1. On July 14th, 1984,
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2. millions of loyal
viewers tuned into
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3. cable channel WTBS
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4. to watch its most
popular program,
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5. World Championship
Wrestling.
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6. Thank you so
very, very much.
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7. But instead of a live
broadcast featuring the
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8. south's most
popular wrestlers...
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9. Fans were shocked by the
surprise appearance
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10. of New York promoter...
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11. Vincent McMahon Jr.
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12. Thank you. It is
indeed a pleasure
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13. to be associated
with WTBS.
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14. And everybody's
mouth dropped open.
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15. Did seem like the
world of wrestling
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16. stopped at that time.
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17. I was watching the TV.
I had no idea it was coming.
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18. Nobody knew why.
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19. You know, the fans of that
promotion were furious.
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20. It was a day that
would live in infamy,
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21. forever known as
'Black Saturday.'
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22. Vince McMahon's
first step toward
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23. his goal of
total monopoly.
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24. He had a vision that
wrestling should be
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25. national under
one person.
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26. Far more than the tale
of one man's ambition,
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27. 'Black Saturday' is the story
of an epic behind the scenes
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28. showdown between
titans of the industry.
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29. They kind of hoodoo'd him
and snuck it out from
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30. underneath him, more so
than him giving it up.
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31. And Ole said, "Well
let's do a blood oath."
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32. The first one to break
that oath was not us.
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33. So my father,
he gets a call,
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34. "They've stolen
the company."
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35. A high stakes power play
that sets Vince McMahon
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36. on the path
toward building
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37. a billion dollar
wrestling empire.
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38. It was all the beginning
groundwork
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39. of future warfare.
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40. Vince McMahon is a cancer
on the wrestling business.
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41. Vince won, he was
the best at it,
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42. he was the most vicious
shark in the sea.
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43. Welcome to
WrestleMania!
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44. For over 40 years the
wrestling business has been
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45. dominated by World
Wrestling Entertainment,
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46. under the singular control
of its owner and mastermind,
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47. Vince McMahon Jr.
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48. But in the early 1980s,
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49. McMahon is just beginning
to stake his claim on an
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50. industry divided into
regional promotions
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51. known as territories.
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52. In 1983, most wrestling fans
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53. saw Vince McMahon Jr.
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54. as the announcer of the
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55. WWF television program.
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56. Now everybody in the
wrestling business
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57. knew that Vince was Vince
McMahon Senior's son
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58. and was the guy who had
just bought the WWF,
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59. the World Wrestling
Federation,
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60. from his father in 1982.
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61. Let's meet Jimmy Cornette
and his dynasty of wrestlers.
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62. That's exactly right,
let's meet me.
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63. Where did you get that
tie, Freddie Miller?
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64. I'm Jim Cornette, and
through my 40 year career
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65. in wrestling, I've been an
historian, specifically.
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66. I've studied 'Black Saturday'
and its effects
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67. on modern day
pro wrestling.
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68. When Vince McMahon
Junior bought the WWF,
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69. the business in that
part of the country
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70. had almost never
been stronger.
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71. Since the 1940s,
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72. regional promoters
like McMahon Sr.,
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73. did business through a
governing body called
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74. the 'National
Wrestling Alliance.'
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75. Well, the NWA,
they made these bylaws,
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76. and they had territorial
boundaries where you
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77. got this territory,
and you got this territory.
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78. My name is Dave Meltzer
and I'm the editor of the
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79. Wrestling Observer Newsletter
and I've been covering
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80. pro wrestling since
the early 1970s.
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81. In the NWA,
there were always,
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82. always wars and fighting
and things like that.
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83. Wrestling has always been
kind of like the mafia
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84. without the
cement overshoes.
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85. Nobody ends up at the
bottom of the river,
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86. just a few black eyes
every now and then.
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87. Every year the
NWA had a meeting.
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88. All the promoters came.
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89. It was like the Gambino's
and the Bonanno's,
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90. and there's the Gotti's.
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91. And it was all the families
that came together once a
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92. year and decided the major
decisions for wrestling in
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93. the United States for
the following year.
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94. The other promoters looked at
Vince Jr like an upstart kid.
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95. They didn't realize he
wanted to be the
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96. Walt Disney of wrestling.
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97. They didn't understand
not only the,
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98. the plans that he had, but
the lengths that he was
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99. willing to go to, to have those
plans come to fruition.
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100. While some territories
showed signs of struggle,
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101. Georgia Championship
Wrestling was thriving...
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102. thanks to the shrewd
leadership of Jim Barnett.
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103. Barnett was one of the
great minds in
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104. wrestling as a promoter.
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105. When he needed
to charm people,
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106. he could charm people.
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107. And he had connections
outside wrestling.
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108. If you needed to discuss
something with a politician,
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109. if you needed to talk to a
television executive or a
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110. station manager
or a big sponsor,
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111. Barnett was the guy
that they called to
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112. make the connection.
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113. Even in today's business,
as off the wall as the
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114. characters are, Jim Barnett
would still stand out
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115. as a very unique
character.
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116. I'm Gerald Brisco,
better known as
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117. "Jerry" Briscoe on the
wrestling circuit.
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118. Let's go see the world
tag team champions
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119. Jack and Jerry
Brisco in action.
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120. My brother and I became the
only two people ever to
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121. hold both of the eastern
championship and
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122. the mid-Atlantic
championship.
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123. Right, brother?
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124. Well, they say we're
wild and we're mean,
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125. we're creating a scene.
We gone crazy.
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126. I got along real well and
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127. learned so much
from Jim Barnett.
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128. All the other promoters
were ex-wrestlers,
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129. or they were loud
and braggadocious.
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130. Jim always wore a
beautiful suit with a tie,
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131. and he had the hair slicked
back and he had jewelry on.
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132. Does wrestling
encourage violence?
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133. I don't think so, no.
I never thought so.
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134. He was very different
from a wrestling guy.
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135. I mean, he was
interested in wrestling,
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136. but he's more
interested in fine arts,
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137. which is kinda unique for
a, a wrestling promoter.
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138. For a while, they wouldn't
let Jim in the NWA until,
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139. geez, like '70.
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140. Because they didn't want
somebody gay in their,
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141. in their old boy's club.
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142. Behind the scenes,
he was a cutthroat.
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143. He had the ability to cut
your balls off and shove 'em
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144. down your throat and
you'd thank him for it.
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145. Known as a powerful
liaison to TV executives,
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146. Jim Barnett is close to
media tycoon Ted Turner,
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147. who airs Georgia
Championship Wrestling
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148. nationally on his
cable network, WTBS.
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149. Wrestling was the first
hit on cable television.
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150. It was Georgia
Championship Wrestling.
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151. Turner just took his
local Atlanta channel,
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152. 17 TV Station, and put
up on the satellite,
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153. and everybody
thought he was nuts.
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154. Who's gonna wanna watch a
local Atlanta television show
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155. in San Francisco, right?
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156. There wasn't so
many options for TV,
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157. so it was one of the
stations you got.
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158. So you can watch
the Atlanta Braves,
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159. and Andy Griffith
was big...
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160. but wrestling was the
biggest show on the station.
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161. You know, that was
like must see.
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162. Coming up next, Georgia
Championship Wrestling.
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163. All the stars of the
National Wrestling Alliance.
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164. Surprise!
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165. Flew into Atlanta every
weekend to appear on
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166. the two hour
television program.
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167. A severe amount of
punishment to the heads.
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168. It was the number one
TV show on cable TV,
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169. that's how hot
it was, I mean...
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170. what made it so hot was a
unique combination of
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171. Gordon Solie, the voice of
Championship Wrestling.
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172. I'm Gordon Solie,
your host.
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173. And the available talent.
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174. There were so many Hall of
Famers on that original
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175. list of talent that it's
mind boggling that that
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176. kind of group of talent
could assemble in
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177. one small territory
like Georgia.
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178. Ooh!
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179. I think what made it so
special is it was TBS,
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180. first TV station to go
all over the country,
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181. and I got to wrestle
the best of the best,
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182. I mean the cream
of the crop.
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183. My name's Tommy
"Wildfire" Rich,
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184. former NWA world
heavyweight champion.
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185. - Welcome aboard, Tommy.
- Thank you very much, Gordon.
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186. It was crazy.
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187. A lot of times you'd sit
back and watch people,
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188. and it would be as big a
show watching them as it
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189. would be watching the
wrestling, you know.
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190. Oh, Lord, yeah,
the Georgia peaches
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191. and the grannies
love me, too.
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192. I've seen grannies take their
cane and beat Ole Anderson
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193. up with it, 'cause he's
beating me up, you know.
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194. I put the TV ring up every
Saturday at the TV station.
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195. It was cramped studio,
it only held 100 people.
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196. And you packed 'em
in like sardines
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197. to get a hundred
in there.
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198. Boy Scout groups, Girl Scout
troops, church groups...
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199. just fans that loved
to come every week.
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200. My name is Bobby Simmons.
Started working for ABC
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201. booking when I was 14
years old, running errands,
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202. and then went
to work for
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203. Georgia Championship
Wrestling.
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204. We had good crowds and we
did sell out a lot of arenas.
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205. The day to day operations
are handled by
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206. matchmaker
Ole Anderson. ..
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207. Ole Anderson!
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208. A veteran wrestler
who rules
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209. Georgia Championship
Wrestling with an iron fist.
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210. Ole suckered him
that time.
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211. Ole was very intelligent.
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212. One of the most
intelligent guys,
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213. one of the most
well-spoken guys.
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214. He was loud,
he was opinionated.
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215. Why don't you be quiet for
about two seconds and
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216. let me talk and
say something!
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217. But Ole was a
great wrestler.
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218. And he had also gotten
quite a reputation
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219. as a matchmaker
and a booker.
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220. Stop the cameras!
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221. Either you hate him or
you love him, or, well...
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222. you don't love him, but
either you hate him
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223. or you like him.
Let's put it...
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224. He's kinda hard to love.
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225. My name is Joe Hamilton Jr.
I refereed and
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226. wrestled as "Nick Patrick"
throughout my entire career.
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227. I stopped the match myself.
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228. Two! Nick Patrick very slow
to make a count right here.
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229. I heard Ricky Morton
one time say,
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230. "I don't think Ole Anderson
even likes ice cream."
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231. You know, it's like-
And I agree,
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232. he probably didn't,
you know.
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233. He was just so old school
and grouchy but...
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234. a lot of the old timers back
then were like that, you know?
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235. They was, being hard ass
on the young guys and
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236. making 'em,
making 'em learn.
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237. He was what you saw.
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238. My father was
very no nonsense.
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239. I think the guy that you
saw on the screen was
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240. very much the same guy
that ate breakfast with me
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241. the next morning.
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242. And I think that's really
part of the reason
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243. he was successful,
is because people
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244. could believe what
they were seeing.
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245. My name is
Bryant Rogowski,
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246. and I'm the oldest son
of Ole Anderson.
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247. My father obviously spent
years bumping in the ring
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248. and suffered a lot of
physical injuries,
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249. and some years ago he
was diagnosed with M.S.,
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250. and right now he's just
in a state where
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251. he can't really do a
lot for himself.
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252. I think he was all
about business.
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253. It wasn't long into his
wrestling career that
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254. he began to think about
being in charge.
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255. Eventually, he bought
into the Georgia company.
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256. Ole isn't the only wrestler
looking to increase
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257. his fortunes by getting
involved in the
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258. financial side
of the promotion.
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259. Smart enough!
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260. I started buying my stock
in small increments
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261. where it built
up to over 10%.
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262. And the same
with my brother.
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263. In 1983, the stockholders
in Georgia Championship
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264. Wrestling were the original
promoter Paul Jones,
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265. a Columbus promoter,
Fred Ward,
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266. his son-in-law, Ralph Freed,
Jim Barnett's business
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267. partner, Jim Oates,
Jack and Jerry Briscoe,
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268. and Ole Anderson.
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269. Although Georgia
Championship Wrestling
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270. is turning a profit,
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271. Ole Anderson begins
to question whether all the
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272. live show earnings are
being accurately reported.
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273. Wrestling had always been
a very cash heavy business,
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274. and money had always
probably been
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275. siphoned off the
top to some degree.
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276. And, you know, "We had to
pay off the politician."
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277. Or, "We had to give some
money to the commissioner."
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278. Or whatever it was.
And I think
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279. surely there was
some truth to some of that.
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280. But when my dad started
to really pay attention in
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281. Georgia, and realized that
it wasn't only him
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282. bringing Barnett a few
bucks after this show,
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283. but it was 7 or 8
other guys all doing
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284. the same thing...
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285. he realized that
that amount of money,
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286. surely couldn't all be
used for those purposes.
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287. I had tremendous
concern, you know,
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288. because I wasn't getting a
dividend and I'd invested
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289. tens of thousands
of dollars.
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290. We finally got Jim to
expand into Michigan,
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291. Ohio and West Virginia,
part of Pennsylvania,
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292. and we started selling
out right and left.
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293. And I was actually
doing the settlement
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294. at the shows at the time,
so I personally know
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295. the amount of cash that I
was taking back to,
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296. to Georgia, and that
wasn't getting in
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297. anybody else's pocket
but Mr. Barnett's.
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298. Ole was the first one,
maybe the only one
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299. at the time, to question
Jim Barnett.
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300. The story went around that
while Barnett was in
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301. Hong Kong making
his annual trip,
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302. because he liked
to go to Hong Kong,
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303. get all his new
suits made,
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304. Ole either kicks the door
in or bust the door in,
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305. whether the accountant
was in the office or not,
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306. but Ole got
into the books.
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307. It was like Fort Knox
trying to get to a,
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308. a box office statement,
because he had 'em under
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309. lock and key and the people
working in office were
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310. instructed, "Don't let
anybody in my office."
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311. It was actually
padlocked shut.
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312. Ole, you know,
start examining the
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313. books and everything,
and he saw, like,
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314. Jim Barnett
spending all kinds of
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315. crazy money
on phone bills,
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316. $3,000 a month phone bills,
and he had a personal chef,
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317. and he had a
personal driver.
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318. So, Ole just thought
that, you know,
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319. Jim was embezzling
money from the company.
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320. They had a meeting of the,
the Georgia Championship
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321. owners at a hotel
south of Atlanta,
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322. in a conference room.
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323. And Jim handed out
the cheques from
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324. the proceeds of the
calendar we sold.
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325. Supposedly when Jim left,
that's when Ole
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326. came in and addressed
the, the owners.
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327. Ole had rallied the troops
and gotten the majority of
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328. the other stockholders
on his side.
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329. When I get to the office,
Jim's door is opened.
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330. The light's on, I thought,
"What is this"?
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331. And I heard Ole go,
"Bobby, come here."
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332. And Ole handed me all the
cheques that I had written
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333. for the proceeds of the
calendar, he said,
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334. "Put this back
in the bank."
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335. And he told me
that day, he said,
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336. "You don't work
for Jim Barnett anymore,
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337. you work for me."
Ole told me, he says,
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338. "I'm not out to hurt Jim.
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339. I'm not out to
put him in jail."
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340. Whatever that meant.
He said, "I think I can
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341. run this company and we're
gonna do it my way."
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342. He thought everything
was black and white,
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343. there were no
grey areas, that it was
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344. just business, you acted
like businesspeople.
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345. Well...
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346. He found out very quickly
that it didn't work that way.
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347. Hell hath no fury
like Barnett scorned.
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348. After reviewing
the accounts for
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349. Georgia Championship
Wrestling,
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350. part owner Ole Anderson
tries to convince
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351. his fellow shareholders
that manager Jim Barnett
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352. is embezzling funds
from the company.
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353. Well Ole would call me
and say,
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354. "Well, Jim's stealing
all this money."
Copy !req
355. "Ole, is he stealing"?
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356. "Well yeah, he's using
it for his limousine,
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357. he's using it for this,
and nobody approved
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358. those expenditures."
And, which was true.
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359. Jim would just
explain it off,
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360. it's cost of
doing business.
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361. We had both
sides of the story.
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362. Ole and Jim were not
the best of friends.
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363. They were not even good
partners most of the time.
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364. They were always at
one another's throats..
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365. I'm Louise Cochrane,
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366. formerly known as
Louise Bennett,
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367. in Georgia
Championship Wrestling.
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368. We were in a lot of debt,
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369. because Jim had
promised the buildings
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370. and the TVs so much
per week, or per month...
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371. and it didn't matter if
we didn't make money.
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372. That was a power play
for Ole to move in.
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373. I think it was more than
just of a money power thing,
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374. than a Jim is tanking us
with his spending thing.
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375. My dad and Ralph,
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376. another stockholder
in Georgia Championship,
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377. went downtown to Barnett's
penthouse apartment,
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378. and they had a
talk with him.
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379. I think my dad probably
did most of the talking,
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380. and explained to Barnett,
my dad was gonna be
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381. elected president of
Georgia Championship.
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382. That's the way it's gonna be,
and if you don't like it,
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383. I'm gonna toss you
over your railing.
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384. Here you are, 285 pound
monster, and you're,
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385. you're bullying
this old man.
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386. You did not want to get on
the bad side of Jim Barnett
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387. because he could actively
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388. —- with you and your
wrestling career.
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389. Now Ole is taking it
to a whole new level.
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390. He didn't just no-show
Barnett, or stand him up,
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391. or hold him up for
more money for
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392. a main event
or whatever...
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393. he's run him out
of the company.
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394. Barnett knew that he
might not be able to
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395. do anything
about it then.
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396. You just know that he
definitely knew he was
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397. gonna do something
about it eventually.
Copy !req
398. While Ole reorganizes
the company under
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399. his own management
in early 1983,
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400. Vince McMahon has been
quietly strategizing
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401. to expand his own
promotion
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402. into other NWA territories.
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403. When Vince bought the
company from his father,
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404. at first everything
maintained the status quo.
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405. He had plans,
but he didn't start
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406. putting them out
front of everybody,
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407. where they could tell
what he was doing.
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408. But, behind the scenes,
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409. Vince Jr. has these
plots in mind before
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410. even the other
promoters know that
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411. he's gonna do it.
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412. And the first thing that he's
thinking about is television.
Copy !req
413. Vince McMahon's scheme
to steal the airwaves
Copy !req
414. from other promoters begins
by hiring an unlikely ally
Copy !req
415. as his director of
operations, Jim Barnett.
Copy !req
416. In 1983 they have
the annual meeting,
Copy !req
417. all the promoters
are there.
Copy !req
418. Barnett comes in,
Copy !req
419. so does
Vince McMahon Jr.,
Copy !req
420. and they both give
their resignations.
Copy !req
421. That couldn't be good.
Copy !req
422. What the —-'s
gonna happen?
Copy !req
423. Their, they, they, they were
all blindsided, for sure.
Copy !req
424. When they resigned
from the NWA,
Copy !req
425. that would mean they're
either gonna get out of
Copy !req
426. wrestling, or they're
going to run opposition.
Copy !req
427. That's the only two
things it can mean.
Copy !req
428. And that seems to indicate
that they're gonna go into
Copy !req
429. business for themselves,
with themselves,
Copy !req
430. in some other fashion.
Ole smelled it.
Copy !req
431. He said, "Okay, then the
gloves are gonna be off."
Copy !req
432. Well, the problem was you
couldn't handle the
Copy !req
433. wrestling business in
1983 and '84 like
Copy !req
434. you handled it
in 1953 and '54.
Copy !req
435. And secondly, Vince wasn't
gonna play that game.
Copy !req
436. And he had one of the
most powerful wrestling
Copy !req
437. personalities of the last
30 years in his corner
Copy !req
438. who knew absolutely
everybody.
Copy !req
439. Barnett hated Ole.
Copy !req
440. Barnett also was
looking at survival.
Copy !req
441. He was getting
up there in age,
Copy !req
442. but he needed
to keep working.
Copy !req
443. He needed to keep
that income coming in,
Copy !req
444. to maintain the facade
that he was a millionaire.
Copy !req
445. I'm Bob Roop, 13 year
amateur wrestler,
Copy !req
446. 15 year professional
wrestler,
Copy !req
447. five-time
Hall of Fame member.
Copy !req
448. Bob Roop ladies and
gentlemen, Bob Roop!
Copy !req
449. Vince Senior, asked Ole
to come up and
Copy !req
450. meet with Junior,
and see if they could
Copy !req
451. make some kind
of arrangement.
Copy !req
452. And Ole said, "No."
He said, "Absolutely not."
Copy !req
453. You know, "He's trying to
steal my territories,"
Copy !req
454. and stuff.
Copy !req
455. There was this unspoken
agreement that people
Copy !req
456. honoured each
other's territory.
Copy !req
457. I'm sure Barnett was talking
to McMahon right away and
Copy !req
458. starting to sabotage
Georgia Championship.
Copy !req
459. Things started to happen
around that time that
Copy !req
460. had never
happened before.
Copy !req
461. McMahon would go to a
station that we were on,
Copy !req
462. we had a show running,
Copy !req
463. and offer them
2000 bucks a week
Copy !req
464. to take his show,
Copy !req
465. but they had to get rid
of Ole's show.
Copy !req
466. Nothing on paper,
there was no contract,
Copy !req
467. nothing said that
they had to honour
Copy !req
468. Championship Wrestling
from Georgia.
Copy !req
469. So the station
would say, "Okay."
Copy !req
470. Next you'd start
losing buildings.
Copy !req
471. You'd call to check
on the building and,
Copy !req
472. and see how ticket sales
are going, they say,
Copy !req
473. "Well, we stopped
selling 'em."
Copy !req
474. Bunch of police cars roll
up outside the TV station,
Copy !req
475. take somebody away.
Copy !req
476. They got an anonymous tip
that he's dealing drugs.
Copy !req
477. Or they're searching the
guys at the airport.
Copy !req
478. Things that just had never
happened before that were
Copy !req
479. just a constant thorn in his
side and making things
Copy !req
480. difficult to operate,
more so than usual.
Copy !req
481. I don't think he
ever had any proof,
Copy !req
482. and I don't know
how he would.
Copy !req
483. But like I say,
it was stuff that
Copy !req
484. never happened
until then.
Copy !req
485. Vince was infiltrating
everybody's territory.
Copy !req
486. Vince got the USA
Network time slot from
Copy !req
487. Southwest Championship
Wrestling,
Copy !req
488. another regional promotion
out of San Antonio.
Copy !req
489. Ladies and gentlemen,
Copy !req
490. the Southwest tag
team champions.
Copy !req
491. They couldn't afford
the slot anymore,
Copy !req
492. Vince jumped in
and took it.
Copy !req
493. And All American Wrestling
debuted on the USA Network.
Copy !req
494. He would call different
promoters and say,
Copy !req
495. "Hey, I've got this
cable show now.
Copy !req
496. If you'll send me tapes, then
I'll put your wrestlers on it
Copy !req
497. and I'll get them over to a
whole new audience."
Copy !req
498. But the people that he was
getting the tapes of and
Copy !req
499. showing, are people that
he wanted to sign
Copy !req
500. for the WWF.
Copy !req
501. He gets the Junkyard Dog
from Mid-South Wrestling,
Copy !req
502. he gets Steamboat
from the Carolinas.
Copy !req
503. He got Kerry von Erich
in Dallas.
Copy !req
504. He was buying out talent
from other areas.
Copy !req
505. You know,
Hulk Hogan was,
Copy !req
506. was on top in the
AWA for Verne,
Copy !req
507. and all of a sudden
he went to New York.
Copy !req
508. Hulk Hogan shows up
Copy !req
509. to win the WWF championship
Copy !req
510. from the Iron Sheik in
Madison Square Garden.
Copy !req
511. Now Vince has the superhero
Copy !req
512. on the top of his cards that
Copy !req
513. he wants to put in every
arena in the country and
Copy !req
514. all over television, to lead
his national expansion.
Copy !req
515. He knew that if you
controlled television,
Copy !req
516. you would control the source
of distribution for all the
Copy !req
517. wrestling programs and
all the top wrestlers.
Copy !req
518. Oh!
Copy !req
519. And that's what he
wanted to corner.
Copy !req
520. Everything had been
done a certain way,
Copy !req
521. and now everything
was different.
Copy !req
522. And Vince was public
enemy number one.
Copy !req
523. Some of the promoters
in there talking,
Copy !req
524. "What if we put a hit
on the guy"? You know?
Copy !req
525. And, you know,
it's a wild story. Um...
Copy !req
526. I don't doubt that it's true
at all because, you know,
Copy !req
527. like, these are, these
are bad dudes, just like,
Copy !req
528. you know, Vince was
breaking the rules.
Copy !req
529. Through Barnett's
calculated maneuvering,
Copy !req
530. Vince has seized TV time
from promotions
Copy !req
531. across the country,
Copy !req
532. but one remains
for the taking...
Copy !req
533. Georgia Championship
Wrestling,
Copy !req
534. and its nationwide
slot on WTBS.
Copy !req
535. And when Barnett comes to
him with a grudge against
Copy !req
536. Ole Anderson, who has
the widest distribution
Copy !req
537. of any television
program in wrestling,
Copy !req
538. and Barnett says to Vince,
Copy !req
539. "I think I can
get it for you."
Copy !req
540. And that's all he
needed to hear.
Copy !req
541. If he could take over
and control television
Copy !req
542. across the country,
then he could take over
Copy !req
543. every territory
in the country.
Copy !req
544. While Vince McMahon
scoops up talent and
Copy !req
545. TV spots from territories
across the country,
Copy !req
546. Ole Anderson tries to
hold Georgia Championship
Copy !req
547. Wrestling together by
any means necessary.
Copy !req
548. Maybe Ole thought he could do
everything at that point in
Copy !req
549. time, but Georgia Wrestling,
it still had the reputation,
Copy !req
550. but the product was
starting to suffer.
Copy !req
551. Yeah, I think he was trying
to run a business with,
Copy !req
552. you know,
second tier guys,
Copy !req
553. people that
weren't gonna draw.
Copy !req
554. I mean, he'd employed
just about everybody
Copy !req
555. in the business at one
point or another,
Copy !req
556. and it was those guys who
were now working for Vince
Copy !req
557. in WWF and becoming
his superstars,
Copy !req
558. leaving my father just
Copy !req
559. scratching around
for leftovers.
Copy !req
560. And that just wasn't
gonna sell tickets.
Copy !req
561. Ole had changed the
concept where
Copy !req
562. we weren't bringing in a
lot of outside talent.
Copy !req
563. Our live events were not
drawing the money because
Copy !req
564. we weren't spending the
money on the talent that
Copy !req
565. we were spending
on before.
Copy !req
566. And the top guys quit wanting
to come to our territory.
Copy !req
567. And we, we were actually
getting phone calls from
Copy !req
568. some of the top talent
around the country,
Copy !req
569. "Hey, what's going on?
You better watch Ole."
Copy !req
570. And not only took
their word for it,
Copy !req
571. but were out there
on several big shows and
Copy !req
572. experienced that payoffs
weren't the same.
Copy !req
573. Frustrated that their
investment is no longer
Copy !req
574. paying dividends,
the Briscos decide
Copy !req
575. Ole isn't cut out to
manage the company.
Copy !req
576. But in order to push out Ole,
they will have to get
Copy !req
577. their fellow
shareholders to agree
Copy !req
578. with a majority vote.
Copy !req
579. We called a
stockholder's meeting,
Copy !req
580. because we were gonna take
over Ole's dictatorship and,
Copy !req
581. and, and do
it ourselves.
Copy !req
582. And we flew into town
early, met with the lawyers,
Copy !req
583. and the lawyers said,
"Guys, you can't do this
Copy !req
584. stockholders' meeting,
it's illegal."
Copy !req
585. Because we didn't
state a purpose.
Copy !req
586. The meeting got
put off, of course,
Copy !req
587. so we went back to the hotel
and wanted to drown
Copy !req
588. our sorrows, so we were
sitting in the hotel bar,
Copy !req
589. and who all of a sudden
showed up in this bar?
Copy !req
590. Is Ole Anderson.
Copy !req
591. His purpose, track us down
to find out what the hell
Copy !req
592. we were planning
on doing.
Copy !req
593. And we weren't shy,
we laid out,
Copy !req
594. "We're here to take
you out of office."
Copy !req
595. They want to know how much
money there is in the bank.
Copy !req
596. He tells them, "Well,
why can't you pay it out"?
Copy !req
597. And so I'm sure for the
hundredth time he tries to
Copy !req
598. explain to them how you
have got to have some
Copy !req
599. operating capital to
run this business.
Copy !req
600. You know, "I've got to
pay deposits on buildings,
Copy !req
601. I've got to pay
for advertising,
Copy !req
602. I got to buy plane tickets.
Copy !req
603. Once we get another
100,000 in the bank,
Copy !req
604. then I'll write the
dividend cheques.
Copy !req
605. Of course, I want to,
I'll get one too."
Copy !req
606. And we were done drinking
as much as we could drink,
Copy !req
607. and argued as much as we
could argue, and, Ole,
Copy !req
608. "I'll come up to the room with
ya I got a deal for yas."
Copy !req
609. "Okay, we'll listen to
one last pitch."
Copy !req
610. Ole said: "Well, you ever
watched The Godfather?"
Copy !req
611. Yeah. Well, I got this deal
with you, if you guys agree.
Copy !req
612. Let's do a blood oath
Copy !req
613. so we're all on
the same page."
Copy !req
614. The deal was if anybody
was gonna sell stock
Copy !req
615. they had to offer it to the
other shareholders in
Copy !req
616. Georgia Championship
Wrestling first,
Copy !req
617. before they could sell it
to anybody else.
Copy !req
618. And my dad has a
little pocketknife,
Copy !req
619. sticks it in his head, gigs
it down, gets some colour.
Copy !req
620. And they look at him
like, "Oh my God!
Copy !req
621. What's wrong with you"?
Copy !req
622. Ole, my word means
more than blood.
Copy !req
623. I mean,
you know, to me.
Copy !req
624. I mean, if I give you my word,
I'm gonna live up to it.
Copy !req
625. I don't need these
little gimmicks to, to,
Copy !req
626. to certify my,
my honesty.
Copy !req
627. Probably took him about
10 minutes to convince
Copy !req
628. Jack and I to do
the same thing.
Copy !req
629. So that was the Ole
solution to our problem.
Copy !req
630. You know, let's cut
ourselves and
Copy !req
631. bleed on each other.
Copy !req
632. My dad was such a man
of his word that
Copy !req
633. if he shook your hand and
said he was gonna
Copy !req
634. do anything,
he would do it.
Copy !req
635. He just, he believed
people because,
Copy !req
636. you know, he,
he would never tell a lie.
Copy !req
637. As part of the
blood oath agreement,
Copy !req
638. the Briscos will focus on
increasing ticket sales
Copy !req
639. in exchange for
regular payouts.
Copy !req
640. But the deal doesn't
last for long.
Copy !req
641. So, first one to break the
oath was Ole 'cause
Copy !req
642. he quit paying us what he
agreed to pay us, so...
Copy !req
643. we felt that we, we had
an open waters there
Copy !req
644. to do what we
wanted to do.
Copy !req
645. That lit a fire under us that
if we stick in this situation
Copy !req
646. too much longer, we're not
gonna have anything.
Copy !req
647. Desperate to cash out,
Copy !req
648. the Briscos begin
shopping their shares
Copy !req
649. outside of the company,
Copy !req
650. starting with Jim Barnett,
who turns them down.
Copy !req
651. Knowing the Briscos
are looking to sell,
Copy !req
652. Barnett knows someone
who wants to buy...
Copy !req
653. Vince McMahon.
Copy !req
654. So Vince flew us
up to LaGuardia,
Copy !req
655. and still to this day
I'll rib Vince about
Copy !req
656. flying us up coach.
Copy !req
657. We met at LaGuardia
Airport. He said,
Copy !req
658. "Can you guys deliver me
51% of the territory"?
Copy !req
659. And I looked at him and
I said, "Yes, sir, I can."
Copy !req
660. I had to make
a call to Jim Barnett.
Copy !req
661. Jim Barnett knew
everybody that
Copy !req
662. owned a piece of Georgia.
Copy !req
663. Jim Barnett knew who they
liked, who they didn't like,
Copy !req
664. what they were mad about,
what their weak spots were,
Copy !req
665. whatever the case.
All Jim Barnett had to do
Copy !req
666. was point Vince McMahon
in the right direction,
Copy !req
667. not only at the Briscos
but anybody else.
Copy !req
668. Or, talked to
them himself.
Copy !req
669. He could make you do
something you didn't
Copy !req
670. want to do, and by the
time he was finished,
Copy !req
671. you'd think it
was your idea.
Copy !req
672. In the end of the
negotiations and
Copy !req
673. all the transactions,
Vince ended up owning
Copy !req
674. 67 and a half percent of
Copy !req
675. Georgia Championship
Wrestling.
Copy !req
676. Which of course also
held the contract for
Copy !req
677. the television
program on TBS.
Copy !req
678. There was an agreement in
the articles of incorporation
Copy !req
679. that before anybody
was to sell, they had to
Copy !req
680. first offer it to one of
the other stockholders.
Copy !req
681. And he was told repeatedly
by the attorneys that
Copy !req
682. that was going
to protect him.
Copy !req
683. Well, it turned out
not to be true.
Copy !req
684. Behind the back
of Ole Anderson,
Copy !req
685. the Briscos align
with Jim Barnett
Copy !req
686. to give Vince McMahon
control of
Copy !req
687. Georgia Championship
Wrestling,
Copy !req
688. a move that will forever
reshape the industry.
Copy !req
689. In March of 1984,
Copy !req
690. my grandmother passed
away very suddenly.
Copy !req
691. My father and I go up to
Minnesota, Wisconsin
Copy !req
692. and take care of
the arrangements
Copy !req
693. and family business.
Copy !req
694. He gets a call
from the office,
Copy !req
695. I think it was Louise
who called him.
Copy !req
696. I was in my office and the
door opens and
Copy !req
697. Vince walks in.
"Good morning."
Copy !req
698. Ah... "I now own
the company."
Copy !req
699. So I called Ole,
Copy !req
700. and told him that Vince
had stole the company.
Copy !req
701. I thought it
was real sneaky.
Copy !req
702. It's not that they did it,
it's just how they did it.
Copy !req
703. He and I got on a
plane right away.
Copy !req
704. He parked me at a
hotel in Atlanta.
Copy !req
705. He immediately met
with the lawyers,
Copy !req
706. they filed for injunctions,
and they fought for three
Copy !req
707. or four months before it
was finally all over,
Copy !req
708. that he wanted to
stop Vince from
Copy !req
709. taking over Georgia
Championship.
Copy !req
710. With Ole's legal efforts to
block the takeover thwarted,
Copy !req
711. all that's left for
him to do is concede.
Copy !req
712. There was a deal in the
bylaws for our corporation
Copy !req
713. that said, "If a majority of
the stockholders decide to
Copy !req
714. change all the damn rules
that are written up here,
Copy !req
715. they can do that."
Copy !req
716. And they just changed
all the rules that
Copy !req
717. we'd been
going by for years.
Copy !req
718. So we lost it because
Barnett was smart enough
Copy !req
719. to realize that he
could have done it.
Copy !req
720. And I didn't,
didn't know.
Copy !req
721. I can remember the Saturday
morning TV at TBS studios,
Copy !req
722. Vince McMahon is
in the building.
Copy !req
723. It's the only time that I've
ever been in the
Copy !req
724. same room as
Vince McMahon to this day.
Copy !req
725. But from there,
the fight was on.
Copy !req
726. Vince was still at that
point trying to talk to Ole,
Copy !req
727. because Vince is a guy that's
used to getting his own way
Copy !req
728. and used to being able
to talk people into
Copy !req
729. anything he
wants them to do.
Copy !req
730. I think, you know,
Vince would say,
Copy !req
731. "Ole, Ole, I'll give
you a job."
Copy !req
732. You know, tried to tell
him over and over,
Copy !req
733. "It's just business.
It's just business."
Copy !req
734. Vince says, "Ole, I'd like
you to meet my wife, Linda."
Copy !req
735. Well my dad, in typical
fashion, responds,
Copy !req
736. "You know what"?
Copy !req
737. "---- you and —- Linda"!
Copy !req
738. Despite Ole's fury,
few outside the company
Copy !req
739. are even aware of the
change in ownership.
Copy !req
740. Until Vince McMahon
takes to the airwaves.
Copy !req
741. So I go in there on this
particular Saturday,
Copy !req
742. and there's this guy
standing there with
Copy !req
743. his arms folded,
making this face.
Copy !req
744. As it turns out, the man
was Vincent K. McMahon.
Copy !req
745. None of the, none of the
talent knew anything.
Copy !req
746. That was all
interoffice stuff.
Copy !req
747. Nobody knew who sold
the what or who was
Copy !req
748. on what side
or nothing.
Copy !req
749. The camera guys and all them,
they didn't have a clue.
Copy !req
750. I got a call, was told
not to come to TV,
Copy !req
751. that we weren't going
to be taping that day.
Copy !req
752. I didn't go to TV on
Saturday, that Saturday,
Copy !req
753. because I had
just gotten fired.
Copy !req
754. Vince had a meeting with all
the talent that was here,
Copy !req
755. and he said, "None of you
have jobs anymore."
Copy !req
756. He said, "If we want to use
you, we'll contact you."
Copy !req
757. And that was it.
It was over.
Copy !req
758. The wrestling
program on TBS
Copy !req
759. had been an
institution for years.
Copy !req
760. Every wrestling fan that
was able to get cable
Copy !req
761. at that point in time,
is gonna watch
Copy !req
762. Georgia Wrestling
every Saturday.
Copy !req
763. July 14th, 1984,
Copy !req
764. they turn on World
Championship Wrestling,
Copy !req
765. and they didn't
see Gordon Solie,
Copy !req
766. they see Freddy Miller.
Copy !req
767. Hello, everybody,
and welcome to
Copy !req
768. World Championship
Wrestling.
Copy !req
769. Freddy Miller introduced
Vince McMahon.
Copy !req
770. Here's Vince McMahon.
Vince.
Copy !req
771. Thank you very much,
Freddy.
Copy !req
772. When Freddy Miller
introduced Vince,
Copy !req
773. and then,
just the silence of
Copy !req
774. the dead airtime,
you know.
Copy !req
775. No, no, no crowd,
not a fan, no nothing.
Copy !req
776. Let's take you now to
Minneapolis and
Copy !req
777. Jesse 'The Body' Ventura.
Copy !req
778. They started showing
videotapes of matches from
Copy !req
779. other WWF television
programs and
Copy !req
780. other WWF arenas
and TV shoots.
Copy !req
781. One of the many
stars here in the
Copy !req
782. World Wrestling Federation.
Copy !req
783. The fans of
Georgia Wrestling,
Copy !req
784. they practically rioted.
Copy !req
785. They were just bombarding
the TBS switchboards.
Copy !req
786. "We want our wrastlin'."
Copy !req
787. Tommy Wildfire has
just exploded on the...!
Copy !req
788. Georgia Wrestling was a
lot different than
Copy !req
789. Vince's wrestling.
Copy !req
790. Vince brought his style
down here and I don't think,
Copy !req
791. I don't think they bought
it or didn't, you know,
Copy !req
792. just didn't like it, 'cause
it wasn't homeboys, you know.
Copy !req
793. So I think,
I think, ah...
Copy !req
794. they just wasn't buying
what he was selling.
Copy !req
795. He didn't want the Georgia
Wrestling territory.
Copy !req
796. All he wanted
was that TV.
Copy !req
797. I'm getting excited
because I'm seeing
Copy !req
798. a new future starting
to be made.
Copy !req
799. I called it 'Green Saturday'
because it
Copy !req
800. changed my, my,
my fortune.
Copy !req
801. But obviously a lot of fans
that were fan, true fans,
Copy !req
802. of Georgia Championship
Wrestling didn't see it
Copy !req
803. the same way I saw it.
Copy !req
804. Ousted from the promotion
he helped build,
Copy !req
805. Ole makes no secret
of his resentment.
Copy !req
806. If Jack and Jerry
had agreed with him
Copy !req
807. to wait things out
a few more months,
Copy !req
808. and then taken advantage
of the time when
Copy !req
809. he's dealing with his
mother's funeral
Copy !req
810. to sell out behind his back,
I think that that would have
Copy !req
811. really impacted his
opinion, strongly,
Copy !req
812. for quite a while,
to the negative.
Copy !req
813. And I was pissed at
The Briscos, and um...
Copy !req
814. they got whatever
money they got.
Copy !req
815. Ole had supposedly hired
an armed guard to
Copy !req
816. stand there and actually
do bodily harm to us
Copy !req
817. if we tried to get
in the office.
Copy !req
818. Not the promoter,
but Paul Jones,
Copy !req
819. the old wrestler,
called and said,
Copy !req
820. "There's supposedly
a hitman
Copy !req
821. out on you guys
for two days.
Copy !req
822. Be very careful where you go
and who you associate with,
Copy !req
823. because I think
it's real."
Copy !req
824. Ole Anderson is on the
hunt for revenge as
Copy !req
825. rumours circulate about
a potential plot to
Copy !req
826. have the Briscos killed.
Copy !req
827. We waited the two days,
nothing happened to us,
Copy !req
828. and we threw one of
the biggest parties
Copy !req
829. we ever thrown.
Copy !req
830. No. First of all, he would have
never got rid of the money.
Copy !req
831. And secondly,
he'd 'a done it himself.
Copy !req
832. He would have never
asked anybody else to
Copy !req
833. do it, he would have been
glad to do it hisself.
Copy !req
834. The only negative way that
I think it affected us
Copy !req
835. is the loss of friendship
and the negative things
Copy !req
836. that were
said about me.
Copy !req
837. The threats that brother
and I got during
Copy !req
838. this time frame too
was phenomenal.
Copy !req
839. I mean, our families were
receiving phone calls,
Copy !req
840. you know, that we were
no good backstabbers.
Copy !req
841. It was a very rough deal.
Copy !req
842. Determined to keep the spirit
of Georgia Championship
Copy !req
843. Wrestling alive,
Ole sells his shares and
Copy !req
844. starts his own promotion.
Copy !req
845. Ole was able to
work out a deal.
Copy !req
846. He called up Vince
and said,
Copy !req
847. "Vince, I'm gonna sell
you my piece too."
Copy !req
848. Which, you know, I guess,
thank you, Vince.
Copy !req
849. Because Vince could very
easily have just said,
Copy !req
850. "Okay, I'm closing up,
Copy !req
851. your shares
aren't worth anything."
Copy !req
852. Ole went to Ted Turner
directly and he said,
Copy !req
853. "Hey! The people want to see
the Georgia Wrestling
Copy !req
854. and the Georgia wrestlers,
and I've got them.
Copy !req
855. Give me another
time slot."
Copy !req
856. And when I went to
Ted Turner later on I said,
Copy !req
857. "Who do you think's been
running this damn thing
Copy !req
858. for the last eight,
nine years? Me!"
Copy !req
859. So he gave Ole Saturday
morning at 7:30.
Copy !req
860. And a very spirited crowd
here today at the
Copy !req
861. WTBS sports arena,
where we're very proud
Copy !req
862. to bring you once again
Copy !req
863. Championship Wrestling
from Georgia.
Copy !req
864. While Ole attempts
to mount a comeback,
Copy !req
865. Vince is struggling to
connect with Georgia viewers.
Copy !req
866. They were used to seeing
a certain style and
Copy !req
867. it wasn't something that
they'd seen before.
Copy !req
868. They didn't know
who these guys were.
Copy !req
869. They didn't care.
Copy !req
870. They were looking for
the people they knew.
Copy !req
871. Vince is getting
crowded out of
Copy !req
872. the Saturday
nighttime slot.
Copy !req
873. Turner's on his ass.
Copy !req
874. It's not doing him
the good that
Copy !req
875. he thought it
was gonna do him.
Copy !req
876. This is one of the
first and only
Copy !req
877. Vince McMahon
complete failures.
Copy !req
878. Looking to offload his
valuable WTBS time slot,
Copy !req
879. McMahon once again
turns to Jim Barnett
Copy !req
880. to land a deal.
Copy !req
881. Barnett finds a buyer in
one of McMahon's
Copy !req
882. other major competitors,
Copy !req
883. Jim Crockett Promotions.
Copy !req
884. One year. Turner was gonna
kick Vince off as soon as
Copy !req
885. he legally could,
and so Barnett
Copy !req
886. opened the door to Crockett.
Copy !req
887. You know that TBS
time slot, it's...
Copy !req
888. at the time it probably
sounded like a great deal.
Copy !req
889. Vince will sell
the time slot
Copy !req
890. on Saturday night on TBS to
Copy !req
891. Jim Crockett Promotions,
and Vince McMahon
Copy !req
892. would get a million dollars,
Copy !req
893. and everybody becomes
happy with that.
Copy !req
894. So, with Barnett putting
all the pieces together,
Copy !req
895. Vince McMahon temporarily
monopolizes cable TV
Copy !req
896. wrestling in the
United States,
Copy !req
897. but is a failure at that,
so he uses that flop to
Copy !req
898. make money to
finance WrestleMania.
Copy !req
899. Where he then started on
the road to put
Copy !req
900. every other promoter
out of business.
Copy !req
901. The wrestling extravaganza
of all time, WrestleMania.
Copy !req
902. All in that 80s period,
Copy !req
903. that's where he
got the big jump.
Copy !req
904. WWE became the name
brand of pro wrestling,
Copy !req
905. and he's got Cyndi Lauper,
he's building up
Copy !req
906. WrestleMania,
Hulk Hogan's getting big,
Copy !req
907. and, and he's just shooting
way past everybody else.
Copy !req
908. And they don't, they
don't have the outlet
Copy !req
909. to compete with him.
Copy !req
910. Black Saturday forever
altered the trajectory
Copy !req
911. of the wrestling business,
something no one
Copy !req
912. understood better
than Ole Anderson.
Copy !req
913. It was almost like he had
just cleared his desk off and
Copy !req
914. scraped everything
into it.
Copy !req
915. Honestly, the state
my father is in today,
Copy !req
916. I don't know that he can
hate anybody, sadly enough.
Copy !req
917. But I think he held a grudge
against Vince for a long time.
Copy !req
918. I'm just trying to
see what I got here.
Copy !req
919. Bill Watts, himself a
pioneering promoter in
Copy !req
920. Mid-South Wrestling,
writes a letter to Ole
Copy !req
921. in 1987, reflecting upon
the significance
Copy !req
922. of Black Saturday.
Copy !req
923. "Dear Ole. I know actions
and words once
Copy !req
924. said or done
cannot be recalled.
Copy !req
925. You were seeing the beginning
of the metamorphosis of
Copy !req
926. change of the very
fibre of our business,
Copy !req
927. all precipitated by
McMahon, in my opinion.
Copy !req
928. I certainly agree, his legacy
will be the destruction
Copy !req
929. of an industry as we
know it, or knew it."
Copy !req
930. After the Black
Saturday incident,
Copy !req
931. Barnett was Vince's
right hand man,
Copy !req
932. but Barnett was still more
old-time wrestling and
Copy !req
933. Vince wanted to be modern,
Copy !req
934. and somewhere in
'87 they had a
Copy !req
935. difference of opinion
and Vince let Barnett go.
Copy !req
936. Jim Barnett only worked for
WWF for a fraction of
Copy !req
937. his long career, but his
actions during the
Copy !req
938. company's expansion
helped solidify a
Copy !req
939. new way of doing
business in wrestling...
Copy !req
940. The Vince McMahon way.
Copy !req
941. Vince McMahon,
for 40 years,
Copy !req
942. he made his
business based on
Copy !req
943. taking TV time slots,
or companies,
Copy !req
944. out from under people.
Copy !req
945. Doing takeovers,
Copy !req
946. buying stock,
issuing stock,
Copy !req
947. public offering of the WWE
that made him a billionaire,
Copy !req
948. but his downfall
eventually came
Copy !req
949. through the same way.
Copy !req
950. You know, there's an
old saying,
Copy !req
951. 'what goes around comes
around' and/or '---- around
Copy !req
952. and —- around pretty
soon you won't be around.'
Copy !req
953. Well... Vince had...
Copy !req
954. it came out in the Wall
Street Journal that he had
Copy !req
955. allegations of paying
certain women off,
Copy !req
956. you know, non-disclosure
agreements for infidelities,
Copy !req
957. and, you know,
even worse.
Copy !req
958. McMahon paid a
former employee
Copy !req
959. $3 million to
keep her quiet.
Copy !req
960. You take a picture
of Vincent McMahon,
Copy !req
961. and that there is the
reason why there is
Copy !req
962. a human resources
now in companies.
Copy !req
963. That is
the reason why.
Copy !req
964. As far as revolutionizing
our business, yes, he did.
Copy !req
965. Is there a dark side
and a bad side?
Copy !req
966. Yes, there
damn sure is.
Copy !req
967. It was enough of an
embarrassment to
Copy !req
968. the company that Vince
stepped down.
Copy !req
969. They forced him out of the
company because
Copy !req
970. his son-in-law and his
daughter and
Copy !req
971. all these people that
he's worked with and
Copy !req
972. trusted were saying,
"Vince, you got to go.
Copy !req
973. This is not gonna do the
stock price any good,
Copy !req
974. it's not gonna do our
business any good.
Copy !req
975. You got to step aside."
Copy !req
976. And the thing he learned
from the Georgia takeover,
Copy !req
977. he still owns 80%
of the company.
Copy !req
978. So, after six months,
Copy !req
979. then he comes back,
in a whirlwind of action.
Copy !req
980. Let me just say it. I've
made mistakes, obviously.
Copy !req
981. You know,
both personally and
Copy !req
982. professionally through
my 50 year career.
Copy !req
983. I've owned up to every
single one of them
Copy !req
984. and then moved on.
Copy !req
985. And then announces,
"I'm coming back
Copy !req
986. because we're gonna sell
this son of a bitch."
Copy !req
987. And the time is right.
Copy !req
988. Endeavor announcing WWE and
UFC will combine to form
Copy !req
989. a $21 billion global
live sports and
Copy !req
990. entertainment company.
Copy !req
991. And that's what worries
all the wrestling fans.
Copy !req
992. Say what you
want about Vince,
Copy !req
993. at least it was the
family business,
Copy !req
994. he's done it
for 50 years.
Copy !req
995. Now, Endeavor.
Copy !req
996. What mental romantic
attachment
Copy !req
997. do they have to the
wrestling business?
Copy !req
998. To its history,
to keeping it alive?
Copy !req
999. We're gonna lose a
lot of history and
Copy !req
1000. we're gonna lose the,
Copy !req
1001. you know, the last vestige
of what old time
Copy !req
1002. professional wrestling
was for 100 years.
Copy !req
1003. I think Black Saturday was
kind of a tipping point
Copy !req
1004. in the wrestling business.
Copy !req
1005. That was the moment it
started to evolve away from
Copy !req
1006. the wrestling business
and into show business.
Copy !req
1007. Black Saturday in and
of itself wasn't
Copy !req
1008. a ground-breaking
moment.
Copy !req
1009. It was the canary
in the coal mine.
Copy !req
1010. Vince McMahon put
anywhere from hundreds,
Copy !req
1011. maybe thousands of
wrestlers out of work.
Copy !req
1012. Maybe 3% of them.
Copy !req
1013. The other 97% didn't
get to work anymore.
Copy !req
1014. That's when all the
change is going on and
Copy !req
1015. you can't go back.
I mean, that's life.
Copy !req
1016. Just times change,
you know.
Copy !req
1017. And I'm just holding
on to them 80s.
Copy !req
1018. I don't think they
blame the Briscos,
Copy !req
1019. but they definitely
blame Vince.
Copy !req
1020. But it was the move,
it was the move to make.
Copy !req
1021. What killed the territories
was cable television.
Copy !req
1022. And that would have been
with Vince McMahon
Copy !req
1023. or without Vince McMahon.
Copy !req
1024. If it wasn't Vince McMahon
going national,
Copy !req
1025. it would have been Verne
Gagne or Jim Crockett,
Copy !req
1026. and they wouldn't have
done as well as Vince did.
Copy !req
1027. Somebody was gonna
be successful.
Copy !req
1028. Wrestling wasn't
gonna go away,
Copy !req
1029. but would they have
been as successful
Copy !req
1030. as Vince McMahon was?
I'm gonna say no.
Copy !req