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PeteF3

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Everything posted by PeteF3

  1. This is the first "demonstration" in the history of wrestling that doesn't feature the wrestler refusing to break the hold. Dean shows us the Texas cloverleaf and the segment ends. "I'm the Man of a Thousand Holds--and that was just one." At the current rate, this series would literally be ending right about this week.
  2. Agreed on Dusty, and Schiavone has made little effort to familiarize himself with the new revolutionizing moves he's talking about here. Even the hype for the Dean Malenko video to come, designed specifically to teach us new names, is shit on by Dusty--"my vocabulary's full!" Tony is barely one step above "what a maneuver!" levels--there's a fine balance between that and going all Joey Styles on us, but Tony and Dusty are too far to the lower extreme. The match itself is terrific. They don't have to worry about losing viewers to Raw so they get a chance to slow things up a bit and work more holds, punctuating them with the occasional big move. I don't know if it was intentional, but I thought it was cool how both guys lost their footing and almost fell off the top turnbuckle right before the finish. Makes the double-KO just a little more plausible. Meltzer and fans were moaning about how WCW had no intention of these guys actually getting over (the first Eddy/Dean match on Nitro took a backseat to backstage cameras showing an arriving Hogan, something that sent the Internet fans into a frenzy) but in some ways, it's almost better for everyone that WCW just told them, "go out and do your stuff for ten minutes."
  3. Yes. He had runs with Bruno in the late '60s and one with Pedro in '72.
  4. Technically yes, they were #3, but the first two had already been unified at this point, so in essence they were 2nd.
  5. Norton worked a one-off house show in '94 or early '95, doing a job for Bob Holly of all things. I don't know if it counts, but Garvin did a podium interview in late '92 as part of a TV taping tryout, with the possibility of him taking a job as a TV talking head or some other sort of non-wrestling personality. It's possible they looked at him for the slot taken by Jerry Lawler.
  6. Well, eventually that's exactly what he did.
  7. Even if we take evilclown's interpretation at face value, there's a difference between being a hypocrite and being a sociopath.
  8. I thought Malenko was Jewish.
  9. Johnny B. Badd has assaulted Orndorff from behind, resulting in his mirror breaking. Orndorff is distraught over the upcoming seven years of bad luck, but Brillo-head sorts him out through the power of a pre-taped vignette. Orndorff receives a new mirror and finds a penny on the floor. Once again...the HELL?? Late 1995 WCW is filled with more bizarre vignettes than I've ever seen in my life.
  10. Robert Gibson has not learned any lessons from his tag partner, refusing to part with his beloved Rock 'n Roll tassels. With payoffs being what they are, it seems the SMW folks are all working to avoid breaking any nails or stubbing any toes.
  11. So lame. Butch can't even get the bag over Cornette's head. Cornette comes off as a real idiot here--I mean, not even in a stooging heel sense. I mean as an incompetent buffoon.
  12. This storyline made no sense whatsoever--Bobby Heenan sells "half" of WCW Pro--a show he doesn't even host, not that that should enable him to sell it anyway--to Sonny Onoo as part of a calculated Japanese takeover of WCW. I think the hysteria over Japanese business interests taking over the U.S. economy was a few years out of date by this point, but whatever. Chris Cruise also breaks the news that Kensuke Sasaki has beaten Sting for the U.S. title. Onoo on commentary will have you SCREAMING for the dulcet subtlety of Steve McMichael. He even says, "So sorry!" at one point--there are 1940's cartoons with more dignified portrayals of the Japanese than this. Houston unleashes a bridging knucklelock suplex, an Asai moonsault, and a Northern Lights suplex on the floor before Liger murders him with a fisherman buster. Fun squash. Cruise: "This is perhaps the most difficult thing I've ever done in my life." Preach it, Crispy. Onoo: "Your SHORT life." The HELL??
  13. I forgot how overwrought and decadent this music video was, and this cuts out all the Stephanie Seymour wedding stuff. Still a powerful song and wrestling video in spite of itself, though. Hype for all the main November 2 Remember matches is included.
  14. This is some Adult Swim-level shit but it's pretty funny. Dances With Dudley has tought Buh Buh Ray some hand-eye coordination exercises involving juggling limes. He's also taught him to speak properly--and Buh Buh does an Alfonso Morales impersonation! Big Dick grunts.
  15. Cactus cuts a scorched-earth promo on Tommy Dreamer and the ECW fans, in the ring this time. He would love to be at home watching Movies for Guys Who Like Movies on TBS, but he's got a higher purpose. And he'd love to slap the shit out of Dreamer, but that'd bring the ECW fans too much enjoyment. Instead, he promises to give them the most boring match they've ever dreamed of. Tommy Dreamer rebuts in a pre-tape interspersed with his ring intro. Dreamer tries to goad Cactus into fighting him, but Jack responds only with clean breaks and headlocks. Joey Styles is a lot better now than he was in '93 but I still really hate how he telegraphs things--every time Styles says something is about to happen, you can bet your bottom dollar that the precise opposite will instead. Eventually Cactus starts hammering him, and I think this is what Foley talked about in his first book, trying to bust Dreamer's eyebrow open and only succeeding in getting Dreamer to say to him, "Please stop hitting me." Eventually Cactus suffers a crippling injury to his hand, and since he's vowed never to put his body at risk again, he asks that the match be declared a no contest. "Thank you for coming, drive home safe, and let's support the Turner family tomorrow night!" Jim Molineaux won't declare a no-contest, so Cactus settles for taking a countout. Terry Funk tries to goad him back--"YOUR OLD LADY'S A WHORE! DEWEY'S A WHORE!" It works, and Cactus gets creamed by Dreamer, including a rather cleverly done spot where Dreamer enzuigiris him with a chair wrapped around his foot. Sounds horribly contrived but they made it work. Then Cactus gets into it with Funk. Then Richards gets involved. Then Raven again. Then Raven urges Cactus to use a chair, but Jack hesitates and Dreamer gets his own chair to use on Jack for the win. There are some neat ideas here, but this goes on and on and on. Cactus is still bouncing from anti-hardcore to hardcore and back again without any real rhyme or reason over the course of the match, and I don't get why. The Dreamer cut-ins were generally pretty bad, but unlike the rest of this segment they actually got better as they went along.
  16. Kid conveniently has his back turned as Dean Douglas attacks Razor, continuing the feud that won't die. Otherwise he's impartial...until the end, when he gets Sid out of a Razor's Edge attempt and fast-counts him after a Sid power bomb. Bad, boring match in front of a dead Brandon, Manitoba crowd. Sid almost kills himself taking an electric chair and barely looks competent in general for most of this. Kid turns heel in one of the most anticlimactic ways possible, and basically acts as though he couldn't care less about what's actually going on.
  17. I wonder what awards McMahon won for broadcast journalism. Vince actually books a worked Karate Fighters match.
  18. Bret and Diesel take some passive-aggressive potshots at each other. I appreciate the Pure Sports Build stuff here but this got to be pretty dull as it went on.
  19. It wasn't even the MSG match that Parv is referring to--it's the actual Poughkeepsie bout with the heel turn.
  20. Holy shit, it's the Pink Room of Death from the dying AWA. Or a motel room with rates by the hour. Benoit as a "whiskey-drinking skirt chaser" is not a characterization that I think fits. And boy is he not a smooth talker--not that that's news to anyone. Pillman and Arn are good but this is a horribly produced segment.
  21. You know this is authentically shot in Dublin because people are wearing Guinness t-shirts and the traffic is driving on the right. Jim Duggan's grandmother--Mad Katie Duggan--was a "wrapped fist champion" in 1902. Oh, and they both had a habit of giving a thumbs up and calling to the crowd. WCW sure has been heavy on sheer WTF segments of late.
  22. And why shouldn't Sting have gotten cheered? He comes off way cooler and more real than Hulk. I'm not sure Hogan even at his absolute best could have gotten "cold, silent rage" over as an emotion the way Sting does here. Sting has some strong words for Hogan, and it's absolutely impossible, the way I see it, for anyone to side with Hogan in this situation.
  23. Finally a good promo from Cornette, after a long cold spell. Love all the accurate historical nods, from Cornette helping the Rock 'n Rolls at Christmas Chaos to the wink-and-a-nod version of history of the Ricky Morton Role to the talk of the recent developments involving Ricky Morton and the THUGs. The THUGs rebut. It's a black background all right, but it's an upgrade over the black sheet limply hanging in front of some high school gym bleachers. The THUGs have a mystery partner to go against Robert Gibson & the Heavenly Bodies. The hype is on for the very last Smoky Mountain show. It's a moribund company but I'm going to miss it just the same.
  24. The Jarrett reveal got a pop from me--didn't see that coming at all. Who'd have thought that we actually would get a taste of the ill-fated Jarrett/Roadie feud after all? Jarrett chases Armstrong all the way to the street outside the WMC studio, and you know it's a hot angle when Dave Brown is running out there with them.
  25. Rare footage of a house show in Nashville, as Bob Armstrong makes an impromptu challenge towards Eddie Marlin! AWESOME. I would pay a full Yearbook's price just to see those two go at it in a studio segment. Eddie is holding his own when he's jumped by Smothers, Dunn, Jesse James, and Downtown Bruno. Bullet Bob figure fours him while the heels hold off babyfaces from making the save. Then to Crenshaw, Mississippi, where Eddie does the same thing to Jesse James Armstrong, who's mocking Eddie by stumbling around with a cane. Jesse clobbers both Marlin and Bill Rush with the cane. Eddie gets busted open!
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