Monday Night Wars
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The term Monday Night Wars pertains to the period of American professional wrestling from September 4, 1995, to March 26, 2001. During this time the World Wrestling Federation's Monday Night RAW went head-to-head with World Championship Wrestling's Monday Nitro in a battle for Nielsen Ratings each week.
The ratings war was part of a larger overall struggle between the two companies, which included the use of cutthroat tactics and the legitimate defections of several wrestlers and writers between the two companies. (Extreme Championship Wrestling, while not a party to the ratings battle, was also involved as a tertiary player.) It ended with the sale of WCW by its parent company, AOL Time Warner, to World Wrestling Federation Entertainment, Inc.
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[edit] Before the Wars
[edit] Wrestling on cable TV before 1993
By the early 1980s, cable television was rising and one genre of programming responsible for this was professional wrestling, which was relatively cheap to produce and scored high ratings. When Atlanta TV station WTCG (now WTBS) became a superstation by the late 1970s, its Georgia Championship Wrestling (GCW) program reached a national audience. Though based in Atlanta, the company also ran live wrestling shows throughout its geographic "territory" of Georgia (the American professional wrestling industry was a patchwork of self-contained, regional and sub-regional companies — there was no single, nation-wide promotion at the time). The territory was affiliated with what had been the world's top sanctioning body of championship titles for decades before, the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA).
The TV show, hosted by Gordon Solie, was recorded in one of WTBS' studios at 1050 Techwood Drive, in downtown Atlanta. Shows were taped before a small (yet enthusiastic), live in-studio audience, as were most professional wrestling TV shows of that era. The show featured wrestling matches, plus melodramatic monologues and inter-character confrontations — similar to the programming offered by other territories, including the Northeast-based WWF. GCW's show, which aired on Saturday evenings, was complemented with a Sunday evening edition. Jack and Gerald Brisco had major stakes in the organization while Ole Anderson was head booker and was basically in charge of operations.
In 1983 WWF started their own cable show called WWF All American Wrestling on Sunday mornings on USA Network. Later that year, WWF debuted a second cable show also on USA called Tuesday Night Titans (TNT), a talk show spoof hosted by Vince McMahon and Lord Alfred Hayes.
While still running steadily, both Briscos sold their entire stock in the business (including the TV deal) to Vince McMahon and on July 14, 1984, WWF took over the GCW slot, which by that time had changed its name to World Championship Wrestling on WTBS. At that point, McMahon controlled all of nationally televised wrestling. However, the WWF show on TBS was a ratings disaster as the former GCW fans turned off the set (and after two weeks, GCW returned to TBS, albeit in an early-morning timeslot).
Despite originally promising to produce original programming for the TBS timeslot in Atlanta, McMahon chose instead to provide only a clip show for TBS, featuring highlights from other WWF programming as well as matches from house shows at Madison Square Garden, Boston Garden and other major arenas. This format would eventually be the cornerstone of the WWF Prime Time Wrestling (PTW) program. In May 1985, McMahon sold the TBS timeslot to Jim Crockett Promotions, under heavy pressure from Ted Turner. That would set up a rivalry between McMahon and Turner that would continue for 16 years.
That same year, PTW replaced TNT on USA Network which expanded to two hours the format of WWF's WTBS program of showcasing matches from WWF Superstars and Wrestling Challenge plus matches from house shows. The most-remembered Prime Time format featured Bobby Heenan and Gorilla Monsoon introducing taped matches and analyzing them afterward, with Monsoon taking a neutral/babyface position and Heenan unashamedly cheering on the heels. The chemistry between Monsoon and Heenan made this show popular with fans for many years, despite the fact it was not considered one of the WWF's "primary" shows for most of its history, and many other wrestling programs — both produced by the WWF and by other companies-would attempt to copy this formula, with varying degrees of success.
[edit] The scheduling war of 1987-88
During the span of five months between November 1987 and March 1988, a bitter event-scheduling war broke out between Vince McMahon and rival promoter Jim Crockett, Jr. On Thanksgiving night 1987, McMahon's WWF aired Survivor Series against National Wrestling Alliance's Starrcade, which Crockett marketed as NWA's answer to WrestleMania. However, many cable companies could only offer one live PPV event at a time. They were therefore presented with a threat from the WWF saying that any cable company that chose not to carry Survivor Series would not carry any wrestling pay-per-views sixty days before and twenty-one days after the show. Therefore, the WWF PPV was cleared 10-1 over Starrcade, as only three cable companies opted to remain loyal to their contract with Crockett.
After this incident, McMahon was warned by the PPV industry not to schedule PPV events simultaneously with the NWA again. However, he was still not willing to fully cooperate with Crockett. On January 24, 1988, another scheduling conflict took place between the WWF and NWA: the NWA presented the Bunkhouse Stampede on PPV, while the WWF aired the Royal Rumble for free on the USA Network.
In 1988, with WWF's WrestleMania IV around the corner, Crockett developed his own PPV-caliber event and aired it for free on TBS. The result was the Clash of Champions (later renamed Clash of the Champions).
On March 27, 1988 – the same night as WrestleMania IV – the first Clash of Champions aired. The first show was of PPV caliber and made Sting a star after he wrestled NWA World Champion Ric Flair to a 45-minute draw. WCW repeated the practice again the following year with a Clash coinciding with the WWF's WrestleMania V. Although the main event saw NWA Champion Ricky Steamboat defeated Ric Flair in a best of three falls match that lasted for almost an hour, ratings and attendance for the event fell well below expectations compared to WrestleMania V. Thus, the practice of conflicting major events would cease for six years.
[edit] WWF between 1993-1995: Monday becomes RAW
As 1993 began, Prime Time Wrestling was struggling in the ratings and PTW was canceled. The show that would succeed PTW would change how wrestling on cable TV would be presented, however.
Monday Night RAW was launched on USA Network in January 1993 as PTW's replacement. WWF decided that it should use its cable time as a showcase for original matches and storylines that would serve as the major build-up to the quarterly pay-per-view broadcasts. The original RAW broke new ground in televised professional wrestling. Traditionally, wrestling shows were taped on sound stages with small audiences or at large arena shows. The RAW formula was very different than that of its predecessor, Prime Time Wrestling: instead of taped matches, with studio voice overs and taped chat, RAW was a show shot to a live audience, with angles as they happened. The 1st episode featured Yokozuna defeating Koko B. Ware, The Steiner Brothers defeating The Executioners, WWF Intercontinental Champion Shawn Michaels defeating Max Moon and The Undertaker defeating Damien Demento. The show also featured an interview with Razor Ramon.
RAW originated from the The Grand Ballroom at Manhattan Center Studios, a small New York City theater and aired live each week. The combination of an intimate venue and live action proved highly successful. However, the weekly live schedule proved to be a financial drain on the WWF, and taped shows began airing. Sometimes up to a month's worth of shows were taped at a time.
This, and the defection of such main event talent as Hulk Hogan and Randy Savage to WCW, gave Eric Bischoff an opportunity on which he was quick to exploit.
[edit] WCW before 1995: Bischoff takes charge
In the same year as the premiere of Monday Night RAW, WCW promoted former commentator and American Wrestling Association (AWA) booker Eric Bischoff to Executive Vice President. Bischoff's first year as the VP was mostly a disaster. Dusty Rhodes and Ole Anderson were still in full creative control at this point, with what were considered to be cartoonish storylines, as well as seemingly pointless feuds with little or no buildup. For example: The Cactus Jack "Lost in Cleveland" amnesia storyline, and the mini-movies that built up the pay-per-view events, such as: 'White Castle of Fear' and the 'Beach Blast' mini movie, including explosions and other action movie clichés involving a beach theme.
The summer of 1993 saw Ric Flair return to WCW after his WWF tenure but since Flair was constrained by a no-compete clause from his WWF contract, WCW gave him a talk show segment on its television shows called "A Flair for the Gold," in the mold of the old "Piper's Pit" segments from 1980s WWF programming starring Roddy Piper. At Slamboree 1993, WCW promised a Four Horseman reunion but former WWF jobber Paul Roma replaced Tully Blanchard who could not work out a contract to show up. Ole was on hand as the adviser but made only one appearance on A Flair for the Gold.
In another infamous incident that took place during "A Flair For the Gold" on a live Clash of the Champions building up the Fall Brawl PPV, WCW decided to introduce a "mystery partner" for the babyfaces, a masked man known as The Shockmaster. The Shockmaster (Fred Ottman, previously known as Typhoon and Tugboat in the WWF) was supposed to crash through a fake wall and intimidate the heels. Instead, he tripped through the wall and fell on live television and briefly knocking off his helmet, rendering himself as a joke character (despite winning some matches.)
Also that same year, WCW began taping matches months in advance for syndicated programming like WCW WorldWide from the Disney/MGM Studios in what would become known as the Disney Tapings. Because the footage recorded would often be shown on television months later, the tapings often exposed bookings and storylines well in advance. WCW was usually forced to have wrestlers appear with title belts before they had won them in regards to the current storyline. This was regarded as a major breach of kayfabe at the time, and ultimately led to WCW's departure from the National Wrestling Alliance in September 1993.
By the end of the year, WCW decided to once again base the promotion around Ric Flair. This was seen as more or less a necessity, as prospective top babyface Sid Vicious tried to injure wrestler Arn Anderson with a pair of scissors (both wrestlers involved were injured in the end) four weeks before Starrcade while on tour in England and was fired. (In fact, before the Sid/Arn incident, several weeks of syndicated programming was taped with Sid Vicious as WCW World Heavyweight Champion. Sid was scheduled to defeat Vader at Starrcade 1993, and the material taped would have begun airing in early 1994. but the footage was scrapped or post produced). Flair won the title at Starrcade and was once again made booker.
Bischoff declared open war on McMahon's WWF in the media and aggressively recruited high-profile former WWF wrestlers such as Hulk Hogan and Randy Savage in 1994. Using Turner's monetary resources, Bischoff placed his faith in the established stars with proven track records. Because of their high profiles, Hogan and Savage were able to demand and get several concessions not usually allowed to wrestlers at the time, such as multi-year, multi-million dollar guaranteed contracts and significant creative control. This would later become a problem during subsequent years of competition with the WWF, as other wrestlers were able to make similar demands, and contract values soared out of control.
Hogan, in particular, was able to gain considerable influence through a friendship with Bischoff. Another thing Bischoff may have failed to consider was the fact that many WCW fans (especially those who had followed the company since its NWA days) watched it as an alternative to the product of WWF in the early 90s that focused on in-ring action as opposed to cartoonish characters and storylines. As such, these fans viewed Bischoff's signing of former WWF talent as an attempt to copy its success instead of remaining true to the idea of WCW being an alternative to the WWF.
However, WCW's first major pay-per-view event since Hogan's hiring Bash at the Beach, saw the former WWF mainstay cleanly defeat Ric Flair for the WCW Championship. The two had worked for WWF at the same time from 1991 to 1992, and a feud was teased between them, but the big-money match originally planned for WrestleMania VIII was changed to Flair/Savage and Hogan/Sid. When WCW delivered the match, the PPV drew a high buy rate by WCW standards due to mainstream intrigue and hype. Despite being a critical and financial success, the glory would not last long as the Hogan/Flair feud was only a one-off match and the hoped for long term effects on pay-per-view buyrates and ratings did not materialize.
Turner management came to this realization when they checked up on the state of the company in mid-1995. Hence, Bischoff called Turner and requested a private meeting, which he was granted.
[edit] 1995-1997: The Monday Night Wars begin
[edit] WCW Monday Nitro premieres
WCW Monday Nitro premiered on September 4, 1995 as an hour weekly show.[1] Bischoff was instrumental in the launching of the show. Turner asked Bischoff how WCW could conceivably compete with McMahon's WWF. Bischoff, not expecting Turner to comply, said that the only way would be a primetime slot on a weekday night, possibly up against WWF's flagship show, Monday Night RAW. Surprisingly for Bischoff, Turner granted him one live hour on TNT every Monday night, which specifically overlapped with RAW. This format quickly expanded to two live hours in May 1996 and later three. Bischoff himself was initially the host,along with Bobby Heenan and former football player Steve "Mongo" McMichael handling the first hour,with Tony Schiavone and Larry Zbyszko handling the second.Other Co-hosts included Mike Tenay(usually for matches involving cruiserweights or international stars),Scott Hudson and Mark Madden.
The initial broadcast also featured the debut of Lex Luger to the WCW audience, even though he had been in the NWA who had been bought out by WCW. WCW's coup of obtaining Luger was significant for several reasons. Because Nitro was live at the time, premiering major stars on the show would signal to the fans the amount of excitement the broadcasts would contain. Also, Luger had just come off a successful run in the WWF and was one of the company's top stars at one point. Last Luger was in line to get the WWF world title and was on a WWF PPV the night before. No one knew excpet Sting, Bischoff, and Luger that he would be there that night. So the shock value was throught the roof.
McMahon later admitted to being bitter about Turner's decision to air Nitro live on Monday nights, saying that Turner and Bischoff's only reason for doing this could be to hurt and damage WWF. Turner and McMahon certainly had something of a personal history: in the early 1980s, when McMahon began buying up local organizations in order to create a nationwide wrestling system, one of the promotions he took over was GCW; thus, he was in the position of providing a Saturday night show for Turner's TBS station. As mentioned earlier, when viewers tuned to TBS on July 14, 1984 and saw WWF programming instead of the GCW wrestlers they were used to seeing, many called the station and demanded the NWA's return.
Two weeks later, GCW returned, albeit on Saturday mornings. Turner quickly grew tired of the personality-driven glitz of McMahon's product and was upset that McMahon had gone back on his earlier promise not to dump second-rate stars and matches onto TBS. With it being obvious that things would not work between Turner and McMahon, McMahon sold the Saturday night pro wrestling slot to Jim Crockett. It is rumored that on the very same day that Turner later acquired Crockett's territories, he called McMahon to say "Vince, I'm in the rasslin' business!" McMahon claims he congratulated him and then told him "That's great Ted. I'm in the sports entertainment business."
In 1995, Turner (as sole head and owner of both TBS and TNT), could air Nitro whenever he wanted. WWF, on the other hand, was constrained by having to deal with the USA Network, whose executives were pleased about the viewers RAW brought to their network, but were also weary of the stigma associated with being the wrestling channel. WCW Monday Nitro made its debut on September 4, 1995 live from the Mall of America in Bloomington, Minnesota, and featured the surprise appearance of Lex Luger, who had been working on a handshake deal with WWF after his most recent contract expired, on a week when RAW was pre-empted by the U.S. Open.
[edit] The rivalry gets hostile
Raw and Nitro shared wins in the Monday Night Wars early on, and the rivalry quickly heated up. WCW aired segments entitled "WCW: Where the Big Boys Play!" showing current WWF wrestlers who had formerly wrestled in WCW losing matches. Eric Bischoff also began giving away the results of some of the matches on Monday Night Raw during Nitro (as some of them had been taped weeks before). WWF Women's Champion Madusa (known as Alundra Blayze in the WWF) threw her WWF Women's Championship into a trash can live on the air after jumping to WCW.
WWF had previously taken shots at WCW with a series of weekly sketches featuring parodies of several WCW figures "Billionaire Ted" (Ted Turner), "The Nacho Man" (Randy Savage), "The Hukster" (Hulk Hogan), and "Scheme Gene" (Gene Okerlund). While some skits were mostly parodies, others, particularly those focusing on Ted Turner were quite hostile. The series culminated with a match between the Huckster and the macho Man on the "Free For All" show before WrestleMania XII. After WrestleMania XII, the WWF would also gain the advantage over Nitro as well[2]
[edit] WCW Domination Via nWo
On Memorial Day 1996, the Monday Night Wars really began to turn in WCW's favor when Scott Hall, who had wrestled in the WWF as Razor Ramon, interrupted a match and delivered a statement that if "WCW wanted a War, they are going to get one" and challenged the best WCW wrestlers to stand up and defend the company against their onslaught, and that was only the beginning of the nWo storyline.
The following week, Hall promised Sting a "little... no... BIG surprise" the next week in Wheeling, West Virginia. It turned out to be former WWF champion Kevin Nash (who had wrestled as Diesel in the WWF). Hall and Nash were referred to in the following weeks as "The Outsiders."
Both men took to showing up unexpectedly during Nitro broadcasts, usually jumping wrestlers backstage, distracting wrestlers by standing in the entranceways of arenas, or walking around in the audience. Within a couple of weeks, they announced the forthcoming appearance of a mysterious third member.
At Bash at the Beach, Hall and Nash were scheduled to team with their mystery partner against Lex Luger, Randy Savage and Sting. At the onset of the match, Hall and Nash came out without a third man, telling Announcer "Mean" Gene Okerlund that he was "in the building", but that they did not need him yet. Shortly into the match, a Stinger Splash resulted in Luger being crushed behind Kevin Nash, and being taken away on a stretcher, turning the match into The Outsiders vs. Sting and Savage and teasing the possibility of Luger, a former WWF wrestler like Hall and Nash, as the mystery partner.
Hall and Nash took control of the match when Hulk Hogan came to the ring. After standing off with The Outsiders for a moment, he suddenly attacked Savage, showing himself to be the Outsider's mysterious third man. Giving an interview with Okerlund directly after the match, Hogan claimed the reason for the turn was that he was tired of fans that had turned on him. Hogan labeled the new faction a "new world order of professional wrestling", beginning a feud between wrestlers loyal to WCW and the nWo.
The fans in attendance were so outraged at Hogan's betrayal that they pelted the ring with debris, such as paper cups and plastic bottles, for the duration of his interview. One fan even jumped the security railing and tried to attack Hogan in the ring, but was quickly subdued by Hall, Nash, and even arena security. even "Mean" Gene Okerlund claimed on the E! True Hollywood story about Hulk Hogan that he suffered a broken nose when he was hit by a full beer can thrown by a fan.
Shortly after, the WWF filed a lawsuit, alleging that the nWo storyline implied that Hall and Nash were invaders sent by Vince McMahon to destroy WCW; this is in spite of the fact that Bischoff had asked Nash point blank on camera at a WCW show "Are you employed by the WWF?" to which Nash emphatically replied "No." Another reason for the lawsuit was WWF claimed Scott Hall acted in a manner too similar to the character Razor Ramon which was owned by WWF. The lawsuit would drag out for several years before being settled out of court. One of the settlement's terms was the right for the WWF to bid on WCW's properties, should they ever be up for liquidation; a settlement which would prove to be invaluable in 2001.
Because of all of this, WCW Nitro would defeat WWF RAW for 84 consecutive weeks. During this time, WCW would, though infrequently, "give away" the endings to pre-taped matches on RAW during its live Nitro broadcasts, adding fuel to the fiery feud between the two companies.
[edit] WWF struggles
RAW, and the WWF in general, was considered to be at a creative nadir before WCW Nitro started thus helping WCW's meteoric rise. The June 10, 1996 episode of RAW would be the last victory in nearly two years[2]
On the November 4, 1996 episode of RAW, the WWF aired the infamous "Pillman's got a gun" angle with the feuding Steve Austin and Brian Pillman, where Austin visited an injured Pillman at home. Austin was attacked by Pillman's friends as soon as he arrived, but easily subdued them. He then proceeded to break into Pillman's home, but Pillman responded by producing a 9mm Glock and pointing it at a hesitant Austin. The camera feed was then disrupted, with the scene fading to black. The on-scene director contacted commentator Vince McMahon and reported that he had heard "a couple explosions."
The transmission was restored later showing Pillman's friends dragging Austin from the house in a scene where Pillman screamed "That son of a bitch has got this coming! Let him go! I'm going to kill that son of a bitch! Get out of the fucking way!" The "fucking way" comment was not censored and was clearly noticeable. The following week, the WWF had to apologize for the incident in order to remain on the USA Network. Pillman also had to apologize for the comment, saying that it was not usual for him to say that.
On February 3, 1997, Monday Night RAW changed to a two-hour format, as "the Attitude Era" was starting to take shape. In an attempt to break the momentum of what had turned into ratings domination by WCW's competing Monday Nitro, Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW) was brought in as Jerry Lawler "challenged" ECW on February 17. In an episode where RAW returned to the Manhattan Center, the "challenge" answered on the following week's show with Taz, Mikey Whipwreck, Sabu, Tommy Dreamer, D-Von Dudley, and The Sandman.
ECW owner Paul Heyman did a call-in interview on RAW the week after that, followed by an in-ring confrontation between Lawler and the ECW wrestlers, including Heyman, on March 10, 1997; the first edition of the newly renamed RAW is WAR (an in-reference to the war that now existed between the WWF and WCW).
Throughout 1997, there were more and more controversial elements on RAW and WWF programming such as Bret Hart shoving Vince McMahon to the mat and engaging in a profanity-laden tirade and the Nation of Domination and D-Generation X (DX) "racial graffiti" storyline designed to "implicate Bret Hart's 'The Hart Foundation'." In spite of those controversial elements, WCW's winning streak continued.
In addition, "Stone Cold" Steve Austin would suffer a serious neck injury at SummerSlam 1997 that would keep him from participating in matches for three months, a major blow to the WWF considering that Austin had become the promotion's top star following WrestleMania 13. Come WrestleMania XIV in 1998, however, WWF would have one last chance to beat WCW.
[edit] 1998: McMahon Strikes Back
[edit] The Montreal Screwjob and Starrcade 1997
At the 1997 Survivor Series pay-per-view, Bret Hart was double crossed by McMahon during Hart's WWF Championship defense against Shawn Michaels. An idea from Triple H, the plan was executed when the match referee, Earl Hebner, under orders from McMahon, called for the bell to ring and ended the match as Michaels held Hart in the sharpshooter submission hold, even though Hart had not submitted.[3][4] Michaels was declared the victor by submission and the new WWF Champion, even as Hart and the audience was outraged.[4][5]
The screwjob would ultimately turn the tide of the Monday Night Wars. Bret Hart left for WCW after the incident, and it seemed that WCW was in position to push the WWF into perpetual ratings ruin. WCW had the big stars people wanted to see: Hogan, Nash, Hall, Hart, Flair, Sting, Randy Savage, Lex Luger, Diamond Dallas Page, etc. In addition, WCW had credible midcard stars like Chris Jericho,Chris Benoit ,Eddie Guerrero , and Raven, along with an exciting cruiserweight division featuring high-flying competitors from Mexico (the luchadores) and Japan, as well as the United States and Canada. The popular opinion at the time was that the Montreal Screwjob was too much of a blow for the WWF's image to overcome, since the screwing over of a popular wrestler like Hart would anger many fans and give WCW a great amount of hype to work with.
In fact, after the Montreal Screwjob, several WWF employees threatened to leave the WWF. Bret's brother Owen (claiming a knee injury) left out of loyalty to his brother only to return a month later when he was unable to get out of his contract. Rick Rude, then acting as manager for D-Generation X and working on a pay-per-appearance basis, left a week later after appearing on Nitro the same night as a pre-taped RAW.
On November 17, 1997, a clean-shaven Rude appeared live on Nitro and criticized the WWF, calling the company the "Titanic" (a reference to Titan Sports, as the WWF's parent company was then known as a sinking ship), even mentioning Shawn Michaels by name at one point. An hour later on RAW (which aired on a six-day tape delay), Rude appeared unshaven. Brian "Crush" Adams left two weeks after Survivor Series, citing the screwjob as his reason. In reality, he felt he would fare better in WCW than in the apparently failing WWF.
Mick Foley walked out of the WWF, but returned after realizing he would have been in breach of contract; he stated in his autobiography that it was Jim Ross who persuaded him to continue to stay. Barry Windham also no-showed WWF programming initially as a way of demonstrating how angry he was, though he returned to the WWF a week later, believing he had made his point.
Meanwhile, WCW's Starrcade 1997 pay-per-view at Washington D.C. drew WCW's highest buyrate to that date, largely because of Eric Bischoff building up the main-event of Hulk Hogan vs. Sting. Although Bischoff was praised for not hotshooting Hogan vs. Sting, the main event ended in controversy as Hogan was heavily criticized for not doing a clean finish to the match.
This confused and irritated fans who had waited over a year to see Sting take down the nWo.Bret Hart, in his WCW pay-per-view debut, claimed that referee Nick Patrick made a fast three count in order to prevent Sting from being screwed. Although, according to Eric Bischoff, in his book Controversy Creates Ca$h the count looked like a normal speed count.
Hart then restarted the match with himself as referee. Sting won the WCW World Heavyweight Championship, but the title was stripped from him and declared vacant until SuperBrawl VIII, where Sting recaptured the WCW Championship.
Many fans were confused and disappointed with this finish, partly because of the seemingly anticlimatic finish and partly were confused of how Bret Hart would have the power in WCW to be able to reverse a decision and restart a match.
[edit] WWF enters the Attitude Era
Despite losing to Nitro week after week, RAW, however, would gain dominance in the rating by booking Steve Austin as the WWF Champion. By the spring of 1998, the war would begin to turn in the WWF's favor. The WWF then went into what is now referred to as The Attitude Era (referred to as such because WWF Attitude had become the company's tagline).
This era was spear-headed by McMahon and then head writer Vince Russo, who drastically changed the way wrestling TV was written and constructed. Russo's booking style was often referred to as Crash TV - short matches, backstage vignettes, and shocking television. Vince McMahon also took advantage of wrestling fans' widespread hatred for him after the Montreal Screwjob by recasting himself as Mr. McMahon, an evil-owner caricature who would routinely "screw" faces in order to ensure the dominance of his hand-picked heel champions.
The night after WrestleMania XIV, Vince also began an epic feud with Stone Cold Steve Austin, who was fired by Bischoff in 1995 as not being marketable enough. The feud was enormously successful due to fans' universal love of Austin and universal hatred of Vince, and it would be a major factor in the WWF finally snapping WCW's ratings winning streak with its new Attitude branding. The night after WrestleMania XIV, where Austin won his first WWF Championship, RAW dominated Nitro for the first hour but could not maintain victory in the second hour. WCW won the night after WrestleMania XIV ratings battle. On April 6, however, WCW would win the first hour and the evening battle, but the WWF would also dominate the ratings for the second hour as well.
Finally, on April 13, 1998, RAW beat Nitro for the first time since June 10, 1996, and the evening was headlined by a teased Austin/McMahon match; the match, however, did not take place as Mick Foley came down to the ring, in his Dude Love persona, and attacked Austin. Meanwhile, several popular characters emerged on Monday Night RAW that would establish consistently high viewing from fans: Mick Foley, at the time a WCW castoff, was being cheered for playing the heel Mankind, and The Rock, after flopping as the babyface Rocky Maivia, was making a new name for himself as a catchphrase-spewing member of the Nation of Domination, and Triple H, Shawn Michaels, and Chyna had also formed the rebellious, rule breaking wrestling stable D-Generation X.
After Wrestlemania XIV, however, Shawn Michaels would take a four year hiatus from wrestling, due to back injuries, and Triple H became the sole leader of D-X, and recruited The New Age Outlaws and Sean Waltman (X-Pac)- who had just returned to the WWF after wrestling for two years in WCW as NWO member Syxx-pac- into his new "D-X Army. One famous angle the D-X Army also participated in during the Monday Night War was also an "invasion" of WCW Nitro on April 27, 1998.
On this evening, WCW Nitro was being filmed at the Norfolk Scope in Norfolk. Virginia, while WWF Raw was being filmed nearby at the Hampton Coliseum in Hampton, Virginia, and D-X , earlier in the day before the shows began, went from the Hampton Coliseum to the Norfolk Scope and stood outside the arena and challenged Eric Bischoff to come out and face them; D-X then persuaded some people to say that D-X rules[1] and then made attempts to enter the arena and invade the Nitro broadcast as well, but where denied entry and then made their way back to Hampton.
WWF programming also made a successful attempt to feature edgy characters and storylines that were adult-oriented. RAW's ratings began to rise steadily and consistently, bringing the newly-christened "Attitude Era" to its highest point.
[edit] WCW's attempt to come back
Hoping to counter the McMahon/Austin feud, WCW divided the nWo into the Hulk Hogan-led heel nWo Hollywood faction and the Kevin Nash-led face nWo Wolfpac faction. However, many felt that it was a poor rehash of the original WCW vs. nWo storyline. At the same time, it cannot be denied that during mid-1998, the Wolfpac was extremely over with the crowd. Nevertheless, WCW launched a brand new Thursday night show on TBS called WCW Thunder in January 1998. Bischoff stated in his autobiography that he was against the creation of the show because he felt it would bloat the product and take the emphasis away from concentrating on Nitro; The creation of the show was Ted Turner's idea.
WCW's next big attempt to regain ratings supremacy was by marketing ex-NFL player Bill Goldberg as an invincible monster with a record-breaking winning streak of 174 consecutive wins. Goldberg was incredibly popular from the outset, with chants of his name heralding his approach to the ring. However, business still continued to plummet for WCW, despite the immense popularity of Goldberg that continued to maintain and grow until the demise of WCW in 2001.
On July 6, 1998, airing out of the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Georgia, Nitro defeated RAW in the ratings when Goldberg pinned Hulk Hogan cleanly to win the WCW World Heavyweight Title. The match drew a 6.91 rating for the quarter-hour, the highest rating recorded in the ratings war up to that time. However, it was widely speculated that the match would have made millions of dollars had it taken place on pay-per-view instead of Nitro. After this episode, RAW immediately took back the lead.
On September 14, WCW won the ratings war once again when Ric Flair returned to WCW and reformed the legendary Four Horsemen. WCW won for the last time on October 26 when the world title match between Diamond Dallas Page and Goldberg from the previous night's Halloween Havoc pay-per-view was aired for free on Nitro due to some PPV viewers losing the feed at 11pm eastern time.
During this time, Kevin Nash was in charge of booking the shows. After winning the World War 3 battle royal in November 1998, he ended Goldberg's winning streak and won the World Title at Starrcade 1998 the following month. In his defense, Kevin Nash claims that he did not take up the booking position until February of 1999, two months after his victory over Goldberg. Nash's booking was heavily criticized by fellow wrestlers and fans, including Eddie Guerrero in his autobiography Cheating Death, Stealing Life: The Eddie Guerrero Story. This booking decision also would set the stage for the beginning of 1999 and what is widely viewed as the beginning of WCW's long-term decline, from which it would never recover.
[edit] 1999-2000: The tide turns
As 1999 began, both shows were consistently getting 5.0 or higher Nielsen ratings and over ten million people tuned in to watch RAW and Nitro every week. Wrestling was the place to be, as wrestlers made the mainstream media, appearing on magazine covers like Entertainment Weekly and TV Guide. But by November 1998, the momentum would be in the WWF's favor for the remainder of the war.
On January 4, Nitro broadcasted live once again from the Georgia Dome. In the second of three hours (the show had expanded to two hours in 1996 and three in 1998), Eric Bischoff, who had learned of the results of the taped RAW that was set to air that night, ordered announcer Tony Schiavone to make this statement: "Fans, if you're even thinking about changing the channel to our competition, do not. We understand that Mick Foley, who wrestled here at one time as Cactus Jack, is gonna win their World title. Ha! That's gonna put some butts in the seats!"
Almost immediately after Schiavone made those comments, an alleged 600,000 people switched channels to RAW to see Mankind win the WWF Championship, many of whom wished to see a guaranteed title change and/or a title victory by the Foley. After Mankind won the title, many fans then switched back to Nitro (which still had 5 minutes of air time left), suggesting that WCW had a show that the fans wanted to see and might have emerged the victor that night had they not given away the RAW main event results. The final ratings for the night were 5.7 for RAW and 5.0 for Nitro. During the year following the incident, many WWF fans brought signs to the shows saying "Mick Foley put my ass in this seat."
This Nitro's main event was originally scheduled to be Goldberg vs. Kevin Nash for the WCW Championship and was going to be their anticipated rematch. However, Goldberg was arrested (kayfabe) mid-show and accused of "aggravated stalking" by Miss Elizabeth. He was released when Elizabeth couldn't keep her story straight. Meanwhile, Hollywood Hulk Hogan returned to WCW after a hiatus and challenged Nash to a match, which Nash accepted. This led to the infamous "Fingerpoke of Doom" which saw Hulk Hogan merely poking Nash in the chest with his finger, causing Nash to lie down for Hogan to win the belt.
It led to another heel turn for Hogan and the reformation of the entire nWo. The credibility of the company, which did not present the match that had been advertised, was damaged severely (a Goldberg vs. Kevin Nash rematch from Starrcade 1998), as well as what was perceived to be an underhanded way of selling out the arena for that night's telecast. Kevin Nash however defends the incident by claiming that any Nash/Hogan matches would have been terrible.
Despite the incident, WCW would continue this bait and switch tactic of booking until their demise in 2001. This "match" may very well have started the permanent ratings slide that was to follow for WCW, as Nitro only got a 5.0 rating twice afterwards; its 5.8 rating on February 8 (on a night when RAW was pre-empted by the Westminster Dog Show) was the last time it would get such a number.
RAW was dominating Nitro to the point where WCW was making "quick fixes" to stem the tide, including hiring rapper Master P, as well as bringing in Megadeth and KISS for concerts (both of which flopped in the ratings). In September 1999, Bischoff was removed from power. He states in his autobiography that he intended to resign on the day and when word leaked, they decided to remove him before he could resign. Meanwhile, RAW's numbers continued to rise; a 25-minute long This Is Your Life themed skit between The Rock and Foley drew an 8.4 quarter-hour rating on September 27.[6]
On October 5, 1999, Vince Russo and Ed Ferrara, the head writers of WWF television programs, were lured away by WCW, and were immediately replaced in the WWF by Chris Kreski. However, Russo and Ferrara failed to capture the magic of their WWF days when they turned Nitro into more of a RAW clone, and they became known on-screen as unseen management known as "The Powers That Be." Ferrara even became a parody of Jim Ross, named Oklahoma.
In December 1999, when Bret Hart suffered a serious career-ending concussion during a match with Goldberg at Starrcade. The promotion was becoming more desperate by the month, and WCW was entering severe financial crisis, both of which would only get worse in the months to come. Nitro's ratings failed to increase, and in January 2000, both Russo and Ferrara were suspended from the company after they considered putting the world title on Tank Abbott.
The subsequent promotion of Kevin Sullivan to head booker caused an uproar among WCW's wrestlers. In spite of winning the WCW title at Souled Out 2000, Chris Benoit quit in protest, along with Eddie Guerrero, Perry Saturn and Dean Malenko. All four of them entered the WWF as The Radicalz, premiering on RAW's January 31 episode—15 days after Benoit's title win.
Nitro was cut to two hours in January 2000 in an effort to bolster the aggregate ratings score,[1] but the elimination of the third hour didn't mean higher ratings for Nitro, which by April averaged around a 2.5 (while RAW drew double, or sometimes triple that amount).[7]
In April 2000, the company hired the reigning ECW champion, Mike Awesome, who left ECW over a contract dispute. His appearance on WCW television led to legal threats. A compromise was reached which resulted in Awesome (a WCW employee and ECW champion) appearing at an ECW event, accompanied by WCW's head of security, where he lost the title to Tazz (a WWF employee). Tazz then appeared as ECW Champion on WWF SmackDown, losing a match to the WWF Champion, Triple H. The WWF used this as a symbolic demonstration of superiority over WCW.
On April 10, 2000, Bischoff (now a creative consultant) and Russo, returned with equal power to work as a team and attempted to reboot WCW. Bischoff was allowed back with booking powers, but no longer had control of the company finances like he did in his previous reign. The premise of the WCW revival was that a changing of the guard was in order. The Millionaires Club, consisting of WCW's veteran stars such as Hogan, Flair and DDP, were accused of preventing the younger talent from ascending to the main event circle and feuded with The New Blood, consisting of WCW's younger stars such as Billy Kidman, Booker T and Buff Bagwell.
In theory, the younger stars would finally get an even playing field to break out as big stars in wrestling. However, a lot of the newer stars were seen as being relatively green or lacking the charisma and/or ability to truly get over. The new storyline sparked initial interest, but ultimately failed to turn around the ratings,as fans begin to see the storyline as a ripoff the WCW vs nWo storyline in 1996 and 1997 and WCW continued its downward spiral. WCW became even more desperate, even going as far as putting the belt on David Arquette, who was making promotional appearances for WCW's feature film Ready to Rumble.
By now, Ted Turner was no longer running the company, having been purchased by Time Warner in 1996 and AOL in 2000. That year WCW lost $62 million, due to the guaranteed contracts of their older performers, plummeting advertising revenues, dropping house show attendance, controversial booking decisions (like David Arquette winning the WCW title and Russo booking himself to win the title in September 2000), expensive stunts to boost the dismal ratings and abysmal pay-per-view buyrates.
Bill Goldberg, arguably the biggest star of the promotion at the time, suffered an arm injury that kept him on the shelf for half the year. Upon his return, his momentum was derailed, after turning heel at The Great American Bash 2000, despite being the most popular performer in the company.
In July, Eric Bischoff left again, shortly after Russo had Jeff Jarrett lie down for Hulk Hogan in a WCW Championship match at Bash at the Beach 2000. Russo publicly fired Hogan later in the show. Vince Russo then vanished due to a concussion suffered in September and shows were left to be written by Ed Ferrara, Bill Banks, Jeremy Borash, Disco Inferno, and various other wrestlers and staff. Rumors that WCW would be put up for sale or downright out of business began to circulate towards the end of 2000.
The WCW Hardcore Championship, a tertiary title, was booked to be won by Tonga Fifita (Meng), who was not under contract with the company. He then signed a contract with the WWF, appearing six days later at their Royal Rumble event. Fifita kept the physical belt; the title itself was never mentioned in WCW again.
[edit] 2001: The End of the Wars
In January 2001, Fusient Media Ventures, led by Eric Bischoff, announced they had bought WCW. The deal was contingent on the Turner networks keeping Nitro on Monday and WCW Thunder on TBS on Wednesday. When Jamie Kellner took over as CEO of Turner Broadcasting, he removed all WCW programming from the network.
With no national television outlet to air the shows, Fusient dropped their offer to purchase the promotion. As a stipulation in an earlier lawsuit the WWF filed against WCW, WWF had first dibs on WCW because of outstanding debts and as a creditor ;[8] basically set their price for around $7 million to acquire certain assets, including the trademarks, logos, and video library. On March 23, 2001, Vince McMahon purchased World Championship Wrestling.
Twenty-five wrestler contracts were included in the sale;[9] however, most of the main-event level stars were contracted directly to parent company AOL Time Warner instead of WCW, and thus AOL Time Warner was forced to continue to pay many of the wrestlers for years.
McMahon did allow a final Nitro show to air from Panama City Beach which had been scheduled for the following Monday on March 26. It featured him and the WWF stars from Cleveland airing in segments during the show. The final WCW World Heavyweight Championship match for the show and the company saw Booker T unify the WCW World Heavyweight Championship and WCW United States Heavyweight Championship by defeating Scott Steiner.
The main event saw Sting defeat Ric Flair with the Scorpion Deathlock as a culmination of their trademark feud, then both men embraced one another at the match's conclusion. This was a direct parallel to the very first Nitro, where Sting v. Flair was also the main event.
The end was a RAW/Nitro simulcast in which Shane McMahon said that he (and not Vince) had bought WCW. That set up the ill-fated Invasion storyline. The last Nitro drew a 3.0 rating. The final ratings tally in 253 head-to-head showdowns was: 158 wins for RAW (including 122 straight wins from November 1998 until the war ended), 110 for Nitro, and three ties.
[edit] Aftermath
WWE business steadily declined in North America after the end of the wars, with a noticeable drop in buyrates and ratings. To compensate for the decrease in domestic revenue, WWE expanded their business overseas. Additionally, due to the glut of wrestlers on the roster after the merger, the company created two "brands" one year later, with separate rosters, titles and television shows, and instituted the concepts of General Managers and talent drafts to emulate the rivalry that had ended with WCW.
WCW's closure left a gap in the market which several companies attempted to fill. In 2001, X Wrestling Federation and World Wrestling All-Stars opened, but both folded by 2004. Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) and Ring of Honor (ROH) both emerged in early 2002 and have enjoyed moderate success since that time. At first running weekly pay-per-views, TNA has since switched to monthly supercard pay-per-views supported by a weekly show on cable television entitled TNA iMPACT!. In late 2007 ROH also started airing bi-monthly, pre-taped pay-per-views.
In 2004, WWE produced a DVD called The Monday Night War. Two hours in length, the DVD left out a large portion of the "wars", breaking off around 1997 before jumping straight to the post-WCW era of WWE. The accuracy and objectivity of the DVD came into question, as some believed the documentary was simply telling one side of the story.
[edit] Legacy
As a result of the Monday Night Wars, professional wrestling became a prime-time tradition on Monday nights in America. It also lessened the prevalence of squash matches (where star wrestlers would defeat jobbers) on television, as both companies were compelled to show competitive, pay-per-view quality matches on a weekly basis in an effort to increase ratings.
The Monday Night Wars led to millions of people becoming new wrestling fans. The late 1990s are commonly referred to as professional wrestling's last boom period. Wrestling stars like The Rock, Stone Cold and Bill Goldberg became household names, and some attempted to parlay their newfound fame into other mediums and found success in them, much like Hulk Hogan of the '80s and early '90s: the most notable examples were Mick Foley, who became a New York Times best selling author with his autobiography, Have a Nice Day, and Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, who branched out to become a successful actor in films.
[edit] See also
- History of professional wrestling
- History of World Championship Wrestling
- History of World Wrestling Entertainment
- The Invasion
[edit] Notes
- ^ a b Chris Pursell (January 2000). WCW Nitro tightens belt. Variety. Retrieved on 2007-06-11.
- ^ a b OO: Online Onslaught Special Features (Pro Wrestling News, Analysis, and Commentary... WWF, WCW, ECW, The Rock, Steve Austin, RVD, Undertaker, Triple H)
- ^ Adam Kleinberg and Adam Nudelman. Mysteries of Wrestling: Solved (p.73-74)
- ^ a b Dave Meltzer (November 11, 1997). Montreal Screwjob (PHP). Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Retrieved on 2007-01-23.
- ^ Shawn Michaels and Aaron Feigenbaum. Heartbreak and Triumph: The Shawn Michaels Story (p.276)
- ^ Christopher Robin Zimmerman. Slashwrestling RAW report - with ratings. Retrieved on 2007-01-13.
- ^ Blackjack Brown (2000-04-02). Foley's dream to come true at `WrestleMania'. Chicago Sun Times. Retrieved on 2007-06-09. “Another notch in the win column for the WWF as "Raw" did in "Nitro" again this past Monday, 6.6 to 2.6.”
- ^ Callis, Don. "Deal leaves wrestlers out in cold", Slam! Sports, 2001-03-25.
- ^ Callis, Don. "Deal leaves wrestlers out in cold", Slam! Sports, 2001-03-25.
[edit] References
- Adam Kleinberg and Adam Nudelman (2005). Mysteries of Wrestling: Solved. ECW Press. ISBN 978-1550226850.
- Dave Meltzer (November 11, 1997). Montreal Screwjob (PHP). Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Retrieved on 2007-01-23.
- Shawn Michaels and Aaron Feigenbaum (2005). Heartbreak and Triumph: The Shawn Michaels Story. World Wrestling Entertainment. ISBN 978-0743493802.
- The Rise and Fall of ECW DVD chapter 36 WWE Co-Promotion
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