Loss Posted July 9, 2011 Author Report Posted July 9, 2011 Hogan recaps all of his big programs since 1984 and talks about how every time there has been a major challenge, he and his Hulkamaniacs have overcome it. Footage is shown of Andre, Savage, Earthquake, Slaughter and Undertaker while he's talking. Quote
Ditch Posted July 9, 2011 Report Posted July 9, 2011 And of course at this moment in time there was no such thing as Ultimate Warrior so WM6 never happened! Quote
Tim Evans Posted July 10, 2011 Report Posted July 10, 2011 I don't think he mentioned Piper or Paul Orndorff either did he? Quote
shoe Posted August 3, 2011 Report Posted August 3, 2011 He didn't hit every feud but it was a nice touch to have video of some of the feuds. Quote
MikeCampbell Posted August 26, 2012 Report Posted August 26, 2012 Nice recap of some of Hogan's major programs, with video footage to boot. Like I said about the "Update" with the Mountie title win, this is the sort of stuff you don't see on RAW anymore that I wish we could. Aside from perhaps a quick video clip from the week before or the previous night's PPV. Typical Hogan promo. Quote
WingedEagle Posted February 7, 2013 Report Posted February 7, 2013 Hogan calls back feuds and angles with Andre, Savage, the Hebners, Slaughter and Undertaker. Flashback clips to all of these were fun. Quote
PeteF3 Posted July 3, 2013 Report Posted July 3, 2013 The Warrior has been Stalinized from history, but I'm surprised to see acknowledgment of the MegaPowers explosion considering Savage was a babyface now. Even the Slaughter footage sort of undermines what they were trying to do with him. Still a very cool little historical piece that the WWF didn't typically go for. Hogan whines about that nearsighted Jack Tunney, ignores Ric Flair, and calls out Savage and Sid Justice instead. Quote
kjh Posted February 3, 2015 Report Posted February 3, 2015 Hogan completely ignoring Flair really sticks out like a sore thumb when Flair a week earlier sold that his feud with Hogan was more important to him than the Rumble match and the WWF title up for grabs too. That's just plain odd, even though the promo itself was a good way of getting over how Hogan usually overcame the insurmountable odds thrown at him. Quote
garretta Posted December 8, 2015 Report Posted December 8, 2015 There was no mention of how Hogan had won the last two Rumbles, which was strange. The nods to history were nice, and like a few others have said, quite unexpected in the context of 1992 WWF. I didn't like the shot at Tunney, nor did I like the fact that out of the three people Hogan called out, two (Savage and Sid) were faces. One would have been sufficient to get over the "every man for himself" bit. The fact that Flair wasn't one of the people called out signified just how done Hogan (and Vince) were with him already, at least as far as being "The Man" was concerned. MSG three weeks ago killed almost all desire I have to see Flair touch Hogan ever again, and, quite frankly, it's diluted Flair's Rumble performance for me as well, mostly because I'm almost sure Flair would never have even sniffed the belt if Hogan hadn't been scheduled to go away after Mania and Vince hadn't needed a transitional heel champ for Savage to beat. On a much more somber note, Mean Gene's liver disease is beginning to be noticeable here. He's not as drawn as he'd be later on in WCW, but he's doesn't quite have the (relatively) youthful appearance he's had since his AWA days. I wouldn't be surprised if his sickness was as much of a factor in the downfall of his work as the cheesier atmosphere of Attitude Era-WCW. Quote
soup23 Posted August 20, 2017 Report Posted August 20, 2017 A cool promo from Hulk with a lot of backstory and clips added in. However, after the clips he gets really heelish and cultish talking about how he is going to force Tunney to see things his way. The tonal shift was odd and the close up shot on an intense Hogan made the tone of the promo off from what they probably intended. Quote
dawho5 Posted March 8, 2018 Report Posted March 8, 2018 I didn't like Hogan calling out Savage and Sid. I get it's every man for himself. But at the same time how do you spin Sid's actions during the Rumble as heelish when Hogan was begging for something like that to happen the week before? Quote
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