Posted May 21, 201510 yr comment_5669227 Kris is joined by David Bixenspan & Dylan Hales to discuss the end of Jim Crockett Promotions and the show is so loaded that we couldn’t even finish off the year in one show!!!! We talk about the odyssey of Lex Luger, the idiocy of Dusty Rhodes & Jim Crockett, & lots more. Listen to us talk about what not to do when you are running a wrestling promotion and how things would stay the same even after the Turner buyout. http://placetobenation.com/exile-on-badstreet-5-the-price-of-ridiculousness-part-1/
May 21, 201510 yr comment_5669234 Loved every one of these so far! Looking forward to giving this a listen
May 21, 201510 yr comment_5669235 Loved every one of these so far! Looking forward to giving this a listen I feel the same way. Hopefully I will get a chance to give it a listen either today or tomorrow.
May 22, 201510 yr comment_5669365 What an awesome show that still had me wanting more after 4 hours. So much good wealth of information here and fun antidotes and story I was unfamiliar with.
May 22, 201510 yr comment_5669379 Is this interview being done on the beach because listening to seagulls and birds chirping really isn't helping me deal that I am listening to this at work Do look forward to finishing this. I figure there will be many many more hours of these
May 22, 201510 yr comment_5669381 "With this show, Kris Zellner has foregone producing podcasts and has moved into the realm of making audiobooks." - Parv, May 2015.
May 22, 201510 yr Author comment_5669407 Is this interview being done on the beach because listening to seagulls and birds chirping really isn't helping me deal that I am listening to this at work Do look forward to finishing this. I figure there will be many many more hours of these I said it was like doing a podcast at The Masters and I felt like Jim Nantz
May 22, 201510 yr comment_5669507 I think it's great that Exile is becoming this epic wrestling version of Dan Carlin's Hardcore History podcast. Can't wait to finish this episode over the weekend.
May 23, 201510 yr comment_5669557 two hours into this and - surprise surprise! - really good podcasting, guys. Lots of fascinating in little asides and nuggets of info peppering it nicely.
May 23, 201510 yr comment_5669598 Is this interview being done on the beach because listening to seagulls and birds chirping really isn't helping me deal that I am listening to this at work Do look forward to finishing this. I figure there will be many many more hours of these I said it was like doing a podcast at The Masters and I felt like Jim Nantz Hello, friends.
May 23, 201510 yr comment_5669611 I've been looking forward to this one, and it totally lived up to expectations. Can't wait for Jim Herd talk in part two.
May 23, 201510 yr Author comment_5669624 Part 2 was taped last night so it will be up soon. I love doing shows like these because of all of the history that went down that gets overlooked
May 23, 201510 yr comment_5669637 That was tremendous. I think the rich dude's yacht was the owner of the Chicago Blackhawks. Also KrisZ when you mention JJ saying Garvin was looking good. Wasn't that during the phase of looking for a new Horseman before the Windham turn? Or do I have my timeline off a bit?
May 23, 201510 yr Author comment_5669655 It actually did start before Windham joined then they iced it for a bit and brought it back.
May 24, 201510 yr comment_5669703 Arn got mileage out of that "shampoo a moose" line. In the '89 WCW timeline that just came out, Cornette quotes him telling that line to Tony Schiavone, in reference to Schiavone's 6 kids.
May 24, 201510 yr comment_5669753 I just wanted to join the chorus of praise for this podcast. Perfect mix of history lesson, stories, and three guys just BSing about one of my favorite time periods in wrestling.
May 24, 201510 yr comment_5669757 I agree. I thought it might be a chore to sit through, but the 3 hours and 50 minutes flew by in a flash. Much more quickly than, say, trying to watch WrestleMania IV. I can't wait for Part II to be posted.
May 26, 201510 yr comment_5670058 Thank you for all the effort and thought that clearly went in to this podcast. I have no idea how you all found the time for this, or how you all still had a voice by the end! It is great to see a story like this broken down, with anecdotes and numbers to back it all up - entertaining and informative. I also think it kind of challenges the standard narrative that WWF killed the territories as it sounds like JCP and others were doing a pretty good job of killing themselves.
May 26, 201510 yr comment_5670121 I'm only up into May and I've already learned a TON that I had no idea about only following the business thru the Apter mags at that point. I'm amazed how screwed up the booking & layout of shows was by that point. It's a wonder Dusty lasted in the booker role as long as he did. I imagine the office was so screwed up by that point, finances & whatever that they probably didn't even have time to care about how screwed up everything else was. These shows are providing a wealth of knowledge to me as this was before I would discover the sheets at the tail end of 1988.
May 26, 201510 yr comment_5670171 There were so many details to mention so this may have been missed. The post-Bash house show series with Flair/Luger was being pushed on TV as if there was only going to be one rematch and all these cities were bidding on getting the match. Only in the localized promo segments for your town would they say that your town had been chosen so come see Flair/Luger. It helped the draw too with MX/Arn & Tully on those shows. I think that era of excitement also kind of sped along people becoming disenchanted with it. They had the biggest houses in a while and more people to disappoint at once when Luger failed to get the job done. I could sense even as a mark then that by Sept when they started the 2nd run of rematches with special refs that fans were starting to figure out that Flair NEVER won and ALWAYS escaped with the title. This show was also kind of fascinating to compare to the narrative presented in documentaries such as Good Old Days. Most of the narrative you hear about this time period kind of glosses over 1988 with all the talk of the move to Dallas being the last straw & the sale inevitable. They also make it sound like the financial losses were a complete surprise to Crockett when clearly there were issues 6-12 months before the sale that clearly everyone was well aware of. After listening to this it seems like 1988 might have been one of the most newsworthy years of the 80s with all the backstage stuff going on with AWA/World Class and potential other groups looking to buy each other out. Lots of stuff to dig into there that I never knew.
May 26, 201510 yr Author comment_5670172 Yeah I watched the TV from that period before the show and I forgot to note that but yeah they were pushing the rematch deal hard
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