Oh hell yes !!!!!! I'm definitely going to watch this show.
from cagesideseats.com:
Old-school wrestling fans and those interested in the genre’s history will want to mark their calendars and set their DVRs for August 8, as PBS is set to premier an exciting new wrestling documentary.
Mid-Atlantic Gateway, a website dedicated to the history of Mid-Atlantic Championship Wrestling, shared the news on social media:
To me that was the peak of talent in NXT. I was at a bachelor party trip in Austin with that match going on my laptop, and 3 non-wrestling fan friends couldn't pull themselves away from watching.Watching the Takeovers and that 6 man ladder match for the North American belt in 2018 was something else
Adam Cole vs Killian Dain vs Lars Sullivan vs Velveteen Dream vs Ricochet vs EC3
Kinda sucks Lars and Velveteen are bad ppl, they both had oodles of potential and had great performances
It’s funny you say that- my exact thought watching that was “wow this is a match I’d show non-fans to get them into it”To me that was the peak of talent in NXT. I was at a bachelor party trip in Austin with that match going on my laptop, and 3 non-wrestling fan friends couldn't pull themselves away from watching.
IMO Dream would have been a WWE World champion by now if not for his, ahem, life transgressions.
If anyone wants to watch a GOAT women's match that was also historical for free
Earthquake vs Koji Kitao from SWS. After the match fell apart after he stopped cooperating Kitao topped everything off by grabbing a mic and saying that wrestling was fake. It should come as no surprise that he was instantly fired.I didn't see it live, but Antonio Inoki vs the Great Antonio would make the list for me
I think a lot of it has to do with the changing nature of the business where those were used to sell tickets in specific markets and as that was surpassed by PPV and TV as revenue drives it faded away. I 100% agree bringing them back would be a good idea.I was going to start a new thread but maybe I will just post it here.
Why in the past 20+ years have they got rid of the simple 2 minute promo. When I was young my favorite part of wrestling was watching the wrestlers give there 1-2 minute spiel leaving me want to hear more, but as the new century was coming around they started to become longer and longer, many times making me hope that it would end soon. As the years went on they became even worse and more scripted. I get it that the WWe felt like scripted long promos was the way to go but why does it seem like every other wrestling organization feels the need to copy them. I do think there is a market out there for a wrestling company that goes back to unscripted 2 minute promos after a match of somebody telling us how they want to win the championship because it means they will have sex with hotter chicks and eat better quality steaks.
I think a lot of it has to do with the changing nature of the business where those were used to sell tickets in specific markets and as that was surpassed by PPV and TV as revenue drives it faded away. I 100% agree bringing them back would be a good idea.
I was going to start a new thread but maybe I will just post it here.
Why in the past 20+ years have they got rid of the simple 2 minute promo. When I was young my favorite part of wrestling was watching the wrestlers give there 1-2 minute spiel leaving me want to hear more, but as the new century was coming around they started to become longer and longer, many times making me hope that it would end soon. As the years went on they became even worse and more scripted. I get it that the WWe felt like scripted long promos was the way to go but why does it seem like every other wrestling organization feels the need to copy them. I do think there is a market out there for a wrestling company that goes back to unscripted 2 minute promos after a match of somebody telling us how they want to win the championship because it means they will have sex with hotter chicks and eat better quality steaks.
You need weekly content to make someone watch every week so you get your stars on way more often, longer promos, more involved storylines.
I would argue how many wrestlers today would you consider to be stars? When you see guys on TV wining 50% or even say less then 75% of the time every other week it sort of devalues them when they lose 25-50% of the time. Beyond that you need a reason to care about them which even a 2 minute promo could do
Maybe I have an antiquated idea of what, who or how to make a star but the best way is to have a person constantly win for like 6+ months on TV while giving a little time to talk to get himself over.
And I do agree the way wrestling works today their is more emphasis on the tv shows being the prime source of generating revenue so it does change the way you have to do things, but surely there can be alternative ways to get people over in the 5+ hours a week of content ERA of wrestling.
At the end of the day I do think some wrestler the general audience(not hardcore one) views as a star wrestling some jabronee in a 3-5 minute squash match then giving a 2 minute post match interview saying how he is the best will attract more casual viewers then a 15 minute 4 star match by 2 great wrestlers who nobody beside the hardcore fans care about because both guys lose to often.