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PeteF3

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Everything posted by PeteF3

  1. I can reluctantly allow the repeat of the soon-to-be-tired "take the chair from a supposed partner, then turn on them" spot on the basis that it was a deliberate callback to Shawn turning on X-Pac. Otherwise, yawn. They've teased way too many DX splits that weren't for this to have much meaning, even though it pops the crowd good. Uh...and didn't Shawn say this match was supposed to be anything-goes and that the Outlaws would be allowed to get involved? Why the DQ?
  2. "IT'S BETTER THAN SEX!!" I enjoyed D'Lo's attempts to justify why he's still the European champion.
  3. I think this is a pretty obvious swerve that we're in for--nobody actually announces anything in the Attitude Era. If the NAO were going to turn, they'd have done it in a match. There are some good personal below-the-belt shots here between HBK and HHH but neither one actually wants to sell for the other (or just about anybody else) in a mic-spot, so it all ends up falling kinda flat.
  4. Come January, this will make two consecutive Dome shows where WCW will make every effort to kill the town. I'd just like to mention for about the 37th time that when the WWF baits-and-switches us, 99% of the time, they manage to make us forget about what we originally thought we were going to see. This is just a pathetic mess.
  5. This from a Reynolds-directed movie called Hard Time, which I've never heard of but sports a fairly decent B- cast of Reynolds, Piper, Billy Dee Williams, Robert Loggia, and others.
  6. "If Goldberg thinks he's running the show, he's not." I love shoot comments that aren't supposed--oh, who am I kidding, of course that was supposed to be a shoot comment. By whose authority does Nash have the ability to insert himself into the main event? They're not even attempting to make sense of this, unless Nash just plans on doing a run-in.
  7. I really don't care for the LWO as a group, as it seems to only marginalize the non-Eddy (and I guess now non-Juvie) luchadores further when the goal was for the opposite to be the case.
  8. No one replaced Booger--his spot was empty, with Vince and Ted assuming it was supposed to be the injured Bret.
  9. Yeah--MAYBE you could pass this off as Eric Bischoff propaganda, but I'm guessing WCW isn't sophisticated enough to portray that kind of nuance for a video. This will be an interesting compare and contrast opportunity when Vince is forced out next year.
  10. I can't believe he was still around at this point.
  11. When you're hot, you're hot.
  12. GEORGE and ADAM again?? Who ARE these guys? Who did they know?
  13. Sort of a spotfesty TV match but they sure do cram in a lot of stuff in this brief amount of time. Had the WWF had any clue how to get the division over they could have quickly put together a cruiserweight division to rival WCW's.
  14. Dave and Corey don't seem overly concerned with the state of Randy Hales here.
  15. A fun little studio match with some awesome punches and takedowns by Dundee, but not much more than that. Good, I didn't get Christopher's line about high heels and flip flops either, unless it's just that he's saying Samantha's feet are so disgusting it destroys her shoes, or something. He also refers to a fan as Shamu the Killer Whale which is that type of Kenny Bania-esque "don't have to think about it" humor I come to expect from my wrestling heels.
  16. AJPW finishes the year strong, as they always seem to do no matter what happens earlier--though I will say this year felt stronger from start to finish than '97 did, which opened with a GOAT candidate and then slid off for 10 months until a hot finish. As for the match itself, yeah, it's a MOTYC and probably the best AJPW tag I can recall seeing. Vader feels home again and continues to fit right into this environment, and Kobashi is such a perfect opponent for him on multiple levels. This is hard-hitting and super-heated and yet never really feels overindulgent--as Loss said, it's more of a big slugfest than a match with a lot of advanced offense, but the moves are still put over like they're high-end. And the finish is almost cinematic, as a dead Jun resurrects himself and you can see the action develop as he makes a last-ditch effort for the save.
  17. Not a great match, not the best indy match of the year, but much better than a lot of other indy matches on these sets. A good structure will do that for you, and the Hardyz and Helms already know how to lay out a southern tag match but punctuate it with more advanced '90s offense. Weirdly, since they make such a big deal about the Hardyz signing WWF contracts, it seems to heel them with the crowd to the point where you'd swear it was by design. But the match is worked with them as babyfaces all the way. Then some goof gets on the mic and rants a bunch and comes off as every stereotypical indy promoter desperate to be part of his show.
  18. Boy, this was tough to watch. Thank God for the Dudleys' good old wrasslin'-style attack because I'm about sick of them trying to play Taz up as having done this crap "for real" or whatever.
  19. Tammy's still looking good at this point, personal problems notwithstanding.
  20. I don't want to see any more of Undertaker vs. Kane, though I admit I liked the visual of Austin sneaking up on Undertaker and finally laying him out with the shovel. Missed on the disc but explained to us by the announcers, they somehow got another Kane mask and put it on the Undertaker, and when Bearer brought the orderlies back, they ended up carting *him* to the institution and not Kane. Probably too clever by half. The in-ring segment is awful and does in fact sort of contradict my earlier contention that the embalming was semi-erased from history, as for all their downplaying of it in the first segment, it's rehashed here in all its glory. The sewer climax is whatever--compared to where this segment was headed, it's probably not such a terrible payoff.
  21. I actually thought this was better than it looked on paper. It's rushed, but both guys take some really stiff shots with the ladder and they tease a miracle Mankind victory in the face of 2-on-1 odds before he's overwhelmed. Shawn alternates between being amusing and being a total JBL-esque shit, with some of those "postmodern wrestling" hallmarks that Parv loves so much, like bragging about how he can wrestle for 45 minutes and Mick can't. It's like this is where the start of the WWE exacerbating its wrestlers own weaknesses instead of hiding them comes from.
  22. All that and this is hurt more by the fact that Shawn does his full entrance and gets in the ring, where X-Pac fails to actually do anything to him after declaring he was going to whip his ass. Why couldn't Shawn have just stayed on the ramp? Nothing about the promo itself would have changed.
  23. Yeah, after last week's debacle, this was pretty inspired. Low-key and lighthearted is definitely better as far as on-location segments go. Henry is quickly becoming a natural on-camera ("No, no, that's not D'Lo" ... "You know what comes after dinner, right? No, not THAT...").
  24. This is like watching Thesz vs. O'Connor compared to last week. I'll take it.
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