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Over in WrassleGAF we're doing an nWo month (hence my av, and you may see some others being branded nWo) and I thought it'd be fun to make a topic to have people who aren't wrasslin' regulars chip in with their thoughts and memories as well.
First I'd like to direct you to a series of writeups at legitshook.com, that valued gaffer Strobogo has written, to re-familiarize yourself with the buildup and reveal of Hulk Hogan being the third man. Some of this is directly cribbed from his reviews.
This is from Wikipedia outlining the buildup to the infamous Bash at the Beach 1996 Pay-Per-View that had Hogan appear:
Then, for the Bash at the Beach 1996 "Hostile Takeover" match (that had AMAZING promo music as well, the Outsiders' official theme pre-nWo) I defer to Strobogo's review of Bash at the Beach, with gifs - available at https://legitshook.squarespace.com/...oys-play/2014/9/27/wcw-bash-at-the-beach-1996
[quote="legitshook.com]TO THE MEAN BROTHERJACKDUDE. Gene gets hit in the head with a full drink heading for Hulk. "You can call this the New World Order of wrestling, brother." You see, those 2 came down from a big company up north and who knows better about that company more than Hogan? Hulk made them so much money that he became bigger than the whole company. Open drinks are hitting Hogan now. Hulk got bored, brother. "They're the NEW BLOOD of professional wrestling, brother." "Look at all of this crap in this ring." "As far as I'm concerned, all of this crap in the ring represents all these fans out here." "You fans can STICK IT, brother." "I'm Tony Schiavone. Hulk Hogan, you can go to hell. We're outta here. Straight to hell." [/quote]
[quote="legitshook.com]God damn that reaction when Hulk dropped the leg. And that same noise didn't stop for the entire promo afterwards. Just a roar of confusion and anger. It's amazing. Trash every where, Tony telling Hogan to go to hell and storming off, Gene being disgusted, Brain being vindicated after a decade of shit talking Hulk. I don't think there has been a heel turn since to get that kind of reaction. I think this was the last time a heel turn was real.[/quote]
What a hell of a moment for wrestling. It triggered the boom in popularity that wrestling may never achieve again, reinvented Hulk Hogan, and so much more. It would kick the WWE in the ass to start making compelling content, and ignite a war between the two companies that brought out the best in each other...for a while.
Later, there would be splinter nWo groups, the lWo, and much more - but let's appreciate this, the best, at its time.
First I'd like to direct you to a series of writeups at legitshook.com, that valued gaffer Strobogo has written, to re-familiarize yourself with the buildup and reveal of Hulk Hogan being the third man. Some of this is directly cribbed from his reviews.
This is from Wikipedia outlining the buildup to the infamous Bash at the Beach 1996 Pay-Per-View that had Hogan appear:
On May 19, 1996, Scott Hall and Kevin Nash wrestled their final matches for the WWF as "Razor Ramon" and "Diesel," respectively. Both Hall and Nash had opted to sign with rival WCW instead of staying with the WWF, and as such made a homecoming of sorts; Hall, a former star in the American Wrestling Association, wrestled for WCW from 1989 until 1992 and Nash broke into the business with the company in 1990 and remained in WCW until 1993.
Eight days after his last WWF appearance, Hall showed up in Macon, Georgia for May 27's Nitro from the Macon Coliseum. As The Mauler and Steve Doll wrestled in the ring, Hall emerged from the audience and jumped over the guard rail, entered the ring bringing a halt to the match, and called for the ring announcer's microphone. "You all know who I am," Hall said to the stunned crowd, "but you don't know why I'm here." He went on to deliver a now-famous speech which has since become known as the "You Want a War?" speech, stating that he and unnamed allies had a challenge for WCW Executive Vice-President Eric Bischoff and any WCW superstar.
As Nitro neared its end, Hall accosted Bischoff, who was also the lead broadcaster for Nitro at the time, in the broadcast booth and demanded that he tell WCW owner Ted Turner to pick three of his best wrestlers.[4][5] The next week, Hall reappeared on Nitro five minutes before the end of the broadcast and again interrogated Bischoff. Sting confronted and slapped Hall after Hall threw a toothpick at him, and Hall said he had a "little...no...BIG surprise" for Sting.
During the next Nitro, Hall again pestered Bischoff in the broadcast booth. Bischoff demanded to know of the "surprise" Hall had in store for Sting while being unaware that Nash, the surprise, was standing right behind him. Hall finally pointed his partner out, and Nash said, "So this is WCW, where the big boys play, huh? Look at the adjective: Play [sic]. We ain't here to play!" From then on, the two would become known as The Outsiders, randomly appearing at WCW events to cause trouble and (inevitably) be led out of the building by WCW security. Initially, the WCW broadcasters did not use "The Outsiders" to refer to Hall and Nash collectively, instead referring to Hall and Nash individually by their last names.
Despite the fact that Hall and Nash were both fully employed by WCW, the storyline's implication that they were WWF wrestlers "invading" WCW was enough of a concern to the WWF that it considered legal action over Hall and Nash's antics. Hall was the largest concern to the WWF; in addition to his usage of the terms "Billionaire Ted", "The Huckster", "The Nacho Man", and "Scheme Gene" (disparaging references to Turner, Hulk Hogan, "Macho Man" Randy Savage, and "Mean" Gene Okerlund that the WWF had made in early 1996 skits mocking WCW) in interviews, he had not fully distanced himself from his "Razor Ramon" character in the WWF, continuing to speak in a faux-Cuban accent and referring to people as "chico." WCW attempted to address these concerns at The Great American Bash in June 1996, where Bischoff invited The Outsiders to do an interview with him.
He promised them a match at the next pay-per-view event, and then directly asked both Hall and Nash if they were employed by the WWF, to which each replied in the negative. The WWF, still unsatisfied, filed a lawsuit, charging that Bischoff had proposed inter-promotional matches for TBS to associate the two companies with each other.
This was despite the fact that Ted Turner and WWF chairman Vince McMahon had carried on a rivalry for (at the time) eleven years, based on the fallout from McMahon's 1984 purchase of Georgia Championship Wrestling and its flagship program World Championship Wrestling, and the program's subsequent failure and McMahon's sale of its time slot to Jim Crockett Promotions (the forerunner to WCW). Also, prior to the nWo storyline, Bischoff routinely revealed results of taped episodes of Monday Night Raw, the WWF's flagship show, on live Nitro broadcasts (at the time RAW was only live every other week, as the WWF would show a live RAW on a Monday night and then tape the next week's show the following day) and had presided over a controversial angle on a December 1995 edition of Nitro in which Madusa, who had competed in the WWF as Alundra Blayze and was the reigning WWF Women's champion, appeared on the air with her championship belt and threw it in a trash can.
During their interview with Bischoff at The Great American Bash, both Hall and Nash pressed him again to name his company's three representatives. Bischoff said that he had found three men who would answer their challenge, but would not name them. Hall became skeptical of Bischoff's refusal and it led to an attack by both Outsiders, ending when Nash powerbombed Bischoff through the interview stage. Following this show, The Outsiders continued to randomly terrorize WCW events, always being chased away by armed security guards. Meanwhile, Bischoff held a draft on Nitro to determine WCW's representatives. Sting, his tag team partner Lex Luger, and Randy Savage were chosen. Meanwhile, The Outsiders had an ace up their sleeve: the mystery third man. It was rumored that Bret Hart was going to be the third man, as he was a free agent at the time, but he ended up signing a 20-year contract with the WWF, squashing the rumor.
Then, for the Bash at the Beach 1996 "Hostile Takeover" match (that had AMAZING promo music as well, the Outsiders' official theme pre-nWo) I defer to Strobogo's review of Bash at the Beach, with gifs - available at https://legitshook.squarespace.com/...oys-play/2014/9/27/wcw-bash-at-the-beach-1996


Legitshook.com said:The Outsiders vs Sting/Lex Luger/Randy Savage
This place is amped. Everyone is standing. Still no 3rd man. The drama is so thick you CAN'T cut it with a knife. Sting's music hits. Gene comes out instead, looking confused. Gene wants to know who the god damn 3rd man is. "All you need to know, little mayne, is that he's here, and he's ready." The 2 of them are enough as it is.
Hall and Lex start the match. Lex hits the forearm on both men. Nash grabs Lex in the corner. Sting comes in with a Stinger Splash, accidentally squashing Lex in the process. Lex falls to the floor and appears completely out. EMTs put Lex on a gurney and take him to the back. Hall tries to take some shots at him while he's tied up. Hall slaps Sting right in the face, which gets Sting all FIIIIIIIIIRRRRRREEEEEEDD UP. Macho tags in and gets hits in the gut. Nash hits sneaky snake eyes. Nash then tags in for the first time. "Who bad? WHO BE BAD NOW? WHO BE BAD NOW? Deal on him, brother!" Macho tries to roll out of an elbow drop and actually made it worse for himself. Nash's power is too much for Sting. Fall away slam. Big boot. Sting is able to hit a low dropkick on Nash, but couldn't make the tag. Macho tries to use a chair. Tony is all supportive of Hall and Nash getting injured. CHEAT TO WIN. HIT HIM WITH A BOARD. INJURE THEM. Side walk slam. Sting is getting wrecked. Hot tag to Macho! "Randy Savage is in and he's NUTS!" HULK HOGAN IS IN THE BUILDING! "Yeah, but whose side is he on?!?!" Hulk Hogan just leg dropped Macho Man. WHAT THE HELL IS GOING ON? ARE YOU KIDDING ME? More leg drops. Randy Anderson is thrown from the ring. Hall counts the pin for Hulk. The reaction is wonderful. Trash is starting to fill the ring.
[quote="legitshook.com]TO THE MEAN BROTHERJACKDUDE. Gene gets hit in the head with a full drink heading for Hulk. "You can call this the New World Order of wrestling, brother." You see, those 2 came down from a big company up north and who knows better about that company more than Hogan? Hulk made them so much money that he became bigger than the whole company. Open drinks are hitting Hogan now. Hulk got bored, brother. "They're the NEW BLOOD of professional wrestling, brother." "Look at all of this crap in this ring." "As far as I'm concerned, all of this crap in the ring represents all these fans out here." "You fans can STICK IT, brother." "I'm Tony Schiavone. Hulk Hogan, you can go to hell. We're outta here. Straight to hell." [/quote]
[quote="legitshook.com]God damn that reaction when Hulk dropped the leg. And that same noise didn't stop for the entire promo afterwards. Just a roar of confusion and anger. It's amazing. Trash every where, Tony telling Hogan to go to hell and storming off, Gene being disgusted, Brain being vindicated after a decade of shit talking Hulk. I don't think there has been a heel turn since to get that kind of reaction. I think this was the last time a heel turn was real.[/quote]
What a hell of a moment for wrestling. It triggered the boom in popularity that wrestling may never achieve again, reinvented Hulk Hogan, and so much more. It would kick the WWE in the ass to start making compelling content, and ignite a war between the two companies that brought out the best in each other...for a while.
Later, there would be splinter nWo groups, the lWo, and much more - but let's appreciate this, the best, at its time.