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XL
03-16-2006, 03:58 PM
So who wants to write me a COMPLETE history of the nWo?

I stopped watching wrestling between 95 and 98 so missed the nWo thing on the whole.

Now obviously I know the origins with Hall, Nash and Hogan, what I'd like is a rundown of who joined, when and why? Did anyone leave/get thrown out? Why was this? What were the splits? Why did they happen?

If someone(s) can do a full history or link me up to one I would be most thankful.

The One
03-16-2006, 04:04 PM
http://www.100megsfree4.com/wiawrestling/graphics/nwologo.jpg

The History of the New World Order (nWo)

Story:

History of the nWo: Scott Hall appears on Nitro promising a "takeover". The next week, Kevin Nash appears and promises the same thing. They attack people for the next month or so (most notably powerbombing Eric Bischoff through a table) until challenged by Sting, Lex Luger, and Randy Savage to a six-man tag at Bash at the Beach. Nash and Hall - at this point only "The Outsiders" - accept, and say their third man will be revealed later.

Hall and Nash are victorious when their third man is revealed to be Hulk Hogan, who over time adopts the new persona of "Hollywood" Hogan. The newly-christened New World Order begins attacking WCW wrestlers viciously. The first new members to arrive are Ted DiBiase (acting as a manager and "money man") and Vincent (acting as "head of security"). At Road Wild, Hollywood Hogan defeats the Giant by cheating outrageously to win the WCW World title. Strangely, the Giant joins the nWo two weeks later, citing the money as his primary reason. Also at Road Wild, the Booty Man tries to join, but is beaten up.

The next member of the nWo appears when they debut a "Fake Sting" at Wargames, who wrestles ittermitently over the next few months until the original Fake Sting, now called "nWo Sting", goes to compete in Japan as part of their version of the nWo. The Nasty Boys try to join the nWo as well, but are beaten up for their trouble. Although he is in fact the seventh member, Sean Waltman joins in November as Syxx.

The nWo announces a "membership drive", giving "all WCW wrestlers" the chance to join the nWo. In order, the wrestlers accepting this offer are Marcus Bagwell (soon redubbed "Buff"), Michael Wallstreet, Big Bubba, and Scott Norton. Also, Eric Bischoff is revealed as being an nWo member around this time, and Masa Chono and the Great Muta, visiting from New Japan Pro Wrestling, join the North American nWo (although they have little effect). At the same time, Giant is kicked out for demanding a title shot from Hulk Hogan.

Randy Savage joins the nWo at SuperBrawl. Newly appointed WCW Commissioner J.J. Dillon says that according to their contracts, Big Bubba and Michael Wallstreet cannot be members of the nWo. Amidst great hype, Dennis Rodman "joins" the nWo, despite wrestling only one match that year as a celebrity guest at Bash at the Beach. Konnan joins the nWo in August. Ted DiBiase quits the nWo and becomes a manager for the Steiner brothers.

Curt Hennig joins the nWo after turning on the Four Horsemen at WarGames. Rick Rude joins in December. Bret Hart is invited to join the nWo, but declines. The Disciple joins sometime in January, although he is not named until March. Dusty Rhodes joins at Souled Out after turning on Larry Zybysko. Bryan Adams joins in January after turning on Bret Hart. Scott Steiner joins in February after turning on his brother Rick. During most of January, Louie Spicolli acts as a flunky to Scott Hall and wears an nWo t-shirt, although he is never "officially" inducted into the nWo before his death. Syxx disappears when Sean Waltman is fired by WCW.

Randy Savage and Kevin Nash, having issues with Hollywood Hogan, form the nWo "splinter faction": nWo Wolfpac. Curt Hennig and Konnan immediately join, as do longtime nWo foes Lex Luger and Sting; they immediately distinguish themselves from the "traditional" nWo (now known as nWo Hollywood or nWo Black-And-White) by wearing black-and-red T-shirts rather than black-and-white. Scott Hall is invited to join the Wolfpac, but refuses. Giant rejoins nWo Hollywood.

Curt Hennig quits the nWo Wolfpac to rejoin nWo Hollywood. Randy Savage is injured and disappears from the Wolfpac. Dennis Rodman once again is trumpeted as a member of the nWo for a celebrity match at Bash At The Beach. Stevie Ray joins nWo Hollywood in September. The Disciple quits nWo Hollywood in October to join the "One Warrior Nation". Horace Hogan joins nWo Hollywood at Halloween Havoc. Bret Hart seemingly joins, quits, and rejoins nWo Hollywood several times during this period, and never wears an nWo shirt or explicitly states his membership in the nWo.

Hollywood Hogan announces his "retirement", and Scott Steiner becomes the leader of nWo Hollywood. Scott Hall is kicked out of nWo Hollywood in November, but despite his efforts is not allowed to join nWo Wolfpac. Disco Inferno starts claiming he is a member of the Wolfpac.

Hollywood Hogan comes out of "retirement" to "beat" Kevin Nash in a thrown match for the WCW World title and reform the nWo as one single entity. The Wolfpac is now an "elite rank" of the nWo: its members are Hollywood Hogan, Kevin Nash, Scott Hall, Lex Luger, Buff Bagwell, and Scott Steiner. The remainder of the nWo (Giant, Curt Hennig, Vincent, Stevie Ray, Bryan Adams, Scott Norton, and Horace Hogan) continues wearing the black-and-white, while the Wolfpac wears black, white, and red. The Wolfpac also seems to be conducting a gradual elimination of the black-and-white (also referred to as "the nWo B-Team"); at this writing, both the Giant and Curt Hennig have received turfing-out beatdowns, with more likely to come. Konnan has been explicitly kicked out of the nWo entire. Sting's status is unknown. Bret Hart's nWo membership is entirely forgotten.

With Scott Hall in retirement, Hulk Hogan back in semi-retirement, and Bagwell turfed from the group, the only members left are Lex Luger, Kevin Nash and Scott Steiner, and possibly Disco Inferno. Steiner and Nash rarely do anything nWo-related (besides use the Wolfpac music). The nWo black-and-white is whittled down to Vincent, Horace Hogan, Stevie Ray and Bryan Adams, with Scott Norton doing his own thing without the nWo name. Soon after, Horace Hogan is fired, Bryan Adams is repackaged, Stevie Ray leaves to reform Harlem Heat, and Vincent joins the West Texas Rednecks, thus finally ending the group’s legacy once and for all.

The concept was originally started by Scott Hall, who "invaded" WCW on the first two-hour Nitro in May of 1996 (see "Monday Night Wars") and declared that they were taking over, although he didn't note who "they" were. The implication was that is was a WWF takeover, which led to a later lawsuit and was publicly denied by Hall at the "Great American Bash" PPV in 1996. Kevin Nash joined him two weeks after he debuted, and the two of them promised a third man at the "Bash at the Beach" PPV in July. The third man was Hulk Hogan, who coined the phrase "New World Order" during his heel turn interview, although in a nebulous and roundabout way. Commentators Bobby Heenan and Larry Zbyzsko later officially named them the nWo, building on Hogan's speech, and the rest is history.

Off-and-on booker Paul Orndorff was really credited with the creation of the "invasion" angle, and Nitro booker Terry Taylor is credited with coming up with the details (the t-shirt selling, the black and white, the attitude). Hulk Hogan was given much leeway in his own angles (as usual) and improvised a great deal of the mannerisms and catchphrases (as did Hall and Nash). And it should be noted that Eric Bischoff had almost NOTHING to do with the nWo's creation, although he often takes credit for it regardless by stating that it was based on where else.

CREDIT: Wrestling Information Archive - http://www.100megsfree4.com/wiawrestling/pages/wcw/nwohist.htm

Basically left out everything of the recreated nWo from around 2000. But that was boring and useless...so there you go.

Xero
03-16-2006, 04:09 PM
Short version: Hall, Nash, and Hogan recruited 3/4 of the WCW roster so they could suck Hogan's monster dick, which was actually a metaphor for his ego.

XL
03-16-2006, 05:28 PM
Thankyou for that!

I'm feeling a little dizzy after that but does anyone wanna fill me in on the 2000 reunion? or the nWo Japan? or the lWo? Have I left any out?

Y3J
03-16-2006, 06:21 PM
Well let me see, we have the...

AWO
BWO
CWO
DWO
EWO
FWO
GWO
HWO
IWO
JWO
KWO
LWO
MWO
NWO
OWO
PWO
QWO
RWO
SWO
TWO
UWO
VWO
WWO
XWO
YWO
ZWO.

The One
03-16-2006, 07:49 PM
Thankyou for that!

I'm feeling a little dizzy after that but does anyone wanna fill me in on the 2000 reunion? or the nWo Japan? or the lWo? Have I left any out?

2000 = Bret Hart (World Champ), Jeff Jarrett (US Champ), and The Outsiders (Tag Champs)...it was short lived and didn't do shit for impact...Scott Steiner and the Harris Bros joined...it was shit

nWo Japan = Masa Chono, Keiji Muto, Mr Wallstreet, Big Titan, nWo Sting, Hiro Saito, Ohara, Hiroshi Tenzan, Scott Norton, Brian Adams. They did shows over in Japan and carried the nWo banner with them. It was WCW's attempt to gain a strong foot hold in Japan, and it worked...kind of.

lWo = Eddy Guerrero and all the latin guys in WCW said they wern't getting a fair shake. Basically everyone was in lWo, but it was more or less a revolving door membership. They formed the lWo, and it was entertaining for a bit, but much like the nWo it got old...so it disbanded over time. Nobody seemed to mind too much.

LIC098
03-16-2006, 08:10 PM
So who wants to write me a COMPLETE history of the nWo?

I stopped watching wrestling between 95 and 98 so missed the nWo thing on the whole.

Now obviously I know the origins with Hall, Nash and Hogan, what I'd like is a rundown of who joined, when and why? Did anyone leave/get thrown out? Why was this? What were the splits? Why did they happen?

If someone(s) can do a full history or link me up to one I would be most thankful.
The nWo was the best thing that happened to WCW the WWE should bring it back again but ran the group as a 7 person stable no leader just out to get all the gold & run the show

Skippord
03-16-2006, 08:58 PM
No no they shouldnt

Y3J
03-16-2006, 09:09 PM
The Cruiserweights.