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by Tom
the Actuary
I was getting ready to go to lunch early this last Friday at my real job
about 10 minutes before eleven. A co-worker and I were going to go and try and
grab a steak early before the rush got there. Except that, suddenly, it was 12:30, and I was waking up in the emergency
room of a local hospital. I had a grand mal seizure, and as it had been about
eighteen months since my last time, I had no inkling I would ever have another
one. I got home about 2:30 in the afternoon and have slept most of the time since
then (it's Sunday evening as I write this). Still, now adequately medicated and
back to full strength (more-or-less) I thought I would visit the subject of
surprises and swerves in professional wrestling. = = = = = The story goes that when Bob Backlund was WWF champion almost continuously
for six years, Vince McMahon swerved the title off of him by having his manager
(Arnold Skaaland) throw in the towel while he (Backlund) was in the Iron Sheik's
camel clutch. If it was a swerve, it was a well-engineered one, as they set up and harped
on Backlund's back injury before and during the match. It also established that
hold as a particularly fearsome one, so when Hulk Hogan broke it, it helped put
him that much more over the top. I personally always felt that match was completely a work, and that Backlund,
unwilling to take a heel gimmick (at that time) or a demotion to the mid-card,
quit rather than stay around, but not before doing the job in a way that
satisfied long time fans - he didn't give up. The most famous pairs of swerves in more modern wrestling history happened to
Bret Hart and Hulk Hogan himself. Both of these guys learned that you can have
"creative control" all you want; it's the booker that calls the shots.
Whether he is someone as savvy as Vince McMahon was in taking advantage of bad
PR coming out of Montreal, or someone as insane as Vince Russo was, the booker
calls the shots, and creative control be damned. Some surprises have only been such in retrospect. When the wrestler who now
wrestles as X-Pac won his first raw match, it seemed to be a stunning upset: he
seemed to be a typical curtain jerker, the kind who got squashed regularly on
WWF shows of the day. Similarly, later, when Barry Horowitz, the
all-time-jobber-to-the-stars, actually won a few matches. The bookers broke out
of such regularly established booking patterns that the viewers were genuinely
swerved. Some swerves aren't so effective, however. Mabel winning the King of the Ring
tournament was one. I was one of the few who enjoyed that show - as I recall -
but overall, this was seen as a disastrous booking choice. Still, no one can say
Vince didn't cross us all up with that one. The WWF used to use "expect the unexpected" as a slogan. However,
as we saw in Vince Russo's ill-fated WCW run, for this to work, you have to
establish an "expected", something his febrile mind was never able to
do. The WWF's the most effective surprise was the one that upset their most
established conventions: the Ultimate Warrior beating Hulk Hogan. You see, Hogan always won in those days, and he always won the exact same
way. To lose when in the middle of his inevitable winning combination of moves
was a shock of the highest order. It was kind of like watching the end of the
seventh game of the NBA finals when Michael Jordan was playing, and having him
miss the potential game-winning shot - - it never happened. Wrestling is like any other type of storytelling in that the best surprises
have to be planned way in advance. There may be several being cooked up right
now that we will all talk about in the future. In the meantime… I think I'll go lay back down. | |||
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