1. WCW is about to
dominate the globe
Copy !req
2. with professional wrestling.
Copy !req
3. 10 million people in the
United States were
Copy !req
4. zeroed in on professional
wrestling.
Copy !req
5. We were the number
one cable rated show.
Copy !req
6. For almost two years.
Mind blowing.
Copy !req
7. And, when something
gets too big, too fast,
Copy !req
8. shit's gonna hit the fan
at some point, and it did.
Copy !req
9. Little by little,
we just fell.
Copy !req
10. We already knew that
we were running thin.
Copy !req
11. It is so good to be king.
Copy !req
12. He cared more about
ratings than
Copy !req
13. he cared about
advertising dollars.
Copy !req
14. It was a shit show.
Copy !req
15. Vince Russo was
just another idiot.
Copy !req
16. He was there to lead
to our ultimate demise.
Copy !req
17. Kiss my ass!
Copy !req
18. I was done.
It was over.
Copy !req
19. I could'nt care less.
Copy !req
20. No doubt in my mind Bischoff
Copy !req
21. was responsible for
a little of this.
Copy !req
22. Another nail in the coffin
of a company that was
Copy !req
23. rapidly dying at that time.
Copy !req
24. I don't control that shit.
I go out and I do my job.
Copy !req
25. My check didn't change.
Copy !req
26. It was the easiest money
I ever made in my career.
Copy !req
27. Like,
they got what?
Copy !req
28. Hey!
Copy !req
29. When guys got those
kind of agendas,
Copy !req
30. thinking about themselves,
that's pretty much
Copy !req
31. when the ship
started to go down.
Copy !req
32. This is some
fucked up shit.
Copy !req
33. You ain't in
Kansas anymore.
Copy !req
34. You cannot sweep this
under the rug!
Copy !req
35. I don't understand
what he's doing.
Copy !req
36. The real reason
men commit lies...
Copy !req
37. Grid going out!
Copy !req
38. It is at an end.
Copy !req
39. It didn't feel like
a family anymore.
Copy !req
40. It felt like everybody
was out for themselves,
Copy !req
41. and it seemed like the blood
was in the water and
Copy !req
42. the sharks were
coming to get it.
Copy !req
43. I think everybody
just didn't know
Copy !req
44. what was happening.
Copy !req
45. We were still hearing
the rumors that
Copy !req
46. we were just gonna
shut the doors.
Copy !req
47. So, I think at that point
everybody was just really...
Copy !req
48. unsettled.
Copy !req
49. It's easy to lose sight of
how lucky we are
Copy !req
50. to be part of this.
Hopefully, it ain't over.
Copy !req
51. WCW wrestling is so important
to me, and there's just...
Copy !req
52. that one guy at Turner,
I think just
Copy !req
53. doesn't think wrestling's
cool or whatever,
Copy !req
54. so he's gonna ruin it for
millions of people.
Copy !req
55. I think Turner finally
started looking into the
Copy !req
56. books and said, "We gotta
pull the plug on this."
Copy !req
57. No matter how much Ted
Turner loved this business
Copy !req
58. and wanted to, you know,
keep it afloat,
Copy !req
59. you start looking at the
books at that time and
Copy !req
60. seeing how much money
we were spending,
Copy !req
61. I can only imagine how much
money went out the window.
Copy !req
62. Oh, my god.
Copy !req
63. After Brad brought me back
to kind of oversee Russo,
Copy !req
64. it was apparent to me
that things were more
Copy !req
65. dysfunctional within Turner
Broadcasting and
Copy !req
66. in the relationship between
Turner and WCW
Copy !req
67. than they had ever been.
Copy !req
68. And I'm not talking about what
was going on on television,
Copy !req
69. or how much money they
were making or losing.
Copy !req
70. I'm just talking about
the relationship.
Copy !req
71. Time Warner is a company of
winning brands and
Copy !req
72. winning people,
and so is AOL.
Copy !req
73. For this merger-
just like when we put
Copy !req
74. Turner Broadcasting
into Time Warner
Copy !req
75. it made the company
much, much stronger.
Copy !req
76. And I think we're
all committed to
Copy !req
77. making this thing work.
Copy !req
78. AOL was absolutely
ubiquitous at that time
Copy !req
79. in terms of in the public
consciousness
Copy !req
80. the company introduced
many people to
Copy !req
81. the concept of
logging on to the internet
Copy !req
82. for the very first time.
Copy !req
83. [Ad] I've been on America
Online two months,
Copy !req
84. and it's really been
a revelation for me.
Copy !req
85. You've Got Mail!
Copy !req
86. This is at the time where
a lot of the new internet
Copy !req
87. dotcom businesses were
receiving wild overvaluations
Copy !req
88. based on promises
of future growth.
Copy !req
89. If you looked at the
assets, besides furniture-
Copy !req
90. - they have
a subscription list,
Copy !req
91. and that's the people
who subscribe to AOL.
Copy !req
92. AOL's leadership in the early
part of 1999 also were
Copy !req
93. keenly aware of this
reality as well.
Copy !req
94. So, one option that was
considered was to merge with
Copy !req
95. a media and entertainment
conglomerate,
Copy !req
96. which was Time Warner.
Copy !req
97. The combined company,
which will be called
Copy !req
98. AOL Time Warner gives each
partner what it now lacks.
Copy !req
99. What ended up happening is
that AOL shareholders
Copy !req
100. would receive 55% of
the new company,
Copy !req
101. and Time Warner 45%.
Copy !req
102. Now, my dad's never
been online on his own.
Copy !req
103. Never touched a computer,
never owned a cell phone,
Copy !req
104. never used an ATM.
Right? He's old school.
Copy !req
105. So, I think it was a whole
generation gap lost on
Copy !req
106. AOL's going to buy this
giant company with nothing,
Copy !req
107. where the older investment
guys are like,
Copy !req
108. "Well, you can't
turn it down.
Copy !req
109. Hundreds of dollars a share,
this is gonna be awesome.
Copy !req
110. We're all gonna make a
billion dollars,"
Copy !req
111. but nobody would
stand up and go,
Copy !req
112. "This is a Ponzi scheme,
man," right?
Copy !req
113. This is, this is all
gonna fall apart.
Copy !req
114. The Blockbuster deal still
needs regulatory approval,
Copy !req
115. and a nod from Time Warner
and AOL shareholders.
Copy !req
116. AOL had serious,
serious issues.
Copy !req
117. You know, WCW got
caught up in that also.
Copy !req
118. And essentially you could
say it was collateral damage.
Copy !req
119. Wrestling has become
fun, crazy entertainment.
Copy !req
120. It is, it's an
alternative.
Copy !req
121. It doesn't define
our network.
Copy !req
122. It's one night a week.
Copy !req
123. It's a hit every
Monday night.
Copy !req
124. But it wasn't anymore.
Copy !req
125. Because it was broken
and I had to fix it,
Copy !req
126. I was a physical
presence there.
Copy !req
127. I was in there trying to do
whatever I can do
Copy !req
128. to get it back on track.
Copy !req
129. Big mistake!
Copy !req
130. What a bunch of
fucking boobs.
Copy !req
131. It was so bad!
Copy !req
132. I really felt like,
okay, stake in our heart.
Copy !req
133. It was a chaotic
shit show and a blur.
Copy !req
134. And, I said, "I'm about to
get the hell out of here
Copy !req
135. because I've had it."
Copy !req
136. You had to look out
for yourself.
Copy !req
137. I just felt
like Brad didn't
Copy !req
138. know anything
about wrestling.
Copy !req
139. I mean, he knew about
the corporate side,
Copy !req
140. but he wasn't a
wrestling person.
Copy !req
141. He wasn't somebody
that was gonna try to
Copy !req
142. help save the company.
Copy !req
143. It was like going
through the motions.
Copy !req
144. To be completely honest,
I couldn't fix it.
Copy !req
145. And the red kept
getting redder.
Copy !req
146. And the ratings kept falling,
and falling, and falling.
Copy !req
147. In addition, WCW drove
away its paid audience.
Copy !req
148. Look at the difference in
buy rate between the
Copy !req
149. uncensored Pay Per View in
March of 1999 and the
Copy !req
150. same event just 12 months
later in March of 2000.
Copy !req
151. They basically put on the
exact same main event.
Copy !req
152. Hogan-Flair two years
in a row.
Copy !req
153. Hold onto your hats!
Copy !req
154. 1, 2, 3!
Copy !req
155. In March of '99, the
uncensored Pay Per View
Copy !req
156. enticed some 325,000 viewers
Copy !req
157. to purchase the event,
Copy !req
158. but just 12 months later,
only 60,000 people were
Copy !req
159. willing to purchase
the 2000 version of
Copy !req
160. WCW Uncensored.
Copy !req
161. That represents
a drop of 81%.
Copy !req
162. The narrative, it was
at the end of 2000.
Copy !req
163. WCW had losses of
around $62 million.
Copy !req
164. That's the narrative.
Copy !req
165. And I think that there
probably is a grain of truth
Copy !req
166. to that, but what people
don't understand...
Copy !req
167. is the why.
Copy !req
168. Professional wrestling is
very different
Copy !req
169. when you're a company like
Time Warner AOL.
Copy !req
170. A lot of answering to
shareholders that have
Copy !req
171. expectations on a monthly
and quarterly basis.
Copy !req
172. I think there was a lot of
debt from other divisions in
Copy !req
173. the company that could
be allocated- legally-
Copy !req
174. but allocated as losses against
WCW because everybody
Copy !req
175. knew it was gonna be written
off as a loss anyway.
Copy !req
176. The bullshit internal
transfers that people
Copy !req
177. tried to park all their
trash on our books while,
Copy !req
178. while we were getting hurt.
Copy !req
179. It was clear to me at
that point that
Copy !req
180. Turner Broadcasting
didn't want
Copy !req
181. anything to do with WCW,
Copy !req
182. and I said to Brad,
specifically, I said,
Copy !req
183. "Brad, why don't you let me
explore selling WCW
Copy !req
184. while it still has
some value?"
Copy !req
185. Because, the velocity at
which WCW was
Copy !req
186. losing ground at that
particular time
Copy !req
187. was pretty dramatic.
Copy !req
188. Brad kind of chuckled at me,
and he said, "Eric,
Copy !req
189. you know this company.
We don't sell anything.
Copy !req
190. We buy things."
So I just let it go.
Copy !req
191. Fast forward...
Copy !req
192. Good evening.
Copy !req
193. Today we announce that
the Federal Communications
Copy !req
194. Commission has approved the
merger of America Online
Copy !req
195. and Time Warner Inc.
Copy !req
196. So the merger was announced
on January 11th 2000.
Copy !req
197. Finalized on
January 11th 2001.
Copy !req
198. There had actually been a
lot of financial experts
Copy !req
199. who had been predicting
the imminent demise
Copy !req
200. of AOL for quite some time.
Copy !req
201. Keep in mind that throughout
the year 2000
Copy !req
202. a number of significant
things happened.
Copy !req
203. We had the dotcom
recession, right,
Copy !req
204. we had a number of these
internet companies that were
Copy !req
205. going to be the darlings of
the future that went
Copy !req
206. belly up, which affected
AOL in a serious way.
Copy !req
207. Its stock price
dropped by 50%,
Copy !req
208. which of course creates a
huge pressure to look
Copy !req
209. closely at which divisions
are profitable and
Copy !req
210. which are registering
huge losses.
Copy !req
211. That put WCW even more
in the crosshairs.
Copy !req
212. There were a lot
of executives
Copy !req
213. at very
senior levels.
Copy !req
214. The only person standing in
front of them was Ted Turner.
Copy !req
215. The merger happens.
Copy !req
216. Ted becomes Vice Chairman.
Copy !req
217. You know, he was excited
about that at first.
Copy !req
218. And you know, you have an
office in New York,
Copy !req
219. you know, "I've made it."
Well, no,
Copy !req
220. your name made it,
your businesses made it.
Copy !req
221. But they didn't want even
want to hear
Copy !req
222. at the board meetings
from him.
Copy !req
223. Ted Turner was no
longer a challenge.
Copy !req
224. Ted Turner was regulated to
the corner and didn't have
Copy !req
225. a voice or vote in
his own company.
Copy !req
226. You know, Ted is no longer
in a position to have
Copy !req
227. control over WCW
and its affairs.
Copy !req
228. I remember saying, y
ou know, with Time Warner,
Copy !req
229. is it that important to own
a wrestling company
Copy !req
230. that's losing money,
bleeding massively,
Copy !req
231. has lost money every year of
its existence except for
Copy !req
232. one or two years-
is that really
Copy !req
233. what Time Warner
needs to own?
Copy !req
234. I don't think we need this.
Copy !req
235. Brad Siegel, take one.
Copy !req
236. Mark.
Copy !req
237. I get a phone call
from Brad.
Copy !req
238. And he said, "So,
let me ask you, Eric,
Copy !req
239. a couple months ago you
brought up the idea of
Copy !req
240. selling WCW. Do you think
you could find a buyer?"
Copy !req
241. And I immediately said,
"Sure." I had no idea,
Copy !req
242. I'd never done
anything like that before.
Copy !req
243. But I assured him that I
could find someone
Copy !req
244. who had the
resources to buy it.
Copy !req
245. I said, "Do you want me
to put a deal together?
Copy !req
246. You want me to try to put
some people together?"
Copy !req
247. And he goes,
"See what you got."
Copy !req
248. I went to a guy by the
name of Peter Guber.
Copy !req
249. Peter Guber at that point of
time owned a company
Copy !req
250. called Mandalay Sports
and Entertainment.
Copy !req
251. He's a very, very, very well
established Hollywood guy.
Copy !req
252. And he said, "Look, I'm not
interested in investing,
Copy !req
253. in buying WCW,
Copy !req
254. but I think I know some
people who may."
Copy !req
255. And he put me in touch
with Brian Bedol and
Copy !req
256. Steve Greenberg, who owned
a company called
Copy !req
257. Fusient Media Ventures.
Copy !req
258. Fusient Media Ventures
had created the
Copy !req
259. Classic Sports Network,
Copy !req
260. which became
ESPN Sports Classic.
Copy !req
261. Brian and Steve
understood media.
Copy !req
262. They had great connections
in New York, on Wall Street.
Copy !req
263. And, we hit it off, and
started the process.
Copy !req
264. I called Brad back, said,
"Okay, I got the investment."
Copy !req
265. Fusient Media funded
the initial round
Copy !req
266. with 5 million
of their own,
Copy !req
267. and then went out and raised
$62 million in the market,
Copy !req
268. so I felt like I was capable
with the financial resources
Copy !req
269. and the right
partners with me,
Copy !req
270. there was
potential for WCW.
Copy !req
271. They professional
wrestling genre
Copy !req
272. as a whole is
indestructible.
Copy !req
273. It's just a matter of the
company being
Copy !req
274. in the right hands.
Copy !req
275. Eric was invested in
Copy !req
276. trying to keep WCW
alive and moving.
Copy !req
277. So, it was very exciting
when the opportunity
Copy !req
278. came up to buy it.
Copy !req
279. And it wasn't surprising
that he went 100% all in
Copy !req
280. and just gave it
all he had.
Copy !req
281. We had come up with a loose
plan of what we were
Copy !req
282. going to do once the deal
was consummated.
Copy !req
283. For example,
went out to Las Vegas.
Copy !req
284. We met with the Hard Rock
and they were planning on
Copy !req
285. building a entertainment
theater on top of one of
Copy !req
286. their parking garages that
would hold about 3500 people.
Copy !req
287. So, we started to negotiate
the opportunity for kind of a
Copy !req
288. full-time location, producing
our shows in front of a
Copy !req
289. live audience in Las Vegas
every Monday night.
Copy !req
290. And one of the initial
thoughts we had is
Copy !req
291. let's bring WCW back with
this Pay Per View
Copy !req
292. called The Big Bang.
Copy !req
293. So, on January 11th 2001,
Copy !req
294. it appears that
Fusient Media Ventures
Copy !req
295. has purchased
the company.
Copy !req
296. The figure that was reported
at the time of the
Copy !req
297. apparent sale to Fusient
was $67 million.
Copy !req
298. You know, there's a lot of
exuberance about,
Copy !req
299. once again, this being now
the turning point.
Copy !req
300. Now we've got the
new owners in play,
Copy !req
301. now Eric Bischoff's
back in his position,
Copy !req
302. this is where we're
off to the races.
Copy !req
303. The new goal is
100 weeks in a row,
Copy !req
304. and that's kind of what's
in the future for WCW.
Copy !req
305. Oh, I was excited.
I thought, you know,
Copy !req
306. okay, great, this is gonna
open a new door.
Copy !req
307. We're gonna continue
to go on like we are.
Copy !req
308. I think we were gonna
see a, a smarter,
Copy !req
309. newer, more refreshed
version of Eric.
Copy !req
310. He looked really gung ho
to make this work.
Copy !req
311. Turner Broadcasting
guaranteed us our time slot
Copy !req
312. on Monday night
and Thursday night.
Copy !req
313. So, our job was then
to produce the show,
Copy !req
314. find the advertisers, and
turn the show profitable.
Copy !req
315. I remember that being
part of the deal,
Copy !req
316. and I liked that as
part of the deal.
Copy !req
317. Knowing that you've
got that slot,
Copy !req
318. then being able to calculate
what the advertising value
Copy !req
319. of that's gonna be...
Copy !req
320. is critical.
Copy !req
321. So, it was a fait accompli
as far as we were concerned.
Copy !req
322. And we were scheduled
to close that deal.
Copy !req
323. On the March the 6th,
Copy !req
324. Jamie Kellner is
announced as the
Copy !req
325. new CEO of
Turner Broadcasting.
Copy !req
326. Jamie Kellner is someone
whose reputation certainly
Copy !req
327. preceeded him in the
television business.
Copy !req
328. He is credited with having
a huge influence over the
Copy !req
329. growth of the Fox Network,
and then actually becoming
Copy !req
330. a founding partner
of the WB Network.
Copy !req
331. And, upon being
appointed to the role,
Copy !req
332. his initial comments to
the press were that-
Copy !req
333. I'm paraphrasing-
"This is a great company,
Copy !req
334. full of great people.
Copy !req
335. I'm gonna try not
to mess things up.
Copy !req
336. I'm going to tweak it."
Copy !req
337. Jamie Kellner was one of the
best television executives
Copy !req
338. in the business,
but Jamie hated wrestling.
Copy !req
339. He hated it, you know.
He hated it, didn't get it.
Copy !req
340. Didn't want anything
to do with it.
Copy !req
341. It was a pain in the ass,
Copy !req
342. and we were losing so
much money all the time
Copy !req
343. that I think- I made the
suggestion to sell WCW.
Copy !req
344. I don't know if
it came from me,
Copy !req
345. or somebody suggested
and I latched on to it,
Copy !req
346. and Jamie was like,
Copy !req
347. "Yep, get rid of this
as fast as you can.
Copy !req
348. I don't want anything
to do with it."
Copy !req
349. March 16th, Brad Siegel
sends out a memo advising
Copy !req
350. WCW employees there's going
to a period of hiatus.
Copy !req
351. Then just a few days later...
Copy !req
352. Actually, there's not
gonna be a hiatus,
Copy !req
353. but the programming is
being canceled after a
Copy !req
354. 29-year run on the
Turner Networks.
Copy !req
355. And that leads us to an
episode of Monday Nitro
Copy !req
356. in the midst of all of this
chaos that has to occur
Copy !req
357. in Gainesville, Florida
that Monday evening.
Copy !req
358. Many of you may know that
for the past six months
Copy !req
359. I've been working with
a group of people
Copy !req
360. whose goal it was,
and is,
Copy !req
361. to acquire World
Championship Wrestling.
Copy !req
362. But recently we've hit a
couple road blocks
Copy !req
363. that may be
in fact brick falls.
Copy !req
364. And, while it is
still in my power,
Copy !req
365. I want to do something
befitting what could be
Copy !req
366. very well the last
night of wrestling
Copy !req
367. on the Turner Networks.
Copy !req
368. That being said, I'll see
you all in Panama City
Copy !req
369. next Monday night,
the Night of Champions.
Copy !req
370. Incredible!
Copy !req
371. We're just getting
ready to close,
Copy !req
372. and I got a call
from Brian Bedol,
Copy !req
373. and Brian said,
"Eric, it's done."
Copy !req
374. I said,
"Congratulations, Brian!"
Copy !req
375. He said, "No, you don't
understand. It's done.
Copy !req
376. The deal is over.
It's off the table."
Copy !req
377. We were rounding third
heading for home
Copy !req
378. and there was no
warning whatsoever.
Copy !req
379. It came completely
out of the blue.
Copy !req
380. Jamie Kellner,
he was the head dog.
Copy !req
381. And he looked
at the WCW deal,
Copy !req
382. and contemplated us having
at least a couple of years
Copy !req
383. of two hours of prime time
on Monday night,
Copy !req
384. two hours of prime time
on Thursday night,
Copy !req
385. and Kellner didn't want that
beachfront property
Copy !req
386. to be dedicated to
wrestling content.
Copy !req
387. He wanted that
prime time schedule
Copy !req
388. for other programming.
Copy !req
389. The cold, hard truth
is that WCW was
Copy !req
390. completely reliant
on television.
Copy !req
391. So much so in fact
that Eric Bischoff
Copy !req
392. famously quipped that
without television the
Copy !req
393. company was worth
20 bucks, if anything.
Copy !req
394. So, at that point,
when you take the
Copy !req
395. television distribution off
the table, you're taking
Copy !req
396. 90% of the revenue
out of the equation.
Copy !req
397. The deal was not
worth it to us.
Copy !req
398. It effectively
killed the deal.
Copy !req
399. I was devastated.
Copy !req
400. What am I doing here?
Copy !req
401. Stu Snyder.
Copy !req
402. Ready, go.
Action.
Copy !req
403. Growing up,
I loved wrestling.
Copy !req
404. I lived in New York.
Copy !req
405. I remember going to Madison
Square Garden once a month.
Copy !req
406. Bruno Sammartino.
Copy !req
407. Ivan Putski,
Gorilla Monsoon,
Copy !req
408. George "The Animal" Steele.
Copy !req
409. I can go on.
I enjoyed it, I loved it.
Copy !req
410. It's a core element
of my childhood.
Copy !req
411. I joined Turner
Broadcasting in 1993.
Copy !req
412. My responsibility was to
come on board and head up
Copy !req
413. the unit called Turner
Home Entertainment.
Copy !req
414. And then, I left,
did a few other things,
Copy !req
415. including becoming
the president and
Copy !req
416. chief operating officer of
WWF Entertainment.
Copy !req
417. The first thing I was
looking to do was to
Copy !req
418. keep growing the
core business.
Copy !req
419. To look for new opportunities
for the company.
Copy !req
420. I continued to read about
what was happening at WCW.
Copy !req
421. I kept reading about the
behind the scenes angst
Copy !req
422. going on there.
Copy !req
423. The ratings
weren't improving.
Copy !req
424. What's gonna
happen here?
Copy !req
425. Are they gonna
stick with this?
Copy !req
426. Are they not gonna
stick with it?
Copy !req
427. And then what I recall
is picking up the phone,
Copy !req
428. and calling Brad and,
you know,
Copy !req
429. just checking in
first of all,
Copy !req
430. 'cause we've known each
other for a long, long time.
Copy !req
431. I keep reading about
this stuff. Are you okay?
Copy !req
432. And, you know, he'd share
with me some of
Copy !req
433. the angst he was
going through.
Copy !req
434. I may have said something to
the effect of, "Hey, look,
Copy !req
435. if there's ever a reason
to have a conversation,
Copy !req
436. I think we might be
interested."
Copy !req
437. We were aware that there
was another player.
Copy !req
438. It didn't factor
into anything.
Copy !req
439. I didn't know their deal,
Copy !req
440. I didn't know what
they were offering.
Copy !req
441. Knew nothing.
Copy !req
442. Internally at WWF,
we had made a decision,
Copy !req
443. we thought if we could do a
transaction to acquire WCW,
Copy !req
444. we were going to work really
hard to get that done.
Copy !req
445. On Friday March 23rd,
Copy !req
446. the WWF announces
the unthinkable,
Copy !req
447. that it has purchased
its competition, WCW.
Copy !req
448. On March 26th, 2001,
Copy !req
449. the final episode
of WCW Nitro is
Copy !req
450. broadcast live from
Panama City Beach, Florida.
Copy !req
451. What is this for?
Copy !req
452. Last two days, oh.
Copy !req
453. It's great.
Copy !req
454. Get the fuck out of here.
Copy !req
455. Do you know anything?
What's going on tonight?
Copy !req
456. - Holy shit.
- What is that all about?
Copy !req
457. Panama City, Florida.
Copy !req
458. Wow, that's big time,
brother.
Copy !req
459. Here we go, in 5...
Copy !req
460. 4...
Copy !req
461. You had Vince McMahon
starting the show, on camera.
Copy !req
462. It's hard to overstate
just how shocking
Copy !req
463. that was at the time.
Copy !req
464. Imagine that.
Copy !req
465. Me, Vince McMahon.
Copy !req
466. Imagine that.
Copy !req
467. Here I am on
WCW television.
Copy !req
468. How can that happen?
Copy !req
469. Well, there's only way.
Copy !req
470. You see, it was just a
matter of time before
Copy !req
471. I, Vince McMahon,
Copy !req
472. bought my competition.
Copy !req
473. That's right.
Copy !req
474. I own...
Copy !req
475. WCW.
Copy !req
476. Therefore, in its
final broadcast,
Copy !req
477. tonight on TNT,
Copy !req
478. I have the opportunity
to address-
Copy !req
479. What is the fate of WCW?
Copy !req
480. Because the fate...
Copy !req
481. the very fate of WCW...
Copy !req
482. is in my hands.
Copy !req
483. We thought we were coming
to work like a regular day.
Copy !req
484. And no one knew
until that night.
Copy !req
485. No one knew.
Copy !req
486. We saw Vince come
up on the tron.
Copy !req
487. No matter how you look
at it, at that point,
Copy !req
488. you know, no matter
how it's spread...
Copy !req
489. they win the war.
Copy !req
490. When WWE acquired WCW,
Copy !req
491. it felt like the
end of an era.
Copy !req
492. It sucked.
Copy !req
493. The 800-pound gorilla
of the room had won.
Copy !req
494. Had no idea what Vince
would do with it.
Copy !req
495. I didn't know if it was more
advantageous for him to
Copy !req
496. buy it and keep it afloat,
Copy !req
497. and then have
the competition.
Copy !req
498. Or destroy it.
Copy !req
499. So, the fear of the unknown
is pretty, pretty heavy.
Copy !req
500. There was a lot sadness
and a lot of uncertainty.
Copy !req
501. Who they were gonna hire,
who they were gonna cut.
Copy !req
502. We don't really
know what's going on.
Copy !req
503. People are happy and
sad at the same time.
Copy !req
504. They don't know why.
Copy !req
505. I don't think you want my
real feelings about it,
Copy !req
506. 'cause it ain't pretty.
Copy !req
507. It was very emotional.
Copy !req
508. I remember
Dusty was there,
Copy !req
509. so I was sticking
pretty close to him.
Copy !req
510. There were WWF
signs up,
Copy !req
511. which was really weird.
Copy !req
512. You know, 'cause there's
always signs like on the
Copy !req
513. dressing room doors,
you know, wherever,
Copy !req
514. and you were
seeing "WWF".
Copy !req
515. I mean,
it felt like a slap.
Copy !req
516. I remember Shane McMahon
coming in and,
Copy !req
517. and he had like a little
brief meeting with everybody.
Copy !req
518. And we get told that the
company's been sold to
Copy !req
519. the WWE,
and tonight,
Copy !req
520. everybody's gonna
find out about it.
Copy !req
521. And a lot of guys were like,
"Oh, my god."
Copy !req
522. As I was seeing,
you know,
Copy !req
523. the wrestlers and
performers backstage...
Copy !req
524. you know, shoulders might
have been slumped
Copy !req
525. before they walked
through the curtain,
Copy !req
526. but then when they
walked through,
Copy !req
527. it's back to
business as normal.
Copy !req
528. And then when they came
back after their match,
Copy !req
529. or segment, or whatever,
it's back to...
Copy !req
530. "What's going on?
What's gonna happen?"
Copy !req
531. Let's not lose sight of the
fact this is the last Nitro
Copy !req
532. on the Turner Network, and
we're going out with a bang!
Copy !req
533. Scott Steiner and I, we,
ah, had a conversation.
Copy !req
534. And Scott goes,
"Bro, you know,
Copy !req
535. what do you think
they're gonna do, man?
Copy !req
536. What do you think
they're gonna do?"
Copy !req
537. And I look at Scott,
and I go, "Bro,
Copy !req
538. we was
auditioning that night."
Copy !req
539. Booker T,
the cover!
Copy !req
540. Oh! And he nailed it!
Copy !req
541. Everyone was
working that night,
Copy !req
542. so we went out
and we rocked it.
Copy !req
543. And 1, 2- could it be it?
Yes, it is! Yeah!
Copy !req
544. Booker T!
Copy !req
545. I didn't know I was gonna win
the world title that night,
Copy !req
546. but then when I did
find that out, I go,
Copy !req
547. "Oh, yeah, man. I got a
chip in the game.
Copy !req
548. They got eyes on me,"
you know, so I was, ah...
Copy !req
549. I was really excited.
Copy !req
550. I was probably perhaps
one of the only guys
Copy !req
551. that was excited though.
Copy !req
552. I mean,
it was sad, you know.
Copy !req
553. It was, it wasn't even sad,
it was pathetic.
Copy !req
554. Because fucking people
actually showed up.
Copy !req
555. "Hey! You guys want to
be on the Titanic?"
Copy !req
556. Nah. Good.
Copy !req
557. I'll sit and watch the
fucking thing sink
Copy !req
558. from my fucking house.
Copy !req
559. I didn't watch it
as it happened live.
Copy !req
560. I feel bad for the
talent that were there.
Copy !req
561. I feel bad for the production
staff that were there
Copy !req
562. that didn't see it coming,
had no idea
Copy !req
563. what their futures
were going to be.
Copy !req
564. It's a big life change, but
as far as the brand, itself,
Copy !req
565. I walked away from it.
I no longer cared.
Copy !req
566. It's gonna be an
emotional thing.
Copy !req
567. You see a lot of
production guys,
Copy !req
568. a lot of people with cameras
taking pictures of the guys
Copy !req
569. and, to me, I look at it as
the day you left college,
Copy !req
570. and guys you might
not see again.
Copy !req
571. But this is a tight-knit
group of guys we have.
Copy !req
572. Like one of the camera guys,
and what a sweetheart guy.
Copy !req
573. He'd been working for
the company for 27 years.
Copy !req
574. All of those people...
Copy !req
575. lost their livelihood.
Copy !req
576. And that's why I say
fuck you, Jamie Kellner.
Copy !req
577. I was concerned about
a lot of people that
Copy !req
578. just couldn't walk into
a job so easily.
Copy !req
579. Our jobs are so different.
Copy !req
580. It's not a factory.
Copy !req
581. We don't do the same
thing every day.
Copy !req
582. We're a combination of
a circus and the army.
Copy !req
583. And, to get that good at it,
we had to have
Copy !req
584. the right people in
the right places.
Copy !req
585. And, the way you got
to that point was
Copy !req
586. the trust of one another.
Copy !req
587. And now you can't do it
together anymore.
Copy !req
588. Everybody was in a
bad space. You know,
Copy !req
589. a lot of them didn't know
what they were gonna do.
Copy !req
590. But, there is a time,
you know, you gotta...
Copy !req
591. you know,
you gotta let it go.
Copy !req
592. But in this business,
it's a little bit different.
Copy !req
593. What was really
weird to me,
Copy !req
594. this multimillion
dollar company
Copy !req
595. was sold to WWE
for like nothing.
Copy !req
596. I'm not saying that
there was anything
Copy !req
597. spooky kooky
going on there.
Copy !req
598. But, I have
my suspicions.
Copy !req
599. I own WCW!
I own the WWF!
Copy !req
600. And you will treat me
with respect!
Copy !req
601. When you think about the
final purchase price,
Copy !req
602. we're talking about a
company that at its peak
Copy !req
603. was generating in the
neighborhood of $200 million
Copy !req
604. a year, and a huge
part of pop culture,
Copy !req
605. that gets sold for a little
over 4 million bucks.
Copy !req
606. I always thought that,
Copy !req
607. when I heard the price
of what they paid for WCW,
Copy !req
608. it was an inside job
of some sort.
Copy !req
609. Somebody filled their
pockets by making that deal
Copy !req
610. for cheaply as it was.
Copy !req
611. Maybe there's
an envelope...
Copy !req
612. pushed across the desk.
Copy !req
613. Maybe you got influence with
the guy that's selling it.
Copy !req
614. Look, there's some
murky circumstances.
Copy !req
615. Stu Snyder was an executive
at Turner Broadcasting, and,
Copy !req
616. oh, by the way, Stu Snyder,
after the fact just
Copy !req
617. happens to land a plum
executive role with WWE.
Copy !req
618. Oh, my god,
that's, that's Bob Ryder!
Copy !req
619. That's Bob Ryder
from WCW.com!
Copy !req
620. Bob, run!
Run!
Copy !req
621. Bob Ryder, he was one of
the hosts on shows
Copy !req
622. that were broadcast
over WCW.com.
Copy !req
623. So, in the summer
following the
Copy !req
624. sale of WCW being
purchased by the WWF,
Copy !req
625. Bob Ryder puts out a widely
disseminated post online,
Copy !req
626. essentially alleging that
there had been
Copy !req
627. a conspiracy at play.
Copy !req
628. Bob Ryder,
he was a good man,
Copy !req
629. and a good friend.
Copy !req
630. And I know that Bob had
written about a theory that
Copy !req
631. Brad Siegel helped facilitate
the actual sale to WWE
Copy !req
632. by convincing Jamie Kellner
to take the
Copy !req
633. distribution of programming
out of the deal.
Copy !req
634. Bob's theory was Brad Siegel
really didn't want WCW
Copy !req
635. as a part of the
Turner portfolio,
Copy !req
636. and this was
Brad Siegel's way of
Copy !req
637. using Jamie Kellner
to kill the deal.
Copy !req
638. The conspiracy theory is
really something like
Copy !req
639. out of a wrestling
storyline, essentially.
Copy !req
640. There was a plot initiated
by Brad Siegel and
Copy !req
641. Stu Snyder to clear the
path for it to have
Copy !req
642. a quick sale to the WWF.
Copy !req
643. Stu Snyder at that time was
the president of the WWF,
Copy !req
644. he had previously worked
at Turner Broadcasting,
Copy !req
645. had a relationship
with Brad Siegel.
Copy !req
646. And so, the allegation
was that
Copy !req
647. there were covert
talks between the two,
Copy !req
648. and the primary piece of
evidence was the fact
Copy !req
649. that WCW was sold
for 4.3 million bucks.
Copy !req
650. I don't know
that that's true.
Copy !req
651. It is a conspiracy theory.
Copy !req
652. Unfortunately, there are
enough questions,
Copy !req
653. and questionable
relationships,
Copy !req
654. that lend interest in
a conspiracy like that.
Copy !req
655. No. Well,
first of all, it was-
Copy !req
656. I mean, we'd known each
other our entire careers.
Copy !req
657. I mean, the fact
that Stu Snyder
Copy !req
658. was running WWE and was
Copy !req
659. a likely buyer for WCW
Copy !req
660. is purely coincidence.
Copy !req
661. No.
Copy !req
662. It's as simple as that.
Copy !req
663. My understanding is that Brad
reported up to Jamie Kellner,
Copy !req
664. and that Jamie made
the decision, said,
Copy !req
665. "I don't want it on our, on
our air," and canceled it.
Copy !req
666. If you think about
how serious these
Copy !req
667. particular allegations are,
and the fact that
Copy !req
668. they would lead to
potential FCC violations
Copy !req
669. and have serious
professional and
Copy !req
670. personal consequences
for all people involved,
Copy !req
671. it's quite the
audacious plot,
Copy !req
672. given the high profile
nature of the people that
Copy !req
673. we're talking about and,
what they stood to lose if,
Copy !req
674. eventually, they would
be convicted
Copy !req
675. essentially of
corporate espionage.
Copy !req
676. I'm not saying I'm 100%
convinced that Stu Snyder
Copy !req
677. was part of an orchestration
to make sure WCW
Copy !req
678. got sold for nickels
on the dollar.
Copy !req
679. I'm not suggesting
that I know that.
Copy !req
680. I just lean in that
direction because
Copy !req
681. I don't believe in the
number of coincidences
Copy !req
682. that surround this
entire situation.
Copy !req
683. I'm just not buying it.
Copy !req
684. I understand... gossip.
Copy !req
685. I understand rumor.
Copy !req
686. But, it's easy to sit on
the sidelines and
Copy !req
687. not really understand the
economics of the businesses
Copy !req
688. to say what
something is worth.
Copy !req
689. If there was a deal out
there worth $60 million,
Copy !req
690. I can guarantee you as
I'm sitting here today,
Copy !req
691. the Turner executives
would have made a deal.
Copy !req
692. We wanted to sell it.
Copy !req
693. When we sold it,
that's what it was worth.
Copy !req
694. My regret is that when the
ratings started to plummet,
Copy !req
695. we could not find
the right story,
Copy !req
696. the right players in that
story to turn it around.
Copy !req
697. You know, that's a
big regret of mine.
Copy !req
698. We weren't successful.
Copy !req
699. Sometimes that happens.
Copy !req
700. You can't always
be successful.
Copy !req
701. I feel a responsibility
for it because
Copy !req
702. I clearly was not the
person to do it.
Copy !req
703. I didn't know the
business and
Copy !req
704. the story well enough to,
to write it myself.
Copy !req
705. I'm not a writer.
Copy !req
706. So, yeah, I'm really
sad about that,
Copy !req
707. and regret it wasn't
a different outcome.
Copy !req
708. In my opinion,
Copy !req
709. without a strong advocate...
Copy !req
710. who really believed
in the business,
Copy !req
711. it would have been
tough to exist there,
Copy !req
712. with everything else,
Copy !req
713. their challenges
as a company.
Copy !req
714. But that world had passed.
Copy !req
715. Ted was that person who
was its chief advocate.
Copy !req
716. In the new AOL Time Warner,
Copy !req
717. without that person,
Copy !req
718. I don't know how
it succeeds there.
Copy !req
719. And, for good or for worse,
the one thing that
Copy !req
720. all the talent knew,
Copy !req
721. they knew where the
buck stopped at WWF.
Copy !req
722. It was Vince.
Copy !req
723. You were either in line
or you were out.
Copy !req
724. That's how Vince
ran that place.
Copy !req
725. That place was a
different story,
Copy !req
726. a different time,
different era.
Copy !req
727. So, unless you had somebody
like that who can go,
Copy !req
728. "This is the way it's gonna
run and I have the support of
Copy !req
729. corporate to leave it alone
and let me do my thing,"
Copy !req
730. I think it would have
been challenging.
Copy !req
731. It's been proven that
it was challenging.
Copy !req
732. we weren't looking at all
Copy !req
733. to buy something
and kill it.
Copy !req
734. This brand is still good.
Copy !req
735. It's still relevant,
to an audience.
Copy !req
736. We're gonna figure out,
how do we keep it alive?
Copy !req
737. And maybe over time
it comes back
Copy !req
738. as a separate show.
Copy !req
739. In my head, I saw this
great rivalry that
Copy !req
740. was under one roof.
Copy !req
741. First of all, it all started
with the famous
Copy !req
742. Shane McMahon showing up
on WCW, on Nitro.
Copy !req
743. And proclaiming, you know,
the storyline of, basically,
Copy !req
744. Vince was gonna buy WCW,
but—
Copy !req
745. he snagged it
out from him.
Copy !req
746. That's right!
Copy !req
747. I now own WCW!
Copy !req
748. I remember sitting down in
my hotel room and
Copy !req
749. writing down all the wrestlers
who I had hoped to wrestle-
Copy !req
750. Goldberg,
Sting, Savage.
Copy !req
751. Everybody in the NWO.
It's like, I remember
Copy !req
752. writing everybody down
and going to Vince,
Copy !req
753. and saying, "Hey,
this might be a good idea.
Copy !req
754. What about this guy, and
this guy, and this guy,
Copy !req
755. and this guy?
Let's bring them in."
Copy !req
756. There was so much
speculation as to how,
Copy !req
757. how it would all work.
Copy !req
758. What people don't realize
is that when
Copy !req
759. WWE acquired WCW,
Copy !req
760. the assets of WCW,
the contracts
Copy !req
761. weren't really part
of the equation.
Copy !req
762. It wasn't like all of
the talent that was
Copy !req
763. under contract automatically
came to WWF.
Copy !req
764. At least not the big names
that mattered.
Copy !req
765. Some of those people had
quite a bit of time left
Copy !req
766. on their contracts and they
were gonna get paid anyway.
Copy !req
767. I knew that at the time guys
were getting 50 cents
Copy !req
768. on the dollar on their
existing contracts.
Copy !req
769. That was not
happening with me.
Copy !req
770. I'm not gonna give in.
I'm not gonna do it.
Copy !req
771. So, if I had to sit out
for three years,
Copy !req
772. I sat out for three years.
Copy !req
773. Not everybody wanted
to go to work for WWE.
Copy !req
774. You didn't have Sting,
you didn't have Lex Luger,
Copy !req
775. you didn't have Goldberg.
Copy !req
776. What do you really have?
Copy !req
777. I still had like over a year
left on my contract.
Copy !req
778. They offered me
a 50% buyout,
Copy !req
779. and, ah, go to work
or just, you know,
Copy !req
780. sit at home for
the next year.
Copy !req
781. I said, "Nah, man,"
I said,
Copy !req
782. "You know, out of sight,
out of mind," you know.
Copy !req
783. I remember Ric Flair
said a long time ago,
Copy !req
784. "Time off is your
worst enemy." You know,
Copy !req
785. so I was like,
let's get-
Copy !req
786. take the 50% buyout and
let's go to work.
Copy !req
787. Wait a minute!
What the hell?
Copy !req
788. Ah! Booker T!
Copy !req
789. He's the WW...
WCW champion!
Copy !req
790. Back then it was a test.
Copy !req
791. Let's throw these
guys out here,
Copy !req
792. see how good
they really are
Copy !req
793. compared to
the WWE guys.
Copy !req
794. Shane and I decided
to join forces.
Copy !req
795. Oh, the invasion storyline
was supposed to be
Copy !req
796. the best that WCW
had to offer versus
Copy !req
797. the best that
WWE had to offer.
Copy !req
798. But, we were in no shape to
actually be able to really,
Copy !req
799. really pull off an invasion
mainly just because
Copy !req
800. we did not have enough
star power to
Copy !req
801. really, really get that
thing off the ground.
Copy !req
802. And they never really did
a WCW-WWE feud correctly,
Copy !req
803. and I think that was a big
mistake by Vince McMahon.
Copy !req
804. I think he could've done
some really cool match-ups
Copy !req
805. and some really cool things.
Copy !req
806. - Hey, yo.
Copy !req
807. They were gonna write
Copy !req
808. the history that
they wanted to create,
Copy !req
809. and no matter
how you looked at it,
Copy !req
810. we were the confederate
soldiers going to work for
Copy !req
811. the union, and if you
thought that you were
Copy !req
812. gonna go over one of their
top guys, bullshit.
Copy !req
813. They brought us in
under the guise of,
Copy !req
814. "this isn't gonna
work twice".
Copy !req
815. I looked at Scott, I said,
Copy !req
816. "We're gone, we're done,
we're dead."
Copy !req
817. I get to have the
wonderful experience
Copy !req
818. to watch my friend,
who now has been
Copy !req
819. sober for 11 months,
Copy !req
820. go downstairs and just start
pounding drinks.
Copy !req
821. And he's like, "Fuck it."
Copy !req
822. You talk about a miserable
day in my life?
Copy !req
823. When it's the WCW,
there was no room in
Copy !req
824. New York City for a
company like WCW.
Copy !req
825. That's just the way
I felt about it.
Copy !req
826. When the WWE won the war,
Copy !req
827. not only did they want
to win the war,
Copy !req
828. but they wanted to bury
their opposition
Copy !req
829. and they wanted to
plant the flag.
Copy !req
830. And that's what they needed
to do more than anything
Copy !req
831. to really solidify
winning that war,
Copy !req
832. planting that flag.
Copy !req
833. Yeah, they had to
be in, you know,
Copy !req
834. a dominant position
to do that, yeah.
Copy !req
835. We're back live here,
ladies and gentlemen.
Copy !req
836. This crowd is still buzzing.
Copy !req
837. Here comes
Mr. McMahon back.
Copy !req
838. He promised to name the
new general manager of Raw.
Copy !req
839. 2002, Vince McMahon
called me,
Copy !req
840. and while Vince was
speaking, I had already
Copy !req
841. made up my mind that
this is my opportunity.
Copy !req
842. Allow me to
introduce you to
Copy !req
843. the new general
manager of Raw.
Copy !req
844. His name is
Eric Bischoff!
Copy !req
845. I'm not gonna say that
everybody in WWE
Copy !req
846. was happy to
see me show up,
Copy !req
847. but the people
that mattered
Copy !req
848. could not have made me
feel more at home.
Copy !req
849. I like Eric a lot,
we're good buddies.
Copy !req
850. Known him for a
very long time.
Copy !req
851. And, he has his bust on
the Mount Rushmore of
Copy !req
852. professional
wrestling executives.
Copy !req
853. Everything that
went wrong-
Copy !req
854. the Fusient sale
falling through,
Copy !req
855. the fact
that the narrative is,
Copy !req
856. "Eric Bischoff
cratered WCW"-
Copy !req
857. I had an opportunity to
write the last chapter
Copy !req
858. of my story.
Copy !req
859. Wait a minute...
Copy !req
860. What?
What the...?
Copy !req
861. What the hell is going on?
What is this?
Copy !req
862. You know, I had been with
WWE for a few years as that
Copy !req
863. general manager
character and
Copy !req
864. everything was going great,
and I remember getting
Copy !req
865. the phone call from
Stephanie McMahon,
Copy !req
866. who was head of creative
at that point.
Copy !req
867. She goes, "Eric,
I don't want you
Copy !req
868. to take this
the wrong way.
Copy !req
869. You've done a great job.
Copy !req
870. But we're gonna go in
a different direction."
Copy !req
871. Eric Bischoff
Copy !req
872. has abused his power
for too long.
Copy !req
873. John Cena was going to
hit me with his finish and
Copy !req
874. drag me out of the ring,
and John Cena was
Copy !req
875. gonna throw me in the
back of a garbage truck,
Copy !req
876. and I was gonna be
hauled out of the arena.
Copy !req
877. And I very seldom
questioned creative,
Copy !req
878. but I went to Vince,
and said,
Copy !req
879. "It doesn't make any sense
for John Cena to do it.
Copy !req
880. It makes more sense
for you to do it."
Copy !req
881. And I thought,
if I'm gonna do this,
Copy !req
882. I'm gonna have
fun doing it.
Copy !req
883. I'm gonna make
this fun for me.
Copy !req
884. And I did, and I
had a blast.
Copy !req
885. And I got to live a dream
and rewrite my own chapter,
Copy !req
886. and I loved it,
every minute of it.
Copy !req
887. There's not a second
of it that I regret.
Copy !req
888. Ooh.
Copy !req
889. Who killed WCW?
Copy !req
890. I think it was
Turner corporate.
Copy !req
891. And, some of the people
within the booking committees.
Copy !req
892. AOL Time Warner.
The executives,
Copy !req
893. they were embarrassed
by goofy wrestling.
Copy !req
894. The guys in Turner that
didn't want us and
Copy !req
895. didn't like us, and the
top guys not letting
Copy !req
896. the mid-card guys
interact with them.
Copy !req
897. WCW killed itself.
Copy !req
898. The cast of characters
Copy !req
899. that was WCW,
killed WCW.
Copy !req
900. It didn't function
as a team any longer.
Copy !req
901. It functioned as a bunch of
self-seeking individuals.
Copy !req
902. I've never see anybody
that was that high up
Copy !req
903. in the food chain take
less responsibility.
Copy !req
904. This is what killed WCW.
Copy !req
905. They were fighting
within themselves.
Copy !req
906. They were eating their own.
The wolves.
Copy !req
907. Who killed WCW?
That's easy.
Copy !req
908. Turner Sports.
Copy !req
909. It would have to be the
person with the check book.
Copy !req
910. It would have to be
Eric Bischoff.
Copy !req
911. Vince Russo, Eric Bischoff-
two guys that had
Copy !req
912. zero knowledge about
how to run wrestling,
Copy !req
913. and they put themselves
in a position to
Copy !req
914. tell people like me
what to do.
Copy !req
915. And, that's
what killed WCW.
Copy !req
916. As a matter of fact,
I'm gonna give myself-
Copy !req
917. - A round
of applause for that!
Copy !req
918. Yes, thank you.
Copy !req
919. Bro, they took such a drop
from where they were
Copy !req
920. to where it was
when it was sold,
Copy !req
921. and so much money lost.
Copy !req
922. I don't think anybody could
have done anything.
Copy !req
923. So, I would say a business
decision killed WCW.
Copy !req
924. I don't think one person
could have killed WCW
Copy !req
925. by any stretch of
the imagination.
Copy !req
926. There were a
shitload of people
Copy !req
927. who contributed
to its downfall.
Copy !req
928. I think it's a
collection of factors,
Copy !req
929. a number of reasons
that explain its demise.
Copy !req
930. There's plenty of
blame to go around,
Copy !req
931. but I think ultimately it
was inevitable that it was,
Copy !req
932. it was going
to fall apart.
Copy !req
933. A good buddy of mine,
he's one of my best friends-
Copy !req
934. Downtown Bruno-
when I first started,
Copy !req
935. I said, "Bruno, give me
some advice."
Copy !req
936. He said, "You're gonna hear
a voice one day,
Copy !req
937. and that voice is
gonna say,
Copy !req
938. 'Go on home,
the big run's over'."
Copy !req
939. WCW as an entity,
they heard that voice.
Copy !req
940. And the big run was over,
and it was fucking awesome.
Copy !req
941. Wow, man!
What a run!
Copy !req
942. It was always about the
performances for me.
Copy !req
943. It was always
about the fans.
Copy !req
944. We were rock stars.
Copy !req
945. Everywhere we
went was packed.
Copy !req
946. DDP!
Copy !req
947. The whole WCW experience
was a hell of a ride.
Copy !req
948. Period.
Copy !req
949. Let us remember
the lessons,
Copy !req
950. learned in stride,
to build a fairer and
Copy !req
951. more equitable future
for wrestling.
Copy !req
952. We've done over 350
or 60 some odd Nitros.
Copy !req
953. You know, a lot of
these people are like,
Copy !req
954. are like family to me.
Copy !req
955. It was a good ride,
it was fun.
Copy !req
956. You were like a big family
even though
Copy !req
957. you're a
dysfunctional family.
Copy !req
958. You may not get
along with everybody,
Copy !req
959. but you're still gonna be
there when it comes to it.
Copy !req
960. It was the greatest job.
Copy !req
961. They let us be as creative
as we wanted to be.
Copy !req
962. The first time I realized
WCW was big was
Copy !req
963. my very first show
when I debuted.
Copy !req
964. There was a
palpable energy.
Copy !req
965. You could feel the crowd.
Copy !req
966. There's something special
and something different
Copy !req
967. about a wrestling fan.
Copy !req
968. It just blew my mind to see
Copy !req
969. what a big deal
WCW really was.
Copy !req
970. He's got him up!
Copy !req
971. Those were some
great times.
Copy !req
972. Terrific times.
Copy !req
973. And it came to an
abrupt end like that.
Copy !req
974. But hey man, all good
things come to an end.
Copy !req
975. I still think that, you know,
when it comes down to it,
Copy !req
976. WCW is Eric's creation.
Copy !req
977. Any success they had
was with Eric.
Copy !req
978. There's nobody on
this planet that can
Copy !req
979. look in the mirror and say,
Copy !req
980. "I beat Vince McMahon
Copy !req
981. at professional wrestling
Copy !req
982. for 83 weeks."
Copy !req
983. It's a pretty fucking huge
accomplishment.
Copy !req
984. Cool.
Copy !req
985. Time fucks with
your head, you know.
Copy !req
986. It's...
Copy !req
987. it becomes distorted.
Copy !req
988. My memory is more
Copy !req
989. like a series
of photographs.
Copy !req
990. There's bits, and pieces,
and moments
Copy !req
991. that stand out in my mind,
but...
Copy !req
992. as time goes on,
they kind of just
Copy !req
993. all blur together.
Copy !req
994. When I look back at my
time during WCW-
Copy !req
995. the journey, the ups,
the downs-
Copy !req
996. the ride all along the
way was a rush.
Copy !req
997. We were the #1 wrestling
company on television
Copy !req
998. in the world.
Very proud of that.
Copy !req
999. I was able to experience
and achieve things
Copy !req
1000. that nobody
thought possible.
Copy !req
1001. And I wouldn't have had
any of this
Copy !req
1002. if it wasn't
professional wrestling,
Copy !req
1003. so I'm grateful for
every minute of it-
Copy !req
1004. the good, the bad,
everything in between.
Copy !req
1005. Very lucky.
Copy !req