
...skipped his girlfriend's birthday in 2005 in favor of attending ECW One Night Stand?
He bought her home a t-shirt as an apology, which she declined, and it was the last time they spoke.
I can see where you're coming from, but IMO it's this involvement that made the show timeless. You don't need to know 20 years of wrestling history to put that show on and know what ECW was and what made the show extra special. Half of the appeal of the brand was they were anti-establishment. ECW was always about "Us vs Them", the cult following that went with it, and without all the Raw/SD stuff a new viewer might not "get it". I thought they did a nice job of putting that vibe out there for a night.Big Red Machine wrote: ↑Nov 25th, '18, 10:50 Yeah, it's a pretty forgotten excellent show. The only thing that drags it down is the time wasted on the forced Raw/SD heel involvement eating up time during the show
Maybe. In the era that I first saw One Night Stand, it was impossible to conceive that anyone had possibly watched the show without first seeing at least Rise and Fall of ECW, if not also Forever Hardcore. And also impossible to conceive that someone had seen either of those documentaries and not immediately tried to find as much ECW stuff as they could on YouTube and Daily Motion.Bob-O wrote: ↑Nov 25th, '18, 14:14I can see where you're coming from, but IMO it's this involvement that made the show timeless. You don't need to know 20 years of wrestling history to put that show on and know what ECW was and what made the show extra special. Half of the appeal of the brand was they were anti-establishment. ECW was always about "Us vs Them", the cult following that went with it, and without all the Raw/SD stuff a new viewer might not "get it". I thought they did a nice job of putting that vibe out there for a night.Big Red Machine wrote: ↑Nov 25th, '18, 10:50 Yeah, it's a pretty forgotten excellent show. The only thing that drags it down is the time wasted on the forced Raw/SD heel involvement eating up time during the show
lol I don't think I've seen either one (~maybe~ Forever Hardcore... I feel like that's one that I say I haven't seen, but if I went to watch it I'd realize I had), but I was really into ECW in '97 and '98. I think to this day I've still been to more ECW shows than any other promotion. I like the way I remember it, and the 'Rise And Fall' documentaries always make me sad.Big Red Machine wrote: ↑Nov 25th, '18, 14:47 it was impossible to conceive that anyone had possibly watched the show without first seeing at least Rise and Fall of ECW, if not also Forever Hardcore.
Ok, so, how validated am I here? Do you think the Bischoff/JBL stuff set a good tone for what we were celebrating, or did you feel it was unnecessary?
back then I was still living in Mexico, so i couldn't get my hands on the R&F of ECW or Forever Hardcore so easily, but the PPVs I could get via satellite, so I indeed watched the ONS before all the docs. I had watched a lot of ECW through pirated tapes or KazaaBig Red Machine wrote: ↑Nov 25th, '18, 14:47
Maybe. In the era that I first saw One Night Stand, it was impossible to conceive that anyone had possibly watched the show without first seeing at least Rise and Fall of ECW, if not also Forever Hardcore. And also impossible to conceive that someone had seen either of those documentaries and not immediately tried to find as much ECW stuff as they could on YouTube and Daily Motion.
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