Everything posted by PeteF3
- [1998-05-11-WCW-Nitro] Randy Savage promo
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[1998-05-11-WCW-Nitro] Interview: Bret Hart
"It's not easy being a hero" was a great line that got great heat, and I admire Bret's fire. But yes, this is a dream match (not literally their first, but close enough) that doesn't really feel like it. Why is it we can't get an explanation of why he helped Hogan now, after weeks treating that secret like Bret was about to drop the formula for Coke on us? Oh, and the other highlight is Bret fulfilling my expectations and hopes by referring to the upcoming PPV as "The Slamboree."
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[1998-05-08-OMEGA] Serial Thrillaz (Mike Maverick & Shane Helms) vs Death & Destruction (Frank Parker & Roger Anderson)
Best indy match since the heyday of the Lightning Kid. In some ways this is just as much of a cosplay performance as the previous OMEGA bouts--Anderson & Parker even resemble Ole & Gene physically in addition to the style and the crimson ring attire--but the fundamentals are executed so much better and D&D stand out so much precisely *because* they work a fairly antiquated style that it makes for a much more enjoyable match. They do some terrific heeling through all this, with some old-school trademarks like Parker loading his boot and using a string to choke Helms, and some great mocking of the crowd chants and of the Serial Thrillaz' posing for the crowd. When they attempt the more advanced '90s-style moves they get a little sloppy, but the overarching story is good enough to make up for it and you sort of have to admire the effort to update the classic southern formula a little. Helms is even sloppier at this point, but he at least knows how to sell and that can get you 90% of the way sometimes. And the height on his dives is really incredible. Maverick doesn't do a lot but he's clearly holding this together from the babyface side, and aside from the big dives he's the best part of every babyface offensive sequence. A promising blend of what's to come--a '90s indy aesthetic with classic Crockett touches that the Hardyz grew up watching.
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[1998-05-04-WWF-Raw] Terry Funk vs Mick Foley (Falls Count Anywhere)
Austin is so far ahead of everyone else in wrestling at this point that his commentary, good as it is, tends to overshadow even a crazy war like this one. His headset going out right as he was about to talk about the alleged Foley-McMahon conspiracy was a great touch. Funk goes all-out trying to get Mick over, doing a moonsault off the balcony and taking and giving some hellacious weapons shots. This is good work with some fantastic booking, as Foley establishes himself as both a sellout and a bloodthirsty savage willing to cripple anyone to get what he wants, and we even continue the slow build to the Stooges become full-fledged on-air characters, first with Brisco last week and now Patterson this week. And of course, that ending--maybe the best closing image in the history of Raw. This could end up being the most enjoyable WWF TV match of 1998.
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[1998-05-04-WWF-Raw] Mick Foley and Terry Funk video
Not sure why they *can't* do this stuff now--they do it for NXT. This was a terrific video, on the level of the stuff setting up WM14. An unspoken implication is, "This is what these guys did to each other when they were *friends*!" Makes you want to see what they'll do as enemies.
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[1998-05-04-WWF-Raw] Val Venis vignette
I was just reading a Cracked article a few days ago about how "porn superstar" is one of several jobs made obsolete by the Internet. It sure as hell isn't my field but there aren't really any Jenna Jamesons around nowadays, it doesn't seem.
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[1998-05-04-WWF-Raw] Jerry Lawler and Paul Bearer
This works better than a typical "shoot" segment because these guys break character in a way without actually breaking character or kayfabe at all. A good bit of inside-television stuff that still gets the proper storyline across. "I wasn't fat like I am now--in fact, Jerry, I was kind of studly!" Lawler and Bearer share a good laugh over how Undertaker's mother seduced virginal young Paul on the kitchen floor of the funeral home, resulting in Kane. Lawler does an "out of character" (again, not really) apology afterward.
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[1998-05-04-WWF-Raw] Mick Foley, Vince McMahon and Steve Austin
"When I came out, you threw Dude Love into my face. How does it feel to have the truth thrown into yours?" *smack* One of Vince's best lines ever, and a great capper to an awesome segment that shows just how far ahead the WWF had pulled in front of WCW in terms of storytelling and thought put into each segment. We finally get a sea change for Mick's character as Vince delivers a speech that he's probably delivered during contract negotiations a hundred times. Austin responds by trashing the Love Shack and forcing Vince to attempt to defend himself with the ring bell and hammer.
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[1998-05-04-WCW-Nitro] Rick and Scott Steiner
Yes, a dumb angle that was as obvious as the most hackneyed, cliched Memphis segment except Memphis segments tend to have good interviews. Okerlund's bad here, too--he seems to have checked out along with all the rest of the WCW announce crew, all of whom have deteriorated badly this year. Brian Adams does a shoulder breaker on the floor, which apparently is more devastating than a shoulder breaker in the ring. And yet, various combinations of Scott, Rick, and Bagwell would repeat this same basic angle over and over and over and OVER for at least the next 6 months!
- 4 replies
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- WCW
- Monday Nitro
- May 4
- 1998
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+2 more
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[1998-05-04-WCW-Nitro] DDP and Raven
A bullrope match for Slamboree? Yeah, I'm down with that. Another strong in-ring (sort of) segment as Raven continues the workrate run of his career. In an ideal world this could possibly, conceivably set up Raven as a semi-main event player but of course the Glass Ceiling is now in full effect in WCW.
- 4 replies
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- WCW
- Monday Nitro
- May 4
- 1998
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+2 more
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[1998-05-04-WCW-Nitro] Chris Jericho vs Bore Us Malenko
Better than any match at Wrestlepalooza '98. I love how Jericho adds some real bite and venom to his usual pre-match promo, making him a little more than just a comedic smartass. Bore Us Malenko is a stone-faced jobber who's slightly better built than a Mulkey brother, with a big "1" on his tights to signify how many holds he knows. He does in fact do his one hold here (a wristlock) before Jericho makes a Misawa-esque comeback to destroy him.
- 4 replies
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- WCW
- Monday Nitro
- May 4
- 1998
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+2 more
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- [1998-05-04-WCW-Nitro] Raven vignette
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[1998-05-04-WCW-Nitro] Interview: NWO Wolfpac
We're officially in a full-fledged trend of mid- and undercarders getting laid out left and right by the Big Stars , and man does it suck. And it's only going to get worse. I know it's just Scott Putski and Kidman, but God forbid we keep our points of difference from the WWF going. Savage actually cuts a good promo in the middle of this mess, hyping up his match with Bret Hart at Slamboree. Curt Hennig is introduced as the newest Wolfpack member and yeah, this is a complete mishmash of a stable. Konnan accuses Brian Adams of being Hogan's Mascot--no, KDawg, the Disciple is a different guy.
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[1998-05-03-ECW-Wrestlepalooza] Shane Douglas and Taz
Ridiculous promo where Douglas veers completely into "Old Man Yells at Cloud" territory and where he can't decide if he's a heel or a babyface. He makes fun of the Big Two and it's talked up how gutsy he is, then starts in on Flair again thinking he's still a Bischoff asskisser for some reason, and naturally the crowd who'd just been popping for major stars who still weren't a pimple on Ric Flair's ass as a draw or a talent, turns on Douglas. And that line about Shawn Michaels being a pussy for not wrestling with a concussion sure has aged poorly, hasn't it? Taz and his re-mixed music, "War Machine" with no lyrics but with Taz soundbites, and he shits all over the idea of Douglas being a gutsy hero. Taz gets a VERY tepid response for his promo and his attack. The Junkyard Dog was more over than any of these guys. Is this the least consequential PPV of the Yearbook era? I can't think of another one where no matches at all, not even finishes, made the Yearbook.
- 6 replies
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- ECW
- Wrestlepalooza
- May 3
- 1998
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+2 more
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[1998-05-03-ECW-Wrestlepalooza] Legends of Hardcore Wrestling
JYD makes his final public appearance, about a month before his death. Eadie looks almost the same as ever--the wrestlers have gotten old, but the mask-and-suit look hasn't.
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[1998-05-02-MPPW-TV] Brian Christopher vs Billy Joe Travis (Stretcher)
Travis is STILL clinging to the single-long-leg tights, bless 'im. And bless PPW for giving us a decisive and satisfying finish--if any promotion could have devised a screwjob finish for a stretcher match, Memphis is it. But we get a really good studio brawl with a few modern touches like the drop toe hold onto a chair and the finish with Christopher doing the Tennessee Jam with a chair over Travis' head. That's a pretty good way to effectively knock him out long enough to strap him to the stretcher for the win. You have to credit PPW for not just giving us longer matches on TV but also working hard to completely change the look of the studio as much as possible. Even the handheld close-up cameras during the interviews give this a fresh view of things even if the concept is, as Migs said, anachronistic.
- [1993-08-07-USWA-TV] 1-2-3 Kid vs J.C. Ice
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[1998-05-01-AJPW-25th Anniversary Show] Mitsuharu Misawa vs Toshiaki Kawada
It's at least a year too late, but this was a satisfying effort in the end--in fact it might be the match I've enjoyed the most in 1998 so far. It's kind of a Kawada carry-job, but it works--and I actually kind of like the idea that Kawada just went out and executed his game plan and won. The big gimmick for this, as big of a gimmick as AJPW gets, was that this match had no time limit. That brings to mind visions of an overindulgent 45-60 minute "epic" and we didn't get that here. In a way the relatively perfunctory victory served as a sort of swerve in its own right, even though this conclusion seemed pretty foregone (what could you possibly do with Misawa if he wins again?). MOTY for the first 5 months, though certainly off of these guys' mid-'90s peak.
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[1998-05-01-AJPW-25th Anniversary Show] Kenta Kobashi & Johnny Ace vs Vader & Stan Hansen
A way fresh match-up for All-Japan. The negotations going into this Dome show were a compelling soap opera in and of themselves: - Long and at-times comical negotiations with the WWF over the use of talent, with everyone from Austin and Michaels on down being named as possibilities to work the event. At one point there was consideration of allowing Vader to do a job for an AJPW guy in exchange for All-Japan returning the favor, with speculation that that would involve Akira Taue putting over the Undertaker (!). - Talks involved Johnny Ace coming to the U.S. and working a Raw dark match. They turned sour when Gerald Brisco & Bruce Prichard made a trip to Japan. First, Baba was offended that he turned up for negotiations and not Vince. Second, AJPW's liasions explained very clearly (and correctly) that mainstream Japanese audiences had little knowledge of most U.S. stars besides Vader and Shamrock (the Road Warriors fit that description as well but no one seemed interested in them at this point). Unfortunately for AJPW, the day that Brisco & Prichard arrived in the country was the day that news of the Austin-Tyson angle broke in Japan, which was a huge deal and a front page sports story. Naturally, Gerald & Bruce saw Austin all over the place as being a sign that the WWF being bigger than ever worldwide and that they were fed a line of bullshit from the All-Japan office. - Eventually AJPW decided to focus on an almost all-Japanese event and announced the top matches of Misawa vs. Kawada, Akiyama vs. Hase, Akira Taue vs. Koji Kitao, and Kobashi & Mossman vs. Hideki Hosaka & Mike Awesome. Fan reaction to this announced card was overwhelmingly negative and immediately sent AJPW scrambling into rebooking the show. Then Kitao naturally refused to do a job for Taue, which made the decision to cut ties with him all the easier. Negotiations re-opened with the WWF and they finally got a drawing card in Vader, which allowed them to move Kobashi into a match where he wasn't going to be completely wasted. And a fun closing stretch of a match this is. Kobashi carries himself like the Man here and goes out to try to make this show special, even busting out the Moonsault successfully for the first time in a while (or so it seems). Hansen is Hansen, and even though he's lost a step or four his presence can still carry him a long way. Only Stan could fuck up a top-rope dive so badly and still make it look like it hurts in the end, which is all that matters. Kobashi manages to fight off Hansen and Vader down 1-vs.-2 and eventually puts Stan away with a series of flash pins. My first thought was for a guy carrying himself like The Man, Kobashi could have used a more decisive victory, but I think the circumstances of Ace being out and being alone against two monsters supports the finish they went with.
- 8 replies
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- AJPW
- Tokyo Dome
- May 1
- 1998
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+4 more
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[1998-04-30-NJPW-TV] Music Video: Norio Honaga
NJPW was trying to not-so-subtly push out some of its higher-paid veterans in a cost-cutting move. Honaga, Masa Saito, and a few other guys got severance packages to retire (I think Inoki and Choshu were wholly separate situations). Amusing video, as Honaga goes from a wide-eyed clean-cut young boy to an opportunistic scuzzball before our eyes. I bet he'd end up being Matt D's favorite NJPW junior worker.
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[1998-04-30-FMW-Fighting Creation] Hayabusa vs Mr Gannosuke
I really dug the atmosphere here of a big-time, serious match for the gold. And I respected what they were trying to do, at least, basically running an FMW version of a lucha title match with dry body part work building to big bombs at the end with a glorious feelgood celebration. But like with Childs and soup, they just didn't get there for me. The early body part work is sound and focused but still dull, and the transition to the big moves at the end doesn't really feel earned, nor do many of the transitions down the stretch. There are a lot of good near-falls here and some plays off their previous match, which is always appreciated. But Hayabusa still blows stuff and still doesn't really seem fundamentally sound. He's spectacular and charismatic but as an overall worker I still think Tanaka utterly smokes him and Gannosuke is better too if only because he has a better grasp of the basics. Even among matches I've qualified as "more to be admired than loved," I've seen better on these sets.
- [1998-04-29-Pillman Memorial Show] Steve Austin promo / 10 Bell Salute
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[1998-04-28-WCW-Tuesday Nitro] Bret Hart and the NWO
Seems like they're going to go with the idea of Bret wanting to beat Hogan for the title, but Savage interrupts in a pretty groanworthy development. You really risk pissing fans off when you fuck them over too many times, and the fact that the reason isn't really all that consequential--this isn't like revealing the Greater Power or Vince's first professional match or even the identity of the Hummer driver--actually makes it *more* annoying that we don't get a payoff rather than less. Why was Savage not out the previous week to confront Bret? Best I can figure, the only answer to that is, "Because there wouldn't be a closing segment tonight." Which is pretty shitty storytelling.
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[1998-04-28-WCW-Tuesday Nitro] Interview: Alex Wright
Alex is back from a 5-month vacation in Germany--actually he suffered a devastating aneurysm, but that's not getting in the way of his dancing. This is kind of an awkward and downright bad promo, but that's actually part of Alex's Eurotrash douchebag appeal. He's escorted out, which is just as well as he presumably has to be back to Dance Centrum in Stuttgart in time to see Kraftwerk.
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[1998-04-27-WWF-Raw] Steve Austin vs Goldust
Fun little preview of what we'll get at Over the Edge. Vince is terrific on the outside and turns in one of the best timekeeper's performances ever, not only his selling of Gerald Brisco's devastating eye injury but also his sternly getting up and warning Brisco not to allow a double-countout. Ross is at his indignant best, at least until Over the Edge. "Do you want to referee this match now?" "I COULD DO A BETTER JOB THAN HIM!" Vince ends up clobbering Brisco with the belt and Gerry takes a NASTY spill, cutting his head open both on the edge of the gold plate and I believe the ring steps as well. It was still absolutely wild to see Vince getting physically involved to this degree, though it would probably get overdone in the years to come. There's still a lot of attention to long-term detail and the impact of main event matches influencing other angles in the company. Dude Love makes a reappearance and his failure to win the title here would have long-lasting consequences for Goldust.