"Lucha Libre" - Mexican wrestling - is the second most popular sport in Mexico after football and is now becoming massive in the UK.
Lucha Libre ("free wrestling" in Spanish) is characterised by colourful costumes and mysterious fighters famous for their masks.
In the UK, Lucha Britannia is a mix of Mexican wrestling and US, British and Japanese martial disciplines.
Housed underneath the railway arches in a grotty end of Bethnal Green, Lucha Britannia trains would-be wrestlers and hosts events that attract hundreds each night.
It's amazing how up close to the action you can get. You can literally rest yourself against the ring.
The compère is just as important as the wrestlers in keeping the magic of the characters alive and in getting the audience excited about the storylines.
It's not just about throwing each other round, the "heroes" and "villains" stay in character throughout the whole performance and even on social media.
Effectively, they're stunt men and women who spend hours each week to doing a combination of cardio, strength, weights, wrestling and martial arts.
They interact a lot with the audience. But sometimes there are inadvertent injuries. We saw a man get his tooth knocked out!
The biggest pay off is seeing the ultimate "luchador" defend his title. In this case, it's El Mercurio.
... which is why I have signed up to train as a Mexican wrestler myself. I now wrestle 2-3 times a week.
The community is pretty incredible and is made up from all walks of life.
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I first started in their beginners training class but I have now moved to intermediate training. Now I can do this. This is an "atomic drop."
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I've learned a host range of moves that will enable me to put together a sequence and instinctively know how to wrestle without necessarily agreeing on a chain of events before hand. This is the "wheelbarrow."
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