What started as a disagreement over wrestling content has now spiraled into one of the pettiest personal feuds in recent memory—and it just got way more vicious.
Amanda Huber and Sarah Stock have been going back and forth over a segment involving Darby Allin. But the drama hit a new low after Amanda torched Stock’s past TNA content and accused her of hypocrisy for calling AEW content inappropriate for kids.
In response, Amanda fired off a tweet criticizing Stock’s past matches where she used a belt to choke opponents—while pointing out how Stock once brushed it off by saying “tits look great.” Huber went in, writing:
“Want to know what my kids (because I have kids) were doing at midnight last night? Sleeping. Want to know why? Because they’re kids. My wrestling loving kids. Want to know what they weren’t watching? A match between 2 performers who are known for taking things to an extreme.
Want to know why? Because it’s my responsibility as a parent to know what’s they’re consuming. It’s cool tho, I’ll let them watch some old TNA stuff and they can learn to choke each other out with a belt since that’s cool because checks notes “tits look great””*
That triggered a scorched-earth reply from Stock, who didn’t just double down on her original cleavage comment—she went after Amanda directly.
“Thank you! I agree, they are phenomenal. Natural, too! 😃 Sorry about the south-bound journey yours have taken. 🙏🏻 💔 Thank you also for repeating exactly what I said in different words.”
The “south-bound journey” jab quickly lit up social media. What started as a debate over what kids should or shouldn’t watch in wrestling has now turned into a public teardown involving private texts, grief, parental choices, and now, body-shaming.
It’s clear this is no longer just about wrestling philosophy—this is personal. And judging by the tone of both women’s posts, this feud isn’t cooling off anytime soon.
Do you think Sarah Stock crossed a line by going after Amanda Huber’s body? Or is it fair game once private messages and personal choices go public? Drop your thoughts in the comments and tell us where you stand.