James Guttman's first book was good but a bit snide and bitter about wrestling. What makes this great is that Guttman openly acknowledges that and relates how his opinon of wrestling has changed. Much of the book is his experiences running his wrestling radio show in which he's come to realize that while he thought he was an expert on wrestling before, he now sees he didn't know anything about it. It's fun reading his experiences with interviews gone right and wrong and how they've opened his eyes to the fact that so many fans think they're smart about the business but in truth have no clue what goes on behind the scenes. He mentions the Chris Benoit mess and how had this happened a few years earlier, he'd be screaming for Vince McMahon's head with the rest. But Guttman now realizes that Vince really does care about his company and workers, not the self-absorbed jerk he painted him as in the first book. He's also realized that wrestling is bigger than just one fan's view of it and he shouldn't be held up on that. A terrific examination of the business and speaks volumes of wrestling fandom as to how a lot of fans should realize they're more "marks" than "smarts."