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Jay Chaudhuri’s pro-wrestling hall of fame bill in North Carolina goes viral

 Jay Chaudhuri’s pro-wrestling hall of fame bill in North Carolina goes viral

New name for old legislation gets Indian American state senator’s RIC FLAIR Act a lot of traction

By Arun Kumar

“What’s in a name? So asked Shakespeare famously. Apparently a lot, going by the reception Indian American state senator Jay Chaudhuri’s bill to get a pro-wrestling hall of fame in North Carolina, is getting on a second try.

A bill to earmark $500,000 to study building a professional wrestling hall of fame in North Carolina, filed by a group of state senators led by Chaudhuri in the last week of March made national headlines and went viral online.

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That wasn’t an accident, reported assemblync.com noting a similar bill filed by Chaudhuri two years ago got no real media attention or public buzz, and there was little chance of it passing or inspiring a private effort to get the hall off the ground.

But Chaudhuri, who grew up watching professional wrestling in the 1970s and ’80s when matches would be done in-studio on WRAL, had learned a few things, according to assemblync.com.

He knew, for instance, that “Ramblin’” Ricky Rhodes was a pudgy wannabe before a fateful plane crash and long recovery led him to lean out, change his gimmick, and become the flamboyant and dominant ladies man, “The Nature Boy” Ric Flair.

When Chaudhuri brought the bill back this year, he dressed it up and gave it a name with an eye-catching backronym: “An Act to Remember Iconic Combatants through Fostering Learning Awareness and Interest in Rassling.” That’s right. The RIC FLAIR Act.

This time, it went over. “I think the name was definitely a big part of it drawing a lot more attention,” Chaudhuri was quoted as saying. “Truth be told, the credit goes to Pierce Bruns, a junior intern from N.C. State who came up with the acronym. … I told him it may be his single greatest achievement in his time in college as an intern.”

This time around, Republican senators Danny Britt  and Ralph Hise have joined as primary sponsors of the bill, underlining the bipartisan lure of pro-wrestling and its importance to a broad swath of North Carolinians.

When Chaudhuri was growing up, wrestling was still a regional industry. In the South, the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) was dominant. It was a rougher, bloodier and more adult product than the World Wrestling Federation (then WWF, later WWE), a Northeast promotion that would eventually swallow up the territories.

“The WWF, the production was slicker and more for kids,” Chaudhuri remembers. NWA crowds were famous for buying into more realistic matches and plotlines. “Rasslin’ is real,” as the saying went. “People are fake.”

The question of where a hall of fame might be located is a little premature, Chaudhuri said. The bill is now in the Senate Appropriations/Base Budget committee. It’ll need to pass the full Senate and House.

But Chaudhuri has been hearing from folks from the mountains to the coast, all making the argument that their city should be home to a new hall of fame.

The half-million dollar price tag on a feasibility study may seem like Ric Flair-level extravagance, Chaudhuri’s office admits. But they’re quick to point out how many things go into a project like this.

The big ticket items include site selection and evaluation and estimates for construction. The Department of Natural and Cultural Resources would also need to gauge public interest, local support and the overall market for a hall of fame of this type.

The money would also go toward identifying partners, Chaudhuri’s office said, including individual wrestlers and wrestling organizations. They would also need help curating what sort of things—from ring attire like robes and wrestling boots to historic posters and photography—would be in the hall.

Even if the General Assembly decides not to spend a half-million dollars to study its feasibility, Chaudhuri was quoted as saying , the bill has stirred up enough excitement that private interests may make it happen anyway.

“Wrestling is big again, in some ways bigger than it’s ever been right now,” Chaudhuri said. “I think it’s worth honoring it as part of our culture and our history here. There’s obviously a lot of interest.”

Author

  • Arun Kumar served as the Washington-based North America Bureau Chief of the IANS, one of India's top news agencies, telling the American story for its subscribers spread around the world for 11 years. Before that Arun worked as a foreign correspondent for PTI in Islamabad and Beijing for over eight years. Since 2021, he served as the Editor of The American Bazaar.

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Arun Kumar

Arun Kumar served as the Washington-based North America Bureau Chief of the IANS, one of India's top news agencies, telling the American story for its subscribers spread around the world for 11 years. Before that Arun worked as a foreign correspondent for PTI in Islamabad and Beijing for over eight years. Since 2021, he served as the Editor of The American Bazaar.