Impact (March 14th, 2024) – A Step Above The Rest

Part of me wished I had done this on 3:16 day, just so we can talk about something that isn’t WWE-related or even Stone Cold-related… oh well, maybe next year.

Then again, maybe next year, I’ll have more than these weekly Impact postings to see a “regular” occurrence. To tell you the truth, I’m still shocked that I’ve been keeping up with these shows for as long as I have. I figured the dumping of D’Amore would’ve lead to a drop in quality (or at least the return of that fucking owl logo), but thus far, the show has been somewhat pleasant, if not uneventful.

In any case, this is the post-Sacrifice edition of Impact, which means we can start building towards TNA’s other PPV offering for this year, Rebellion.

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Review #1043 – Hat Trick (Atari 7800) (TAKE 3)

A video review of Hat Trick for the Atari 7800… and as the title indicates, this is the third time this particular version is being reviewed. Why would anyone do this? That’s a good question and maybe some day, I’ll have a good answer for you, but until then, enjoy the video and let’s hope there isn’t an fourth take.

 

AEW Revolution 2024

Normally, I’d be holding this off until after the Ramblemania business is done, by after finally watching the show this weekend (via replay), I’d figure that we’d get this out of the way now and be done with it. For context, this is the first AEW show that I’ve seen since All Out 2023. While I’ve been keeping privy of what’s been happening on the programming, I’ve probably only watched a handful of episodes at MOST… and only bothered to post musings on ONE. (For those wondering, I may or may not post thoughts on tonight’s Dynamite show, dubbed BIG BU$INE$$ and eminating from Bo$$ton… maybe.)

That is then and this is… well, also then. But let’s get this one out of the way because I’ve got… far less to say than I thought I would.

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Ramblemania Rewind 19 – WWE Wrestlemania XIX (2003)

Date: March 30th, 2003
Venue: Safeco Field, Seattle, WA
Attendance: 54,097

(Note: This was the first Ramblemania post that I wrote after word broke of the McMahon lawsuit in January 2024. All the rest would follow afterwards.)

Wrestlemania XIX returns to America and baseball stadiums… which would’ve been the perfect time to bring back the Macho Man… or at least, have Sid show up and make an appearance or something… but yeah, this is a show that I don’t hear people talk about all that much outside of maybe one or two things; it would be the show where Steve Austin would have his last match (until 2022, of course) and also the botched BORK LAZOR shooting star spot… and yeah, this is not as top-tier stuff as Wrestlemania X-Seven… I don’t think anything came close to that, quite frankly. But XIX has its moments. And we’re going touch on these fast, fast.

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Ramblemania Rewind 18 – WWF Wrestlemania X-8 (2002)

Date: March 17th, 2002
Venue: Skydome, Toronto, ON
Attendance: 68,237

(Note: The following post was written prior to the McMahon lawsuit from January 2024).

The year was 2002. The year prior, the World Wrestling Federation had acquired all assets of World Championship Wrestling, along with the contracts of a handful of WCW talent. Although they got notable WCW stars such as Diamond Dallas Page and reigning WCW World champion Booker T, they didn’t get any of the really “big” stars who were under contract with Time Warner, such as Ric Flair, Scott Steiner, Goldberg… and guys like Hollywood Hulk Hogan and Kevin Nash.

Roughly a year after anyone would have cared, the original nWo (Hogan, Hall, and Nash) were brought in to spread poison throughout the WWF. Unlike in WCW, where the nWo damn near ran the company to the ground – both in storylines and in real life – the rogue organization was put down as quickly as the Brooklyn Brawler. Stone Cold Steve Austin scored a victory over Scott Hall in an undercard match (something that didn’t please Austin and would be one of many factors that would result from his brief hiatus from WWE in a couple months), while the Rock defeated Hollywood Hulk Hogan (and got booed in the process) in a match that saw Hogan booted from the nWo and turned full babyface. And the nWo itself wouldn’t last long either afterwards.

Wrestlemania X-8 eminated from Skydome in Toronto. It had Rock vs. Hogan in what was billed as an Icon vs. Icon match. Sadly, it’d be the only match on the card that was Wrestlemania-worthy and even that would eventually be repeated in a B-level PPV a year later. I will admit that going into this one, the show was largely a blank to me and I remember nothing about it. Even most PPVs have something that sticks to mind that isn’t the main event, but in the case of X8, I recall nothing. Not a good sign.

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Ramblemania Rewind 17 – WWF Wrestlemania X-Seven (2001)

Date: April 1st, 2001
Venue: Astrodome, Houston, TX
Attendance: 67,925

(Note: The following post was written prior to the McMahon lawsuit from January 2024).

For the first time since Wrestlemania VIII, Wrestlemania returns to a stadium setting – with the seventh iteration of the show being held at the Reliant Astrodome in Houston. If there was ever a sign that the WWF was doing hot business, this is pretty much the culmination. Their revenue was growing, their numbers were growing… it only made sense to go from the usual arena setting to a much larger venue.

And boy, did it pay off. The setting looked great, the crowd was monstrous and molten hot for the entire time that this show took place. And how did the WWF repay those 67,000+ fans for shattering a then-attendance record? With easily the best damned Wrestlemania card that there ever was… and I truly, TRULY believe that.

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Ramblemania Rewind 16 – WWF Wrestlemania 2000 (2000…duh)

Date: April 2nd, 2000
Venue: Arrowhead Pond, Anaheim, CA
Attendance: 19,776

(Note: The following post was written prior to the McMahon lawsuit from January 2024).

Despite early marketing referring to the show as Wrestlemania 2000 – hell, we got a couple video games using that name even – the show itself would simply be referred to as Wrestlemania. Not even Wrestlemania 16, but just Wrestlemania… because this is a reboot or something.

The WWF in 2000 was firing on all cylinders. A new influx of talent from WCW resulted in a group of workhorses that the company desperately needed, we had a new, dominant heel in Triple H as well as an insanely popular top star in THE ROCK to fill the void left by the absence of Stone Cold Steve Austin, and while numbers weren’t hitting the peak of the Attitude Era, money was being made hand over fist, thanks to a late-99 decision to turn the privately-owned WWF into a publicly traded company… which ended up being a very smart move in hindsight. With two excellent PPVs preceding this one, there was no doubt that Wrestlemania 2000/16/whatever would continue the hot streak.\

Spoiler Alert: It didn’t.

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I Couldn’t Tell You How To Grieve Because I’m Not Sure How Myself

Today marks a month since Sacha left us.

I still think of her everyday.

I still shed tears.

I still miss her.

I have never been good at grief. I have never been good at managing emotions. I have a bit of a temper. Not the temper you see around these parts because that’s mostly for show… but I do flare up over trivial things. And when it comes to the big emotional things… well, that’s the stuff that overwhelms me.

You want to say that you’re prepared for the day when a loved one passes. It’s an inevitability. But the truth is you’re never prepared. You’re never sure how you’re going to react until it happens and when it does finally happen, that’s when you realize that you’re not prepared. Especially if it’s someone who’s close. Especially if they’re a constant part of your life.

In the days since she left us, I’ve been looking online for ways to cope with my grief. Every day, I wrote a little something to express my pain. Some of what I wrote can be somewhat distressing… but what I can tell you is that what’s written on paper (or in this case, a online blog post) pales in comparison to the emotion behind those words. The feelings expressed in those posts undersell my actual emotional state at the time I wrote them.

I eventually got around to gather every video and photo that I had of Sacha on hand – scattered across multiple memory cards, hard drives, and my slowly falling apart Galaxy A5 – and I’ve been putting them together onto a single flash drive. Some of this stuff has graced this online space – whether it’d be videos made for the channel or the smattering of photos uploaded onto this blog… but a good chunk of this stuff hasn’t seen the light of day. Hell, a lot of this stuff I’ve seen for the first time in years, practically covering her entire lifespan.

Some of that stuff eventually became part of the Sacha tribute video that I put together and posted a couple weeks ago… but there’s a lot of stuff that’s still on the cutting room floor. It’s stuff that I would like to eventually share with everyone. It’s the only time that I’m more than willing to open up a part of my life… something that I’ve resistant to do in the past because I’m more of a private person.

I want to say that this gets easier over time… but it doesn’t. If anything, it becomes harder to bare.

Grief is a complex creature. It’s not something that is easily figured out. It’s not something that is easily resolved. It’s a process. And sometimes, that process can take a long time to get over. Hell, chances are it’s something you’ll never get over. That’s not a weakness or a failing. That’s a sign of how much that loved one meant to you, of how much they’ve had an affect on you. There’s no surefire way of handling grief, no one way to overcome that emotional burden. Everyone has their own way. Everyone has their own pace. Just because something works for one person doesn’t mean it works for you. It’s not a matter of “If I can do it, so can you” because nobody is wired the same way.

How each of us grieve is something that is unique to us. It’s not something that has a straightforward answer nor is it something that’s easy to figure out. Some folks find a way to grieve and eventually start to feel like their old selves. Others don’t quite make it over the hump, but will often hide it as to not upset anyone else. Some folks need a helping hand in getting over that hump while others could and probably would prefer to manage it themselves. There’s no singular right way to deal with grief and the only person who could truly figure this shit out is you.

However you get there… however long it takes… eventually, you’ll get there.

Remembering your loved ones, remembering all the good times you had, and keeping that memory alive… however you do that… that’s one way of showing how they affected you. Passing that love and care to others… that’s another. Or maybe that’s all the same thing.

Like I said, I’m not good at the grieving thing. Never was.

But I’m sure that sooner or later… I’ll get there.

However long it takes…