80474506_jpg_11650_crop_650x440_crop_650x440_crop_340x234Maria, got very mad on Afterbuzz tv

What many fans do not realize is that most of the time, these girls are working under a management team that don’t seem to want them to succeed. 
To make matters worse, due to their status as outsiders coming into a close-knit business, they also face a less-than-warm working environment in which they are viewed with suspicion and contempt. They also face intense jealously and politics for “not paying their dues” and gaining spots on the roster with relative ease.
 And not just from their male co-workers—there’s also apparently a great deal of tension with the female wrestlers on the roster, something Kristal Marshallcomplained about to Steve Gerweck in a recent interview. 
 Talking about her transition from Barker’s Beauty on The Price is Right to WWE Diva when she signed with WWE in 2005, she spoke about the hostility she faced as a recently signed model trying to train Deep South Wrestling, a WWE developmental territory at the time.  Marshall was adamant that she had been eager to be in WWE and wanted to learn to wrestle, but encountered problems with several wrestlers, the other women in particular, who resented that she came from Hollywood and did not have indie experience:

 I don’t think they wanted to me to get good. I don’t think they wanted me to learn. I don’t think they wanted anyone else to see that I wanted to learn. I think that, unfortunately, there was still a lot of animosity between the models that were coming in and the girls that were wrestlers.