However, time change, and as they amendment, so do americans’s tastes. As such, although there’s nevertheless room even nowadays in most wrestling promotions for the occasional goofball personality, people’s attitudes because the Attitude Era have began to gravitate more towards those wrestlers with personas that are more realistic and reflective of bound attitudes and beliefs and away from the more overblown archetypes and stereotypes of years past. Such is part of the reason why David B. McLane’s Women of Wrestling failed to carry the interest of many a wrestling fan back in 2000 01, as I’ve said on June 12, 2012, in this blog. Sure, the characters were, as I’d said then, more like ladies’ motion comic book heroines and villainesses than the burlesque comedy characters that GLOW had had, besides, with many of these characters receiving little to no storylines involving them and as such little to no personality development over the course of WOW’s initial run e. g.