Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship, live stream, channel, time, how to watch BKFC 36 New Orleans

BKFC 36 is set to make history this Friday in New Orleans, featuring the biggest heavyweight bout in bare-knuckle fighting history.

BKFC 36 is set to make history this Friday in New Orleans, featuring the biggest heavyweight bout in bare-knuckle fighting history. The reigning BKFC World Heavyweight Champion Arnold “Bomaye” Adams will defend his title against the undefeated Alan “The Talent” Belcher. Adams boasts an impressive record of seven wins in eight bouts, making him one of the most dominant heavyweights in BKFC history.

Belcher, on the other hand, has a perfect record of 3-0 with three KOs in BKFC, as well as a 5-0 record with five KOs as a professional boxer. With both fighters deserving of the spotlight, this highly anticipated bout is sure to be a historic one.

This will be a great night of Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship, tune in and watch history be made, here is everything you need to know.

BKFC 36 New Orleans

Alan Belcher vs. Arnold Adams

  • When: Friday, February 24
  • Time: 8:00 p.m. ET
  • TV: FITE+
  • Live Stream: FITE+ (watch now)

BKFC 36 Main card

  • Arnold Adams vs. Alan Belcher – Adams’ BKFC heavyweight title
  • Bobby Taylor vs. Wales James Lilley
  • Kaleb Harris vs. Brad Kelly
  • Joseph Creer vs. Duke Sensley
  • Dennis LaBruzza vs. Stephon Reese
  • Dillion Winemiller vs. Tony Jenkins
  • Brandon Shavers vs. Bryce Henry
  • Andrew Angelcor vs. David Bosnick
  • Cody Schieve vs. Tyler Sammis

Preliminary card

  • Blake LaCaze vs. Joseph Brett Williams
  • Cody Mitchell vs. Brandon Meneses
  • Michael Manno vs. Frankie Shughart

How to watch BKFC on FITE+

FITE+ subscribers have access to a selection of premium live events from the worlds of MMA, boxing, pro wrestling, and more. The subscription also offers unlimited on-demand access to the entire FITE+ library with over 4000 hours from more than 100 organizations from around the world.

You can Subscribe to FITE+ now for $4.99/month or $49.99/year before prices rise later this week to $7.99/month and $69.99/year.

We recommend interesting sports viewing/streaming and betting opportunities. If you sign up for a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.  Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

How to watch BKFC 36 on FITE+, live stream, channel, time, Bare Knuckle Fighting Championship Main Card

The reigning BKFC World Heavyweight Champion Arnold “Bomaye” Adams will defend his title against the undefeated Alan “The Talent” Belcher.

BKFC 36 is set to take place in New Orleans this Friday night, and it promises to make history with the biggest heavyweight bout in bare-knuckle fighting history.

The reigning BKFC World Heavyweight Champion Arnold “Bomaye” Adams will defend his title against the undefeated Alan “The Talent” Belcher. This highly anticipated bout is one that fight fans around the world have been eagerly waiting for.

How to watch BKFC on FITE+

FITE+ subscribers have access to a selection of premium live events from the worlds of MMA, boxing, pro wrestling, and more. The subscription also offers unlimited on-demand access to the entire FITE+ library with over 4000 hours from more than 100 organizations from around the world.

You can Subscribe to FITE+  for $7.99/month and $69.99/year.

BKFC 36 Main card

Date: Friday, February 24

Time: Starts at 8:00 p.m. ET on FITE+

  • Arnold Adams vs. Alan Belcher – Adams’ BKFC heavyweight title
  • Bobby Taylor vs. Wales James Lilley
  • Kaleb Harris vs. Brad Kelly
  • Joseph Creer vs. Duke Sensley
  • Dennis LaBruzza vs. Stephon Reese
  • Dillion Winemiller vs. Tony Jenkins
  • Brandon Shavers vs. Bryce Henry
  • Andrew Angelcor vs. David Bosnick
  • Cody Schieve vs. Tyler Sammis

We recommend interesting sports viewing/streaming and betting opportunities. If you sign up for a service by clicking one of the links, we may earn a referral fee.  Newsrooms are independent of this relationship and there is no influence on news coverage.

Jake Paul and Tommy Fury agreed to a winner-take-all bet on their fight during heated press conference

Are they serious?

Jake Paul has become a master of promotion, using similar tactics as people like Conor McGregor before him to draw attention to fights that don’t mean nearly as much to the public at large.

He uses spectacle as a means of interest, and it works. Millions of dollars are typically on the line when the YouTube star turned prize fighter steps in a ring, which he’s done six times and won on each occasion.

Turn No. 7 is Sunday against Tommy Fury, which should have generated enough attention on its own as Paul’s first fight against an actual professional boxer. But the showman couldn’t help himself at Thursday’s press conference, upping the ante with an all-or-nothing bet.

“If you win, I’ll pay you double what I’m paying you already. But if I win, I take everything that I’m paying you,” Paul said, insinuating he’s the only draw for this fight and the only reason it’s generating money.

“You’ve got a deal. All or nothing,” someone responded from Fury’s corner.

Who knows if either side will actually honor this bet when it comes down to it, but Paul is no stranger to betting as the co-founder of micro-betting company, Betr. BetMGM actually has him favored to come out on top at -125, with the underdog Fury at +120 and odds on a draw at +1200.

Fury, the half-brother of world heavyweight champion Tyson Fury who gained fame on U.K. reality show Love Island, is 8-0 (4 KO) in his young career, but hasn’t fought top competition.

According to SportsZion, Paul will make a guaranteed purse of $3.2 million for the fight and Fury will make $2 million. Though both will pocket more with pay-per-view shares and sponsorship deals included.

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Paul Rudd found out AEW wrestler Orange Cassidy is just his Wet Hot American Summer character

Rudd’s character Andy in Wet Hot American Summer is a legend. And one scene inspired an AEW champion’s whole persona.

All Elite Wrestling, for all its flaws, gets a lot right about pro wrestling. One of those tenets is that the squared circle isn’t solely the property of uber-serious meatheads. There’s room for nuance, characters and comedy within the framework of choreographed fighting.

That’s the nurturing soil from which Orange Cassidy has blossomed into the star. The longtime independent wrestling scene staple — he was Fire Ant in Chikara’s long-running stable The Colony — has emerged as one of AEW’s brightest talents behind a low-effort, too-cool-to-care persona. Cassidy wears denim on denim and aviator sunglasses and generally seems above everything going on around him.

Exactly like Paul Rudd’s character Andy in the seminal American film classic Wet Hot American Summer. And now, thanks to Esquire’s William Mullally, Rudd is finally aware of the pro wrestler modeled after one iconic scene from a cult movie that has persisted in the hearts and souls of a certain brand of nerd for two decades.

“That’s amazing,” Rudd said in the most Paul Rudd way possible after being shown a picture of Cassidy. “How did I not know this? Thank you for telling me.”

“You need to know this,” replied Mullally.

“I do!”

Here’s the scene in question.

Cassidy’s tribute goes beyond the jean jacket and sunglasses. His entrance music on the independent scene was Jefferson Starship’s Jane — the same song that soundtracks the opening sequence and titles of director David Wain’s opus. After flirting with other themes in AEW, namely The Pixies’ Where is My Mind?, AEW president Tony Khan was able to license Jane for weekly broadcasts and gave Cassidy his sprawling rock anthem back.

The current All-Atlantic champion is more than just a gimmick, however. Cassidy’s character wouldn’t work if he wasn’t able to go in the ring. When he flips the switch from “Andy” to “actually caring” you get the full array of dynamic moves and innovative offense you’d expected from a wrestler with nearly two decades of experience.

In short, Orange Cassidy is awesome. So is Paul Rudd. And now that the latter knows about the former, the possibility of double Andys in the wrestling ring is finally in play. Especially when the owner of the company comes from “buy the Jacksonville Jaguars” type money.

Make it happen, Tony Khan.