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Raeg posted:Yeah, Kip Frye I think, Foley also mentions him in his first book. I think he got the bonus once but I can't remember who he was wrestling. He was wrestling Abdullah the Butcher in a falls count anywhere match.
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 18:13 |
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# ? May 11, 2024 09:25 |
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Red posted:I watched The Rise and Fall of WCW on Netflix right now, and I find the following interesting: A subject like WCW should never be attempted to cover in just one single DVD. There's enough footage, material, people to talk to, etc. to do three DVDs, 3 hours each on WCW at the very least.
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 18:21 |
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mcmonkey posted:I had a look at the 2001 WCW PPVs on wikipedia earlier today, they sound pretty good. Are they any good? Russo was gone by early 2001, and the booking was done by a half decent booking committee. They weren't spectacular or anything, but they got the job done, and introduced the Cruiserweight Tag-Team titles. I would argue that most of those 2001 WCW shows are just as good as WWE's product today. Steiner was systematically taking out all the top faces, an the rumour is Goldberg was set to return and start a program around May, leading up to Starcade 2001. They were building Steiner up as this psychotic monster, who was basically killing people, and he was really getting over. For example, at Greed, WCW's last PPV, he and Rick Steiner beat DDP until he passed out in the Steiner Recliner, and the next day on Nitro they held a mock funeral for his career. Late 1999 and 2000 is when WCW REALLY sucked. Zack_Gochuck fucked around with this message at 19:11 on Mar 24, 2011 |
# ? Mar 24, 2011 18:46 |
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Raeg posted:Yeah, Kip Frye I think, Foley also mentions him in his first book. I think he got the bonus once but I can't remember who he was wrestling. Kip Frye was a badass and would have turned the company around given time. He was excited to run WCW and gave said bonus to whomever had the best match that night on big shows. He liked people that the crowd liked and didn't seem to care about politics because he didn't know or care. He was like if Jim Herd had fun with his job and the wrestling world would have been mad different if he were Vic Venom.
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 20:13 |
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Greed is a really great but really sad show. Everyone busted their rear end, and it really looked like they might be able to salvage things, and then...
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 20:24 |
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Reached Nitro August 2000, Tony Schiavone just doesn't care and honestly looks like he's about 2 Mark "Cheer all heels" Madden lines away from suicide.
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 20:29 |
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Giedroyc posted:They keep dragging his wife on to talk about things in the past tense and Bobby himself doesn't give a comment on anything. Building on what Captain Charisma said: He can speak in very, very short sentences now, which is a significant improvement from where he was only a year or two ago, but he isn't exactly a guy you can trot out in front of a video camera and have him speak for two or three hours about his life.
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 21:05 |
Holy poo poo he looks awful. I had no idea he was that far gone.
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 21:12 |
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Wojtek posted:Holy poo poo he looks awful. I had no idea he was that far gone. Throat cancer, followed by a jaw infection, is a bitch.
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 21:14 |
How much of his mind is left?
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 21:15 |
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Wojtek posted:How much of his mind is left? His minds all there, his mouth is not.
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 21:22 |
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Manic_Misanthrope posted:His minds all there, his mouth is not. Exactly. Just like Roger Ebert, who had similar problems (well, Ebert had thyroid cancer, then the treatment created jaw problems), his mind is presumably still as sharp as a steel bear trap. His health problems have simply robbed him of the ability to speak. (And, unlike Ebert, he certainly couldn't afford for an expensive foreign company to custom-tailor a text-to-speech program using his voice taken from prior recordings.)
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 21:35 |
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Minges posted:Kip Frye was a badass and would have turned the company around given time. He was excited to run WCW and gave said bonus to whomever had the best match that night on big shows. He liked people that the crowd liked and didn't seem to care about politics because he didn't know or care. He was like if Jim Herd had fun with his job and the wrestling world would have been mad different if he were Vic Venom. So does anyone actually know why he left/was replaced? It's weird because this was apparently the one levelheaded man in the entire industry.
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 21:37 |
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Timby posted:(And, unlike Ebert, he certainly couldn't afford for an expensive foreign company to custom-tailor a text-to-speech program using his voice taken from prior recordings.) It's unfortunate because if they did take his old recordings he'd only be able to refer to people has humanoids and ham & eggers.
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 21:41 |
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Does Bobby's current jaw condition affect his long-term health?
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 21:42 |
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Maxwell Lord posted:So does anyone actually know why he left/was replaced? It's weird because this was apparently the one levelheaded man in the entire industry. I just grabbed The Death of WCW from my bookshelf behind me, and Frye's tenure is only addressed in about three paragraphs, and ends abruptly by saying, "Frye suddenly quit." That's when Watts came in.
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 21:43 |
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I'm sure being a former Pizza Hut manager with 0 wrestling knowledge who threw money around at a time when WCW didn't have much didn't help, hence why Bill Watts came in to cut costs.
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 21:50 |
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Giedroyc posted:I'm sure being a former Pizza Hut manager with 0 wrestling knowledge who threw money around at a time when WCW didn't have much didn't help, hence why Bill Watts came in to cut costs. He wasn't a Pizza Hut manager, he was in the corporate office.
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 21:55 |
Its one of those things where there isn't much to go on. The lockerroom was happy and business was up slightly. Frye hasn't talked about it and really he is the only one who knows for sure. For what its worth Dusty was fired as booker a couple of days before he quit.
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 22:00 |
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Rusty Shackelford posted:He wasn't a Pizza Hut manager, he was in the corporate office. Kip Frye is not Jim Herd.
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 22:03 |
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El Duke posted:Kip Frye is not Jim Herd. Kip Frye was in the Pizza Hut main corporate office and Jim Herd was in the corporate office of Pizza Hut of St. Louis. It isn't like they went from yelling at delivery drivers to yelling at wrestlers.
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 22:04 |
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Rusty Shackelford posted:Kip Frye was in the Pizza Hut main corporate office and Jim Herd was in the corporate office of Pizza Hut of St. Louis. It isn't like they went from yelling at delivery drivers to yelling at wrestlers. I've never seen anything that said Kip Frey worked for Pizza Hut. He was a lawyer, worked at Turner starting in 1990, headed up WCW in 92, then went on to do other stuff. Never heard anything about Pizza Hut. Not saying it isn't possible, I've just never heard anything about him working for Pizza Hut, just Herd.
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 22:15 |
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Rusty Shackelford posted:Kip Frye was in the Pizza Hut main corporate office and Jim Herd was in the corporate office of Pizza Hut of St. Louis. It isn't like they went from yelling at delivery drivers to yelling at wrestlers. Frey started as an IP lawyer, and then began working in TBS' legal department in 1990. He took over WCW in 1992. I can't find any indication, anywhere on Google (nor in any of the books I have), that Frey had any involvement with Pizza Hut. Also, the Internet and most books seem to have a disagreement regarding the spelling of his last name: Foley and Death of WCW say it's "Frye," while the Internet and other sources say it's "Frey." El Duke posted:Not saying it isn't possible, I've just never heard anything about him working for Pizza Hut, just Herd. Right. Jim Herd was the Midwest director of marketing for Pizza Hut. Frey was just a lawyer.
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 22:17 |
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El Duke posted:I've never seen anything that said Kip Frey worked for Pizza Hut. He was a lawyer, worked at Turner starting in 1990, headed up WCW in 92, then went on to do other stuff. Never heard anything about Pizza Hut. Not saying it isn't possible, I've just never heard anything about him working for Pizza Hut, just Herd. You're right. I quoted this post and kept running with the mistake that Giedroyc made. Giedroyc posted:I'm sure being a former Pizza Hut manager with 0 wrestling knowledge who threw money around at a time when WCW didn't have much didn't help, hence why Bill Watts came in to cut costs.
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 22:18 |
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I'm sure being a former nondescript corporate person with 0 wrestling knowledge who threw money around at a time when WCW didn't have much didn't help, hence why Bill Watts came in to cut costs. Fixed
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 22:21 |
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mcmonkey posted:I had a look at the 2001 WCW PPVs on wikipedia earlier today, they sound pretty good. Are they any good? no. They're basically proto TNA
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 22:57 |
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Frye had some good ideas and even at their worst early 90s losses WCW wasn't losing more than they would have made if they got fair TV residuals from Turner like Bischoff negotiated. Frye wasn't savvy to the business though, and I don't think he was the guy to turn WCW around. He was overpaying people and getting worked on the best match bonuses by the boys. When push came to shove the guy would be run over by politics.
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 23:08 |
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MassRayPer posted:Frye had some good ideas and even at their worst early 90s losses WCW wasn't losing more than they would have made if they got fair TV residuals from Turner like Bischoff negotiated. Frye wasn't savvy to the business though, and I don't think he was the guy to turn WCW around. He was overpaying people and getting worked on the best match bonuses by the boys. When push came to shove the guy would be run over by politics. JR was recently asked about him and said the same thing: had some decent ideas, had no idea how the business worked or real product knowledge, and was politicked apart, basically, since he had no idea how things actually worked in the wrestling world.
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# ? Mar 24, 2011 23:46 |
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The observer pretty much goes "Herd resigns, chucks a temper tantrum at Dusty,Magnum and JR. To be replaced by Frey." And that's about it. No more headlines until rumors of Brett joining WCW (!!!) and then Watts being hired. But it is mentioned that Frey loved the cruiser weights and saw $$$ with a Pillman/Liger feud. And that led to the infamous Pillman contract dramas, which still boggle the mind.
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# ? Mar 25, 2011 00:30 |
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LordPants posted:The observer pretty much goes "Herd resigns, chucks a temper tantrum at Dusty,Magnum and JR. To be replaced by Frey." The Bret to WCW rumor was in what? January 1992? The story is that he was planning on jumping and that's why he lost the IC Title to the Mountie right before the Rumble.
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# ? Mar 25, 2011 04:20 |
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coconono posted:no. They're basically proto TNA
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# ? Mar 25, 2011 05:28 |
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LividLiquid posted:Not even close. Maybe proto-TNA 2005-6 before Russo came bacl where they put out a decent product but bobody wanted to like them. 2001 WCW was just like WCW or TNA in its heyday. The main event still sucked but everything else was outstanding. Greed had a great main event. In 2001, Nitro was usually awful. Thunder was great, and the PPVs were mixed bags in January and February followed by a great PPV in Greed.
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# ? Mar 25, 2011 05:31 |
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Wow, ten years ago today. I wasn't even in high school yet. Man, I feel old.
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# ? Mar 26, 2011 16:54 |
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LordPants posted:The observer pretty much goes "Herd resigns, chucks a temper tantrum at Dusty,Magnum and JR. To be replaced by Frey." I assume Magnum here is Magnum TA? How long did he work backstage?
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# ? Mar 26, 2011 17:15 |
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Rusty Shackelford posted:He was wrestling Abdullah the Butcher in a falls count anywhere match. Actually, Foley was wrestling Van Hammer - Abdullah just ran in at the end and then cut himself in on the "best match" bonus they got.
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# ? Mar 26, 2011 17:28 |
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ExplodeYourself posted:Wow, ten years ago today. I wasn't even in high school yet. Man, I feel old. Ten years ago today i was knee deep in college. You godamn youngsters!
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# ? Mar 26, 2011 17:34 |
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ExplodeYourself posted:Wow, ten years ago today. I wasn't even in high school yet. Man, I feel old. Second year in college for me. This is one thing that ages everyone.
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# ? Mar 26, 2011 17:47 |
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If only Crowbar's wrestling talent or charisma were as big as his nose. He's got a chronic case of Sunny-itis too, which is the uncontrollable urge to gurn and pose to the camera even when you're not supposed to be the centre of attention.
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# ? Mar 26, 2011 18:50 |
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There's a Steamboat/Pillman lumberjack match on WWE On Demand as part of the March Mania series that is the History of WCW in one match. Two great workers in a singles match as part of a tag title feud, the ring surrounded by Steve Austin, Mick Foley, Kevin Nash, Raven, Shane Douglas, Steve Regal, a young RVD, and 2 Cold Scorpio (among others). Regardless of whether or not all of those guys are your cup of tea, it's enough talent for a ridiculous main event scene and they're being wasted on the mid-card WCW Saturday Night in 1993.
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# ? Mar 26, 2011 20:22 |
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# ? May 11, 2024 09:25 |
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The WCW 2001 PPV's aren't as bad as you'd think considering the previous year and they're kind of interesting to see because they're heading in a different direction to WCW typically with an abundance of new stars out of the Power Plant who were employed for a couple of months before the buy out. Whenever I see a WCW 2001 PPV's there's faces I'd totally forgotten about that I wonder what's become of.Wojtek posted:Holy poo poo he looks awful. I had no idea he was that far gone. I guess that's chemo.
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# ? Mar 26, 2011 20:42 |