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Everything posted by cawthon777
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I've got time to kill ... 1. 21 2. a 3. no 4. N/A 5. N/A 6. no 7. b 8. maybe a little more ... I'll go with a 9. c 10. b 11. c 12. c 13. b 14. c 15. a 16. well considering WCW and ECW no longer exist ... I'll go with a 17. usually the better workers are the heels and I cheer talent ... so I'll go with a 18. antagonists ... anyone that can crack on the crowd gets my thumbs up 19. c ... it's rather minimal anyway 20. Anyone can have a bad day, week, month, year and I'm not quick to jump on Austin's case about this since I - nor a lot of the people who have voiced their opinion on the subject - don't have all the facts. I may not agree with whatever he did to Debra but I'm not going to crucify him or hold a grudge because of it.
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It probably depends on where you are as to who you think is most over with the crowd. In my case, I was right up next to the ring and had an 8-year old hillbilly and his dad sitting to my right - both of which thought that RVD never would have won the tag titles had it not been for Kane. Also, it had to do with how RVD and Kane were used in the match. RVD was the one put in the 5-minute headlock which killed the crowd ... Kane was the one that cleaned house to wake the crowd back up.
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I never saw that film but I believe Glory was also in 'Jawbreaker' with Darla.
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I picked up Cruel Intentions on DVD yesterday at Wal-Mart. Surprisingly good; I'd never seen it. Sarah Michelle Gellar can play an awesome uber bitch. I have to believe she's got a decent film career ahead of her if she just takes some different roles that break the 'Buffy' mold. No more 'Simply Irresistable', no more 'Scooby-Doo' (although I know we have another one of those coming), and no more 'I Know What you Did Last Summer'. Let's see her in some R-rated action movies just to break the monotany.
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Keep the Faith -Bon Jovi Gotta have Faith - George Michael Yeah, my musical reference is much more gay than yours.
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I thought it was weird and artsy ... and not a pretty artsy. A dark artsy. It's one of those movies where all the young adults (college students in this case) are portrayed as cold, callous, driven, evil people. Even the most innocent characters are pot heads or have something 'wrong' with them emotionally. It's hard to compare this to any other movie. I might say 'Go' but this is much darker.
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I was in Alaska at the time so my exposure to ECW was only via magazines and through WWF broadcasts leading into Barely Legal. I thought it was cool for them. "Yay, them!" I would say.
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Rico rules! Indeed!
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Are you saying that the Fink sang the national anthem? If so, awesome! He and I are kindred spirits. That would have been more entertaining. It was some chick from Richmond.
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Just got back a few hours ago. Very tired but I threw this together for those that were interested. I took about 3 1/2 rolls of film which I should have developed and online in a week. 4th row floor seats. WWE Raw @ Roanoke Civic Center – April 12, 2003 The WWE made its long-awaited return to Roanoke last night after an absence of approximately 2 years. This first Raw brand house show following WrestleMania XIX featured not only the return of Shawn Michaels to the house show circuit after more than 5 years but also the first match back for Kevin Nash. In an attempt to meet or at least see some of the wrestlers prior to the show, my friend Chuck and I arrived at the arena around 3pm (for the 7:30 bell time event). Shortly after camping out in front of the crew parking lot, we were able to catch glimpses of Goldust, Triple H, Kane, Maven (in a limo) and Steven Richards as they arrived. Goldust was the first to pull in, chewing tobacco as he made his way into the arena. Triple H soon followed, failing to acknowledge any cheers from the small crowd of fans. Later arrivals by Christian, Lance Storm (who came in together), Trish Stratus, Booker T, Victoria, Molly Holly, the Dudley Boyz (who drove in together), Spike Dudley, Arn Anderson (who drove in with Charles Robinson), and Test showed varying degrees of appreciation for the fans that cheered them on their way in. The most we got out of Shawn Michaels and Kevin Nash was a wave as they drove into the gadded parking area. At one point, the crewman who was in charge of opening and closing the gate for the staff and wrestlers (and was a carbon copy of Tough Enough’s Big – ball cap and all) was on the other side of the parking lot when Chief Morley drove up. My friend then took it upon himself to grow a huge set of balls and open the gate himself – receiving a big thumbs up from Morley in return. However, the true highlight of the pre-game show was the arrival of Rico. After rolling down his window prior to driving into the parking lot and saying hi to the fans, he went a big step further as he took the time to sign autographs, shake hands, and have pictures taken with anyone that wanted one – especially the little kids (he autographed my Kodak film box so I’m not complaining). I thought that was incredibly classy and, as a result, Rico had a small but very loyal and vocal fan base for the event (I think I was the most vocal). So after dealing with the event security staff regarding the size of my camera lens, I found myself in a 4th row floor seat – mere feet from the ring. As the minutes counted down to the beginning of the show, the PA system blared tracks from the WWE Anthology set – most notably themes from the Honkytonk Man, DX, Mankind, and Lex Luger’s “I’ll Be Your Hero” – before finishing with Creed’s “My Sacrifice”. “Welcome to the Jungle” brought Howard Finkel to the ring and, after a very well done rendition of the National Anthem, the event began. Goldust pinned Steven Richards (w/ Victoria) with the powerslam - Goldust was a big fan favorite and his case of shock-induced Turrets made for a very entertaining, if not technical, bout. Late in the bout, Goldust made his comeback after no-selling blows from Richards (much like the Ultimate Warrior or Tatanka would – only in this case, he yelped and had full body spasms instead of shaking the ropes). Victoria attempted to make the save after Richards was set up for the Shattered Dreams – however, she inadvertently gave Richards a headbutt to the groin and moments later Goldust sealed the match with his intense powerslam finisher. Christopher Nowinski pinned Spike Dudley by reversing an attempt at the Dudley Dogg into a back suplex and putting his feet on the ropes for the win - Nowinski was booed out of the building right from the get-go. Sporting the face protector, he told the crowd that he would have liked to have quoted something from a book we would all be familiar with – unfortunately he left his copy of Green Eggs ‘n’ Ham at home. Oh, and apparently he is the first Harvard graduate to ever come to Roanoke (I got the impression he was looking to leave ASAP). The crowd seemed to be much more anti-Nowinski than they were pro-Spike. Decent bout. 3 Minute Warning (w/ Rico) defeated Maven & the Hurricane when Maven was pinned with a sidewalk slam following interference from Rico - Both faces were huge over, however the only guys in this match I was interested in were the Hurricane and Rico. Back and forth bout, nothing too spectacular. This being near Maven’s hometown of Charlottesville (where Raw will be Sunday Night), he was given the opportunity to play the hero for the match as he cleaned house after a hot tag from the Hurricane. Pulling out several impressive and rare moves from his repertoire, Maven had things going his way until Rico rolled into the ring and changed the momentum of the bout long enough for 3MW to pick up the victory. Post-match, Maven and the Hurricane hugged to the delight of the crowd. Test pinned Christian with the full nelson slam - I was one of the very few vocal pro-Christian fans in attendance. Solid match. Lots of stalling in the opening moments but Christian pulled off a good performance and made Test look like $100. There were successful attempts at the tilt-a-whirl slam, the Unprettier, and the boot to the face – however none of these resulted in the finish of the bout. The end came following a near fall by Christian, which resulted in him arguing with the slowness of the referee’s count. Christian pushes the ref and the ref pushes Christian right into a full nelson slam by Test for the pin. No Stacy. Very sad. WWE Raw Tag Team Champions Rob Van Dam & Kane defeated the Dudley Boyz and Lance Storm & Chief Morley in an elimination match - Kane seemed to be the most over in this bout with fans often calling out to RVD “Tag Kane, you dummy!” – even when Van Dam was in full control of the bout. There were a few less than stellar dropkicks from RVD, which didn’t help his standing amongst the crowd. Early in the bout, Morley made it clear that the Dudleyz’ sole purpose in this match was to ensure that he and Storm would regain the tag titles. However, things didn’t quite pan out that way as RVD lands a frog splash on Storm to eliminate the former champions following a miscommunication with the Dudley Boyz. Bubba Ray & D-Von then squared off against the champs in a lengthy bout (which bored the hell out of me, even though the rest of the crowd seemed very into it). Eventually, Kane scored the pin on D-Von with a chokeslam to retain the titles. Post-match, Bubba Ray presented RVD and Kane with the title belts in a showing of respect and all four men celebrated in the ring. After the champions returned backstage, the Dudleyz were attacked by Storm and Morley – with Spike eventually coming out to make the save. - Intermission WWE Women’s Champion Trish Stratus defeated Victoria and Molly Holly by pinning Victoria following a double Stratusfaction - The shortest bout of the night and surprisingly so. Trish and Victoria were very much over with the crowd, which at this point began to annoy the hell out of me with their chants of “Spread your legs” and “I came here to see tities!” It was pretty sad, especially since the match itself was well done for how short it was. Rico pinned Tommy Dreamer (sub. for Jeff Hardy) in a No DQ match following the spin kick - After his meet and greet with the fans earlier in the evening, Chuck and I were quick to give Rico 100% of our support against Dreamer and were very vocal of that during the bout. No explanation was given for Jeff Hardy’s absence. Dreamer beat Rico from pillar to post, inside and outside of the ring with his trusty Singapore cane. However, in the end, it was Rico that picked up the victory to the dismay of the very anti-Rico crowd. Kevin Nash, Shawn Michaels, & Booker T defeated WWE Raw World Champion Triple H, Chris Jericho, & Ric Flair when Nash pinned Triple H with the powerbomb - Well done match from top to bottom and the longest of the night. Everyone received a huge reaction from the crowd upon their entrance – which, oddly enough, included the faces coming out first. All three heels got on the mic at one time or another to ridicule the crowd – calling them fat, saying they have no teeth, and (always a favorite) promising to take their mothers home and make women out of them. Michaels got on his knees during Flair’s intro and mockingly bowed to the Nature Boy; Flair was not amused. Booker played the babyface in distress first as he was repeatedly triple-teamed by the opposition. Book eventually made the hot tag to Michaels, who cleaned house for several minutes. The match appeared to be over following the superkick on Flair, however HBK was hit with the Pedigree from an illegal Triple H – which killed the babyfaces’ momentum and caused Michaels to become the victim of a brutal triple team. Nash, who was used only sparingly during the bout, received the hot tag at the climax of the match and laid to waste each member of the opposition. Chris Jericho prevented a Jackknife powerbomb by nailing Nash in the head with the world title belt – however, moments later a second attempt proved to be the charm as it was enough to put Triple H down for the 3-count. Following the bout, Michaels and Nash egged Booker T to hit the Spinaroonie – which he did as the crowd went crazy. Overall, a very entertaining show. I can’t say much for the more vocal Roanoke wrestling fans as they seemed to hurl obscenities at the wrestlers at every opportunity – which in itself isn’t a big deal but when their 8-year old son or daughter is sitting right next to them I find it questionable. From talking to various fans as the wrestlers arrived earlier in the evening, I got the impression that the vast majority were very backward in their understanding of the WWE. Most asked if the Undertaker, Rock, Lita, Vince McMahon, Hogan, Goldberg, or Austin would be on the card … some spread the “news” that Austin was going to make a surprise appearance during the event … others said Bret Hart will be at Summer Slam … others still talked of an imminent return of Degeneration-X. I didn’t have the desire to debate so I simply rolled my eyes and didn’t say a word as this “accurate” info from the Internet was passed around.
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We're getting a preview of Nash, HBK, Booker vs. Flair, Jericho, Triple H and RVD / Kane vs. the Dudleyz vs. Storm / Morley tonight in Roanoke. ...Should be interesting.
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Very true. Since they started hitting the UK in 89, the WWF would only have a handful of stops per tour - and then would return 6 months later. Even in 92 when the company was in a similar downturn, they had the British Bulldog on the roster who would main event all the UK shows against guys like Dibiase or Flair. Tickets sold pretty quickly. Matter of fact, Summer Slam 92 sold out after a matter of hours (or so they say). The WWF came back to the UK just a few weeks afterwards with Flair defending against Savage and Bret. Not sure how those tickets went but Bulldog was kept in the U.S. for that tour.
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1. Jimmy Hart and Sensational Sherri ... although Sherri managed them before they got the name Money Inc. 2. Bobby Heenan 3. tye dye 5. I don't think I have any info on that particular show but I'll guess Adrian Adonis
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Did it take people time to remember him? Do we forget one of the biggest cartoon shows of the late 80s / early 90s - GI Joe?
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Ric Flair/Arn Anderson vs Chris Benoit/Bobby Eaton
cawthon777 replied to a topic in General Wrestling
I saw a bout between Sting / Bulldog and Benoit / Eaton on WCW Worldwide in 93 (at MGM Studios). Complete squash, very sad Benoit vs. Bulldog would have ruled. -
Aside from Arquette, I loved April - July 2000 WCW. Maybe it's just me ...
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1. Outlaws vs. Snow / Blackman 2. Shutter Speed or something ... had to do with a camera 4. Taz vs. Triple H 8. Scott Steiner
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IYH 3: Triple Header.
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Well if they bring back Sting, they MUST bring back the Black Scorpion too.
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I was huge into Star Trek back when I was 10ish, right around the time of the 25th anniversary. I believe I rented The Cage at Blockbuster once after marking out for The Menagerie in syndication (both parts of which I now own via the CBS Video Library collection). As a much younger kid (7 or so), I thought - without seeing all of The Menagerie - that the big brained aliens were responsible for making Pike an invalid. If that were the case, the pilot might have been more interesting.
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I don't agree with that. Regal has gotten real shitty over the last year. Everyone can have a shitty year. One shitty year shouldn't erase the 9 years prior to that where he was over huge and one of the best wrestlers on the WWF / WCW roster.
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I was thinking the same thing. We don't like heavy metal, we don't like rock 'n' roll, all we like to listen to is Barry Mannilow! They can say they're going to move to Memphis because they love the U.S. so much ... but never do.
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That blows. Regal > Morley
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Well, Ole was never around so it was basically just Flair, Arn, and Roma who were on TV. After Flair won the world title and started feuding with Rude, he didn't appear on TV with Arn or Roma but they were still referred to as the Horsemen. What happened with the Arn / Roma tag team was that they started losing to lesser teams due to Roma's inability to make the save when he had the chance. It finally climaxed when the Horsemen fought (I believe) Austin and Orndorff. There was a double team behind the referee's back, Roma went to make the save, but the Assassin (who was managing Orndorff) waved him off. Then, with little explanation, Roma started running with Orndorff. There was a blow off btw Arn and Roma, taped prior to the scissors incident, which Arn easily won.
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1-900-909-9900 easy to remember