Lead Host · The Tristen Law Show

Tristen Law

Tristen Law Bio Pic

"Wrestling is better when it’s shared — and everyone deserves a seat at the table."

Tristen Law is a semi-retired professional wrestler and broadcast professional who brings an insider’s perspective and a fan’s passion to The Tristen Law Show, a live and interactive pro wrestling program on YouTube. What began as an audio-only interview podcast in 2020 evolved into a fully live, community-driven show where wrestling storylines are broken down, debated, and experienced together — in real time.

With over a decade inside the ring from 2009 to 2022, Tristen approaches wrestling as both a performer and a storyteller. Trained by WWE Hall of Famers Bubba Ray and D-Von Dudley, he has wrestled legends such as Jimmy Snuka, Tito Santana, Tommy Dreamer, Rikishi, and Jim Neidhart, as well as today’s stars including Damian Priest and QT Marshall. He has competed across the card — from opening matches to main events — and held championship gold along the way. That firsthand experience gives him a unique lens that goes beyond surface-level fandom.

But The Tristen Law Show isn’t about talking at fans — it’s about talking with them. The live format allows viewers to actively participate, share their perspectives, and become part of the conversation. Tristen believes wrestling is best discussed when everyone in the room feels heard, respected, and valued. The goal is simple: create a space where fans feel like they belong, where opinions matter, and where the love of wrestling brings people together.

Known for a hosting style that’s New York, real, and professional, Tristen blends his wrestling background with formal broadcast training to create thoughtful, direction-driven conversations — not hot takes for the sake of noise. His long-term vision is to build a wrestling ecosystem where fans show up daily, connect with one another, and eventually take that community beyond the screen at live events and major wrestling weekends.

The Tristen Law Show exists because wrestling is better when it’s shared — and everyone deserves a seat at the table.