Into the Apter Mags
Sincerely Yours
A lot of magazines -wrestling or otherwise- would start off readers' letters, and Inside Wrestling was no different.
Reporter's Notebook
Names Makin' the News
- Diamond Dallas Page insisting that he and Karl Malone were at least partly responsible for Goldberg beating Hulk Hogan for the title and thus believing himself to be deserving of a title shot.
- Jerry 'The King' Lawler feuding with Giant Silva of all people in Memphis and also staring in Man on the Moon.
- Sunny getting a viral infection in Mexico (I bet she did) and thus not being on TV with LOD 2,000
- Tully Blanchard coming out of retirement to feud with Buddy Landel on the indies (and later to compete at the awful Heroes of Wrestling 1999 PPV)
- Scott Steiner telling Apter that he regretted not getting into movies but insisting that we'd see him on a movie screen near us in the future. Seriously, could you imagine that?
On The Road With Dave Lenker
"They called me one day a few weeks before Wrestlemania XIV," Ellering started, "and Hawk says 'we're thinking of taking Sunny as our manager.' I said 'who?' and Animal says "You know, Sunny. One of the smartest young minds in this business. She knows what she's doing."
Behind the Dressing Room Door
"Truth: As of press time, I had not been able to find a single woman who would admit to having ever dated Bearer. In fact, the general reaction when I asked 'Have you ever dated Paul Bearer?' was 'Do I look that desperate'?"
"Some of them looked pretty desperate, but obviously not desperate enough to have dated Bearer. Or, perhish the thought, to have kissed him."But Undertaker's mother? A woman who owned a funeral parlor? Seducing the hired help? I can believe that. Let's face it, funeral parlor workers are not reputed to among the best looking women in the world."
Something about that really tickles me. It really never occurred to me that women who work in funeral parlors might have a reputation for being ugly, and I'm really sure that's not the case!
Still, this was fun.
Get yours now, wrestling fans!
The Insider, by Brandi Mankiewicz
This time...it was personal!
On Assignment, by Liz Hunter
"In each issue, eight of wrestling's biggest stars are thoroughly evaluated. For each wrestler, you get an in-depth analysis covering 20 different categories, including offense, defense, experience, conditioning, stamina, power, ability to absorb punishment and much, much more."
I don't know about you, but I'd buy that.
Inside Wrestling Profile - Sable
Where Are They Now?
News From the Wrestling Capitals
Matt Brock's Plain Speaking
Harder than nails, veteran wrestlign reporter Matt Brock has logged more miles covering wrestling than any other jouranlist. Every month, Matt will travel to the sport's hotbeds, reporting on everything he sees without fear or favor.
So more stuff from the road, basically.
Obviously, Lawler was having none of it and refused to be usurped.
In Cleveland, Steve Austin regained his title from Kane after losing it to him at King of The Ring 1998, while Elmhurst, New York played host to an ECW card that Brock didn't like too much because it was too violent and didn't seem to have much going on that interested him.
Finally, Atlanta was, of course, the home of WCW, and it was here were Brock saw Goldberg "fight like a man" to beat Hulk Hogan for the WCW title. Seriously, this piece really wants us to know just how manly Big Bill is.
HHH vs. Shawn! The Inevitable War Nobody Wants to Talk About
As sure as the sun will rise tomorrow, you can be sure of this fact: If shawn Michaels returns to the WWF, Hunter Hearst Helmsley will be his first target.
Yes, this was a piece written after Michaels had dropped the title to Austin at Wrestlemania 14, leaving Triple H to pick up the slack as the new leader of D-Generation-X.
As you've probably gathered, this report by Dan Murphy looks at how HBK wouldn't have taken kindly to the Hs suggesting that he'd "dropped the ball," and would no doubt go after his one time friend as soon as he returned to action.
Sure enough, four years after this magazine was published, Shawn did return to action and, yes, his first opponent really was Triple H.
You have to imagine that, on that night somewhere in America, Dan Murphy was sat there beaming "I told you so."
Bret Hart's Startling Revelation: "Hollywood Hogan's Obsessions Will Be His Downfall"
Expert Analysis: Austin vs. Goldberg! Who Would Win - And Why?
Is Stevie Ray Trying to Sabotage Booker T's Career?
Hotseat: Dude Love - "Vinnie Mac Ruined the WWF!
As such, we got a great, back-and-forth Q&A with plenty of gems like:
Q: Wait! I thought I scheduled Mankind for an interview! What's this?A: (Mick Foley, adorned in his typical "Dude Love" attire, pulls up a chair) Hey, don't look so glum, chum "His royal Dudeness" is ready to create some malice in the palace!
and...
Q: Are you still angry at Vince McMahon for firing you?
A: Sure, I might be a hippy-dippy, FM-type longhair, but I've got feelings, too. I really thought Vince was my Mc-main-ma, you know what I'm saying? Over the Edge was the place were dreams were supposed to come true....Yeah, Steve Austin beat me, I was too busy thinking about the chicks by my dressing room, that Three Dog Night eight-track I just bought, and those fancy finger sandwiches I had at The McMahon's pad the day before.
To sum up:
Yes, Dude Love was pissed at McMahon for firing him.
No, he couldn't comment on Mankind now teaming with Kane and Paul Bearer in a feud against Austin and Undertaker because he wasn't Mankind.
And yes, he thought "The Big Mc-Mac" (brilliant) was showing signs of early Alzheimers and might possibly destroy the very foundation of the World Wrestling Federation.
How can you not love things like this?
Junkyard Dog: A Tribute to a Unique Breed
One on One: Sting vs. The Giant
Find Out How to Get into Pro Wrestling!
Back Issues of Inside Wrestling
We Sent Hulk Hogan to Cover Bockwinkel vs. Wahoo....AND ALL HELL BROKE LOOSE!
Official Rankings and Roll-Call of Champions
These ratings are compiled by the editors with the assistance of promoters, wrestlers, and reporters around the country, and are based on won-lost records for the past month, quality of opposition, and the inherent skill of each wrestler.
The most interesting thing about this is that the magazine still refers to The Rock as Rocky Maivia despite him not using that name for the better part of a year.
Anyway, this is pretty much what you'd expect it to be:
Austin and Goldberg were number one in their respective companies. Rock and Sting were number two and so on.
In the Top 15 Tag Teams, Kane and Mankind were the top-ranked tag team by virtue of being the WWF tag champions and having more experience as a team than Nash and Sting.
And, finally...
Blast From The Past: This Month In Wrestling History - Paul Ellering vs. Jerry Lawler, November 1981
Other 1998 reviews:
- WWF - Royal Rumble 1998
- WCW - Souled Out 1998
- WWF - In Your House 20: No Way Out of Texas
- WCW - Superbrawl 1998
- WCW - Uncensored 1998
- WWF - Wrestlemania 14
- WCW Spring Stampede 1998
- WWF - In Your House 21: Unforgiven
- WCW Slamboree 1998
- WWF - In Your House 22: Over The Edge
- WCW Great American Bash 1998
- WWF - King of the Ring 1998
- WCW - Bash at the Beach 1998
- WWF - In Your House 23: Fully Loaded
- WCW - Road Wild 1998
- WWF - Summerslam 1998
- WCW - Fall Brawl 1998
- WWF - In Your House 24: Breakdown
- WWF - In Your House 25: Judgement Day
- WCW - Halloween Havoc 1998
- WWF - Survivor Series 1998
- WWF - Capital Carnage 1998
- WCW - World War 3 1998
- WWF - In Your House 26: Rock Bottom
- WWF Raw Magazine - March/April 1997
- WWF Magazine - January 1998
- WWF Raw Magazine - January 1998
- WWF Raw Magazine - April 1998
2 Comments
You should do more of these magazine reviews.
ReplyDeleteThank you :) They take a while to do but planning a few more eventually.
ReplyDelete