What is nwo wrestling




















Add content advisory. Did you know Edit. Trivia Off-and-on booker Paul Orndorff is often credited with coming up with the idea for an "invasion angle," with Terry Taylor being the one to suggest the black-and-white colors, t-shirt selling and attitude, with Hulk Hogan , Kevin Nash and Scott Hall given a lot of leeway to make up the mannerisms and catchphrases.

User reviews 3 Review. Top review. New World Order! Another documentary that could have been better than what it was. Now, it was very detailed and chronicled the history of one of the biggest wrestling factions in history but my biggest problem was wrestlers trying to keep kayfabe. This documentary lacked because of that reason. Details Edit. Release date November 6, United States. United States. Technical specs Edit.

Runtime 1 hour 3 minutes. Contribute to this page Suggest an edit or add missing content. Edit page. This phenomenon was bigger than wrestling, and soon everybody, inside of wrestling and out, wanted to be a part of the nWo.

With momentum on their side, WCW wanted to capitalize on pushing the nWo into the mainstream as quickly as possible. Rodman, who was in the middle of the NBA Finals against the Utah Jazz, took his role with the nWo so seriously he flew from Chicago to Detroit to appear on Monday Nitro live, in the middle of the series. Rodman going to a professional wrestling event in the middle of a NBA Finals series seems absolutely ludicrous, but his Bulls teammates knew that was just part of the give-and-take with having Rodman on the team.

He did so much for the team, but to do it during the Finals, that was another indication this was all coming to an end. Even entering the game in a rotational role Rodman played 30 minutes and finished with 14 rebounds. The nWo ultimately won in the main event, and Rodman would not appear in a ring for another year, when he returned in and lost to Macho Man Randy Savage.

There are numerous factors that led to the demise of the nWo as the premiere wrestling faction, but it ultimately comes down to being crushed until its own weight and mismanagement. Hogan turned heel, shredding the trademark red and gold for a new look of black and white. Joining forces with Nash and Hall, who were a rare combination of legitimate tough guys who were as dangerous as they were entertaining, the moment was the start of something larger that had industry-altering ramifications.

NWO T-shirts are still top sellers. People thought it was real. Other WCW wrestlers thought it was real. And so much of that night was unpredictable. No one knew exactly how the Hogan turn would play out—or whether it would even occur, let alone become such a lasting memory for so many.

In an era when WWE was pre-taping much of its programming and genuine surprises were rare, his appearance sent shockwaves throughout wrestling. Two weeks later, Nash also arrived, displaying a striking realism that was simply not present at the time in WWE. Together as The Outsiders, Hall and Nash did the seemingly impossible by being equal parts threatening, charming and intimidating, using the equity they had built in WWE to amplify their work in WCW.

The match at Bash at the Beach was set to be their in-ring debut for their new employer. They then arrived in a promotion that was in flux. Once he dropped the belt to Hogan at Hog Wild in August, he also began to incorporate more realism into his character, eventually joining the NWO that fall. Chris Jericho has unveiled countless subtleties and nuances to his character throughout the years, as have John Cena, Roman Reigns, and Sasha Banks.

Hogan in the red-and-yellow always seemed slightly out of place in WCW, but he became a WCW icon—even crossing over into mainstream sports and entertainment in matches that included Dennis Rodman, Karl Malone and Jay Leno—in this new black-and-white incarnation. They made fun of the old regime. It was a hell of a time. Hogan had been a fixture in the world title picture since his arrival in the summer of , but his tried-and-true message of saying your prayers and eating your vitamins no longer held the same gravitas by the midpoint of Everything was declining.

In terms of live attendance, no one was drawing big numbers in the United States. I was visiting Japan and seeing packed crowds at the Tokyo Dome, so I studied the difference between what was being presented in America against what was in Japan. The biggest difference was that it was treated so real in Japan. He was not interested. He knew it, I knew it, the fans knew it, but it took a few more months for him to realize it enough to make that change.

Bischoff honed in on Sting as the best fit for the third man. Sting certainly could have worked a convincing style as a heel, but Hall and Nash were cast perfectly as The Outsiders. On the other hand, Sting embodied WCW. It was a conundrum, and having Hogan eventually return in red-and-yellow to fight off Sting, Hall and Nash feels like merely a new twist on an old story.

He had crossed over into the mainstream during that period, and there is no one else who could have made that heel turn feel as substantial. Once Hulk made his decision, I knew it would be shocking and I knew he would be good at it. There are a lot of reasons why I have so much respect for Steve Borden, but one of the biggest reasons is—and I remember specifically talking to him on the phone while Hogan was off doing a movie—I asked Sting to abandon the babyface position he was in and take on that heel role, which was a big ask, and Sting was willing to do it.

Kevin Nash and Scott Hall did not know who the third person was going to be. Sting and I were the only two people who knew. Can you make it out to California? Who do you think it should be?



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