



VITAL INFORMATION
Billed Name: Pesty, sometimes stylized ‘PE$TY’
Other Aliases: Bodie Clemmens
Height: 5'9"
Weight: ~ 110 lbs.
Billed Hometown: Los Angeles, California
Date of Birth: 16, August, 1998
Professional Debut Date: 2025
Current Record: 11 Wins, 2 Loses and 2 NC
Disposition: Chaotic Babyface
Gimmick: A chaotic babyface who wins by irritation and endurance. She isn’t the strongest or the flashiest, but once she’s in the ring she becomes an inescapable presence that slowly wears opponents down until they break.
BIOGRAPHY
Pesty, given name Bodie Clemmens, comes from a long wrestling pedigree. The Clemmens name does not carry the weight it once did, but that only sharpened her hunger to be the one who drags it back into relevance. Part of it is that she does not have much else pulling her forward. The other part is simpler. She has it. The ability. The mindset. Now she just has to step into the wild and see if it holds. Fingers crossed she does not end up the Teddy Hart of the Clemmens family. Yikes.
PRESENTATION
Visual Base: Lil Debbie
Look: Tall-ish, wiry, cute, big ass; weird-hot in a way people usually internalize
Gear: shiny metallic shorty shorts and a matching crop top (silver, oil-slick black, or neon chrome)
Footwear: shiny metallic Air Jordans, sometimes black Chuck Taylors
Accessories: Minimal — maybe a chain, maybe finger tape
Vibe: Carefree to the point of negligence. Disarmingly unserious. Casually invasive. Carries herself like she doesn’t realize she’s in your way - because she doesn’t think she is. Looks like she wandered into the arena by accident - She didn’t. Also looks lost in general - but isn’t.
Theme Song: "AHHH MEN” by Doja Cat
ENTRANCE
♫ "AHHH MEN" by DOJA CAT PLAYS ♫
That Knight Rider beat pounds for a few moments before she finally steps through the curtain. No pose. No acknowledgment. She just appears. Her walk is slow and deliberate, shoulders loose, arms hanging naturally at her sides. She isn’t playing to the crowd — she’s walking through it with her eyes, scanning faces like she’s counting something only she understands.Halfway down the ramp, she stops. Doja singing cuts through the speakers. She tilts her head slightly, lips curling into a small, crooked smile — not playful, not friendly. She looks straight into the hard camera and holds the stare for a beat too long.Then she keeps walking.At ringside, she doesn’t rush in. She circles the ring once, fingers brushing the apron, dragging just enough to make the sound carry. She slides in under the bottom rope instead of stepping through, rising slowly to her feet.Inside the ring, she rolls her shoulders, cracks her neck once, and finally looks at her opponent. Tall. Loose. Invasive. By the time the bell rings, the tension is already in the air — and her opponent is annoyed, unsettled, and off-balance. Exactly where she wants them.
TECHNIQUE
Wrestling Style: Martial Artist / Evasive striker / pressure-based attrition fighter / rhythm disruptorFinisher 1: The Moneymaker (Running jumping knee to the jaw, immediately chained into a cutter)Finisher 2: The Shoot to Thrill (540° gyro crescent kick)
Set-up: Anything that stuns the opponent for a moment & oftentimes this finisher is a counter.Strengths:
Speed
Kicks
Strikes
Ring awarenessWeaknesses:
Size
Risk taking doesn't always pay off
Plays to the crowd sometimes too much
MOVESET
SIGNATURE
Springboard Moonsault
Tope Atomico
Triangle Drop Kick
High Impact Leg Lariat from Corner
Splash onto opponent in corner
Spinning Heel Kick
Spinning back fist
Spinning Back Kick
180° spun flare transitioned into a leg drop
Corkscrew Plancha
FRONT
Martial Arts Kicks
Martial Arts Strikes
Dirty Boxing
Knee Lift
Straight Soccer Kick
Axe Kick
Roundhouse
Standing Drop Kick
DDT (If weight applies)
Knife edge chop
RUNNING
Enzuigiri
Flying Huracanrana
Spinning knee strike
Leg Lariat
Shining Wizard
Crossbody
Knee lift
Side thrust kick
Reverse bulldog
Reverse elbow strike
AERIAL
Diving crossbody
Missile Drop Kick
Side kick off top rope
Suicide Dive
Shooting Star Press
Spinning Leg Drop
Moonsault
Shining Wizard
Elbow Drop
Two foot stomp
BACK
Back snapper
Drop Kick to back
Float over DDT (If weight applies)
Reverse neckbreaker
GROUND
Leg Grapevine
Armbar
Rear Naked Choke
Chickenwing
Guillotine Choke
Single Leg Boston Crab
Darce Choke
Figure Four Leg Lock
Standing Leg Drop
Standing Moonsault


Tijuana, Mexico — If there’s one thing that has become abundantly clear across the wrestling landscape over the last few weeks, it’s that Pesty is not interested in patience. She wants championships, she wants recognition, and perhaps most importantly — she wants the money that comes with both.Across three promotions, the self-styled disruptor has been making noise in every direction.At WWC, Pesty has publicly declared her campaign for a shot at the Iron Road Championship, though the path forward appears complicated. Standing squarely in her way is Sierra Renegade, a competitor Pesty has begun to frame as a personal roadblock. The two have already exchanged heavy shots in recent weeks, with Pesty openly pushing for a rematch somewhere down the line. According to sources close to the situation, Pesty believes the issue between them is “unfinished business,” and she has no intention of stepping aside quietly.Meanwhile, at 1WM, the situation has grown even more volatile.Following her victory over Gina Hewitt, Pesty found herself swarmed by Hewitt’s entourage of so-called droogs. While speculation briefly swirled about a possible alliance between Pesty and the ominous faction Doomsday, insiders say the relationship — if it exists at all — remains murky at best. What is clear is that Pesty has since aligned herself with a group of women determined to challenge Hewitt’s growing power base.Adding further fuel to the fire, Pesty has begun openly lobbying for inclusion in the upcoming Bedlam Championship match. Her frustration stems from the fact that Donovan So-and-so, a wrestler she has already defeated, currently holds a title opportunity while she does not.“She’s taking it personally,” one locker room source said. “In Pesty’s mind, that math doesn’t add up.”Over at TPW, Pesty’s ambitions are no less grand.She currently finds herself in contention for the Caribbean Cup, a tournament she has privately described as “too important to slip through my fingers.” Her most recent match saw her dismantle the controversial “stolen-valor” persona The Defector, a performance that drew loud reactions from the crowd. Next up is a confrontation with the polarizing competitor known simply as Karen, a match many expect to be short and violent.Behind the scenes, Pesty has reportedly made it clear that tournament success is only the beginning — she wants a championship opportunity at TPW as well.Simply put, Pesty wants everything.“I’m not here to participate,” she said recently. “I’m here to collect.”But even as her profile rises across multiple promotions, the most chaotic chapter of Pesty’s career continues to unfold under her own banner.Pesty’s Vanity Project (PVP) — her ambitious independent tournament — returns tomorrow night in Tijuana for Round Two, and insiders say the production has been a logistical nightmare.The event has drawn strong fan response, but financially the operation is bleeding money. Pesty herself has reportedly been scrambling to finalize production details as the show approaches, while simultaneously attempting to manage a locker room full of massive egos.Complicating matters further is the lingering mystery surrounding the masked assailant who attacked Brian Burnside during Round One — an incident that continues to fuel speculation among fans and competitors alike.Whether the attacker will surface again remains unknown.And overshadowing everything is a somber note.Pesty has confirmed that Round Two will include a memorial for Karl Havok, the fan who tragically died during the first PVP event after choking on a Boon Dog in the crowd. While the incident cast a strange shadow over the debut show, Pesty has reportedly insisted that Havok be remembered as part of the tournament’s story.“People came to have a moment,” one staff member said. “Karl had his. Pesty wants to honor that.”For now, Pesty remains a woman moving in ten directions at once — chasing titles, running a promotion, navigating rivalries, and trying to keep the entire enterprise from collapsing under its own weight.But if you ask her, the chaos is the point.After all, Pesty has never hidden the real motivation driving her across promotions and continents alike.She needs money.
Pesty Leader’s second appearance in WWC told a very different story than her debut. At Technical Difficulties in Philadelphia, she delivered a composed and decisive victory over Oliver Caldwell, controlling the match from the opening exchange and refusing to be pulled into the frustration and disruption that often define Caldwell’s offense. Rather than matching his protests or slowing tactics, Pesty kept the action grounded in clean execution, sharp positioning and steady pressure, quietly taking command of the pace and never allowing the contest to drift into chaos.The turning point came when Caldwell finally managed to draw her into a technical exchange, a space he expected to use to stall and reset. Instead, Pesty met him head on. She anticipated transitions, closed off escape routes and repeatedly forced Caldwell to react instead of dictate. Each attempt to regain momentum was shut down with disciplined counters and immediate follow through, turning what should have been Caldwell’s comfort zone into a liability. The finish came clean and without controversy, sealing a win built on control rather than flash.More than a rebound, this performance framed a clear evolution. Where her loss to Sierra Renegade exposed a tendency to stay committed to motion instead of timing, her win in Philadelphia showed patience, awareness and an ability to solve problems in real time. Against a disruptive and politically complicated opponent, Pesty delivered exactly the kind of match WWC leadership has publicly stated it values most. If momentum matters in the race toward future title opportunities, this was not simply a step forward. It was a statement that she is learning fast and closing the gap just as quickly.
Late this night it was revealed that Pesty will be making her debut with One Wrestle Movement at Glory 54, "Love Hurts VI" she's looking forward to making a splash at 1WM!
Pesty Leader’s WWC debut against Sierra Renegade did not deliver a win, but it did deliver a clear first impression. Pesty brought pace, toughness, and a willingness to keep the fight uncomfortable, repeatedly disrupting Renegade’s attempts to control the tempo. From the opening bell, it was obvious she belonged in the ring and was not there to survive quietly.Where the match turned was not power or grit, but timing. As the bout wore on, Renegade made the smarter adjustment, shifting from frustration to calculation. One mistimed charge from Pesty was enough. Renegade capitalized with positioning and leverage, securing a clean and efficient victory without shortcuts.The loss will sting, but it also frames Pesty’s path forward. There were no glaring weaknesses and no signs she was out of her depth. What this match showed is that at WWC’s level, effort must be paired with patience. That lesson is teachable, and if learned quickly, it may be the difference next time.


WRESTLING WITHOUT CONSENSUS: FAULT LINESI had lost to Sierra Renegade and the reasons were clear. She clocked my game plan and eventually used it against me. I went to the well one too many times and paid for it. She beat me straight up and it didn’t feel good. When I looked at him, my uncle, he took a beat and shook his head before saying, “Chin up. That’s something we’ll figure out later.”Me? I wasn’t worried about ‘chin up’ or ‘later’ because I was already halfway out the back door thinking about doing a little drinking and finding a place to hang my head. I was still optimistic, but I wasn’t, like, bound and determined to be a big fat cheerleader on the sidelines while deep down I knew I was a loser that night.I couldn’t sleep. It was miserable.Around four in the morning he called me.“Look,” he said. “Renegade saw the pattern and found the smallest window to exploit it. The turnbuckle bump was not a mistake. It was the consequence of being committed to motion instead of being committed to the moment. It’s like when the driver doesn’t hold the line, locks up the brakes, and ends up in the wall.”He liked sports metaphors even though he was explaining a sport to me. Go figure.Anyway, I was squeezed between a femme guy and a masculine muscular woman that night. I was a bit drunk, but plenty sober enough for consent, and there, I listened to my uncle tell me what I’d done wrong and how I could fix it while I shushed them both.So it was pretty clear. I had things to correct when it came to Wrestling Without Consensus.Put plainly: look before you leap.
SOUTH WRESTLE: HEATWAVEWhat my Uncle couldn’t tell me on the phone that night was: What the hell happened to South Wrestle?Losing was already tough enough let alone being quietly ignored by a whole-assed promotion.The whole idea, the whole reason I went pro, was to take part in that promotion. Specifically South Wrestle. Then suddenly they were ghosting me like I ate Caesar salad with my mouth open on a first date.But it wasn’t the end of the world. I think I’ve made a good friend in Boon Williams. Whether or not we’re actually going to hang out after our match is still on the bubble, which is aggravating, because apparently I might have to come back and recon this whole section. Lame.I don’t want to hang out with him before we face each other because it could ruin my mystique. But that thought is deteriorating by the minute because for every picture of Boon in a banana hammock there’s one of my ass floating around X.Birds of a feather?But as for South Wrestle?Ugh.
ONE WRESTLE MOVEMENT: LOVE HURTS VIAnd there were other things.I’d been set on a collision course with this Prickly Pare babe and this dude named Donovan over at One Wrestle Movement. Unlike the other two promotions, this one was locked down and long running.I sat at home and watched One Wrestle Movement when I was still in high school. I also watched it long after I became an adult and felt disgusting because I ate a whole bag of Doritos and had no plan for how to burn it all off.It went to my ass.Anyway, both of these kids are killers and both of them look like they could use a bath. But so could I, so who am I to judge?Thinking about the two of them takes me back to the night after I lost to Sierra Renegade and the wild night I had as a result. Maybe, just maybe, no matter how the match ends, Pare and Don and I could grab a drink afterward and see if anything human comes out of it.But I seriously doubt it–Don seems a bit too edgy to hang out with us, but I could be wrong. Pare, on the other hand, seems like she’s alright.
WRESTLING WITHOUT CONSENSUS: TECHNICAL DIFFICULTIESBut none of that previous shit matters right now. Do you know why? Because I won!I won. I won. I won.It was terrifying going out there a second time. But once I found the groove and remembered what my uncle told me, something finally clicked. When Oliver Caldwell caught me in that technical trap, I didn’t panic. I controlled the transitions. I controlled the tempo. This wasn’t a straight-at-them kind of match.The match wasn’t about dominance; it was about discipline.And wham.Holy shit.Did that really just happen?And now I have to ask the quiet question out loud - with the majority of the promotion sitting at .500 does that mean my name might actually be in the conversation for a shot at the Flashpoint Title? Fuck, I barely want to even contemplate it for fear of jinxing the whole thing.Seriously though, did you hear that crowd?
End.