What’s A Work - Combat Sports Entertainment
Pro Wrestling, MMA, Boxing, and any form of Combat Sports are the things we like and those are the things we talk about here.
Reviews, editorials, opinions, whacky theorys, wild predictions, and irreverent behavior. If those things describe you, or what you are into, give us a shot and let us know what you think.
New episodes uploaded whenever we decide so make sure you subscribe to get all the latest updates.
Episodes

7 hours ago
7 hours ago
Is Moses Itauma really the chosen one to drag heavyweight boxing into its next era—or are we all getting a little too carried away with the hype train? On this week’s The B’s of Boxing, we dive headfirst into the chaos: a young wrecking machine with scary power, unreal composure, and belts already stacking up like he’s speedrunning the division. But standing in his shadow are the ghosts of greatness—Ali’s charisma, Tyson’s menace, Fury’s madness, Usyk’s genius—so the real question is: can Moses just be great, or does he have to be that great? We break down whether he’s the future king… or just the next name we crowned way too early.

Sunday Mar 22, 2026
Sunday Mar 22, 2026
This week on The B’s of Boxing, the boys are swinging wild and not checking the scorecards. First up, Ben Whittaker is out here shadowboxing his own hype—so who’s the poor soul that actually makes sense as his next opponent? Somebody real? Somebody dangerous? Or just another victim for the highlight reel? Then it’s time to ask the question nobody in a suit wants answered: is Conor Benn really the golden boy that could make Zuffa Boxing pop… or is this whole thing one big “trust me bro” from Zuffa Boxing? And finally, things get spicy—are UFC fighters quietly packing their bags after the Tom Aspinall situation, or is this just another case of fighters tweeting through the pain while Dana counts money? It’s bold takes, bad behavior, and just enough truth to get us in trouble—exactly how you like it.

Tuesday Mar 17, 2026
Tuesday Mar 17, 2026
This week on The B’s of Boxing, Steve Swift and Chris dive into the absolute soap opera surrounding cruiserweight wrecking machine Jai Opetaia and his increasingly spicy situation with the International Boxing Federation. After the IBF decided to pull sanctioning for his fight and basically tell one of the most exciting champions in the sport to go sit in the corner and think about what he’s done, Opetaia’s team is now reportedly exploring legal action—and the boys have a lot of thoughts. Is this just another alphabet-body power trip, or did Opetaia commit the ultimate sin in boxing… working with the wrong promoters and not kissing the ring? Steve and Chris break down the bureaucratic nonsense, the politics, the lawyers sharpening their knives, and why boxing somehow remains the only sport where the champion can win a fight and still get grounded like a teenager who missed curfew. Buckle up—because when boxing sanctioning bodies start making “sense,” you know something shady is probably happening. 🥊😆

Sunday Mar 15, 2026
Sunday Mar 15, 2026
On this episode of The Law – Live Audio Wrestling, Chris and Bradie dig into two stories that show the darker side of the wrestling business that fans rarely think about. First, they break down the frightening moment at an OVW event where a referee suffered a serious injury in the ring and how situations like that expose just how little protection officials often have compared to the wrestlers they’re trying to keep under control. Then the conversation takes a much heavier turn as they discuss the tragic death of a wrestling trainee in Ontario, raising tough questions about training standards, safety, and the risks people take chasing the dream of becoming a pro wrestler. As always on The Law, Chris and Bradie mix hard truths, a little gallows humor, and plenty of straight talk about an industry that can be thrilling, chaotic, and sometimes heartbreakingly dangerous. ** WARNING** - contains serious conversation that some may find offends them.

Thursday Mar 12, 2026
Thursday Mar 12, 2026
This week on Good Times Classic Wrestling Reviews, Steve and KJ dive head-first into the beautiful chaos of ECW Wrestlepalooza 1997, breaking down the legendary war between Raven and Tommy Dreamer—a match featuring more weapons, drama, and emotional baggage than a reality show reunion special. Dreamer is out for revenge, Raven is brooding like a goth kid who just discovered poetry, and the crowd is louder than a bar full of Philly fans after last call. But wait… things get even more ridiculous when “The King” Jerry Lawler shows up to stir the pot, insult the entire ECW roster, and generally act like the world’s most well-dressed wrestling troll. Steve and KJ relive every chair shot, every wild moment, and every over-the-top ECW antic with the kind of adult humor that would probably get them banned from commentary in 1997. If you like hardcore wrestling, outrageous storytelling, and two hosts laughing like they just saw someone get hit with a shopping cart, this episode is absolute must-listen chaos. 🎙️😂🪑

Tuesday Mar 10, 2026
Tuesday Mar 10, 2026
On this week’s Good Times Classic Wrestling Review, the guys crack open a few cold ones and relive the absolute car crash of violence that was ECW Living Dangerously 1998, featuring the legendary meat-slapping showdown between Taz and Bam Bam Bigelow. The hosts marvel at the fact that Taz—built like an angry fire hydrant—spent the match trying to suplex a man the size of a vending machine, while Bigelow moved around the ring like a surprisingly athletic refrigerator with tattoos. The crowd at the ECW Arena was so loud they sounded like they’d been locked in a bar for six hours and fed nothing but rage and cheap beer. The guys laugh about the insane ring-collapse spot, debate whether the ring broke from physics or pure ECW insanity, and conclude that this match perfectly represents Extreme Championship Wrestling—two large, angry humans trying to destroy each other while the audience cheers like absolute maniacs. And honestly… wrestling is rarely better than that. 🍺💥

Sunday Mar 08, 2026
Sunday Mar 08, 2026
The boys are back and the gloves are off on this week’s The Weigh-Ins Bros. Combat Sports Show—and let’s just say… the announced fights for the so-called historic card at the White House have the Bros staring at the bout sheet like it’s a gas station sushi menu. Confusion, regret, and a lot of questions about life choices. The guys break down the official matchups from the Ultimate Fighting Championship and try—try—to understand how a once-in-a-lifetime venue somehow ended up with fights that feel more like a random Tuesday night at the Apex. Is this really the best the UFC could do for a global spectacle… or did someone accidentally hit “autofill” on the matchmaking spreadsheet?
Expect rants. Lots of rants. The Bros ask the uncomfortable question: has the UFC lost touch with the fans that built the sport? From questionable matchmaking to missed superstar opportunities, the guys go full conspiracy board trying to figure out how we went from dream fights to “wait… that’s the co-main?” If you enjoy passionate debates, sarcastic breakdowns, and grown men dramatically reading fight announcements like they’re Shakespearean tragedies, this episode is for you. Grab a drink, because the Weigh-Ins Bros are about to grade the White House card—and someone is definitely getting a failing grade. 🥊🎙️

Friday Mar 06, 2026
Friday Mar 06, 2026
The Weigh-In Bros. Combat Sports Show is back and this week the boys are asking the question nobody thought they’d ever hear outside of a fever dream after too many energy drinks: is the UFC really putting a fight card at the White House? That’s right — the lawn where presidents give speeches might soon be the same place where someone gets spinning-back-kicked into another dimension. The Bros break down the most ridiculous and glorious possibilities for this historic card, including whether Jon Jones will headline the show like the final boss of MMA, and whether the UFC tries to turn the event into the combat sports version of the Super Bowl… except instead of halftime shows we get people punching each other in the face while a bald guy in a suit screams about pay-per-view numbers.
But the real debate gets spicy: who crashes the party? Does Tom Aspinall show up to unify the heavyweight title and ruin everyone’s patriotic barbecue? Does the UFC somehow convince Francis Ngannou to come back and launch uppercuts so powerful they temporarily change the rotation of the Earth? Or does Dana White decide subtlety is overrated and book something so insane that Secret Service agents have to explain to world leaders why there’s a cage next to the Rose Garden? The Bros break down all the possibilities with their usual mix of fight nerd analysis, terrible predictions, and jokes that would absolutely get them banned from Thanksgiving dinner at most normal households. Buckle up — this episode is chaos.

Tuesday Mar 03, 2026
Tuesday Mar 03, 2026
This week on The B’s of Boxing, Steve Swift looks around the sport and realizes we might be living in No Country for Old Old Men. Manny Pacquiao is out here defying Father Time like it owes him money, Floyd Mayweather Jr. is still cashing checks so effortlessly it should be an Olympic event, and Mike Tyson is training like he just found out the year is 1988 again. Are these inspiring late-career runs… or are we one weigh-in away from someone pulling a hamstring tying their robe? Steve breaks down whether boxing is honoring legends — or running the greatest “remember when?” tour since your favorite 90s boy band.
Meanwhile, Oleksandr Usyk continues to smile politely while dismantling giants, leading Steve to confirm that yes, he is in fact Keyser Söze — softly spoken, mildly amused, and somehow leaving entire heavyweight lineages limping away questioning their life choices. We also dive into why Mexican fighters are the most fan-friendly athletes on planet Earth (seriously, they show up to throw hands, not interpretive dance), and whether Conor Benn is boxing’s newest “flavor of the week” — exciting, spicy, and possibly gone by next Tuesday. Analysis, chaos, and at least three moments where Steve asks, “What are we doing here?” Don’t miss it.

Sunday Mar 01, 2026
Sunday Mar 01, 2026
This week on Good Times – Classic Wrestling Reviews, KJ and Steve bravely step into the chaos that is Hulk Hogan vs. The Ultimate Warrior from WCW Halloween Havoc 1998 — a match so strange it feels less like a wrestling main event and more like a late-night fever dream after too much pizza. WCW promised fans the rematch of two immortal legends, but instead delivered a surreal circus of smoke, mirrors, rambling Warrior promos, and Hogan looking like a man who immediately regretted agreeing to this. KJ and Steve try to make sense of Warrior’s cosmic ramblings, Hogan’s over-the-top theatrics, and a storyline that somehow felt both overly complicated and completely pointless at the same time. 🤯💪
Then the guys break down the match itself — a slow-motion spectacle featuring missed cues, confused referees, and the legendary mirror spot that has to be seen to be believed. Of course, no discussion would be complete without the infamous fireball mishap that looked less like mystical destruction and more like a backyard barbecue accident. KJ and Steve debate whether this disaster is actually entertaining because of how ridiculous it is, or if it’s simply proof that WCW in 1998 had completely lost the plot. Either way, this is peak “so bad it’s good” wrestling, and the laughs come almost as frequently as the botches. 🔥😂






