Dominating Aiden

Dominating Aiden




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Dominating Aiden


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Submission! Aaron Pico dominates Aiden Lee before earning anaconda choke win at Bellator 260 | Highlights














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Aaron Pico picked up his fourth straight win earlier tonight (Fri., June 11, 2021) at Bellator 260, and he did it in dominant and impressive fashion. Indeed, for two rounds, Pico absolutely dominated Aiden Lee, taking him down at will and putting on a wrestling clinic for everyone to see.
And it was a beautiful thing to watch.
When Pico wasn’t taking Lee down (a total of nine times), he was clipping him with shots or trying to submit him. In fact, Pico tried to sink in an anaconda choke on several occasions, but Lee defended well. After 11 minutes of action, though, Pico once again took Lee down and once again tried the anaconda choke. And this time he got it, forcing Lee to tap, putting an end to the punishment.
@AaronPicoUSA straight in with the takedown! This one's going to be wild... #Bellator260 pic.twitter.com/Hk1JwZSFrq
It was Pico’s best performance to date, dominating the fight in all areas to possibly earn a couple of spots on the official Bellator rankings.
For complete Bellator 260 : “Lima vs Amosov” play-by-play updates and results click here.

A former newspaper veteran, Keith Farner is a news manager for Saturday Down South.
More stories to check out before you go
Will Anderson Jr. is the next challenge for the Georgia offensive line that was targeted last week for its matchup against the vaunted Michigan pass rush. It’s the latest test for a unit that is tied for second in the country in sacks allowed this season (11), and combined with Stetson Bennett’s mobility can prove to be a formidable matchup for Anderson and Co.
Anderson, the star Alabama linebacker, boasts 17.5 sacks this season, which leads the country. But there is rising optimism for the Georgia offensive line, and specifically offensive tackle Jamaree Salyer after he neutralized Michigan’s Aidan Hutchinson to the point that he only had 4 tackles and zero sacks in the Orange Bowl. David Ojabo didn’t have any tackles. Hutchinson led the B1G with 14 sacks, and Ojabo was 2nd with 11. Georgia shut them out.
Salyer is aware that NFL scouts will watch the Anderson matchup just like they did Michigan, but he said he’s more interested in competing against the best. Put simply, that’s why he went to Georgia, and wants to play in the SEC.
“We just wanted to go out and battle,” Salyer said. “We wanted to play our best game, and we knew the strength of their defense was their defensive ends. Very, very talented player, take nothing from them, we just had a good game, and I’m proud of the way that we played, just up front in general we played a really good game.”
Kirby Smart has preached to the team about the analogy of holding a ladder. The o-line has bought in.
“You want to be the guy that holds the ladder so the team could climb to the top,” Salyer said. “It’s easy for an offensive lineman, that’s our thing, we hold the ladder for everybody. But as a team concept, that’s what we want everybody to be, so we could keep climbing.”
Even after the impressive performance to the point that ESPN’s Chris Fowler and Kirk Herbstreit hardly discussed the Michigan pass rushers, Salyer gave himself a grade of B- or C+, likely because of facemask and chop block penalties. This week, he’s ready to do it again against Anderson and the Alabama pass rush, which had 3 sacks in their December meeting.
“The trio of Hutchinson, Ojabo and Anderson obviously are all great players, the young kid they have over at Alabama is a really great player” Salyer said. “I’m excited, I’m always excited to rise to the occasion.”
— WeAreBigGuys (@WeAreBigGuys) January 1, 2022
Salyer, who is 6-4 and 325 pounds, has done it all season, and he’s beginning to catch the eye of NFL scouts. There’s been discussions about Salyer moving to guard in the NFL, and they started earlier this season, but he has excelled at tackle, and he attributes that to hard work.
“It’s tough not having the same 6-6 measurables as the next guy, but it’s a mindset thing, if you allow that to hold you back, then it will,” he said before the Orange Bowl . “If you allow that to slow you down, then it will. But if you go out there and work hard every day, take the mindset of I can do this and I will do this, it will happen for you, no matter what that is in life. I just kind of took that approach with playing offensive tackle, and I take that same approach playing guard, center, whatever it is. Everything requires work, everything requires strain and effort and perfecting your craft. I go at every day trying to attack that goal and be the best that I could be. I think that’s helped me where other people think I would fall.”
It’s clear that Salyer, who battled a foot injury part of this season, is playing some of the best ball of his career. He is the spokesman for the offensive line, and the former 5-star prospect is the perfect mold of who Kirby Smart is looking for in a Georgia player. He loves competition, doesn’t back down from opponents, and is versatile enough to play multiple positions.
He gets one more chance to go out and battle on Monday against that Alabama pass rush.
#CFBPlayoff / @seniorbowl Preview: Which team runs the ball more effectively will be a key in tomorrow’s #orangebowl . @GeorgiaFootball LT Jamaree Salyer & LG Justin Shaffer, both likely eventual NFL starters, will face a big test with Michigan’s Aidan Hutchinson and David Ojabo. pic.twitter.com/oifU7rcrph
— Jim Nagy (@JimNagy_SB) December 30, 2021
Georgia OT Jamaree Salyer has some finishing ability. Little top heavy but I like some of what he can do. pic.twitter.com/lUXpzntbFn
— Zach Hicks (@ZachHicks2) December 15, 2021
We do not target any individuals under the age of 21. We support responsible gambling. If you feel like you're losing control over your gambling experience, call 1-800-GAMBLER (NJ, PA, WV), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN), 1-800-BETS-OFF (IA), 1-888- 532-3500(Virginia) 1-800-522-4700 (NV, TN), 1-800-522-4700 (CO, TN), 1-855-2CALLGA (IL), 1-800-270-7117 (MI).

A former newspaper veteran, Keith Farner is a news manager for Saturday Down South.
More stories to check out before you go
Will Anderson Jr. is the next challenge for the Georgia offensive line that was targeted last week for its matchup against the vaunted Michigan pass rush. It’s the latest test for a unit that is tied for second in the country in sacks allowed this season (11), and combined with Stetson Bennett’s mobility can prove to be a formidable matchup for Anderson and Co.
Anderson, the star Alabama linebacker, boasts 17.5 sacks this season, which leads the country. But there is rising optimism for the Georgia offensive line, and specifically offensive tackle Jamaree Salyer after he neutralized Michigan’s Aidan Hutchinson to the point that he only had 4 tackles and zero sacks in the Orange Bowl. David Ojabo didn’t have any tackles. Hutchinson led the B1G with 14 sacks, and Ojabo was 2nd with 11. Georgia shut them out.
Salyer is aware that NFL scouts will watch the Anderson matchup just like they did Michigan, but he said he’s more interested in competing against the best. Put simply, that’s why he went to Georgia, and wants to play in the SEC.
“We just wanted to go out and battle,” Salyer said. “We wanted to play our best game, and we knew the strength of their defense was their defensive ends. Very, very talented player, take nothing from them, we just had a good game, and I’m proud of the way that we played, just up front in general we played a really good game.”
Kirby Smart has preached to the team about the analogy of holding a ladder. The o-line has bought in.
“You want to be the guy that holds the ladder so the team could climb to the top,” Salyer said. “It’s easy for an offensive lineman, that’s our thing, we hold the ladder for everybody. But as a team concept, that’s what we want everybody to be, so we could keep climbing.”
Even after the impressive performance to the point that ESPN’s Chris Fowler and Kirk Herbstreit hardly discussed the Michigan pass rushers, Salyer gave himself a grade of B- or C+, likely because of facemask and chop block penalties. This week, he’s ready to do it again against Anderson and the Alabama pass rush, which had 3 sacks in their December meeting.
“The trio of Hutchinson, Ojabo and Anderson obviously are all great players, the young kid they have over at Alabama is a really great player” Salyer said. “I’m excited, I’m always excited to rise to the occasion.”
Salyer, who is 6-4 and 325 pounds, has done it all season, and he’s beginning to catch the eye of NFL scouts. There’s been discussions about Salyer moving to guard in the NFL, and they started earlier this season, but he has excelled at tackle, and he attributes that to hard work.
“It’s tough not having the same 6-6 measurables as the next guy, but it’s a mindset thing, if you allow that to hold you back, then it will,” he said before the Orange Bowl . “If you allow that to slow you down, then it will. But if you go out there and work hard every day, take the mindset of I can do this and I will do this, it will happen for you, no matter what that is in life. I just kind of took that approach with playing offensive tackle, and I take that same approach playing guard, center, whatever it is. Everything requires work, everything requires strain and effort and perfecting your craft. I go at every day trying to attack that goal and be the best that I could be. I think that’s helped me where other people think I would fall.”
It’s clear that Salyer, who battled a foot injury part of this season, is playing some of the best ball of his career. He is the spokesman for the offensive line, and the former 5-star prospect is the perfect mold of who Kirby Smart is looking for in a Georgia player. He loves competition, doesn’t back down from opponents, and is versatile enough to play multiple positions.
He gets one more chance to go out and battle on Monday against that Alabama pass rush.
We do not target any individuals under the age of 21. We support responsible gambling. If you feel like you're losing control over your gambling experience, call 1-800-GAMBLER (NJ, PA, WV), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN), 1-800-BETS-OFF (IA), 1-888- 532-3500(Virginia) 1-800-522-4700 (NV, TN), 1-800-522-4700 (CO, TN), 1-855-2CALLGA (IL), 1-800-270-7117 (MI).





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Aiden Sin Flame: “It’s a lot of fun, honestly.”


Aiden Sin Flame didn’t set out to be a career dominatrix six years ago; it actually happened by chance. 


“Initially, I was on a fetish site that was similar to FetLife [a social-networking site for those into fetishes],” Flame says. “I saw girls, their profile was basically an ad where they were charging for [camera] time as a domme. I just kinda kept thinking, ‘I could do that,’ and it just kinda went from there.” 


That was in 2010, and now the 24-year-old has moved beyond camera work to real-time sessions with a developed client base. While maintaining her domme business, she also works as a hair stylist.


Dommes, or dominas, as she prefers to call herself, are professionals who are paid to create power-exchange scenarios for their clients. Some of the activities listed on Flame’s application for potential clients, or “slaves,” are public humiliation, needle play, orgasm denial and couples’ sessions. Sessions are negotiated on a client-by-client basis.


“Foot fetish is definitely the most vanilla fetish, but it’s the most requested,” she says.


While it is considered sex work, Flame’s profession isn’t prostitution and isn’t subject to the same laws. She works from her apartment, where her living room serves as her dungeon. 


Her typical equipment includes whips, riding crops, a spanking bench, wooden shackles and floggers (a short-handled, multi-lashed whip). “The rest of my stuff I have in storage until I can get a bigger place,” Flame says, smiling. 


She receives a lot of her equipment and clothes as gifts from clients as a form of tribute or as thanks for a session. Financial domination of different degrees is common for slaves, who enjoy buying presents or handing over bank-account information as an act of submission. 


In order to schedule a session, Flame requires potential slaves to fill out an application. If she accepts it, an in-person meeting is set up before a session is scheduled. She also requires an upfront deposit for initial meetings to protect her from clients with last-minute cold feet. Safety, in all aspects of the exchange, is highly important to her. 


“I get asked a lot how to do this safely. It really comes down to common sense. If something seems shady, just don’t do it,” she says. 


Flame checks up on her clients’ information before meeting with them, and during sessions, cleanliness, sanitization, routine check-ins with the client and using a safe word are musts.


“You can’t just wing this,” she says emphatically. “Especially with BDSM. If you don’t know about something, don’t do it.”


Most of her clientele are middle-aged white men. Flame says minority and female clients are rare. “Women can get it for free. The women who I have had, they wanted more of a professional experience,” she says. 


Maintaining a client base takes a tremendous amount of work, which Flame does with a robust social-media presence. “People tend to come and go,” she says. 


Most of Flame’s relationships with her slaves are friendly. “I do develop some sort of caring or bond,” she says. However, maintaining the power dynamic is such an integral part of the work and fantasy-building that she has to be careful to maintain her emotional distance. “I had a really loyal slave, who I saw on a weekly basis. We became too close in a friendship, and it kind of ruined everything,” she sighs.


Make no mistake — domming isn’t all strutting around in high heels and humiliating clients for top dollar. It takes a tremendous amount of time, work, learning from mistakes, and energy to have a successful career. 


“I spent a really long time before I ever did real-t
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