Spencer Love
Spencer Love
Love Pro Wrestling founder, CEO, and promoter. Wrestling is the neatest thing on the planet 💞
Gentleman Jervis on Maintaining Mental Health and Changing the Culture of Pro Wrestling
Gentleman Jervis Cottonbelly is perhaps as well-known for his outspokenness on mental health issues as he is for his daring in-ring exploits. His social media account is full of positive messages and affirmations to inspire his fans to be open in addressing their mental health situations and is a firm advocate for mental health awareness.
In many ways, his voice reminds fans that strength isn’t just measured in wins or championships, but in the courage to face life’s toughest battles outside the ring. For those struggling, knowing they’re not alone is vital—and it’s why resources like All In Solutions play such an important role. By offering compassionate care and comprehensive treatment for both mental health and addiction, they provide a safe path toward healing, proving that recovery is not only possible but worth fighting for.
That same message of courage and openness extends into how mental health care continues to evolve, blending compassion with clinical research to meet people where they are. For individuals whose depression, anxiety, or trauma have not responded to traditional approaches, evidence-based ketamine treatments are gaining recognition for their ability to address symptoms at a deeper neurological level under careful medical supervision.
In this context, Avesta Ketamine Wellness reflects a commitment to combining science with empathy, offering structured care that respects the complexity of each person’s experience. By acknowledging that healing is not one-size-fits-all, these advances reinforce the idea that seeking help is an act of strength, and that recovery, like any meaningful fight, is grounded in persistence, support, and hope.
In a recent interview, Jervis described his steps towards maintaining his own mental health in the pro wrestling environment, as well as some of the individuals he considers positive influences in the industry. He also discussed the changing culture of pro wrestling and his impact on it.
“I think the first step for me is to surround myself with honest people and good people who will help me stay accountable,” Jervis begins, “because a lot of the time you’re not just, you know, they say character’s how you behave when no one’s watching. A lot of the time, what inspires my character is my standing within my community.”
“Now, the professional wrestling community, it’s physical and digital,” he continues. “You know, we gather together for shows, but we also gather together on social media platforms like Reddit and Twitter. We listen to podcasts like this one here, which is so special, and we have this community and at times in my career, I have been less than – I’ve behaved in less than an exemplary fashion.
What I’ve learned is that – do my actions help the community or do they hurt them? That’s a question I have to take with me everywhere I go.
And putting that in my brain of ‘does this help our wrestling community, or does it harm our wrestling community?’ That’s helped me to show better character, you know, when no one’s watching, or in, for me, I mean, I take different counseling courses and especially now that we’re pretty much quarantined still, you know, I watched and read a lot of self-help books and things to learn about the – I have two mental disorders that kind of compound one another and I try to learn as much as I can about them because often they get the best of me and I’m not the exemplary person, I’m not a leader by example, which is what I want to be. And when I’m at my healthiest, I do believe I’m a good leader and I believe I lead by a positive example.”
Jervis gave a few examples of individuals that he feels are strong ambassadors for a positive culture in professional wrestling.
“So, what I’m trying to do now is continue to preach that message of positivity. Even if I can’t be the leader, well, then someone like Danhausen or Warhorse, they take that flag of positivity, they give it a different voice, and their own unique interpretation of community, and friendship amongst the wrestling community. They take that flag and they run with it when I can’t. And, you know, for a moment I felt like Orange Cassidy and Chuck Taylor, they said, ‘hey, Jervey, here, take this flag a bit, and I got to wave it for a while and say, ‘hey, look at how much fun we’re having!
‘ And, you know, it’s like you pass it around. A lot of times, the best times is when we all wave the flag at the same time. But as somebody who, again, it takes work to be to stay positive, I can’t say that I’m always flying the flag of positivity. But I can say that I always want to and that I’m trying my best.”
Cottonbelly agreed with the need for more positive ambassadors in professional wrestling, but explained that a change in culture is more in how wrestlers and fans directly interact.
“Well, I think more is – I think, yes, partly it’s the need for more of those, but I think more than the positivity, it’s about opening your heart and your mind. There used to be more of a one direction, one-way mind as it pertained to the audience of a professional wrestling show. There was performers here, audience there, money goes this way, energy and performance goes that way. That’s the exchange. Now, it’s much more intricate. I, personally, I don’t even ever tell people that I have fans. I don’t call them fans. Sometimes I say supporters and well-wishers. Most of the time I say friends. Now we’re not all best friends and we’re not all close friends. But, we’re more than acquaintances because we share pain and heartache and excitement and anger. You know, everything that we feel when we’re at a wrestling show together, we feel collectively. We feel that together. So, sharing those emotions, again, being a part of the community, me opening my ears and listening not just to the other wrestlers and promoters, but listening to the audience and what they want and what they connect with. That, to me is just – that’s important. That’s how we make small, little, you know, incremental change that’s sustainable.”
Please credit Spencer Love/Love Wrestling with any transcriptions.
Deonna Purrazzo on the Knockouts Tag Team Titles and Kimber Lee
On January 16th, the IMPACT Knockouts Tag Team Championships will make their triumphant returns to TV following a seven-year absence. While she won’t be competing for the titles at that night’s Hard to Kill PPV, Deonna Purrazzo and her partner, Kimber Lee were participants in IMPACT’s recent tag team title tournament.
Purrazzo joined us recently to discuss the revitalized Knockout Tag Team Titles as well as her thoughts on working with Kimber Lee throughout her run in IMPACT.
Bringing back the tag titles was something that wrestling fans had clamoured for for the better part of a year. With so many natural partnerships on the roster, it was something that Purrazzo saw as both inevitable and as an incredible opportunity for the women in today’s wrestling scene, whether currently working for IMPACT or not.
“Yeah! I think women’s wrestling is so strong right now, and there’s so – there’s a plethora of women who just want an opportunity,” says the Virtuosa. “I think with the creation of the Women’s Tag Team Championships, and then Impact has so many Tag Team Championships right now, I think bringing those titles back would be an amazing opportunity for us. There’s so many of us that have alliances and have partnerships with other people that it makes sense. If there was ever a time to do it, and there was ever a time to grow a tag division, now would be the time.
There’s so many women that can be brought in to just aid to any roster right now. I think capitalizing on that would be super cool for Impact, especially, but for any company.
“
Throughout her time in IMPACT, Purrazzo has been paired with her curator, Kimber Lee. Of course, as evidenced by the recent Knockout’s Tag Title Tournament, Lee is far more than simply Purrazzo’s manager, assistant, or valet, but her tag team partner as well. It’s a paring that’s more than paid off for both women thus far.
“It’s – (in) Impact the women’s division is so great because it’s all a ton of girls that kind of were right before me, but I kind of came up with,” explains the Virtuosa. “They were the leaders of my generation, so to speak. So Kim was one of those girls, I had only wrestled once on the indies, and it was one of my favorite matches ever, but we only ever got to do it once. So, to kind of be in a place now that she’s kind of – we call her my curator.”
“Every Virtuosa needs a curator to be in a tag team with her, and to kind of be feeling out this process with people who are familiar feels incredible.”
Please credit Spencer Love/Love Wrestling with any transcriptions used.
On October 21, 2020, Deonna Purrazzo finally signed a long-term deal with IMPACT Wrestling, positioning her to be one of the faces of the brand’s expansion plans moving forward. It was a move that was widely praised throughout the professional wrestling industry; however, many were surprised that it had taken so long for the Virtuosa to sign with the promotion after making her IMPACT debut nearly five months earlier.
Purrazzo and I chatted recently to discuss her signing with IMPACT and the process behind committing to the promotion long-term.
While a contract may have taken longer than many fans may have expected, it was all by design, says Purrazzo.
“Well, I think that, for me, especially like the last – even before WWE and NXT, like, I was contracted to Ring of Honor – and then I left Ring of Honor and I went right to NXT, and there was no breathing room in between that,” she explains. “Now, I just think for me, it was I’ve signed two contracts. I wasn’t ready for what came with those things. I wasn’t necessarily happy with both of those contracts and the way my time had panned out. So, let’s take a step back and let’s kind of take a breather and see what happens and, you know, see, the way that creative sees me and the roles that I’m going to be put in and kind of feel this process out a little bit more now that I have some time.”
Of course, the current state of the world certainly didn’t help matters when it came to putting pen to paper.
“More than just personally, I mean, we’re still in the midst of a global pandemic, and I think that it’s not just a hesitation on my part. It’s also a hesitation on theirs,” Purrazzo comments. “Like, ‘where’s our company stand? Where do we see this person? Are we going to invest in this person in the long term?’ I don’t know why it’s maybe taken this long, but I think if I had to surmise why, it’s just like a mutual understanding of, like, ‘let’s see and wait,’ and then the world’s crazy. So let’s see and wait (for) what 2021 brings us, you know?”
“We’ve grown this like mutual respect for each other over the last four months and really developed a great relationship that I can only hope transpires for the next couple years.”
Please credit Spencer Love/Love Wrestling with any transcriptions used.
Spencer Love is joined by the reigning IMPACT Knockouts Champion, Deonna Purrazzo to discuss her move to IMPACT, working with Kimber Lee, female wrestlers who inspired her, what keeps her motivated, whether she’s a fan of the Knockouts name and so much more!
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While many rightfully regard IMPACT Wrestling’s women’s division as one of, if not the, strongest division in the world, there are still those who take umbrage with the division’s moniker of Knockouts. Despite the long-term history of the name and its importance to IMPACT’s branding, there are those who believe that the name should change to be more reflective of the current times.
In a recent interview on Love Wrestling, reigning Knockouts Champion Deonna Purrazzo gave her thoughts on the Knockouts name, the history behind it, and why she feels it’s here to stay.
Purrazzo was all too enthusiastic in giving her thoughts on the name and why it should stay.
“Yeah!” she responded when asked if she was a fan of the division’s moniker. “There’s been a ton of pushback, like, right when I started with Impact of the Knockouts name and I love it. I grew up knowing them as the Knockouts.
I never felt a negative connotation towards it as a fan. I just feel like a Knockout is beautiful, is sexy, is powerful, is strong – is a Knockout, literally.”
“I like it. I think it’s different,” Purrazzo continued. “There’s other women’s divisions and everyone else is a woman, and I feel like it gets grouped in with the Diva era, but I think that the connotations and just the way that they were – I don’t know what the word I’m looking for – but the way that they were portrayed is completely different, what a Diva was and what a Knockout was, and I think Impact, and even when it was TNA, developed a really strong women’s division by branding them as Knockouts and then allowing them to be strong, powerful, sexy, top athletes in their company. I grew up watching Divas and feeling like I wanted to change that perception.”
“I’m happy to be a Knockout,” closed the Virtuosa. “I’m happy to be the Knockouts Champion, I’m happy to continue to build that brand with me now.
“
Please credit Spencer Love/Love Wrestling with any transcriptions used.
Spencer Love is joined by the World’s Sweetest Man, Gentleman Jervis Cottonbelly to discuss both his career inside the squared circle and the wider conversation of mental health in pro wrestling. Don’t miss out as the two chat about Orange Cassidy, his positive outlook, struggles with mental health, Lil’ Wayne, Chuck Taylor, his puppy Lord Booplesnoot and more!
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Follow Jervis on:
Twitter: @GentlemanJervis
Twitch: @gentlemanjervis
Instagram: @gentlemanjervis
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For a time, it seemed all but inevitable that Gentleman Jervis Cottonbelly would be signing with IMPACT Wrestling. After a popular social media campaign brought him to the attention of IMPACT brass, Jervis wrestled his first match for the promotion at last year’s Unbreakable event. However, signing with the promotion wouldn’t come to pass.
Speaking with Spencer Love, Gentleman Jervis commented on his attempts to join IMPACT Wrestling, on whether he would join another major promotion, and some of his favourite IMPACT stars.
“Oh, I would be delighted to join them today,” Jervis commented to me when we spoke in mid-September. “You know, I’m a big fan of the Rascalz. I actually have been to their tree house once and I almost fell out. I actually, I just was with Taya Valkyrie last week. She is one of my favorite wrestlers and she’s a friend of mine. You know, I’ve got a lot of mutual contacts there. And believe it or not, I bugged Jimmy Jacobs this week. You know, I called him up and I asked for advice, and I just said, ‘hey, you know, here’s where I’m at. Talked to me,’ because he spent a lot of time in my earlier days helping me out and giving me advice.”
In late 2019, it looked as though Jervis had accomplished his goal. At the promotion’s Unbreakable event, Jervis made his IMPACT debut teaming with Ryan Taylor and Dick Meyer to take on Jordynne Grace, Petey Williams and Scott Steiner.
“I’ve probably sent at this point, probably eight or nine emails to Scott D’Amore at IMPACT and I did get booked in an Impact match at the end of August 2019. David Marquez actually helped set that up, because I’m a member of the United Wrestling Network and we did like a joint show. So I had a match there, and they even gave me my music and they put the video up for me, and I got a lot of positive feedback.
“
Despite earning positive reviews for the match, nothing came of Jervis’ first appearance inside an IMPACT Wrestling ring. However, the World’s Sweetest Man remains undeterred.
“So, I thought maybe, maybe that would lead you to something more with Impact. And I sent some emails and some videos after the fact, but I didn’t hear anything back.”So, my goal with that is I’m going to keep pushing, I’m going to keep asking and maybe I won’t be public about it, because I think that if you do that at first and it gets a positive reaction, and you get on their radar, and then they can take a real look at you that’s great. But, if they’ve already taken a look at you, and then you try to make it a public thing again, I think that seems a little desperate and at times I’ve seemed a little desperate because I’ve been desperate. For work, you know, I want to work, I want to wrestle everywhere that I can. I want to wrestle all over the world.
I want to show everybody that I’m not a joke. While I do tell jokes, and while I do make a joke of myself, sometimes, I actually have a lot of respect for professional wrestling, and I want to turn things around.”
Despite the seemingly natural fit between Jervis and IMPACT, however, Mr. Cottonbelly isn’t picky about where he would ply his trade if given the opportunity.
“I think I could do that IMPACT Wrestling. I know I could do that in NXT or RAW or Smackdown or AEW. In fact, I have been calling my shot for a minute now, that someday I’m going to get an opportunity at AEW, and maybe to be on Dark, or maybe to be on Dynamite.
But I’m going to get it, because I’m working hard towards it, and the only way to really, really follow your dreams and achieve them today is to ask for what you want. You have to identify it. You have to figure it out in your mind, visualize it, see it so clearly, and then speak it. Write it down, tell others, speak your dreams into existence.”
Please credit Spencer Love/Love Wrestling with any transcriptions.
As a well-known aficionado of rarely-seen and hard-to-find wrestling matches, TJ Wilson was as excited as anyone with last year’s discovery of the long-lost Bret Hart/Tom MaGee match that had encapsulated wrestling fans worldwide for decades. That fact was well-documented in the feature that WWE released on the match in 2019; however, Wilson shared some more memories of that match in our recent conversation, including how he had actually seen the match before.
“Oh, man, how cool was that!” he replied to me when the match was brought up. “So Harry [Smith] – people know I have a very good memory. People who know me know that I have a very good memory. Harry also has a great memory, too. I don’t know why. I don’t know why the two of us have pretty great memory. But he remembers watching that at Bret’s house before, and so he kind of remembered – he remembered the finish. And then, when I saw the match, like when they showed it to me when I did that piece on social media whatever, WWE.com [or] wherever they posted it. I kind of remember watching at Bret’s house, like [a] kind of fuzzy, foggy memory.”
As anapolon for cutting israel takes out digital it did to many, Wilson believes that the match certainly lived up to the hype. Of course, that’s due to the yeoman’s work put in by the Excellence of Execution.
“Man, it was very cool to watch your back and kind of see like the – what I thought was most cool was that like it lived up to the legend of like this pretty good match that if you later on – and I’m not trying to knock him – but if you watch other Tom McGee matches, they don’t look anything like that Tom McGee versus Bret match that we finally got to see.”
“It holds up to the legend of like, Bret definitely did his part that night.”
Of course, long-time WWE fans will remember that Wilson, known as Tyson Kidd throughout his in-ring career, was introduced to fans as ‘the number-one protege of Bret Hart’ in his first official television appearance, and was routinely – and rightfully! – referred to as the last graduate of the Hart Dungeon. It was something I had to ask him about when we recently chatted.
“I’ve watched so many – I mean, I’ve watched a lot of his matches in real-time, and I’ve gone back and watched so many of Bret’s matches, especially the last – like I said, my travels much easier, so with this pandemic, I watched so many of his matches back. It just like, it’s unbelievable, man, his matches,” started Wilson.
“I think he’s maybe even pretty underrated, which might be kind of a weird statement to make, but I think Brett might be fairly underrated.”
After I agreed, Wilson continued.
“Oh, man, and like the little things. Even like – you know, his promos obviously got better, but even his promos like still in 92, like at least they feel real. They felt real. And, I mean, 97, I don’t know what happened.
All of a sudden, Bret, like he is really untouchable. He looked phenomenal, his work was just as great as ever, and his promos were insane.”
In the hyperbolic world of wrestling, relationships are often exaggerated or, sometimes, flat-out made up. However, that’s not the case when it comes to his dynamic with the Excellence of Execution, says Wilson. When it comes to the relationship between the two men, the former Tyson Kidd considers the Hitman a mentor both personally and professionally.
“[Bret’s] a huge, huge influence,” he confirmed. “Because, you know, growing up, and just you know, the way it worked out like at that time frame, Bret’s the guy. So when he’s – like, my best friend’s uncle is the world champion. It’s a cool thing. So, I watched obviously a lot of – I’m gonna probably [be] super biased, but I watch a lot of Davey [Boy Smith] and Owen [Hart] and [Brian] Pillman and other guys like Dynamite [Kid] and guys that like had maybe had starts in Calgary or a little bit of time in Calgary, like a Liger and all these guys later on. But at that time, obviously, I’m watching the family that are in WWF at that time, but I’m really watching – like, Bret’s the, at the time where I’m really – I started coming around in like, 1990. So like, ’92, Bret’s world champion. So, it just was, I guess, a natural progression that I would maybe kind of navigate towards what he was doing.
“
In 1996, Wilson wrestled his first match for the WWF at the Calgary Saddledome. It was there that Bret first saw the then-16-year-old in the ring, and according to Wilson, Hart took an immediate interest in his career.
“There was a while in like, ’96 [that] Teddy and I were going to Bret’s house like every day after school to train in this ring,” Wilson said on training with Hart. “And sometimes he’d be in there, and sometimes he wouldn’t. This is like, right before he came back to wrestle Steve Austin. And he would be there and he would – he took a real interest in us. He took a real interest in us when he saw us wrestle at the Saddledome at that – I don’t know if he’s resigned yet at that time. It’s October 5th, 1996. I don’t know if he’s resigned yet at that time, or if he’s – he ends up coming back to RAW that month. And then that’s when he sets up the Steve Austin match. But, he comes to the show. I remember, like, he loved watching us wrestle. I think it just was maybe – now that I’m 40 and I have my nephews and I brought them to my ring a month ago, I get it.
I saw them like wrestling around [and] you kind of get, like, that youth and that almost invigoration.”
“I don’t know if that was a part of it or if Bret just – anyway, he’s always taken a liking, and he’s always been somebody that I’ve been able to talk about wrestling anytime,” Wilson concluded. “As great as the storyteller as he is in the ring, he might even be a better storyteller outside of the ring. So like to sit and listen to Bret’s stories are so fun.”
Please credit Spencer Love/Love Wrestling with any transcriptions used.

