Folly of a Titan

Folly of a Titan. Follows the events that may have transpired if Vince McMahon's supercard event called 'WrestleMania' was not as successful as it was in our timeline.

Landscape of Wrestling Before WrestleMania
The wrestling scene in North America was heavily riddled with territoy promotions governed by the organization called the National Wrestling Association or the NWA. Up until the 1980s the NWA held considerable power over the Wrestling scene in North America and even in some parts of Japan. It was not until Vincent K. McMahon Jr. bought his father's promotion WWWF, a company that led the wrestling scene in the New England area, from his father in 1982, renaming it to the World Wrestling Federation or WWF.

McMahon's plan to go national began with signing American Wrestling Association superstar Hulk Hogan and to play Hogan's nemesis McMahon Jr. signed North Carolina bad-boy Rowdy Roddy Piper and Jesse "The Body" Ventura. Promoters become furious when they heard McMahon Jr. began syndicating WWF television shows outisde the New England area, along with his deal with Coliseum Video distributing VHS tapes of WWF shows across North America. The move that broke the tense relations between the WWF and the NWA was when McMahon Jr. bought Georgia Championship Wrestling (GCW) in May of 1984, GCW wrestling time slot on Superstation TBS (now TBS) now played WWF shows where GCW's should have. It was not successful due to viewer protest and low ratings, TBS began airing wrestling shows from Ole Anderson's Championship Wresling from Georgia (CWG) and Bill Watt's Mid South Wrestling (MSW) which gained higher ratings than McMahon Jr.'s timeslot, McMahon later sold his time slot to rival promoter of Jim Prockett Promotion (JCP) owner Jim Crockett Jr.

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