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The athleticism part is real. The bump and the flippy flappy parts are real. You don't see any string hooked at kalisto's back when he does his high flying move. The chairshots are real. The thumbtacks on wrestlers back is real. The pain is real...
The outcome of the match, that's planned. So, acting. The anger between wrestlers you see on tv? Acting. Any stupid storylines that being shown on tv? Acting…
Then there's certain part of WWE and their program that are on the borderline of real and acting. A notable case is blood. For example, during an episode of raw, Roman Reigns was bleeding after he got assaulted by triple h and his trusty sledgehammer. The blood on his head? That's fake. There are reports that one of the announcer handed something to make his head seems bleeding. He acted like those shots bled him. So that is 100% acting. Now, not saying everytime you see red, it's acting. The latest example is when you see blood on goldberg's forehead. That's 100% real blood. But that's accidental. He knocked his head to the door and it bleeds. A more complex example would be Eddie Guererro's blading incident when he was against JBL. Blading is a term in entertainment wrestling where a wrestler cuts himself a little bit to make it look like he's bleeding. Usually at the end of the eyebrow or forehead where there's a lot of blood veins. Not a very harmful technique compared to forced bleeding (that's another story, Brock Lesnar). In this context, it's acting. A wrestler trying to convince the audience that, let's say, a continuous punch to his head is making him bleed. But unlike in movies where the actor uses liquid or coloring or special effects to make it seem like he's bleeding, a wrestler will blade to make it look like he's bleeding. Back to the Guererro incident. So he wanted to convince the audience that he was knocked hard until he bled. So he uses the blading technique, just to make his head bled a little (a mixture of a little blood and lot of sweat will create an illusion like he's bleeding hard). But, he cuts his forehead way too deep. What supposed to be a little blood running through his head, turns into a pool of blood On the floor. His whole head is covered in blood. Look it up. It's frightening! Now what supposed to be an 'acted' blood, turns into real blood. The best part? He continued the match and won (winning part is acting, remember? Predetermined). So would you call that incident acting? Real? Somewhere in between?
There's a lot more example of WWE stretching the borderline of real and acting. There's the Edge and Matt Hardy feud, CM Punk's pipebomb promo, Montreal Screwjob… So yeah, WWE is a mixture of real, acting, and everything in between