victoria could continue to run it on her own. Victoria responded with a resounding "NO!" determined to plug away with small and large shows in hopes that some Canadian or American broadcast companies will offer her a TV broadcast contract.

 

Around the 2009 end of the year holidays, Victoria met with Canadian and American cable providers companies in search of a PPV deal. No word yet as to what 2010 has in store for the CWWF!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Somewhere in the Canadian Prairies, in the NOTBPW head offices, Dan Stone Sr. smiles proudly of her daughter Victoria.

 

 

You can follow the CWWF as it unfolds first by following the non-official official blog found on the Blogspot network @ CWWF: The Blog

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