

From: shadowkt of pwcdiscuss@egroups.com
WCW to debut Wrestling Jesus character (January 11, 2000)
WCW is reportedly set to debut a very controversial
character based on an offhand comment Mark Madden made during an episode of WCW LIVE! The character will likely cause widespread controversy among religious groups, even more so than the Undertaker did for his crucifixion skits.
The character will be called Wrestling Jesus. Wrestling
Jesus will be played by Devon Storm once his run as Crowbar is finished. Sting
was considered to be Wrestling Jesus, but WCW management decided that Sting was too pious and self-righteous for the role. Storm has the beard and hair necessary to play Wrestling Jesus. He also has that subtly deranged look that Jesus would no doubt have if he were thrust into wrestling.
The debut of Wrestling Jesus will be accompanied by a gigantic marketing campaign. "What Would Wrestling Jesus
Do?" t-shirts and wristbands will be the first items available.
There seem to be no legal problems about
using the name Wrestling Jesus. In an
incredible development, organized religion
let the copyright for the name "Jesus"
lapse. The name "Jesus" is now the
property of WCW. "We will let organized
religion continue to use the name 'Jesus'
as long as it doesn't interfere with what
we do," said WCW's Vince Russo. "We
don't want to be perceived as
sacrilegious."
While WCW may own the rights to the
name "Jesus," it turns out that organized
religion inexplicably has a copyright on
the term "slapnuts." "Perfect," said
Russo. "That sets up Jeff Jarrett as the
first feud for Wrestling Jesus."
The one legal obstacle to the debut of Wrestling Jesus is a potential lawsuit by
the WWF, which is expected to claim that the Wrestling
Jesus character is based on the opinion Shawn Michaels has of himself as a performer. WWF owner Vince McMahon doesn't see the Wrestling Jesus character as a threat to WWF ratings dominance, since Vince will return to TV soon and everyone knows he's bigger than Jesus. "What a savior I would have made," McMahon
was heard muttering to himself while flexing and gazing
into a backstage mirror.
On WWF.com's Ross Report, Jim Ross said that Jesus "was technically still under contract to the WWF, but no legal action will be
taken because of our great respect for his phenomenal career. But it's pretty obvious that this is the
act of an evil billionaire once again stealing our
intellectual property."
The WWF will definitely sue, however, if WCW markets
"John 3:16" t-shirts as
expected. "Who's this 'John' fellow?" Ross said. "He
ain't no Steve Austin, I can
assure you of that."
Turner Broadcasting Standards and Practices will,
surprisingly, allow Wrestling
Jesus on TV. S&P may have been confused by a similar
character proposed by
WCW that was also called Wrestling Jesus but pronounced
Wrestling
Hay-soos. Wrestling Hay-soos would have been an illegal
alien working as a
gardener at Ted Turner's mansion who had an affair with
Jane Fonda. S&P
vetoed that character, but the smokescreen provided by
Wrestling Hay-soos
may have allowed Wrestling Jesus to sneak by S&P.
"I'm very disappointed that Wrestling Hay-soos was turned
down by Standards & Practices," said Russo. "Now we still have nothing to
do with Psychosis."
When asked whether Wrestling Jesus would be a babyface or
heel, Russo
said, "Well, I want to let the fans decide. But I think
having a character called
Wrestling Jesus certainly gives me a little more stroke
with the boys. I mean,
who's gonna refuse to job to Jesus? Besides Hulk Hogan, I
mean."
Wrestling Jesus will not debut until next Christmas.
"You gotta bring him in at Christmas, right?" Russo said.
"It only makes sense.
It gives us time to really put together a storyline. We
also have to look for some
props for Wrestling Jesus to use, like those trick loaves
and fishes, and we've
gotta teach Devon to walk on water, and turn water into
wine, and to raise guys
from the dead. That last one could really come in handy
if our ratings keep dropping."
The arrival of Wrestling Jesus will be foreshadowed by
a really bright, blinding spotlight that will shine above
the ring for several weeks preceding his debut. Having
one of the Nitro Girls play his mother was briefly
considered, but Russo decided that none of them
would be believable as a virgin. At first, Wrestling
Jesus will be accompanied to the ring by three wise
men bearing gifts of gold, frankincense and Nitro
cologne for men. Later, Wrestling Jesus will be
accompanied by The Disciple.
"We'd like to have 12 disciples, but it's just not
financially feasible," said Russo. "So we'll just stick
with the one we already have."
Other than that, booking plans for Wrestling Jesus are
still in the works. He is tentatively scheduled to lose a
Texas Death Match to
Ric Flair on an Easter Sunday PPV, with Flair finally
playing the Roman
Gladiator character proposed by former WCW president Jim
Herd a decade ago.
Wrestling Jesus will come back on the third day to
wrestle Hogan on Thunder.
Hogan will win clean with the legdrop. WCW is still
thinking about a finisher for
Wrestling Jesus. "The crucifix is too cliched, and the
Walls of Jericho is already
taken," said Russo. "We're thinking about having him use
the brain claw. We
could call it the Crown of Thorns, and we could have his
opponent juice like
crazy."
The next controversial characters you see on WCW TV may
be a gang of four
wrestlers in Teletubbies outfits, with Lenny Lane playing
Tinky-Winky. The big
worry with the Teletubbies gimmick, however, is that WWF
fans in the crowd at
Nitro may use souped-up channel-changers to switch the
TVs in the Teletubbies'
bellies to RAW.
The bulk of WCW's promotion will center on Wrestling
Jesus. "WCW needs
brand-name recognition, and who has more brand-name
recognition than
Jesus?" said Russo. "Besides Hogan, I mean."
WCW may create other characters based on religion. Dean
Malenko may
become Wrestling Jesus' tag-team partner, Wrestling
Moses, while Larry
Zbyszko may play the role of Wrestling Judas because he
did it so well the
first time around with Bruno Sammartino. If WCW feels the
need to involve
celebrities, perhaps Wrestling Jesus could take on
Buffalo Sabres winger
Miroslav Satan.
"We could always use Kevin Sullivan as the Devil," said
Russo. "It's his
real-life gimmick, and then maybe he would finally go
along with some of my
booking ideas and not bury me so much."
When asked if he was worried about the religious
implications of the Wrestling
Jesus character, Russo said, "Not really. It was Madden's
idea, and that fat idiot
is going to hell anyway."
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