Agent Coulson wrote: » Gallows, Machine Gun, Styles, Generico, Steen & Uhaa all on the same episode Monday Night Raw who'd have said that 18 months ago.
briany wrote: » Vince McMahon has been criticized as out of touch and Vince Russo has been called a one trick pony p*ss artist. How did those two manage, then, to join forces and book what is popularly considered the hottest era in all of wrestling?
tinpib wrote: » Hey Guys. Kinda revisiting my childhood reading this wiki articlehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1980s_professional_wrestling_boom I started watching wrestling around the time of the build up to WrestleMania 4 but I also remember at the same time I used to see repeats where Mean Gene was promoting "The greatest extravaganza of all time, WrestleMania 3". Anyway, does anyone know of good docs or books for this period? A more in-depth version of the wiki article.
leggo wrote: » Consider The Attitude Era more like a cultural phenomenon of its time, a fashion trend, than a boom period for pro-wrestling and it makes more sense. Watch back now and a lot of the stuff they put out doesn't stand up at all, whereas the actual in-ring stuff today is a million times better. Today you can watch a generic PPV that means nothing that'll keep you entertained for 3 hours (even if it doesn't change anything on the wrestling landscape) whereas then you'd sit through 3 hours of crap before having your mind blown by the latest twist in the saga of Stone Cold Steve Austin, which again doesn't resonate as much today as there was a genuine emotional connection and stake in him and his every move at the time (so the heat that comes with him being screwed out of the title, say, doesn't stand up with hindsight).
PTH2009 wrote: » Going to try and get too a UK TV taping in November but I'm very worried they will be no November tour with WWE doing the network special in London in September
briany wrote: » The rest of your post I agree with, but I do have to say that the Attitude era featured PPVs where the majority of the matches on the card had some sort of story arc to go with them, and ones with continuity at that. It wasn't simply waiting to see what happened with Austin any more than every wrestling card ever that has been principally focused on its main event and the performers therein. Today's PPVs feature much more wrestling, but if I have no reason to be involved in the match, if the psychology makes little sense and I'm not even sure whether the match is going to mean anything in a week's time then it matters not what moves they do. And I think the in-ring stuff was better in the AE, if only because it wasn't over-produced, it didn't have the fans giving a running commentary in hockey chants, and we hadn't necessarily seen every match on the card in one form or another on previous TV and PPVs because there was a de-emphasis on actual in-ring action for TV. That's something I do agree with Russo on. Skits, vignettes and other things to build the characters of wrestlers are great. Having ways to keep wrestlers apart until the big shows really creates anticipation, tension and a greater excitement in the match they eventually do have.
Omackeral wrote: » They're speaking about us in the real world. "You know it's fake right?!"http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=2057586079
Wo wo wo, slow down. Your being ridiculous now