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WCWNitroBook

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Informed by over 100 new interviews, internal WCW documents and never-before-seen financial records, BEYOND NITRO is here! https://t.co/GGEyNz0k0U

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Just 300 followers to go...then we'll drop this entire, very mysterious event! It occurred in October 1997 but has been lost to wrestling lore. Can we get to 5000 followers before tomorrow night? Eric Bischoff AdFreeShows.com Conrad the Mortgage Guy 83 Weeks with Eric Bischoff Because WCW Deep Cuts - Wrestling Stories in 60 Seconds!

Just 300 followers to go...then we'll drop this entire, very mysterious event! It occurred in October 1997 but has been lost to wrestling lore. Can we get to 5000 followers before tomorrow night? Eric Bischoff AdFreeShows.com Conrad the Mortgage Guy 83 Weeks with Eric Bischoff Because WCW Deep Cuts - Wrestling Stories in 60 Seconds!

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One of Dennis Rodman’s most memorable nWo moments occurred on June 16, 1997, when along with Hogan, Hall, Nash and other nWo members, he entered the United Center – the site of the Bulls’ fifth championship victory just three days prior – in an electric opening scene on Nitro. As Jimi Hendrix’s ‘Voodoo Child (Slight Return)’ blared from the speakers for the first time, the camera immediately showcased a limousine which ostensibly had just arrived in the backstage area. Out stepped Rodman, cigar in hand, issuing veiled threats and offhanded jibes – meanwhile, Hogan bopped his head to the music in tow; a man in his element. In a brilliant production choice, the camera laid bare a veritable behind-the-curtain view, allowing fans to witness the duo approaching the stage in real-time. As Hogan and ‘Rodzilla’ appeared in front of the audience, the building positively erupted, giving way to fireworks, an air-guitar display and, of course, the customary Michael Buffer line: Let’s get ready to rumble! If there ever was a representative moment of the nWo’s cool factor, this was it. The segment achieved the rare distinction of appearing rather spontaneous, almost as if Hogan and Rodman – in a casual, last-minute fancy – decided to stop by Nitro en route to other places. In reality, however, the backstage environment had been a whirl of activity just moments before the show went live. Days later, the Chicago Sun-Times columnist Larry Hamel described the unfolding scene: A few minutes before ‘Nitro’ goes on the air live on TNT, WCW executive vice president Eric Bischoff strides purposefully down the long corridor that is the nerve center of the show. “I need an NWO shirt, a Rodman NWO shirt, and I need it two minutes ago,” he snaps. “Will somebody, anybody, please get me an NWO shirt.” Production assistants scurry around to find one, but wrestler Scott Hall, as cool as his New World Order character, ducks into his dressing room and, upon emerging, calmly flips a black-and-white NWO T-shirt to Bischoff. Dennis Rodman pops out of the Bulls’ locker room, wearing a shirt that reads “NWO Bite Me.” He’s joined in the corridor by ‘Hollywood’ Hulk Hogan, who’s puffing on a cigar, ‘Macho Man’ Randy Savage, Kevin Nash and Hall. Just as Hogan is about to go out the swinging doors, he turns to Bischoff and says, ‘You sure you don’t want to be a part of this thing?’ Bischoff shakes his head and says, ‘No, this is your deal.’ Hogan says, ‘C’mon, put your (NWO) shirt on. You’re one of us.’ Bischoff nods and follows the group out the door. A few minutes later, he’s in the ring, microphone in hand, working a crowd of more than 16,000 into a frenzy as the middleman for Hogan and Rodman. The above is excerpted from the book, BEYOND NITRO: Untold Stories from the WCW era by Guy Evans. For more:

WCWNitroBook

42,801 просмотров • 3 месяцев назад

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Beyond Nitro: 4 Life By 1998, the nWo had spread like wildfire across the middle and high schools of America. Suddenly, nWo shirts littered school cafeterias everywhere from San Jose to Bangor, Maine. Classmates eagerly threw up the ‘Wolfpac’ hand gesture upon passing each other in the hallway. Students with a more theatrical flair enjoyed playing the role of The Bad Guy: Listen, don’t ask me how I’m doin’ – it’s ‘Hey, Yo’, chico… Once the group splintered into two rival factions – nWo Hollywood (or nWo ‘Black and White’), led by the still-villainous Hogan – versus the babyface nWo Wolfpac (or nWo ‘Red and Black’), pupils from state to state divided themselves accordingly. Although there would never be an appropriate ‘blow-off’ to the internal nWo feud, the potentials were imagined daily across America’s playgrounds. “[Previously], it was almost like you were made fun of, in school, if you were a WCW fan,” remembers Mike ‘Gunz’ Gunzelman (Gunz), a long-time media personality with tenures at ABC News Radio, SiriusXM and Outkick. “You cannot deny that the nWo became the coolest, most bad-ass thing. People were jumping ship, and I’m telling you – I was in that age group. All of a sudden, I was going to people’s houses for WCW pay-per-views. We were never doing that before. “The nWo single-handedly made it cool, [including with] the makeshift anarchy-type aspect to it. There’s a revisionist history where people want to change what things actually were at the time. But they’re lying to themselves if they don’t understand what the nWo was able to do...” Listen to Beyond Nitro on Audible for more: USA: UK: Canada: Australia: Logan Sekulow Chris Vannini Brandon Marcello chris channels Brian Bo Sar Zach Takes Euronymous Boschausen SMARKING DOWN! Jonathan Dalecki Monday Night War Stories The Rosencoaster Joey Fatts Wrestling from 80s/90s Macho T Wrestling Pics & Clips RGT 85 O'Hara: IG:ohara.wde Randy Cruz WCW/nWo Because WCW Apple Books link: Direct Audible link:

WCWNitroBook

18,924 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

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Stuart Snyder (fmr. WWF President & COO) responds directly to the continued conjecture re: the WCW sale Another former Turner executive for whom scrutiny has followed is Stuart Snyder, the executive who was – as stated – the ‘point person’ for the WWF’s acquisition of WCW (or more specifically, its pre-selected assets). Although in the first book in the NIRTO series, Snyder responded to claims that he had engineered a quick sale of those assets to the WWF – by virtue of his prior relationship with Brad Siegel – the speculation surrounding his involvement has continued nonetheless. “It’s completely false and ridiculous,” says Snyder when engaged on the subject. “The thing that has to be remembered or acknowledged here – or not – is the reality that we were two public companies. The individuals, myself included, were operating public companies, and there’s a fiduciary responsibility [that comes with that]. Those are things that any executive at a public company – especially myself – took very seriously…to not cross lines and so forth. "There was nothing in terms of ‘inside’ anything. [Again], what’s being alluded to is having insight into whether that [Fusient] deal would ‘close’ or not. "There was none whatsoever from me.” Listen to Beyond Nitro on Audible for more: USA: UK: Canada: Australia: @2001Live Conrad the Mortgage Guy Anthony Maurizio Dark Side of the Ring John Pollock 🇺🇸 J. P. S. 🇵🇱 Ⓙ Christian Howard CAP’N CLUTCH Double J MisterBang Andy Archibald GoreTiger Tyler Emily Saxton Darren Maguire Valkh Comics Ariel Helwani Jared Hull LifeLessons&CombatSports On This Day in WWE Raj Giri Bankie Bruce Jordan Patu Terrence ✨️ Cerebral Vigilante emil The Random Wrestling Review Podcast 𝐾 𝐼 𝑁 𝐺 𝑂𝐹 𝐺 𝐴 𝑅 𝐹 𝑆 David Penzer Fightful Wrestling Apple Books link: Direct Audible link:

WCWNitroBook

17,312 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

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Beyond Nitro: Q. Who Ran Over Stone Cold? A. Mongo??? In the fall of 2000, ‘Stone Cold’ Steve Austin returned to the WWF, looking to find out who had ‘run him over’ at the previous year’s Survivor Series (an angle necessary to provide a kayfabe explanation for a lengthy absence related to injury). Due to Austin’s romantic involvement with Debra McMichael – the former wife of Steve ‘Mongo’ McMichael, last seen on WCW television with the Four Horsemen – Vince Russo and his team had a brainwave. “We reached out to [McMichael] when WWE did the ‘who ran over Steve Austin’ storyline,” wrote Bill Banks, one of Russo’s lieutenants, in a social media pronouncement. “We wanted to bring Mongo back as a surprise to WCW and have him claim that he was the one that ran over Austin…because Austin stole Debra. “[Our] plan was to have an announcement the week before,” continued Banks, “that the person who ran over Austin had contacted WCW – and wanted to reveal himself on Nitro. The next week, the same car that hit Austin would pull up to the back of the arena. The window would open slightly to reveal someone holding a photo of Debra. After commercial, [the] car would drive into the arena…[and] out comes Mongo to cut a promo explaining the story as revenge – against Austin – for stealing Debra. If Austin wanted to do anything, Mongo would be in the ring on Nitro the next week to fight [him]. “[In other words], we were going to attempt to finish [their] storyline on WCW.” Listen to Beyond Nitro on Audible and Apple Books for more: USA: UK: Canada: Australia: Deep Cuts - Wrestling Stories in 60 Seconds! Conrad the Mortgage Guy Brian Gewirtz Fightful Wrestling Raj Giri On This Day in WWE BaseballHistoryNut GrappleClips Cultaholic Wrestling c b j Jus⛏in🩸 tribal chief ☝🏻🩸 Allan Because WCW forever botchamania WCW Archive Matt D - SC The Lapsed Fan Mr. Nobody pittsburghbad Tyler Wessel The Kyle Peterson Sean Ross Sapp of Fightful.com A.J. Leatherman WrestlePurists Pro Wrestling Stories Wrestling from 80s/90s Apple Books link: Direct Audible link:

WCWNitroBook

12,359 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

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