Tuesday, January 5, 2010

WWE - Change to World Wrestling Federation (WWF)

In 1979, World Wide Wrestling Federation (WWWF) became the World Wrestling Federation (WWF). On 21 February 1980, the son of Vincent J. McMahon, Vincent K. McMahon founded Titan Sports Inc. Vince McMahon Jr. purchased Capitol Wrestling Corporation Ltd. from his father and other stock holders (Gorilla Monsoon, Arnold Skaaland and Phil Zacko) on 6 June 1982. The elder Vince McMahon had established the northeastern territory as one of the most vibrant members of the NWA. Vincent J. McMahon had long since recognized that professional wrestling was more about entertainment than actual sport. Against his father's wishes, Vincent K. McMahon began an expansion process that fundamentally changed the industry.



Other promoters were angry when Vince McMahon began syndicating WWF television shows to television stations across the United States, in areas outside of the WWF's traditional northeastern stronghold. Vincent K. McMahon also began selling videotapes of WWF events outside the Northeast through his Coliseum Video distribution company. Vince McMahon Jr. effectively broke the unwritten law of regionalism around which the entire industry had been based. To make matters worse, McMahon used the income generated by advertising, television deals, and tape sales to poach talent from rival promoters. Wrestling promoters nationwide were now in direct competition with the WWF.

Hulk Hogan, due to his appearance in Rocky III, had a national popularity that few other wrestlers could offer, which is what led Vince McMahon Jr. to sign him. Roddy Piper was brought in, as well as Jesse Ventura (although Ventura rarely wrestled in the WWF at that point due to the lung disorder that caused his retirement, moving to the commentator booth alongside Gorilla Monsoon). André the Giant, Jimmy Snuka, Don Muraco, Paul Orndorff, Greg Valentine, Ricky Steamboat, and the Iron Sheik (Hossein Khosrow Ali Vaziri) rounded out the roster. Hulk Hogan was clearly Vincet K. McMahon's biggest star, causing some people to debate whether the WWF could have achieved national success without him.



The WWF would tour nationally in a venture that required huge capital investment; one that placed the WWF on the verge of financial collapse. The future of not just McMahon's experiment, but also the WWF, the NWA, and the whole industry came down to the success or failure of McMahon's groundbreaking concept, WrestleMania. WrestleMania was a pay-per-view extravaganza (in some areas; most areas of the country saw WrestleMania available on closed-circuit television) that Vine McMahon Jr. marketed as being the Super Bowl of professional wrestling. The concept of a wrestling supercard was nothing new in North America; the NWA had been running Starrcade a few years prior to WrestleMania, and even the elder McMahon had marketed large Shea Stadium cards viewable in closed-circuit locations. However, Vincet K. McMahon's vision was to make the WWF and the industry itself mainstream, targeting more of the general television audience by exploiting the entertainment side of the industry. With the inaugural WrestleMania the WWF initiated a joint-promotional campaign with MTV, which featured a great deal of WWF coverage and programming, in what was termed the Rock 'n' Wrestling Connection. The mainstream media attention brought on by celebrities including Muhammad Ali, Mr. T, and Cyndi Lauper at the event helped propel WrestleMania to become a staple in popular culture.

The original WrestleMania, held in 1985, was a resounding success. This event is sometimes credited as the debut of what Vince McMahon Jr. called "Sports Entertainment", in contrast to his father's preference of pure wrestling. The WWF did incredible business on the shoulders of McMahon and his all-American babyface hero, Hulk Hogan, for the next several years, creating what some observers dubbed a second golden age for professional wrestling. The introduction of Saturday Night's Main Event on NBC in mid-1985 marked the first time that professional wrestling had been broadcast on network television since the 1950s. In 1987, the WWF produced what was considered to be the pinnacle of the 1980s wrestling boom, WrestleMania III. A rematch of the Wrestlemania III feature bout, once again pitting Champion Hulk Hogan against Andre the Giant on Main Event, was seen by 33 million people, which is still the record for the most watched wrestling match in North America.



World Wrestling Federation - 1980s
World Wrestling Federation - 1990s
Hulk Hogan - Hulkster / Hollywood Hogan / Hulkamania
Andre the Giant - Eigth Wonder of the World

WWE

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