Wrestling: Last News

Anthony Bowens wows MLB legends with his sweet stroke in star-studded home run derby

A post shared by Anthony Bowens (@bowens_official)Anthony Bowens inflicts damage with his pulsating biceps when he’s in the squared circle. But on the baseball diamond, his weapon of choice is his bat. The wrestling star, who played college ball before shedding his baseball pants for trunks, competed over the weekend in a star-studded home run derby.

The contest featured an array of pro athletes and MLB legends, including Rafael Palmeiro, Andruw Jones and Jose Canseco. With 1,465 lifetime home runs between them, Bowens was facing an uphill climb against the three perpetual All-Stars. But the “Scissor King” never lacks for confidence.

Subscribe to our newsletter for a refreshing cocktail (or mocktail) of LGBTQ+ entertainment and pop culture, served up with a side of eye-candy.That’s why we love him!Prior to the event, Bowens singled out Canseco, one of the most notorious villains in sports. “I am The Scissor King, I am wrestling’s five-tool player, and I know you will never show up and fight me. So, I am issuing a challenge to you,” he declared on social media.

“Do you have the balls left over from the ‘90s to accept my challenge? I bet you don’t. Jose, it’s time to nut up or shut up. Why? Because everyone loves The Acclaimed.”Canseco, never one to back away from a verbal challenge, told Bowens he will put him “right back in his spandex” after the showdown on October 5.

Wrestling Features STARS Love UPS Colleges Ball

Anthony Bowens

www.queerty.com

Latest News

newsweek.com
Seth Moulton Says Dems Proving His Point After Backlash to Trans Comments
Newsweek that the backlash he has faced following his comments about transgender athletes is indicative of how divided the Democratic Party is.Moulton, a Massachusetts Democrat, has faced heat since the election for saying that Democrats are out of touch with the majority of the country's views on issues such as allowing transgender female students to compete in women's sports.In a New York Times article last week, Moulton said Democrats "spend way too much time trying not to offend anyone rather than being brutally honest about the challenges many Americans face." Leaders from the Democratic Party have now said Moulton is "playing politics.""No one issue lost us this election, but there is exit polling that shows that cultural issues played an outsized role," Moulton told Newsweek. "We lost, in part, because we shame and belittle too many opinions held by too many voters and that needs to stop."Following Vice President Kamala Harris' loss in the 2024 election to President-elect Donald Trump, Moulton said his party is leaning too heavily on identity politics rather than embracing the issues everyday Americans care about.Moulton told MSNBC that he was "just speaking authentically as a dad" when he told The New York Times that he doesn't want his two daughters "getting run over on a playing field by a male or formerly male athlete."Massachusetts Democratic Party chair Steve Kerrigan told The Boston Globe that Moulton's comments "do not represent the broad view of our party." On Tuesday, Governor Maura Healey told reporters that Moulton is just "playing politics" and that "it's important in this moment that we not pick on particularly vulnerable children."Though she did not mention Moulton by name, his fellow Massachusetts representative, Democrat Ayanna Pressley, posted to social media that she would stand with the LGBTQ+ community."I will always stand with trans people and the entire LGBTQ+ community," Pressley posted to X, formerly Twitter.
newsweek.com
School Book Bans: Texans Reject Pro-Censorship Hopefuls
recent rise in book bans, with PEN America reporting that the 2022-23 academic year saw 3,362 instances of book banning, a 33 percent increase from the previous year.Frank Strong, a teacher in Austin, Texas, who tracks school board elections, wrote in his Anger & Clarity newsletter that nine of the 15 candidates who ran on banning certain books from schools lost their races."Voters decided again to reject some of the worst, most anti-book candidates," Strong wrote, adding, "And, what's more, these results continued a clear pattern, stretching back through four election cycles to November 2022, of voters successfully organizing to resist extremist takeovers of their school boards."Strong tracked the races using a 23-page document that he compiled, which includes information on the candidates, whether they are for or against book bans, and what they have said about censorship in the past.Strong also tracked whether candidates were supported by groups such as Moms for Liberty, which advocates for "parental rights at all levels of government" and has worked to prevent schools from teaching LGBTQ+ content.Moms for Liberty supporters say American schools should focus their efforts on the country's illiteracy rate instead of teaching children about "gender ideology." Newsweek contacted Moms for Liberty for comment via email outside normal working hours.In September, Moms for Liberty endorsed Brandi Burkman in her school board election.
Change privacy settings
This page might use cookies if your analytics vendor requires them.