by Logan Scisco
And Mick has kept the Christmas gig going, doing promo
spots with his daughter Noelle last month on WWE television. He was a better salesman than anyone else the
WWE could have trotted out there, although I continue to insist that if they
want the Network subscriptions to rise that they need to call Don West.
All of this culminated in Jarrett eventually dropping the
Intercontinental title to Chyna. The
quick piece says that female superstars aligning against Jarrett is a “new version
of women’s liberation with a distinctly hardcore edge.” It warns that Jarrett will soon face the
wrath of all of these women, but I guess that is why he fled down South.
Our “Rookies to Legends” this week misses the mark once
again as it covers Miss Kitty, the last wife that Jerry Lawler had:
In storyline terms, Miss Kitty debuted courtesy of Jeff
Jarrett, who made her a personal assistant to Debra. She soon made Debra’s life difficult and
started to drive her and Jarrett apart.
The piece tries to say that Kitty has bigger ambitions and if that
included exposing herself on WWF pay-per-view then it was correct. However, the soon-to-be-named Kat never made
a lasting contribution to the WWF that could be considered “legendary.”
The piece starts with the Fink asking some rhetorical
questions such as “Why have I been around so long? Why am I still here?” You know, the same questions that Vince
McMahon has probably been asking himself when it comes to Finkel for
years. He complains about not being used
more, while saying that he has high hopes for Chris Jericho, which is why he is
sporting a Jericho-style wig in the piece.
A piece titled “At the Crossroads” breaks down what is in
the future for X-Pac, who was in the midst of a heel turn against his tag team
partner Kane. As such, the article
emphasizes that X-Pac wants to be his own man and fight his own battles,
belying a Napoleon-like complex X-Pac has carried because of his size relative
to other WWF superstars. That is one of
the good uses of the magazine, as it gave you some additional logic behind
angles and face/heel turns, even if some of them ended up being ridiculous.
We also hear that X-Pac was the first person to “guide
Kane to his own heart and give him the courage to realize his human potential.” So next time anyone wants to criticize Kane
as a corporate stooge you can blame X-Pac.
Instead of X-Pac eventually turning on Kane, I would have enjoyed seeing
Kane in a DX green outfit like the picture shows below because that would have
been really different and cool, at least for one show:
Next, Bill Banks talks about the newly-debuted Chris Jericho’s
desire to go after Steve Austin.
Banks takes some shots at WCW, saying that Austin and Jericho
were denied similar opportunities to shine down South and that this slight made
both men more aggressive in their pursuit for glory and titles. It even bashes Austin’s initial “Ringmaster”
gimmick from when he debuted in 1996.
Really, this piece is well-written and does a nice job hyping a
potential Austin-Jericho showdown. It
treats both men as athletes and wrestling as an actual sport, something the
company would be better off doing today.
Unfortunately, a showdown between the two would have to wait until late
2000 because Jericho was quickly diverted into the Intercontinental title
picture while Austin went out with an injury.
Most of the big items are for Steve Austin and the Rock
as you can see here
And you can also get yourself some WWF cologne for
$14.99. I do not think this item was
selling well as it is the only one in the catalog that is marked down from its
initial sale price (which was $19.99 a unit).
I still remember Bobby Heenan cracking jokes about WCW cologne on Nitro. The WWF Attitude bag is cool, but I know very
little about the WWF fielding a racing team in 1999. Evidently, if you want the racing jacket
pictured here you will be out $44.
You see, both men used to be best friends on the Gulf of
Mexico and broke into the business as volunteers. Both men had been abandoned by their
managerial charges by late 1999, so the magazine teases at a possible alliance. The magazine was also trying to recognize
more wrestling history by this point as it brings up Hayes’s run with the
Freebirds. Unfortunately, it does not
tell us who Bearer and Hayes might want to bring into their stable if they
unified forces. It does let us know that
the Fabulous Freebirds and the Undertaker “were supreme entertainers,” though.
Since this week’s magazine selection is from December
1999 it would be remiss for the staff of WWF
Magazine to ignore Christmas. Sure enough,
we get a holiday-type cover featuring the self-proclaimed, undisputed champion
of Christmas Mick Foley:
The 1999 Christmas season featured one WWF product I just
had to have: WrestleMania 2000 for the
Nintendo 64. I was really excited for
the WWF to go to THQ since the company did great work on the WCW games. It was one of my favorite games to play,
especially because it was the first to feature a create-a-wrestler mode. I remember taking Brian Christopher through
the career mode (and why I made that selection I have no idea). Unfortunately, I lent it to a friend in
middle school and they never returned it.
Since Vince Russo went off to World Championship
Wrestling, the magazine was handed over to Kevin Kelly. As a result, he answers the letters to the
editor. Since we are not in 1995 land,
there are no funny illustrations or awful lists provided by fans. Many of the letters tie back to the October
1999 issue of the magazine we reviewed two weeks ago. A fan named Thomas Brennan blasts the fan who
questioned Prince Albert’s education credentials, while Miguel Balseca
completely buys into Vince McMahon’s vision of the product by calling Christian
a member of the “sports-entertainment world.”
A fan called “TakersLady,” using Web TV (remember that product?) frets
that the Undertaker is facing a career-ending injury, which Kelly denies. The Undertaker did have a bad groin injury in
late 1999, but it was not career-ending.
Still, it is interesting that people were talking about the Undertaker’s
health FIFTEEN years ago! They actually
let a fan write in how the newly-debuted Dudley Boys dominated the ECW tag team
ranks, and of course, since we are in 1999 it would be remiss without a fan –
in this case one named Justin Struthers – talking about Debra and her “puppies.” He begs that she needs to “let them run free.”
Speaking of Jarrett, he was also on his way to WCW. Before he got there, though, his last gimmick
was beating up female wrestlers and celebrities and putting them in the
figure-four.
And when I talked about how we did not have any more
lists, I was wrong. This week we have a
top five for ways that “Sexual Chocolate” Mark Henry can curb his
appetite. I did find number one
humorous.
This month’s guest writer of “the Bite” is Howard Finkel,
who in late 1999 was rocking a bitter announcer gimmick where he made a habit
of chewing out Tony Chimmel and Lillian Garcia.
WWF Magazine
REALLY liked Chyna in 1999, as evidenced by its next feature piece on how she
has been a big factor in the WWF.
Remember that she and Triple H were subject of another piece two months
prior to this.
The article describes that Chyna’s success is due to a
difficult childhood, which shaped her into becoming a great athlete and
student. After all, she does have a
double major in Spanish and Literature from the University of Tampa. Her fluency in Spanish is why the company used
her in some skits with Los Boricuas in 1997 and 1998. The classic understatement in the article is
that despite being “quintessential professionals…there have been rumors that
[her partnership with Triple H] is nearing an end.” Sadly, it hypes her career as only getting
better, saying that she is “a history maker, a trendsetter, a one of a kind,”
but 1999 would be the peak of Chyna’s career.
After having a feud with Chris Jericho over the Intercontinental title
she was slowly scaled away from the main title picture and by 2001 she was
wrestling women, which was a step down for her.
In a curious ad, you can get some of the first WWF DVDs, “Hell
Yeah: Stone Cold’s Saga Continues” or
WrestleMania XV. The price for each is $24.95,
but that is sort of laughable considering that WrestleMania XV gives you ninety
minutes of more content, as well as voiceovers of the big matches.
And since this is the December issue, the WWF makes sure
we know what hot items you can buy for the holiday season. Ho ho ho indeed!
Then we get our more “crude” items of the Attitude Era on
another page. Who really wants that Road
Dogg stuffed animal? If you do, it will
cost you $20. And that Debra poster will
cost you another $10. I wonder if some
kid bought the “Show Me Your Puppies!” t-shirt (for $25) and was told to take
it off by school administrators.
Seriously, $25 for that shirt?
An oddly titled article called “The Devil’s Bathtub” is
up next, which provides a comparison between Michael Hayes and Paul Bearer.
I had forgotten about this product, which I never
actually saw anywhere. I never had any
friends who bought it, so did anyone on the Blog every play around with this
toy?
Magazine writer Laura (no last name given) provides her “Attitude
Award” for 1999 and selects Kane and Stephanie McMahon! If you are not a fan of Stephanie, you really
will not like this piece as Laura notes that “Since her debut in the ring,
Stephanie McMahon’s presence has been compelling” and that she cares little for
money and more about her ideals than money.
Kane wins because he stood up for his friend X-Pac and overcame Vince McMahon
and Chyna tormenting him throughout the year.
So basically, the “Attitude Award” is who faced lots of adversity and
overcame the odds. Today, John Cena
would win that award every year!
Kevin Kelly then says that he was amazed that 1999
featured great in-ring performances by Vince and Shane McMahon. Yeah, those criticisms of 1999 revolving
around the McMahons too much appear very
warranted now. Best part is, it would
get worse for WrestleMania 2000 when there would be a McMahon in every corner! So Kelly gives his “Attitude Award” to both
of the male McMahons.
And when it comes to Bill Banks he selects Jeff Jarrett,
which is pretty humorous considering Jarrett’s departure from the company. Banks claims Jarrett has gone a long way
since his country music gimmick, but his selection seems to be based more on
personal factors as Jarrett dealt with the loss of Owen Hart and helped his
wife fight her battle against breast cancer.
We get the results from the Unforgiven pay-per-view,
featuring the infamous “Kennel from Hell” match.
That is probably one of those cases where the awful recap of the matches was
okay. One of the pictures from the
Six-Pack Challenge match is probably sitting about Triple H’s office in Titan
Towers:
The “Private Eye” segment provides some pictures of the
MTV Video Music Awards. So much for
kayfabe in this one:
“The Informer” tells us that D-Lo Brown and Mark Henry
started having problems when Henry had his wallet fall into the lap of D-Lo’s fiancé
on a flight back from England. D-Lo
thought Henry was making moves on his woman and his fiancée thought the same,
thereby triggering a long series of tensions between the two. We are told the Steve Austin-Undertaker
rivalry went onto the National Hot Rod Association (NHRA) circuit as they each
had their own Funny Cars, with the Undertaker’s car winning. And evidently, Al Snow is very upset about
the jokes Mankind made about him in Have
a Nice Day!
This issue had tons
of advertisements in it, much more than previous issues. I am not sure if that was because there were
not as many columns to write or if that is something that I might see more of
in the 2000 magazines. However, it did
get a little tiring flipping through four or five ads before the next story. Maybe with Russo gone that is a good thing
for the magazine, as this one had less ridiculousness in the stories, which
offered a more serious portrayal of the superstars and various angles.
Next time, we will move away from WWF Magazine and over to an early 1999 edition of WOW Magazine, put together by Bill Apter
as a “smart fan” alternative to other kayfabe wrestling publications. It will cover the results of Backlash 1999, chronicle
the independent circuit, and provide some great photographs of wrestlers and
valets during the period.
I remember the Informer articles. I'm pretty sure one of them predicted Chris Jericho winning the championship in December 2001.
ReplyDeleteFyi. Bill Banks also left to be with Russo and Ferrera in wcw as an assistant.
ReplyDeleteWhat was Chris Jericho thinking with that hairstyle?
ReplyDeleteIt was obviously a great debut but even at the time i thought he looked ridiculous.
I don't see the sense in Lesnar holding the title this long just to lose it at a shitty February PPV. Which means that's exactly what will happen.
ReplyDeletelol
ReplyDeleteWM31 Main Event Build Up....
ReplyDelete"REIGNS SEASON!"
"CENA SEASON!"
"REIGNS SEASON!"
"CENA SEASON!"
"REIGNS SEASON!"
"CENA SEASON!"
...
"CENA SEASON!"
"REIGNS SEASON!"
"CENA SEASON!"
"FIRE!"
I agree that they shouldn't be held hostage by the fans, but they also need better plans.
ReplyDeleteThinking Batista/Orton was a draw last year was just delusional. Roman Reigns had a lot of goodwill even if he wasn't as big a smark darling as Bryan, and they have just tanked his appeal systematically over the past couple of months. People are flocking back to Bryan because there's not much of an alternative that's actually viable at this point.
Ah yes. Explains the Jarrett column. Surprised he still had pieces in the magazine at this point.
ReplyDeleteAnd cena collapses into a pile of ash and a beak?
ReplyDeleteTick tock tick tock
ReplyDeleteIs there any chance there's a comeback on the horizon for Mania?
ReplyDeleteJericho's always a possibility.
If Rock was wrestling, we'd probably know by now.
I assume Batista wants no part of this on the off chance he gets hurt and ruins the Bond gig he just got.
If Austin's ever coming back it'll be next Wrestlemania or never.
I guess Taker's a possibility.
Theoretically the most popular guy SHOULD be in the biggest angles. I think it's less a case of being spoilt and more a case of fans not trusting that angles will go anywhere constructive after years of swerving and attempting to push guys that are not over or just booked into shit.
ReplyDeleteI think Taker is a given since he never got a proper send off after losing. I say he goes out high and they do the tribute show/everyone says goodbye the next week
ReplyDeleteThat's got me thinking - when taker retires, does he get a lifetime appointment to the wrestlers court bench?
ReplyDeleteJust "2"? In that category WWE have more sequels than James Bond.
ReplyDeleteThe crowd revolted because WWE gave Bryan his moment in August 2013, immediately took it away, kept screwing him over, then threw him in a feud nobody wanted to see with Bray Wyatt.
ReplyDeleteFans don't mind if Bryan comes out on the losing end. They do care when he's jerked around like he was.
I'm looking forward to that article about WOW Magazine--I remember it being pretty terrible and wasn't surprised that it died a quick death. Perhaps the benefit of hindsight will show otherwise though.
ReplyDeleteI can't judge. I still call the Rock Rocky Maivia half the time.
ReplyDeleteWould have been cool. Totally unbelievable because of the Cena turn
ReplyDeleteStill, even without that most of what you wrote shows that you, some random dude on the Internet, probably could have booked a better product. If you can't turn cena, how do you change the plans up?
People who care what you call him take this shit way to seriously.
ReplyDeleteJust to chip in, Lesnar beating Undertaker didn't make headlines in Australia.
ReplyDeleteCena vs Taker is still huge, cause its never happened as a face vs face matchup.
ReplyDeleteVince and Triple H pick their avatars (thus fufilling that oft-rumored story).
Vince naturally picks Cena. Hunter throws down the trump card with Undertaker.
Taker doesn't even need to show up at first, just show Cena chafing at the idea ala HBK and Flair. Cena not wanting to be responsible for ending Undertaker once and for all.
Why would Ziggler want Cena to do it? Because after defeating 3 men to rid the world of the authority, Cena brought them back a month later, promptly costing Dolph (and Ryback and Rowan) his job.
Taker wouldn't be doing it for hunter at all. In light of everyone treating the match like a foregone conclusion, he'd return to prove that he still has what it takes to be top dog.
It follow ups on the streak ending something other proposed taker matchups don't, he needs to go after the big dog to regain his mojo not ancient Sting or some midcard goof like Bray Wyatt. It ties up Vince and Hunter, ending the authority for good. And wraps up Cenas current story while leaving him in an interesting place as the savior of the WWE at the cost of its conscience.
Plus its the Undertaker vs John Cena at Wrestlemania.
Yeah but how about that Nathan jones
ReplyDeleteBryan (Rumble Winner) vs. Lesnar (WWE Champion)
ReplyDeleteCena vs. Triple H
Sting vs. Undertaker
Reigns vs. Rusev (US Champion)
Orton vs. Rollins
Wyatt vs. Ziggler (IC Champion)
Ascension vs. Usos (Tag Team Champions)
Some Diva Nonsense (Diva's Champion)
Andre Battle Royal
Winners are: Bryan, Cena, Undertaker, Reigns, Orton, Ziggler, Ascension, Nikki Bella, Bad News Barrett
Rollins cashes in immediately after the WWE Championship match and wins the title from Bryan
And besides, it was already tuesday there. Old news.
ReplyDeleteTo beat John Cena and leave a better lasting image at mania than, Brock Lesnar victim.
ReplyDeleteThat is an idea that is ludicrously good.
ReplyDeleteNah. Rollins tries to cash in at the Rumble, but RKOOUTTANOWHERE!!! to set up mania
ReplyDeleteSorry for not warning you guys about 9/11 :S
ReplyDeleteAdd Ambrose vs Bunny and I'm sold
ReplyDeleteYou're right, it's definitely a marquee matchup.
ReplyDeleteI just worry that you're going to have a lot of cooks in the kitchen if you surround their bout with all this "intrigue".
Ambrose will be in the Andre Battle Royal playing The Bunny, because I imagine his own character will be D.O.A. and written off TV by then.
ReplyDelete"Vince has this era all wrong. He thinks it's short attention span theater, when in reality, with the amount of information and technology available, and how people discuss things online, people are actually more open to longer form stories that unfold over time because they get to talk about them, provided that they actually make sense."
ReplyDelete100% this.
I'm still not buying Cena winning this weekend. Smackdown's Heyman promo made it seem like there's still more story to tell with Lesnar as champion.
ReplyDeleteLesnar vs. Bryan for the title. Bryan wins the rumble.
HHH vs. Sting for control of the company/authority gone for good we really mean it this time edition
Wyatt vs. Undertaker for control of Hell, darkness and holograms
Orton vs. Kane because both guys need a spot and there's nothing for either to do, which is the exact same reason they wrestled at wrestlemania a few years ago.
Miz vs. Sandow in what will be the rarely seen well built up midcard feud that peaks at the right time
Usos vs. tag team of the month for the tag titles.
This leaves Rollins, Reigns, Cena and Rusev, Ziggler, Barrett, Harper, Ryback, Rowan, Ambrose etc.
I would assume Cena and Rusev fight for the US title and the shield boys face off against each other in some way and the IC title is the annual "get everyone on the card" match probably involving a gimmick.
If I was fantasy booking, I'd have Rollins either added to the title match by doing what nobody else was smart enough to do and cashing in his briefcase to get into the main event of wrestlemania. Another fantasy booking idea is that some point in the next 2 months, Brock is on Raw and somehow gets incapacitated, Rollins goes to cash in, bell rings and all of a sudden Ambrose gets him DQ'd to get that feud back on.
All I know is that if Cena and Reigns win this weekend I'm going to be pretty disappointed. Any mania card headlined by Bryan and Brock is going to be good, anything headlined by Reigns and Cena is going to be lousy and something I don't want to see.
Well, you can still do that, but let Rollins keep the case. Orton wins at Mania, but Rollins gets the last laugh, winning the title and screwing Bryan AGAIN, making him the nuclear heel of the new generation for Roman Reigns to eventually destroy.
ReplyDeleteI'd probably just have Cena get goaded by the Authority or maybe even Bryan himself into cashing in, and then Brock crashes it. Then, Brock wins the six-man without Cena deserting and wins at SummerSlam by Cena screwing Bryan on accident because of Authority interference instead of on purpose. Bryan and Cena have a tepid but "friendly" feud off of that which the Authority tries to instigate
ReplyDeleteCena vs Reigns works if they actually turn Cena heel at Royal Rumble. And if you successfully double-turn Cena and Brock (Rollins is there for the obvious transference of evil from Brock to Cena), then you can go Rollins vs Brock at WM31 and put Rollins over big in Brock's last match.
ReplyDeleteMinor nitpick, but the Create-a-Wrestler feature in WWF games predates THQ and Wrestlemania 2000. You could make your own guys in Acclaim's Warzone and Attitude, as well. The "edit-a-wrestler" feature, however, was unique to THQ. I loved being able to update gimmicks and whatnot as things changed on TV.
ReplyDeleteI also played as Brian Christopher a lot in that game. He had a surprisingly awesome moveset. He was almost always my Light Heavyweight champion. I remember strapping a rocket to Meat and taking him through the career mode. No idea why I chose him as my pet project, I guess because he had a great look and I thought his moveset was shockingly great, too.
"Strapping a rocket to Meat" is my new favorite sentence.
ReplyDeleteAh yes, forgot about Warzone and Attitude, probably because the gameplay was poor and I didn't own either one.
ReplyDeleteBravo, yeah, at 8:30pm. Mid-90s stuff with Gary Albright, Nubohiko Takada, etc. No Vader though, due to the contracts WCW had at the time. :(
ReplyDeleteIn his first book Jericho said he specifically had his hair like that to get cheap heat and piss off the fans.
ReplyDeleteI remember this issue. Good memories, even trying to flesh out The Fink and Michael Hayes!
ReplyDeleteWCW Magazine was a great read around this time too. Both company's ability to make even the bad matches sound and look like Steamboat/Savage is a testament to the quality of the mags. Kennel From Hell looks like FMW in print.
We didn't get the whole Nitro shows here in germany, so I bought a special sat receiver to decode TNT with Nitro and Thunder. Those were the days...:-)
ReplyDeleteA friend of mine had that Slam Cam thing. It was a piece of shit.
ReplyDeleteThat reminds me actually, we could pick up DSF on certain satellites, so whenever Nitro was in commercials, you could flip over and watch a different Nitro with German commentary!
ReplyDeleteI'm still bummed that I waited all night for Halloween Havoc '97 to come on DSF as advertised and it never did.
I absolutely LOVE this column! Great idea and execution!
ReplyDelete