The Fighting Cholitas are a gaggle of female wrestlers who perform in El Alto, Bolivia. The Cholitas are a part of a gaggle called the Titans of the Ring, which has both male and feminine wrestlers. Tickets to the exhibitions cost $1.
They routinely attract over cardinal spectators to their bouts in El Alto and several other hundred spectators once they travel with the Titans to smaller towns. They wear braided hair, bowler hats, and multilayered skirts within the ring. In keeping with a 2005 big apple Times article, the Titans earn about $13 for every bout. Most of the wrestlers produce other jobs besides their wrestling careers.
Tickets to the exhibitions cost $1. The Cholitas train twice per week and watch YouTube videos of Lucha Mexicana to enhance their techniques and tricks. “The fight, over
anyth
ing, could be a constant update of maneuvers. It’s like riding a bicycle; if you learn to steer, you always remember. But if you would like to do tricks, you would like to practice. The fight is the same.
The thought of including female wrestlers as a maneuver for publicity came from Juan Mamami, a wrestler and president of the Titans. the higher they get, the more they’ll assert their presence in an exceeding field dominated by men. Both genders are even pinned against each other. they are doing not accept that they’re overcome.
In our companions, there also are some anti-Cholas,” says Mary Llanos Saenz, referred to as Juanita La Cariñosa within the ring who’s been fighting for nearly 20 years.
They featured the Fighting Cholitas in an October 2008 episode of the American realit
y series T
he Amaz
ing Race, during which they tasked a contestant from each team with learning and performing a six-step wrestling routine with a Cholita.