OH NO! He's Back

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  • jmillhimes
    MVP
    • Dec 2007
    • 2365

    #1

    OH NO! He's Back

    This could be in the dirt thread but when I heard this, I freaked out thinking they have the two clowns that killed WCW back togetherFormer TNA, WCW and WWE writer Ed Ferrara (Jim ross impersonater) and Vince Russo are back together. Ferrara and Russo were blamed for the final demise of WCW. Ferrara was hired back last Thursday to join the creative team which now includes Russo, Ferrara, Borash, and Conway.
    Other Ferrara Highlights.....He admittedly had a very turbulent time at WCW. He began his stint with Russo there in October of 1999, and they placed themselves upon the onscreen product of WCW. They migrated their style of writing from the WWF, but the result was a television product most viewers deemed cluttered and poor. Matches were shorter in length, speaking segments both inside and outside the ring were more prominent and a far greater emphasis was made in pushing midcard wrestlers to the point that everyone on the card had a gimmick and/or storyline. Successful products of their initial tenure at WCW included Screamin' Norman Smiley, 3 Count, the re-invention of The Outsiders, The Mamalukes, 'Psycho' David Flair, The Revolution, The Filthy Animals, Chris Benoit's Main Event push, among others. However there were some storylines which did not necessarily go over with fans the way they wished including the infamous Buzzkill, The Maestro, Buff Bagwell, Oklahoma and Madusa winning the Cruiserweight title. Their initial stint was epitomized by the reintroduction of the NWO after months of storylines which ultimately saw Bret Hart win the world title at the expense of his arch nemesis Goldberg. However, both Bret Hart and Goldberg got injured a few days prior to a major WCW pay-per-view. This, along with the decision to put the title on Tank Abbott, cost both Vince Russo and Ed Ferrara their creative independence and led to the hierarchy at WCW to form a booking committee which consisted of former bookers including Kevin Sullivan, Kevin Nash, JJ Dillon and Bob Mould. This would also mark the beginning of the end for the friendship between Vince Russo and Ed Ferrara who both took opposing positions. Vince Russo refused to work in the booking committee as he felt he was jobbed out by the backstage politics of the company whilst Ed Ferrara decided he would stay on as he had just relocated his entire family to Atlanta and so felt compelled to continue his work as a writer. This would be the last time Vince Russo and Ed Ferrara would willingly work with one another in a wrestling environment. The success of the booking committee was limited at best. Ratings had plummeted and WCW was in a state of disrepair. The new committee also led to the mass exodus of the most promising mid-card wrestlers in the company. Now known as the Radicalz, Benoit, Malenko, Guerrero and Saturn all walked out of WCW as Kevin Sullivan stated he had no plans to use them on subsequent programming. It was rumored that 17 wrestlers had asked for their release that night but only 5 of them got their successful release (this included Shane Douglas but he would return in April of that year). Within 2 months the booking committee was disbanded and in a desperate attempt to salvage their ailing product WCW hired back the 2 men who they thought could help their product, Vince Russo and Eric Bischoff. This led to Ed Ferrara getting demoted to a road agent position which he later said in an interview "was the best demotion I ever had". In 1999 in WCW, he took the onscreen name of Oklahoma and began copying WWF announcer Jim Ross, and also mimicking his Bell's Palsy. He had previously did an impersonation of Ross in the WWF during an angle with Tiger Ali Singh where he was called from the audience as a fan and did his Ross impression. Jim Cornette would later spit in his face and challenge him to a fight for making fun of his long time friend, Jim Ross. He defeated Madusa for the Cruiserweight Title. The character was considered by most as distasteful and nothing more than a means for Russo and Ferrara to put their own grievances on the air. Ross has since reconciled with Ferrera following an open letter to him. He did voiceovers that played over the intercom when non-English speaking La Parka was doing interviews, often getting La Parka in trouble with his opponents with the comments he created over the intercom. A character on Desperate Housewives was named after him, as a former writing colleague of his worked on the show.
    Last edited by jmillhimes; 09-21-2009, 03:47 PM.
    atleast..Its not Delaware
  • FuzzySlippers
    Banned
    • Aug 2009
    • 171

    #2
    Re: OH NO! He's Back

    you know,after watching these two book WCW into oblivion,it's hard for me to believe someone would actually give them another job.

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