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Fighters Andy Vansteene and Nouh Chahboune face off. The latter, during the combat, displays moments of poor sportsmanship that, for some strange reason, the judge does not take it into account.
The doctor of the fight decides to call out the fight and gives Chahboune the victory for an apparent injury to Vansteene's leg. Despite the victory, Chahboune continues with a cocky and defiant attitude, even going so far as to hit the judge.
And how could the judge not disqualify him? You may wonder... Well, I don't know, sometimes, as in all sports, there are somewhat puzzling refereeing decisions.
Otherwise, look at this boxing match at the 2012 London Olympics between Japanese Satoshi Shimizu (Japan) and Azerbaijani Magomed Abdulhamidov.
And if, like me, you are not liking Nouh Chahboune so much, this fight against the Ukrainian Pavel Zhuravlev will leave you with a good taste. I think Zhuravlev works outside the ring, tearing down buildings.
Meanwhile, in other rings...
Marquez's KO to Manny Pacquiao
Max Holloway's final beating off Anthony Pettis
Against all odds, Douglas Lima ends up knocking out Michael Page with a successful uppercut.
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Martial arts have been blowing up for years now — from influencer boxing matches to the pros in UFC or ONE Championship.
And with that much money and attention flying around, of course everyone wants a piece of the action.
The result? Crazier and crazier ideas: fights inside cars, inside phone booths, bare-knuckle boxing making a comeback (hello, BKFC)...
And now? Beating the crap out of each other with half your body buried in mud.
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The Fight Club, in the movie Fight Club, is a clandestine space where men dissatisfied with their lives find an outlet for their frustration and alienation. What starts as a place for physical confrontations, seeking to feel something real in a hollow and materialistic world, soon evolves into a rebellion against the consumerist system and societal expectations.
The club attracts men looking to escape monotony, reconnect with a more "primal" sense of masculinity, and release repressed emotions. Beyond the fights, the club offers a sense of belonging and brotherhood, in contrast to the disconnection and lack of purpose in their modern lives. However, this attempt to regain control and meaning turns radical and dangerous, questioning the boundaries between personal liberation and self-destruction.
KLAN FC is a Ukrainian bare-knuckle fighting league. It’s like Fight Club, but instead of being underground, it thrives under the spotlight and media coverage provided by today’s social media era.
ExtraBall by javi
Today is the day of breastfeeding dolls to show boobs on social media.
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A couple in Paisley, Scotland, wrecked a shop, shouting racist insults and resisting employees who tried to kick them out. The chaos escalated when a passerby threw the man to the ground, and a few women got into a fight. The police eventually arrested the couple for public disorder.
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We’ve seen it before: the “spectacle” of fights constantly trying to reinvent itself in this era of media and social overexposure. In the past, it was enough to do something different or innovative to stand out. But now, in a world flooded with endless content, one change isn’t enough; you need two or three more twists to truly grab anyone’s attention.
Creativity seems to have no limits: fights suspended meters above the ground, battles in pools, phone booths, and now, as in the video we’re looking at, fights inside public buses. It all boils down to the same goal: competing for those precious seconds of attention in a world where the extraordinary has become the norm.
The real question isn’t just how far they’ll go to grab your interest, but whether you, as a viewer, are still impressed—or if this endless quest for extremes has already lost its punch. Perhaps the real challenge isn’t in reinventing the stage but in finding a way to truly connect with an audience increasingly numb to the spectacle.
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In recent years, the spectacle of fights has been going downhill without brakes, and the worst part is that it seems like no one is at the wheel. The brainstorming sessions of promoters must be absolute madness: fights in phone booths, fights in pools, two vs. two, two girls against one guy, two dwarfs against a guy of average height… It’s no longer about organizing real fights, but about who can come up with the most absurd idea.
The latest? Two professional fighters against ten amateur fighters, a complete spectacle organized by Real Xtreme Fighting (RXF), Romania’s top MMA league. Basically, it’s like throwing two medieval knights against ten peasants or putting two pit bulls against ten poodles.
Where do we draw the line? No idea. But at this rate, MMA is turning more into a circus than a sport. Full speed downhill with no brakes.
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