Monday, December 31, 2012

WWF Saturday Night's Main Event XIX (January 1989)



Original Airdate: January 7, 1989

From Tampa, Florida; Your Hosts are Vince McMahon and Jesse Ventura.

WWF Saturday Night's Main Event XVIII (November 1988)



Original Airdate: November 26, 1988 – airing just two days after the ’88 Survivor Series, though taped a few weeks before – making this both a wrap-up and go home show.

From Sacramento, California; Your Hosts are Vince McMahon and Jesse Ventura.

WWF Saturday Night's Main Event XVII (October 1988)



Original Airdate: October 29, 1988

From Baltimore, Maryland; Your Hosts are Vince McMahon and Jesse Ventura.

Sunday, December 30, 2012

WWF Saturday Night's Main Event XVI (April 1988)



Original Airdate: April 30, 1988

Formatting note – with the expansion of our coverage to… covering… wrestling TV programs like this one, you’ll notice that there is now a nifty new index on the top of each page: one for the WWE/WWF pay per views, WCW/NWA, and a separate one for TV programming from all promotions. Locate whatever you are looking for, and read in order if you wish to do so. There is also a search bar in the upper left corner of each page – good for searching a particular show, wrestler, match, or just how many times I’ve used the word ‘fuck.’ This should clear up any future organizational issues, as many of these shows will likely be posted out of order.

From Springfield, Massachusetts; Your Hosts are Vince McMahon and Jesse Ventura.

WWF Saturday Night's Main Event XV (March 1988)



Original Airdate: March 12, 1988

From Nashville, Tennessee; Your Hosts are Vince McMahon and Jesse Ventura.

Saturday, December 29, 2012

WWF The Main Event (February 1988)



Original Airdate: February 5, 1988

After achieving unparalleled ratings success with their Saturday Night’s Main Event broadcasts (held a few times a year, in SNL’s usual late night slot) NBC decided to give the WWF a one-hour special – this time in primetime, and on Friday Night. And the WWF delivered – promising the highly anticipated WrestleMania III rematch between Hulk Hogan and Andre the Giant – drawing the largest audience ever for a wrestling television program (a ratings record that still stands today) with some 30 million people tuning in. For pro-wrestling, this is the equivalent of The Beatles on Ed Sullivan.

From Indianapolis, Indiana; Your Hosts are Vince McMahon and Jesse Ventura.

Friday, December 28, 2012

WWF Saturday Night's Main Event XIV (January 1988)



Original Airdate: January 2, 1988

From Landover, Maryland; Your Hosts are Vince McMahon and Jesse Ventura.

WWF Saturday Night's Main Event XIII (November 1987)



Original Airdate: November 28, 1987 – airing just two nights after the first Survivor Series, though taped a few weeks before.

From Seattle, Washington; Your Hosts are Vince McMahon and Jesse Ventura.

WWF Saturday Night's Main Event XII (October 1987)



Original Airdate: October 3, 1987

From Hershey, Pennsylvania; Your Hosts are Vince McMahon and Bobby Heenan.

Thursday, December 27, 2012

WWF Saturday Night's Main Event X (March 1987)



Original Airdate: March 14, 1987

From Detroit, Michigan; Your Hosts are Vince McMahon and Jesse Ventura. A testament to the WWF’s drawing power at this point: they pack over fifteen thousand people into an arena for a TV taping a month before running essentially the same town (Pontiac – about a half hour away) for WrestleMania III – and still drawing enough to fill the Silverdome.

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

WWF Saturday Night's Main Event VIII (November 1986)



Original Airdate: November 29, 1986

From Los Angeles, California; Your Hosts are Vince McMahon and Jesse Ventura – with Jesse wearing a special toupee for the occasion, as they’re in Hollywood.

WWF Saturday Night's Main Event VII (October 1986)



Original Airdate: October 4, 1986

From Richfield, Ohio; Your Hosts are Vince McMahon and Jesse Ventura.

During the opening roundup, we get perhaps the most disturbing promo of all time (wrestling, or otherwise), as Jake Roberts shows us his snake while taking a shower.

Sunday, December 23, 2012

WWF Saturday Night's Main Event IV (January 1986)



Original Airdate: January 4, 1986

From Tampa, Florida; Your Hosts are Vince McMahon and Bobby Heenan – since Jesse Ventura is wrestling.

Saturday, December 22, 2012

WWF Saturday Night's Main Event III (November 1985)



Original Airdate: November 2, 1985

From Hershey, Pennsylvania; Your Hosts are Vince McMahon and Jesse Ventura.

Friday, December 21, 2012

WWF Saturday Night’s Main Event II (October 1985)



Original Airdate: October 5, 1985

After the success of the first Saturday Night’s Main Event in May – with the WWF still running wild in the thick of the Golden Age – they came back for another late night special on NBC that fall.

From East Rutherford, New Jersey; Your Hosts are Vince McMahon and Jesse Ventura.

Thursday, December 20, 2012

WWF Saturday Night's Main Event I (May 1985)



Original Airdate: May 11, 1985

With the WWF reaching unparalleled levels of success and mainstream exposure with Hulk Hogan, the Rock ‘n’ Wrestling Connection, and the first WrestleMania, they secured a deal with NBC to air 90-minute specials throughout the year, in place of a Saturday Night Live rerun. It was a tremendous ratings success – a win for both the WWF and NBC – and would run until 1992, when a general slump in the wrestling business resulted in cancelation.

From Uniondale, New York; Your Hosts are Vince McMahon and Jesse Ventura.

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

WCW SuperBrawl (May 1991)



In 1991, WCW introduced a new pay per view to their lineup in an effort to create a non-NWA associated flagship show: SuperBrawl. Over the next few years, WCW would push to establish SuperBrawl as its flagship blowoff show – turning Starrcade into a non-blowoff concept card for ’91 and ’92 – and even releasing a videogame named after the event.

The first SuperBrawl was less this structure of a new flagship program (as WCW had just run Starrcade a few months earlier), but built around a rematch between WCW World Champion Ric Flair and NWA World Champion Tatsumi Fujinami – after Flair had lost the latter title to Fujinami in a WCW/New Japan cross promotional event in March.

From St. Petersburg, Florida; Your Hosts are Jim Ross and Dusty Rhodes.

Monday, December 17, 2012

WCW / NJPW SuperShow (March 1991)



The SuperShow was an interesting cross promotional, east-meets-west event held in Japan by WCW and New Japan in March 1991 – though it wouldn’t air in North America until the next month, and in edited form. It took place in front of over 60,000 fans at the Tokyo Dome, and was actually promoted as ‘Starrcade’ in Japan. I’m covering it today as an introduction to the upcoming SuperBrawl series, as this card is the catalyst for the main event of the first SuperBrawl.

From Tokyo, Japan; Your Hosts are Jim Ross and Tony Schiavone in North America – though my copy is the full Japanese version of the show, with Japanese announcers.

WCW Spring Stampede 1994



For 1994 WCW decided to add a new pay per view to their calendar, for the first time producing an event for the month of April, to bridge the gap between SuperBrawl in February and Slamboree in May. It was an interesting period for WCW, as this was one of the last shows produced before their fateful signing of Hulk Hogan in June, changing the direction of the entire promotion.

I wasn’t a WCW fan yet when the event was first held (in fact, only becoming a wrestling fan at all a few months before), but I did acquire a VHS copy of the show in the late 90s (from Amazon.com!), based on good word of mouth, and the reputation of Ric Flair v Ricky Steamboat matches.

From Chicago, Illinois; Your Hosts are Tony Schiavone and Bobby Heenan.

Friday, December 14, 2012

WWF Over the Edge 1999



Over the Edge ’99 is, without a doubt, the WWE / WWF’s most infamous show. For me, as a fourteen year old hardcore WWF supporter, it was one of the most surreal, visceral moments in my wrestling fandom.

I didn’t order the show live, as the monthly pay per view wars were too pricey for my family to compete in, but I heard about the death of Owen Hart that same night, on the local news. It was indescribably devastating, as Hart had always been one of my favorite Superstars – and, in fact, one of the reasons I turned on to the product to begin with in early 1994. I was heart broken not only as a fan, but thinking of how his family must be feeling – especially parents Stu and Helen, and brother Bret. I stood in front of my bedroom television set shocked – it couldn’t be true – and in an era before DVR, I couldn’t go back to make sure. Unfortunately, the internet quickly confirmed what the newscaster had said.

The next day at school, classes happened to be put off for an end of the year field trip to a local amusement park. It was the first opportunity I had to talk to my ‘wrestling buddies’ about what had happened. Everyone was shocked, not at all in the mood to go on rides, or have any real fun. I remember talking of the incident, and general Owen memories, at the picnic table lunch over our peanut butter sandwiches. It was very overwhelming – and maybe more so for me than some of my friends, as I had recently lost a close family member, and Owen’s death brought on a flood of memories. Fittingly, it rained all day.

Watching Over the Edge ’99 is not a part of the usual process, especially for review. Obviously, it isn’t the type of show we watch for the purpose we usually tune into wrestling: enjoyment and escapism. To suspend disbelief. Watching Over the Edge is the wrestling equivalent of watching the Zapruder film. Of watching a Holocaust documentary. It isn’t entertainment… but it’s a major part of the pseudo-sport we love – one of the most tragic.

From Kansas City, Missouri; Your Hosts are Jim Ross and Jerry Lawler.

Thursday, December 13, 2012

WCW Slamboree 1996



After taking a look at the nWo‘s formation, I thought we should pull back and take a peek at the last WCW pay per view to take place before Scott Hall’s fateful appearance on Nitro the next week.

For 1996, WCW scrapped the ‘Legends Reunion’ theme from Slamboree – instead digging up Dusty Rhodes’ BattleBowl/Lethal Lottery concept (not used since November 1993) to advance some angles without having to pay them off, as well as push Diamond Dallas Page.

My interest in the show was minimal, as I had become a WCW fan after Hogan and Savage’s entrances in 1994 – but only to a point. Everything from fall 1995-nWo invasion blends together, as I was mostly watching the WWF – almost every week of which I remember vividly.

From Baton Rouge, Louisiana; Your Hosts are Tony Schiavone, Bobby Heenan, and Dusty Rhodes.

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

WCW Fall Brawl 1996



With the nWo running wild, the annual Fall Brawl seemed like a perfect place for WCW to get some revenge – booking a hot War Games main event. However, since the nWo only had four active members at that point (and one – The Giant – was busy wrestling in another match), it led to another promise of a mystery partner, as well as the introduction of Sting as the lead foil for Hollywood Hogan, and the nWo.

From Winston-Salem, North Carolina; Your Hosts are Tony Schiavone, Bobby Heenan, and Dusty Rhodes.

WCW Hog Wild 1996



Hog Wild 1996 was an interesting show for many reasons. It was WCW’s first effort at programming an August pay per view into their increasingly competitive schedule, which they decided to hold outdoors at the annual Sturgis Motorcycle Rally, with tickets given to bikers for free in the midst of the hottest angle they’d ever stumbled onto with the nWo. The result led to a disinterested crowd (many of whom actually sat on their bikes for the duration of the show) filled with non-fans who grabbed free tickets to a random wrestling show on their vacation, but had little/no knowledge of the participants or angles presented.

From Sturgis, South Dakota; Your Hosts are Tony Schiavone, Bobby Heenan, and Dusty Rhodes – trying their best to fit in, and not recreate Altamont.

Monday, December 10, 2012

WCW Bash at the Beach 1996



Ever since Memorial Day 1996, when Scott Hall showed up unannounced on Nitro as an ‘invader’ from a rival promotion – the wrestling world was abuzz. At The Great American Bash, he (and fellow ‘Outsider’ Kevin Nash) attacked WCW’s Eric Bischoff – powerbombing him through a table – and spent the next month reeking havoc on the entire roster, running in during matches, and attacking everyone in sight. The angle was extremely hot, turning all heads to WCW (and Nitro – which would dominate the WWF’s RAW in the ratings for over 80 weeks), and the first ‘blowoff’ to the angle was scheduled for Bash at the Beach, where the Outsiders (along with an unnamed third man), would do battle with three of WCW’s foremost stars.

As a kid, this was big. Everyone knew who Razor and Diesel were, and seeing them show up on Nitro, destroy sets and punk out wrestlers was like a bizzaro world. It didn’t have the same feeling as seeing Barry Windham or Dustin Rhodes show up in the WWF with a new gimmick – it felt real, and was extremely well done. The ‘who is the third man’ question also plagued us for weeks going into this – with all sorts of rumors of who was going to come over from the WWF next.

From Daytona Beach, Florida; Your Hosts are Tony Schiavone, Bobby Heenan, and Dusty Rhodes

WCW The Great American Bash 1996



The Great American Bash 1996 is remembered as one of the primary steps in WCW’s quest to transition from ‘that wrestling on the other channel’ to the undisputed #1 promotion in North America. The card on paper going into the show certainly didn’t imply such (it was essentially stranded WCW fare for the period), but the events that would unfold drove forward a storyline that would, for the first time, not only make WCW a contender against the WWF (which they first truly achieved with the signing of Hulk Hogan (and, to a lesser extent, Randy Savage) in 1994) but the premier wrestling promotion in North America.

From Baltimore, Maryland; Your Hosts are Tony Schiavone and Dusty Rhodes

Friday, December 7, 2012

NWA (WCW) WrestleWar 1989



WrestleWar ’89: Music City Showdown! (a showdown in Music City!) isn’t one I saw live (I was four), but in the late 90s, after ‘smartening up’ about the wrestling business and becoming more interested in the art of wrestling, it was one I sought out – as it featured the legendary showdown (in Music City!) between Ric Flair and Ricky Steamboat that was heralded as one of the greatest of all time.

From Nashville, Tennessee; Your Hosts are Jim Ross and Bob Caudle.

Thursday, December 6, 2012

WCW Starrcade 1997



Starrcade 1997 is one of WCW’s most famous, and certainly their most notorious show. It broke all previous pay per view commercial figures for the company (breaking Hulk Hogan’s debut show – Bash at the Beach 1994’s record), and – aside from multiple feuds promised to be paid off on the biggest blowoff show of the year – was the culmination of the Sting v nWo angle that had been the focus of WCW programming throughout 1997.

In addition, Bret Hart – fresh off of his rocky departure from the WWF after the Montreal Screwjob – was set to make an appearance. The signing of Bret Hart – one of the WWF’s biggest international stars of the 90s – was a huge triumph for WCW, and with the WWF reeling, his addition to Starrcade only added to the level of intrigue. It was certainly big bait for me, as Montreal had turned me off of the WWF completely for a while, and I was eager to see what WCW would do with my hero, the Hitman.

The show was poised to become WCW’s knockout blow to the staggering WWF, but is now remembered as one of the turning points in the Monday Night Wars, as WCW mishandled and blew the potential of this show so badly, it began the downward spiral that would not only help the WWF overtake them in ratings and revenue by 1998 – but lead to their eventual demise only three years later.

From Washington, D.C. – Your Hosts are Tony Schiavone, Mike Tenay, and Dusty Rhodes.

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

WWF Survivor Series 1998



By 1998, the WWF was resurgent – finally finding the overarching storyline they needed to overtake WCW with Steve Austin v Mr. McMahon – and in the fall, Mr. McMahon won a major battle in his endless war against Stone Cold, getting the WWF Title off of him. Unfortunately for him, his plan (kayfabe) to put the title on The Undertaker or Kane had failed when Austin interfered – leaving it vacant – and compelling the formation of a fourteen-man single elimination tournament (known as, The Deadly Games) to declare a new champion. McMahon lined up his troops – determined the night end with the title on Corporate stooge Mankind – while Steve Austin and newly christened ‘People’s Champion’ The Rock prepared for the obstacles McMahon would throw on their way to the title.

From St. Louis, Missouri; Your Hosts are Jim Ross and Jerry Lawler.

Monday, December 3, 2012

WWF Survivor Series 1996



As an eleven year old mark, I have very fond memories of watching this show on pay per view. The WWF was getting killed financially by WCW at the time, and they built this card nicely, with the blowoff to the Mankind/Undertaker feud, Shawn Michaels defending the WWF Title against Sid, and, probably most intriguing of all, the return of Bret Hart – after eight months of absence, and worries that he would also jump to WCW – to finally face off with Steve Austin, and his mouth.

From New York, New York; Your Hosts are Vince McMahon and Jim Ross.

Sunday, December 2, 2012

WCW Starrcade 1996



1996 was a return to form for Starrcade, as WCW promoted the card back to flagship status, after spending most of the 90s either running concepts shows, or promoting it as just another event in their ever expanding lineup.

With the nWo storyline in full swing, I had become a somewhat devoted WCW fan by the end of 1996 – Nitro getting about a 50% share with RAW in the channel surfing battle. The WWF was, unquestionably, still my main source of wrestling programming – but even a loyal eleven year old mark superfan would be hard pressed to turn a blind eye at what was going on over on TNT.

From Nashville, Tennessee; Your Hosts are Tony Schiavone, Bobby Heenan, and Dusty Rhodes – along with Mike Tenay (he knows Cruiserweights!) and Lee Marshall (he knows Women!) for a couple of matches.

Saturday, December 1, 2012

WCW Starrcade 1995



1995 once again saw WCW running Starrcade as a concept show – which they had previously attempted with BattleBowl in the early 90s – this time holding a ‘World Cup of Wrestling,’ though the only two countries competing were ‘Japan’ and ‘WCW’ – which, to be fair, did have the budget of some smaller countries at that point. The concept was not entirely unlike the Iron Man tournament they ran on the show in 1989, or the Pat O'Connor Memorial International Cup Tag Team Tournament (try saying that five times fast), held in 1990 – though the promotion for it was strange. Because of the time difference, WCW’s main American television platform – Nitro – was not the primary way to sell Starrcade to the Japanese audience, and episodes of Nitro building to Starrcade placed very little focus on the World Cup – which dominates this card. Most of the build took place on WCW’s scarcely watched syndicated programming – which aired at more convenient hours for the Japanese – to help market Starrcade.

Other than the tournament – which, as noted, was fairly irrelevant to American audiences due to WCW’s promotion – there would also be a match for the WCW World Title, featuring champion Randy Savage defending against the winner of a Triangle Match between Ric Flair, Sting, and Lex Luger. This angle was properly promoted for American audiences. My personal, ten year old interest in the show was limited, as I had been following WCW as an occasional WWF alternative since Hulk Hogan’s signing the previous summer, but the fact that he had decided to take time off – sitting Starrcade out – left me numb on the buildup, and I didn’t even bother to ask my parents about ordering the show.

From Nashville, Tennessee; Your Hosts are Tony Schiavone, Bobby Heenan, and Dusty Rhodes.