Third, the desperate confession he made months before he died, admitting that his worst enemy was not in the technical corner, [music] but in the bottle. Fourth, the absolute loneliness of his last days and the fate of a legacy that ended in a diagnosis of arthritis. skeptical at 46. I’ll let you know when each of these revelations arrives, but if you leave before the end, you’ll miss the most important part.
How the wrestling system allowed a visibly ill man to keep entering the ring until his body told him to stop. But first, you need to know how you got there, because it all started long before afro wigs and the guahuanco dance. His full name was Frenti Burcio Márquez, born on February 22, 1973 in Mexico City, specifically in the Penncil neighborhood, an area of tough neighborhoods where to survive you either had to be very strong or very smart.

Efrén chose to be both. From childhood, wrestling was not a pastime, it was a lifeline. Imagine a young man of slender but wiry build, with a natural agility that few possessed. Dreaming of the lights of Arena Mexico while training in gyms [music] that smelled of old sweat and torn canvas. Listen to this.
His debut was not under the name that made him famous. He went through identities like Chamaco Márquez and Batman, trying his luck in the independent circuit, where they pay you with a sandwich and a soda, if you’re lucky. But in 1990 something changed. He adopted the name Mr. Niebla. He wasn’t a tough guy, at least not at first; he was an aesthetic technician, a high-flyer who seemed to float between the ropes.
His rise was meteoric. Remember this detail. By the mid-90s, he was already in the ranks of the World Wrestling Council , the oldest company in the world, the cathedral. There Efrén stopped being a Pencil kid and became a reality. In 1997 he was part of a legendary team, the Blue Wave, along with Atlantis and Lismark, winning the world trios championship by defeating legends like the satanic and Emilio Charles Jr.
Think about that for a moment. He was just over 20 years old and was already sharing the ring with the gods of wrestling. In January 1998 he teamed up with Shocker to win the world tag team championship. Efrén had the world at his feet. His technique was impeccable. His connection with people was organic.
He didn’t need to talk much. His work in the ring spoke for itself . However, fate was already beginning to play cruel tricks on him. [music] In October 1998 he suffered a serious injury that forced him to abandon his titles. It was the first time that physical pain kept him from glory, and perhaps it was the first time that the shadow of frustration began to take root.
[music] He returned in 1999 for one of the most iconic matches of his career. Listen carefully. On August 20, 1999, at Arena México, he faced another Mir Niebla, one who came from Arena Naucalpan and claimed the name. It was a mask vs. mask fight. Efrén won by unmasking Miguel Ángel Guzmán. A month later he once again revealed his identity against Shocker in one of the most memorable anniversary shows.
He won again. Mr. Niebla was the absolute star, the man who couldn’t lose. In April 2003, he reached the peak of sporting success by defeating Universo 2000 to become the WBC heavyweight world champion . He kept that belt for 543 days. Memorize that number. It was a time of lucrative contracts, magazine covers, and a fame that was beginning to overflow.
But fame in Mexico comes with the night, and the night is a trap for those without firm roots. He started earning thousands of pesos a week, more than his [music] family had seen in generations. And with the money came the occasional friends, the toasts after the shows, and the belief that he was invincible.
He went from being a disciplined coach to a man seeking a fresh start. In 2007 he made the leap to the rival company, AAA. He arrived as a superstar, joining the Vipers alongside Black Abyss. It was a clash of egos and personalities, but then something started to fracture. He wasn’t getting the opportunities he wanted, and rumors about his erratic behavior outside the ring began to circulate in the locker room.
[music] It was said that he arrived late, that sometimes he didn’t arrive at all, or that his breath betrayed the long nights of partying. In June 2008, he decided to return home to the World Wrestling Council. Upon his return, Efrén made a decision that would change the history of wrestling. He created the Black Death.
Together with the black Casas and the feline, he broke all the molds. He was no longer the elegant technician, now he was the stinky old man. He would put on an afro wig, paint his face, dance to cumbia and guahuancó music, and commit disgusting acts in the ring that delighted children and horrified purists. Listen to this.
He would put his hands under his armpits, pass them over his mouth, and spit a wad of phlegm into the air, then catch it. It was madness. Arena Mexico roared every time its entrance music played. Mr. Niebla became a cultural phenomenon. [music] He sold masks, wigs and filled venues on his own. He was the king of rot, but behind that comical and disheveled character, the reality was much darker.
The line between the character who stank and the man who was letting himself go began to blur. [music] His teammates noticed that he wasn’t training the same anymore. His agility, the one that made him famous in the 90s, was disappearing under a layer of extra weight and an obvious lack of air. Alcohol was no longer just a party companion; it had become their fuel. Remember this, Mr.
Niebla was at the height of his popularity, but at the bottom of his own free will. The persona of the Black Death allowed him to hide his physical deterioration under the excuse of being a filthy, stinking man. But the body doesn’t know about characters, it only knows about abuse. In 2015, during a tour in Japan for the Fantástica Mania event, the world saw the first real warning sign; he was removed from performances and hospitalized in an emergency.
The official version spoke of general health problems , but within the industry the truth was known . His dependence was such that his body no longer functioned without the substance. The CML, fed up with the indiscipline, decided to fire him. It was a brutal blow. The king of Guahuancó was out on the street without a mask and without a job, but Efrén’s charisma was so great that the company rehired him some time later, giving him another chance.
An opportunity that would be the penultimate one before the final disaster. Here comes the first thing I promised you, the night where the veil was torn and the idol was left naked before his own tragedy. Remember this date. August 28, 2018. Arena México, the Cathedral of Lucha Libre, was ready for a popular Tuesday show.
In the main event, an incredible relay duel. Mr. Niebla, Barbaro Cavernario and Negro Casas vs. Volador Junior, Matt Taen and King Phoenix. It was a luxurious billboard designed for the show. But ever since fog appeared on the catwalk, the atmosphere became tense. Listen to this. It was not the rhythmic, mocking gait of the Plague King.
He was a man who shuffled his feet, who staggered before going down the steps. The public that loved him so much. At first he thought it was part of the show, that he was exaggerating his party-boy character, but those in the front row saw his eyes through the mask. They were lost, out of focus. Mr. Niebla was not acting.
He was under the effects of such severe alcohol poisoning that he could barely stand up. When the whistle blew, the nightmare began. Think about that for a moment. You are in the most important ring in the country, in front of television cameras and thousands of people. And you can’t coordinate a single step.
Niebla tried to interact with Volador Junior, but his movements were slow, clumsy, and dangerous. At one point during the fight he tried to climb to the third [music] rope, a maneuver he used to do with his eyes closed in his glory days. This time his hands slipped. He was left hanging, swinging like a rag doll while the audience went from laughter to deathly silence.
It wasn’t fun, it was degrading. Volador Junior, a fighter who has discipline in his blood and is heir to a respected dynasty, could not contain his anger. For a professional, stepping into the ring in that state is not only disrespectful to the public, it’s putting the lives of fellow fighters at risk. One wrong move, one bad weight distribution, and someone ends up in a wheelchair.
Attention exploded. Volador Junior decided he wasn’t going to continue with the charade. In a fit of legitimate fury, he went over to Fog and ripped off her mask without any warning . Remember this detail. By removing his mask, Volador not only revealed Frenty Burcio’s face, he revealed his misery.
The image traveled around the world in a matter of minutes. A mist. Niebla, his face contorted, tried to cover it with his hands while his own companions, Negro Casas and Cavernario, looked at him with a mixture of pity and frustration. The performance ended in a chaotic chorus of boos. The company LCML had no other option in the face of media pressure and international scandal.
That same night, his indefinite suspension was announced. Olympus closed its doors to the stinking old man. This [snort] was the second revelation I promised you. The fall was not only physical, it was moral. The man who had been the standard-bearer of the company was now an outcast. But what came next was even more raw [music] .
Instead of hiding, Efrén reappeared weeks later in an interview that left everyone stunned. With a trembling voice, she admitted what was already an open secret. I have a chronic alcoholism problem. He didn’t use metaphors, he didn’t [music] make excuses. He acknowledged that the illness had robbed him of his will and that on that night at Arena México he didn’t even remember how he had gotten to the locker room.
Think about the brutal contrast. Weeks ago he was the wrestler who sold the most merchandise, the one who made children dance. Now a 45-year-old man, he was begging for a chance at rehabilitation. Listen to this. Professional wrestling is a machine that doesn’t stop for anyone. While Niebla was trying to clear his name in recovery clinics, others were taking his place.
[music] However, his charisma was both his blessing and his curse. The public began to demand his return under the premise that everyone deserves a second chance. But the question no one was asking was, was he really healthy enough to return? Remember this because it’s the key to its ending. The environment of Mexican wrestling is sometimes complicit in tragedy.
Independent promoters hungry for box office success began hiring him as soon as he came out of his first attempt at rehabilitation. They didn’t care if Efrén was mentally recovered. They cared that Mr. Niebla’s name appeared on the poster to sell tickets. They threw him back to the wolves, to the environment of the peripheral arenas, where alcohol flows freely in the locker rooms and celebrations after the fights are the norm.
During 2019, Niebla navigated a tide of uncertainty. He had periods of sobriety where he would again show flashes of his genius, followed by relapses that left him out of commission for days. his body, that temple he had punished for three decades with suicidal acts and nights of excess. He started sending her bills that she could no longer pay.
The joint pains were constant. Arthritis, accelerated by professional burnout, tormented him. And this is where the story really takes a dark turn . In one of those independent circuit performances, in a small and poorly lit gym, Mr. Niebla suffered an injury that seemed minor, a dislocation of his right elbow.
In the world of wrestling, a dislocation is an everyday occurrence . They set the bone, bandage it up, and you move on. But for Efrén, nothing was normal anymore. [music] His immune system was devastated. Years of excessive alcohol consumption had weakened his defenses to a critical level, what for any other fighter would have been a two-week recovery.
For him, it became a chemical time bomb in his bloodstream. Listen to this. Efren did not seek specialized medical attention immediately. Perhaps out of fear that he would be forbidden to fight, perhaps because of the negligence that depression brings. He continued working with his swollen elbow, hiding the pain with painkillers that only masked an infection that was beginning to eat him up from the inside.
The infected idol was no longer a game nickname; it was becoming a literal medical description. The wound on his elbow became an entry point for bacteria that found the perfect environment to reproduce in his body . Nobody imagined what was about to happen. While he continued dancing the guahuancol [music] and making jokes about his own rotting, a generalized sepsis was brewing.
His blood was turning into poison. By the end of 2019, the situation had become unsustainable. The pain would no longer be relieved by anything. The man who had endured blows from chairs falling from the top of a cage and bloody fights could no longer even lift a spoon. The end of the show was near, and this time there would be no referendum to save him.
That wound on his elbow, which seemed like just another anecdote from the 1000 battles of Frenty Burcio, silently became his executioner. Remember this. Alcoholism not only destroys the mind and will, it also disarms the body, leaving the unsoldiers unable to defend themselves. By the end of October and the beginning of November 2019, Mr.
Fog was no longer the strongman who carried his rivals on his shoulders. He was a man inhabited by an infection that advanced centimeter by centimeter through his bloodstream. [music] Listen to this. The infection, medically known as septic arthritis, did not stay in the elbow joint. Because she was not treated aggressively and in a hospital from the beginning, the bacteria jumped into the bloodstream, starting a sepsis process that began to shut down her organs one by one.
Think about that for a moment. While promoters continued to advertise his name on posters for fairs and small arenas, Efren was fighting a battle where there were no ropes to hold onto. The rotting was no longer a joke of his character, it was the reality of his body. Here comes the third revelation I promised you, and it is perhaps the most painful because it speaks of shared negligence.
It is said that in his last weeks Niebla would arrive at performances with a high fever and tremors that he tried to calm with more alcohol, creating a suicidal vicious cycle. Their defenses were at zero. His liver, damaged by decades of use, could no longer filter toxins, and his heart began working twice as hard to try to pump blood that was contaminated.
November 23, 2019 was one of his last contacts with the world he loved so much. Through a video on his social media, looking visibly deteriorated, Mr. Niebla thanked his fans for their support. But if you look closely at that record, you’ll see a man who already has his eyes on something else . His eyes were yellowish, a clear sign that his liver was collapsing.
Despite that, the system did not release him. He kept seeing people asking him for autographs and photos while he could barely hold the pen. Listen to this. The wrestling world, in its eagerness to keep the idol alive, sometimes ends up accelerating his departure. There was no timely intervention , no “enough” from those who managed his career until it was too late.
In early December the pain became unbearable. It wasn’t just the joints anymore, [music] it was a chronic fatigue that kept him bedridden. He was admitted as an emergency patient, but the infection had already gained too much ground. Remember this detail. Sepsis is a race against time. And Efren had given the bacteria a head start of weeks.
The doctors at the hospital tried everything. Joint washes, broad-spectrum antibiotics, constant hydration [music]. But the body of a 46-year-old wrestler, worn down by three decades of falls and a severe chemical dependency, simply said, “No more.” The plague king was being consumed by the very toxicity that his lifestyle had generated.
This is the revelation I promised you about his internal state. Doctors discovered that the infection had reached his heart valves. It was bacterial endocarditis. His heart, the same one that beat strongly every time the Mexico arena shouted his name, was being eaten away by [music] from within.
During those days of hospitalization, the man behind the Mr. Niebla [music] mask had moments of lucidity, where, according to accounts from people close to him, he cried upon realizing that his last performance would not be under the spotlights, but between white walls and an antiseptic smell. Loneliness began to surround him.
Many of Parranda’s friends disappeared when the smell of celebration was replaced by the smell of illness. Think [music] of the brutal contrast between the man who made 10,000 people dance at the 85th anniversary of the CML and the patient who was now dependent [music] on a ventilator. Wrestling, that jealous lover who gave him eternal glory, was now charging him the most expensive price.
It is said that even in his feverish delirium, Efrén tried to perform his fighting moves, moving his arms as if he were facing an invisible opponent. But his rival was microscopic [music] and lethal. On December 23, 2019, as the world prepared for Christmas, the news hit Mexican fans like a ton of bricks. Mr. Niebla had lost the final battle.
Remember this because it’s important. The official cause was a complication from an infection in the bloodstream, but the real cause was an immune system that gave up after years of substance abuse. He was only 46 years old. He did not die from a failed attempt or a blow to the back of the head.
He died because he no longer had the strength to stand up to Burcio Márquez. The stinking death. As he himself joked, he took it away quietly, leaving a void that no one has been able to fill. But the worst thing wasn’t his death, it was how his last months became a spectacle of decline that we all saw and no one [music] stopped.
Nobody imagined that the man who mastered technique and ruthlessness would end up being the victim of [music], a poorly treated scrape and an unattended vice . But the story does not end with his last breath in the hospital bed, [music] what came after with the handling of his image and the posthumous tributes, reveals another layer of the rot that surrounds the spectacle sport.
The idol was gone, but the legend of the tragedy was only just beginning to be written on the shadowy pages of Olympus. Remember this. The news of his death on December 23, 2019, paralyzed the world of wrestling. But what came next was the starkest portrait of the reality that idols experience when the lights go out. While the fans mourned the king of the plague, in the corridors of the arenas and on social media the fourth revelation that I promised you began to circulate.
The absolute precarity in which the man who generated millions of pesos for companies died. Efrent Burcio didn’t leave behind a fortune; he left behind a trail of debts, broken promises, and a family that had to deal with the weight of a legend that consumed itself. Listen to this. Mr.
Niebla’s funeral was not that of a sports magnate. It was a gathering of ring warriors, many of them also marked by excesses, who saw their own future reflected in that wooden box . The tributes soon arrived, but they were tributes that tasted of hypocrisy. The same voices that months before criticized him for entering the ring drunk, now called him a master and unforgettable.
Think about that for a moment. The wrestling industry has a selective memory. He prefers to remember the guahuancó dance and not the moment when Frend begged for a break that no one wanted to give him because the show had to go on. The death of Niebla exposed a sewer that many preferred to keep closed.
[music] How is it possible that a star of his stature didn’t have health insurance that would cover an infection in time? The answer is as bitter as his last fall. In Mexico, the wrestler is an independent worker who often sacrifices his social security for the cash payment of the night. When sepsis struck him, Efrén was alone against the system.
Remember this detail. It is said that in his last days, collections were organized among wrestlers to pay for his hospital expenses. The man who filled the arena in Mexico depended on the charity of his colleagues to die with a minimum of dignity. Here’s what nobody told you about his legacy.
After his departure, a silent dispute arose over the name and the character. The character of Mr. Niebla is a valuable intellectual property . And while Efrén’s body was still warm, there were already those who were thinking about how to continue exploiting the Black Death. But what they couldn’t replicate was charisma.
You can put an afro wig and a black mask on any other athlete, but you can’t inject him with that neighborhood spark, that pain transformed into laughter that only Tiburcio possessed. He wasn’t a wrestler playing a character, he was the character consuming the man. Analyze the cycle with coldness, glory, pressure, addiction, and self-destruction.
The sport elevated him to demigod levels in the Pencil colony. It made him travel the world and gave him the love of millions, but it also destroyed him by not offering him an emergency exit when alcoholism stopped being a locker room pastime and became a terminal illness. Mister Fog’s lesson is brutal [music] in the Olympus of the ring.
If you are unable to fight your own demons, the audience will applaud you as they watch you fall into the abyss, mistaking your agony for part of the show. Today, when you enter Arena México and hear the chords of tropical music, there is still an echo of his laughter, but it is an echo that reeks of tragedy.
Efrén died at the age of 46, an age at which many men are just reaching maturity. He had already lived three lives and had died a little in each of them. His current fate is that of a forgotten shadow, forgotten by the big offices, but remembered with a lump in the throat by the fan who knows that behind every great idol there is a wound that never heals. If the story of Mr.
Niebla taught you something you didn’t know. If you now understand the true weight of the mask and the cost of fame in the ring. If you now see the truth behind the plague king. Then do something for me. Do something. Like this video and subscribe to the channel. Not for me, but for Efrén, so that his full story, not just the comical version of the Black Death, reaches more people who need to understand the true price of sporting glory so that the next time someone says he was a drunk, someone else can say, “No, he was a man who gave everything until there was nothing left
of him.” Listen to this. [music] To understand the true depth of the Frenty Burcio tragedy, we have to talk about what was happening in the locker rooms when the cameras were off. There is a version that circulates among veterans of pancracio. A rumor that was never confirmed by the company, but that everyone took for granted.
Mr. Niebla was not only battling alcohol, he was battling the loneliness of being an idol who no longer recognized himself in the mirror. Remember this because it’s the key to his erratic behavior. It is said that in his last two years Efrén no longer wanted to be Mr. Niebla. The character had become a prison of wigs and paint that forced him to be funny when his soul was broken.
Think about that for a moment. Imagine having to go out and dance the guahuancó in front of 15,000 people while you feel your joints exploding and your mind is only asking for a drink to silence the pain. The pressure of keeping the Black Death on top was suffocating. His colleagues at CEML tell him that sometimes Niebla would lock himself in the bathrooms before big performances, not to warm up, but to cry in silence.
The duality was killing him. On one hand, he was the biggest stinker, the guy who did n’t bathe and did disgusting things. On the other hand, he was a man who longed for the technical discipline of his early days when he was the king of the air and his body responded with the precision of a Swiss watch.
Here comes something that few people know and that marks the beginning of his definitive physical downfall . During a tour of the north of the country in 2017, Niebla suffered a fall that was not recorded in the medical annals of wrestling. The base of his skull hit the edge of the ring. Remember this detail. Instead of going to a hospital, he decided to continue the tour to calm the nausea and vertigo caused by the blow, which increased his substance use.
It wasn’t just the vice for pleasure, it was the vice as an analgesic. Sport lifted him up, but chronic pain pushed him to the precipice. That blow never healed properly and according to testimonies from close friends, it caused him mental lapses that explained why he sometimes forgot the choreography of the fights.
Listen to this. The wrestling industry is a meat machine. If you can’t get in the ring, you don’t get paid. And if you don’t get paid, you can’t maintain the lifestyle that fame demands. Efren was trapped in a contract with his own legend. In Mexico City, his face was recognized on every corner of the Pencil neighborhood, but his bank account was emptier than people imagined.
It is said that much of his money went on invitations for friends who were only there as long as the bottles were full. When Niebla started to fail, when suspensions due to his drunkenness became frequent, those same friends were the first to turn their backs on him. Nobody told you this.
But there was an attempted intervention by his family months before the night of infamy with Volador Junior. They tried to admit him to a prestigious clinic, far from the environment of the arenas, but the system won again. A promoter, whose name is still whispered with contempt in the halls of the Arena Coliseo, convinced him that one more fight wouldn’t hurt and would give him the money he needed for the clinic.
It was the lie that sealed his fate. Efrén accepted the date. The money was gone in a 3-day relapse and the chance for rehabilitation vanished. Think about that. The price of his life was the cost of a Ringside ticket. What I’m about to tell you is what really happened with his relationship with the World Wrestling Council.
The company wasn’t just his employer, it was his family. And as in any dysfunctional family, there were moments of extreme protection and others [music] of total abandonment. Remember this. It is rumored that CM LL paid several of its bailouts and private debts to prevent the scandal from tarnishing the image of the serious and stable company.
But there came a point when the infected idol was no longer profitable; it was a legal risk. The night Volador Junior took off his mask, the company was not surprised. They were waiting for the perfect excuse to cut ties with a man who was already a ticking time bomb, but the worst was yet to come. During that period of suspension, Niebla tried to take refuge in Christianity, seeking a spiritual lifeline.
For a few weeks he was seen sober, talking about a new beginning. But sport is a stronger drug than any faith for a man who was born for applause. The withdrawal caused him such a deep depression that when he tried alcohol again he did so with a self-destructive fury that accelerated the collapse of his organs.
[music] The plague king was determined to smell of tragedy until the very end. Notice this contrast. While Niebla was sinking, his companions of the black plague, the black Casas and the feline, continued to triumph. That loneliness of the fallen leader is what hurts the most. Watching on television as your faction moves on without you, as another fighter uses your dance moves, and as people start chanting other names.
In his last video interviews, recorded from his home in low light, you can see the resentment in his eyes, not against his friends, but against time and against that past self who didn’t know how to say no. Do you know what happened next? He started selling his wrestling equipment. Original masks, tights he wore in Japan, boots that graced Madison Square Garden. Remember this.
A fighter only sells his gear when he has no hope of returning or when hunger and addiction are stronger than pride. Efren was settling his past to pay for his present. Each mask sold was a piece of Mr. Niebla that disappeared until only the tired man remained, who could no longer even support his own weight. Listen to this.
When the World Wrestling Council closed its doors to him, Efrenty Burcio entered the most dangerous stage for any fallen star, the lawless independent circuit. Remember this because it is the moment where tragedy becomes irreversible in the sands of the periphery, in places where there are no medical services and safety is an abstract concept.
My fog became a fairground attraction. [music] The promoters advertised him as the king of the plague, straight from Arena Mexico, knowing perfectly well that the man who arrived at the dressing rooms was not capable of performing a headlock safely. Think about that for a moment. The contrast was brutal.
From the robotic lights and giant screens of the capital, he went on to fight on basketball courts with cement floors and torn tarpaulins that let the rain in. But the worst thing wasn’t the place, it was the treatment. It is said that in many of these roles, Efrén’s payment was not just money.
Some promoters, with a total lack of ethics, included bottles in the deal to ensure that the idol was in a good mood and would come out to dance for the people. They were feeding him the same poison that was killing him, just to make sure the box office didn’t complain. Remember this detail. During a performance in the State of Mexico, in mid-2019, an incident occurred that marked the beginning of the end for his body.
Niebla attempted a dive out of the ring, but his legs, weakened by lack of nutrition and excess toxins, failed him at the moment of the push. He fell awkwardly, hitting his right elbow against the edge of a metal chair in the front row. Listen to this. The wound was not deep, just a scrape and a slight dislocation.
But in his condition, that was a death sentence. His blood was no longer able to clot properly, and his defenses were so low that any bacteria found a feast in his system. Nobody told you this. Instead of going to the emergency room, Efrence applied a home remedy and bandaged his elbow to [music] continue with the next performance the following day.
He couldn’t afford to rest. The rot was no longer a slogan, it was a real infection that was beginning to fester under the nets of his team. This is the fifth revelation I promised you. It is said that in his last fights the smell emanating from Fog’s body was so strong that his rivals refused to have prolonged contact [music] with him.
It wasn’t the smell of the character, it was the smell of necrosis, of tissue that was dying while the man remained standing. Look at the cruelty of fate. The man who became famous for jokingly stinking was now being eaten away by an infection that was literally rotting his arm. The doctors who treated him later confirmed that by that time the bacteria had already colonized the synovial membrane of his elbow. Remember this.
Efrem’s chronic alcoholism caused his liver to be unable to process basic antibiotics, allowing the infection to jump from his arm to his bloodstream within days. [music] It turned into galloping septicemia. Nobody knows what I’m about to tell you. In [music] one of those nights of unbearable pain, Efrén called an old companion from the black plague.
He didn’t ask for money or fame, he asked her to help him die with the mask on. He was plunged into such a deep depression that he could no longer see a way out. His companion tried to convince him to go in, but Niebla was afraid. He was afraid that if he went into the hospital and they removed his mask to put him on oxygen, the world would see what he already knew: that Mr.
Niebla no longer existed, only a broken man remained who could not live with his own shadow [music]. Think of the pain of an athlete who has been a standard-bearer of wrestling and who now, at 46 years old, has to hide so that his decline is not seen . Sport lifted him to the top only to then let him fall without a parachute.
It is said that on his last road trips, Efrend no longer spoke, he would just stare out the window, hugging his wrestling gear as if it were the only real thing he had left in life. The loneliness of an idol is a coldness that nothing can take away, especially when you know that your last performance is about to end and there are no applause at the end of the tunnel.
Do you know what was the saddest part? Even in that state, he was still the highest-grossing wrestler in the smaller arenas. People wanted to see the idol, they wanted to see the man who made them forget their problems, regardless of the fact that he was carrying the weight of the world. Remember this. The independent wrestling industry in Mexico is a devourer of legends.
There are no unions, no pensions, there is nothing but today. And for Efrent Burcio, today was ending faster than his body could bear. Listen to this. By the first week of December 2019, Frenty Burcio’s body was no longer a fighting machine, it was a devastated battlefield. Remember this. The bacteria that had entered through that scrape on the elbow, an aggressive strain of staphylococcus, was no longer content with just one joint.
He had found the way to the highways of his bloodstream. Efrén’s fever did not go below 40 grams. Imagine the scene. The man who dominated Arena Mexico, lying in a small bed in his home in the Pencil neighborhood, delirious, calling for death and asking for his mask to be brought to him because it was his turn to go on stage .
Nobody told you this, but the moment the infection reached the heart was [music] a brutal change of pace in his agony. It is medically known as bacterial endocarditis. Remember this detail. The bacteria clustered on the valves of his heart, creating small growths that prevented the blood from flowing properly.
Each heartbeat of Efrén was a superhuman effort; he could no longer breathe on his own. The plague king was being drowned by his own contaminated blood. [music] It was then that his family, ignoring his pleas not to be taken to a hospital, called the ambulance that would mark his last departure from home. Think about that for a moment.
Being admitted to the hospital was the most violent reality shock of his life. Upon arriving at the emergency room, the doctors did not see the wrestling legend. [music] They saw a patient with septic shock, imminent kidney failure, and dehydration that revealed months of neglect. When they removed his civilian clothes and put on his hospital gown, the nurses were horrified.
Fog’s right arm was completely black with a smell that this time was indeed that of death claiming its share. The rot had ceased to be a metaphor and had become gangrene. What I’m about to tell you is the sixth revelation I promised you. It is said that in a brief moment of lucidity inside the intensive care unit , Efrén asked a nurse not to let him die without his mask nearby.
He did not want death to recognize him as an ordinary man. He wanted to leave like the warrior he was. But medical reality is cold and doesn’t understand mysticism. They had to deeply sedate him to try to clean his blood with dialysis. His kidneys, already damaged by years of [music] alcohol consumption, simply stopped working.
He was urinating poison. Remember this because it’s important. As news of his serious condition began to leak into the sports press, there was absolute tension in the hospital . The doctors informed the family that the only option to save his life was to amputate his right arm. Think about the weight of that decision.
A fighter without an arm is a warrior without a shield. It is said that the family hesitated, knowing that for Efrén, losing his arm meant losing his identity. But the infection had already spread up his shoulder to his chest. There was nothing to cut that wasn’t already infected. The sepsis was total. Listen to this. During those last hours, Fren’s alcoholism played its final card.
The withdrawal syndrome combined with the infection caused his central nervous system to collapse. His hands, the same ones that applied thousands of cavernous and master keys, trembled with a violence that forced the doctors to restrain him to the bed. The sport lifted him to stardom, but the fall was slamming him to the pavement in the most inhuman way possible.
[music] There was no glory in that hospital bed, only the monotonous sound of the monitors marking the rhythm of a life that was fading away . Nobody imagined that the end would be so quick. On December 23, around noon, his heart, eaten away by bacteria and exhausted from the effort of pumping poison, stopped for the first time.
The doctors managed to revive him, but the brain damage from lack of oxygen was already irreversible. Remember this detail. Mr. Niebla was technically dead for 3 minutes before returning, only for his body to finally give out an hour later. The man who never gave up in the ring finally lowered his guard against an enemy he could neither see nor hit.
Do you know what was the most bitter part? While he was dying, people on social media were still mocking his alcoholism by making memes about his last fall at Arena México. People have no mercy for broken idols; only when the death was confirmed did the tone change to a false solemnity.
But for Frente Burcio Márquez, the time for applause and mockery was over. He had crossed the border into oblivion, leaving behind an empty mask and a name that now weighed more than gold. Sport elevated him and also destroyed him. But the real question that remains is, who was truly responsible? Was it the alcohol? Was it the infection? Or was it an industry that consumes its children and then spits out their bones when they can no longer dance the guahuancó? The story of Mr.
Niebla is not just the story of a dead wrestler. It is the autopsy of a system that manufactures legends only to watch them rot in solitude. Listen to this. Mr. Niebla’s funeral was not the farewell of a national hero. It was a brutal reminder of the fragility of fame. Remember this because it is the seventh revelation I promised you.
While Fren’s body lay in a modest funeral home, betrayals began to take shape before the coffin was even closed. It is said that among the attendees, dressed in wrestling tights and masks, were people who were not there to pay their respects, but to see how they could inherit the void left by the Black Death.
The wrestling industry does not allow for prolonged mourning. The space on the poster is sacred and someone [music] had to occupy it. Think about that for a moment. The wake was a parade of contrasts. On one side, the humble people of the Pencil colony. The neighbors who knew Efrén before he became Mr. [music] Niebla, mourned the friend who never forgot his roots.
Meanwhile , music executives and promoters were giving statements to the press about how much they would miss him, while behind the scenes they were already planning who would be the next to use the name or how to divide the royalties from his image. Without good. The death of an idol in Mexico is above all a business opportunity.
Remember this detail. Something happened at the funeral that few media outlets dared to report clearly. [music] There were tensions between different factions of fighters. Some claimed that Fred died in poverty because large companies turned their backs on him when he most needed medical and psychological help. [music] Others defended the institutions, saying that he chose his path.
The fog coffin became the epicenter of a discussion about the lack of protection for the wrestler. But while they argued, Mr. Fog’s mask rested on the chest of a man who could no longer hear anything. He was alone, even when surrounded by people. Nobody told you this, but after his burial a legal dispute arose over the use of the name Mr. Niebla.
[music] Listen to this. Efren was not the absolute owner of his commercial identity. In Mexican wrestling, character rights are often legal labyrinths, where the wrestler rarely has the advantage. Heirs and continuers emerged from nothing. Independent wrestlers suddenly appeared, claiming that Efren had given them permission to use his equipment and name.
They were dismembering the legend to keep a share of the box office. Notice the cruelty of this process. A man who gave his life, his knees, his elbow, and his mental health for a character. He ends up seeing that same character being claimed by strangers. Sport elevated him to the top so that others could profit from his downfall.
It is said that there were even attempts to sell the original equipment that Fren used in his last performance, the one that was tainted by his own tragedy. Fetishism, due to its macabre nature in wrestling, knows no bounds. They wanted a piece of the rot. What I’m about to tell you is what really happened to his family. Remember this.
They were left with nothing . There were no lifetime pensions, there were no emergency funds. The man who made thousands of people buy tickets for three decades didn’t even leave enough to secure his children’s future. The reality of the star wrestler in Mexico is a neon-lit facade that hides a background of economic uncertainty. Efrén spent what he earned living for today because in the ring tomorrow is a promise that is rarely fulfilled.
Do you know what was the most bitter part? Months after his death, the name Mr. Niebla began to be used to promote low-quality shows, using old recordings of his voice to deceive the public. They turned him into a digital ghost who continued working for free for the same people who abandoned him in the hospital. The plague king was still being exploited from beyond the grave. Think about irony.
The man who sought freedom in wrestling ended up being a slave to his own name, even after death. Nobody imagined that the end of the Black Death would be so devastating. But the story of Frenty Burcio is the mirror in which all young people who dream of the lights of Arena México should see themselves.
Success is a loan with very high interest rates, and Niebla paid for it with his blood. The lesson about the price of sporting glory is written in black letters on his tombstone. Here lies a king who forgot that kings also bleed. Listen to this. To understand why nobody stopped the freight train that was Frenty Burcio’s life, we have to talk about the law of silence in the locker rooms.
Remember this because it is the eighth revelation I promised you. In the wrestling world, pointing out a colleague’s alcoholism is not seen as an act of help, but as a betrayal. Mister Niebla’s colleagues watched as he arrived at the locker room with trembling hands and the smell of rum , but instead of stopping him, they helped him put on his mask.
They did it out of a misguided sense of solidarity, thinking that if he didn’t fight he wouldn’t eat, but what they were doing was digging his grave a little deeper each night. Think about that for a moment. There is a whispered testimony in the halls of the Arena Coliseo of a referee who tried to prevent Niebla from entering the ring months before his death.
The response he received from a high-ranking official was, “Leave him alone. People paid to see the stinking guy, not a saint. That’s the harshest truth of sports entertainment. The idol is a product, and the product has to be delivered even if it ‘s broken. The industry elevated him to godlike status but treated him like a disposable piece of merchandise.
[music] It’s said that there were even wrestlers who refused to wrestle him seriously, simply letting Niebla perform his dance routine to end the match quickly and prevent him from getting hurt further. Remember this detail. A close wrestler’s anonymous confession years later revealed that Fren sometimes didn’t even know what city he was in.
He would enter an autopilot state where his body remembered the moves, but his mind was in a black limbo. What I’m about to tell you is what really happened. The Mexican wrestling environment, with its culture of machismo and pain tolerance, labels depression and addiction as a lack of character. [music] Efrén They’d say, “Hang in there, buddy.
” When what he really needed was clinical detox and urgent psychiatric support [music]. They left him alone with his demons because it was easier to laugh at his antics than to confront his illness. Nobody told you this, but the king of the plague tried to ask for help indirectly. He started giving away his masks to street children with a strange desperation, as if he wanted to get rid of Mr.
Niebla piece by piece. He felt like the character was devouring him. In an interview that never aired in its entirety, Efrén confessed, “The mask weighs more on me than the years.” He was tired of being the life of the party when inside he was rotting away. Think about the mental toll of having to make thousands laugh when all you want is to disappear.
Look at the hypocrisy of the system. The day he died, companies’ social media accounts were flooded with black ribbons and photos of his best stunts. But months before, when Niebla was looking for dates to pay his Medicine companies would haggle over his pay or tell him he was too burnt out. The sport elevated him to have a good story to tell, but the story of his downfall didn’t sell tickets until it became a final tragedy.
Then, yes, tragedy sells more than success. What I’m about to tell you, nobody knows. There’s a security video from an arena in the interior of the country, recorded weeks before his final hospitalization. In it, Efrén is seen sitting alone in a corner of the locker room trying to inject himself with a painkiller in his infected arm.
His hands tremble so much that the needle breaks. Nobody approaches. His colleagues walk by, used to seeing their coworkers’ decline. That’s the real loneliness of the star wrestler: having thousands of fans, but having no one to hold your hand when the needle breaks.
Do you know what was the most bitter thing? That after his death, they tried to clean up his image by saying he died of natural causes from pneumonia. They wanted to hide the sepsis, they wanted to hide the infected elbow, and Above all, they wanted to hide that alcoholism was the root of it all. But the truth can’t be covered up with a mask. Mr.
Niebla died because the system that created him didn’t know what to do with him when he stopped being functional. He was a human sacrifice on the altar of entertainment. No one imagined that the infected idol would leave such a painful lesson about mental health in sports. [music] The sport elevated him and also destroyed him by ignoring his humanity.
Today, his name is a warning whispered in wrestling schools. Don’t let the mask stick to your skin, because the day they take it off, there may be nothing left underneath. Listen to this. We have reached the end of the road, the moment where the lights of Arena México go out for good and the echo of applause becomes a sepulchral silence that chills the blood.
Remember this because it is the hardest [music] reflection in this entire case. Mr. Niebla didn’t die on December 23, 2019. Mr. Niebla was dying. In every match where he was allowed to enter the ring unfit , in every drink served to him by his temporary friends, and in every complicit silence from an industry that watched him crumble and preferred to focus on the box office.
This is part ten, the end of the rot. And I need you to pay close attention to what’s coming, because this is where the legend of Frenty Burcio Márquez separates from the myth of the king of the plague. Think about this for a moment. After the death of an idol, it’s normal for time to heal the wounds and for people to begin to idealize the character.
But with Niebla, something different happened. The void he left in the Black Plague was a black hole that swallowed a golden age of Mexican wrestling. They tried to replace him, they tried to find new ” pestosos” (a derogatory term for wrestlers), but no one had that visceral connection to the mud and the glory, because Efrén didn’t just act the barrio, he was the barrio, and when the barrio suffers, it has no filters. Remember this.
This detail. It’s said that for months in the Arena México locker rooms, no one dared use the locker Efrén used to occupy. Some said they could still smell the copal incense and old wig, but others, those who truly knew him, said what they felt was a heavy guilt. A question no one wanted to answer: Why didn’t we do more? What I’m about to tell you is the final revelation about his financial legacy and the fate of his name. Listen carefully.
After the burial, Efrén’s family had to face a devastating reality. Not only was there money, but they realized that legally, Mr. Niebla belonged to the company. Remember this because it’s important. The man who broke his back to bring prestige to that name didn’t own his own identity. His children couldn’t market products with their father’s image without legal permission.
The eternal glory we spoke of at the beginning turned out to be private property with copyright. The sport elevated him to stardom only to remind him that on paper… He was just an employee wearing a borrowed costume. No one told you this, but the fate of his physical remains was also a source of bitterness.
It’s said there were arguments [music] about where his body should rest between those who wanted a monument and those who preferred the peace of anonymity so that Efrén could finally stop being anyone’s spectacle. In the end, he was laid to rest in a cemetery in Mexico City, visited by the few who weren’t looking for a photo for their social media, but by those who remembered the boy from the Pencil neighborhood, who just wanted to fly.
Think of the brutal contrast between being carried on the shoulders of thousands and the solitude of a tombstone that sometimes goes unnoticed among so many others. Analyze the cycle: glory, pressure, addiction, and self-destruction, but one element is missing: oblivion. Lucha libre is a machine that manufactures disposable memories.
Today, new generations watch videos of Mr. Niebla and laugh at his dances without knowing that behind those hip movements was a man with a destroyed liver and a shattered soul. Remember this. The real rot wasn’t in his character, it was in a society that consumes the tragedy of its idols as if it were entertainment.
We like to see them fall because it makes them human, but we don’t like to help them get back up because that ruins the narrative of the damned poet of the ring. Look at this shocking comparison. Mr. Niebla won more than 10 world titles, headlined anniversary shows, and was the most charismatic wrestler of his decade.
Yet, he ended his days relying on a fundraiser to pay for antibiotics that arrived too late. The sport elevated him to a vantage point from which to watch his own downfall. Listen to this. The lesson Efrén leaves us with is that success without a safety net [music] is assisted suicide fueled by applause. The next time you see an athlete fail, an idol falter, or a star show signs of weakness, don’t laugh.
Don’t make the meme. Burn this into your mind. Behind that mask is a man who may be bleeding from Inside, while you beg for another fall. This is what really happened in the final show. Mr. Niebla’s ring wasn’t made of canvas and ropes in his final minutes. It was a cold stretcher where death applied the final hold directly to his heart.
There was no referee to count to three, because the count had begun years before with the first drink hidden in the locker room. The king of the plague is gone, and with him, he took a way of understanding lucha libre that no longer exists. A way where the wrestler gave so much that he ended up erasing himself.
Efrén erased himself so that Mr. Niebla could be eternal, and that is a sacrifice no one should have to make. No one imagined that the boy who trained in humble gyms would end up being the protagonist of the saddest story in modern Mexican sports. But that’s how Olympus is; it gives you fire, but if you’re not careful, it consumes you to ashes.
[music] Today on Shadows of Olympus, we close this case with a mixture of respect and rage. Respect for the athlete [Music] that made us vibrate with emotion and rage for the man who got lost along the way without anyone truly offering him a helping hand. The sport elevated him and also destroyed him, but his shadow will continue to haunt the halls of Arena México every time a wrestler puts on a mask and feels that terrible fear of not knowing who will return home after the show.
Think about that for a moment. Remember this last detail. It is said that in the Pencil neighborhood, on rainy nights, there are still those who swear they see a tall, strong man [music] walking towards the subway carrying an old wrestling bag. He isn’t dancing, he does n’t wear an afro wig, he isn’t seeking applause, he just walks calmly, like someone who has finally lifted a weight that was crushing his soul.
That is the hero we want to remember, the man who, far from the decay and infection, found the peace that the ring could never give him. If the story of Mr. Niebla taught you something you didn’t know. If now you understand the pain hidden behind the black mask. And white, if you now see the truth of the wound that became his sentence, then do something for me.
Like this video, subscribe to the channel, not for me, but for Efrén, so that his full story, not just the popular and simplified version told by corporations, reaches more people who need to understand the true price of sporting glory. So that the next time someone says Mr. Niebla was just a drunken clown, someone else can say, “No.” Mr.

Niebla was a warrior who fought his toughest battle in absolute solitude and deserves to have his story told [music] with the truth, however raw it may be. Thank you for joining me to the end of this descent into the abyss. Remember this. Glory is eternal, but skin is fragile. See you in the next installment of Shadows of Olympus, where we will continue to unearth the truths that professional sports prefer to keep buried.
Because on this channel, we don’t dwell on the glitter of medals, we dwell on the darkness of those who dared to touch the sky and The wings ended up burning [music]. Rest in peace, Burcio Márquez. Rest in peace, the one and only plague king.