Luchador Corner
THE TEMPLE
Luchador Name:
Ram Jam
Luchador Nicknames:
The Groove-ador
The Psychedelic Ram
Brown Sugar
The Horned Hendrix of Havoc
Height:
6’1”
Weight:
245 lbs
Hometown:
Harlem, New York City (by way of the underground clubs of London’s Soho)
Gimmick / Persona:
A larger-than-life, mask-wearing soul shaman who channels the raw energy of 1960s blues, rock, and funk straight into the ring. Ram Jam wrestles like a live jam session – improvisational, explosive, and impossible to contain. Part luchador, part rock-god preacher, he believes the ring is a stage and every match is a performance meant to move people – spiritually and physically.
Catchphrase:
“Jam’s in session, baby”
Moveset & Wrestling Style:
High-impact power mixed with rhythmic, flowing sequences. Ram Jam blends classic lucha agility with soul-era showmanship and bruising strikes. Lots of spins, short bursts of speed, sudden stops, and heavy finishers – like a guitar solo that builds slow and ends loud.
Finishing Move:
Purple Haze – A spinning pop-up powerbomb transitioned into a sit-out slam
Signature Moves:
Ram Jam Slam – Running spinebuster with extra torque
Psychedelic Headbutt – Short-range horn-first headbutt
Electric Avenue – Sudden, lightning-fast clothesline
Funk Lock – Modified cobra clutch with body control
Jimi Jammin’ – Shake, rattle, and roll
Taunts / Gestures:
• Slow head nod to an imaginary beat
• Spreading his arms wide like a guitarist mid-solo
• Hypnotic hip roll into a few swaggering dance steps
• Raising one horned fist to the sky before a big move
Entrance Song Title:
Bad Medicine Baby
Ring Entrance:
The lights dim to deep purple and red hues as feedback hums through the arena. A slow blues riff kicks in as Ram Jam steps through the smoke, cape shimmering, head nodding to the rhythm. He pauses halfway down the ramp, spreads his arms, and lets the crowd soak him in before rolling into the ring and climbing the turnbuckles – horns raised high.
Backstory:
Born in the cultural furnace of Harlem, Ram Jam grew up immersed in gospel, blues, and street poetry, learning early that rhythm could move people in ways words never could. Drawn by that pulse, he followed the 60s underground scene to London, where soul, rock, and rebellion reshaped his sense of identity. There he embraced the idea that self-expression is power and myth is a form of armour. At his core, Ram Jam is a liberator – driven to disrupt the ordinary, awaken suppressed spirit, and remind people to live loudly, feel deeply, and reclaim the rhythm the world tries to silence.
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1 Guest(s)