I was a teenager during the attitude era and it seemed like Stone Cold *was* the WWF. He seemed to pick up the entire company on his back (by extension the entire industry) and carry it to the forefront of pop culture. For anyone who wasn't around at the time it's hard to understate just how over Austin was.
@alexloyola67628 ай бұрын
I was 10 in 1998, but I was watching weekly, too. Though Austin was definitely the lightning rod, I think the work Bret, Sid, Austin, Taker, Foley, The Nation, DX and Vince were doing definitely helped compliment Austin’s ascension. It was a fun time to be a fan, especially having an engaged audience there to cheer rather than record everything on their phones.
@nonstickmeat8 ай бұрын
@@alexloyola6762 bro take Sid out lol
@donhill18258 ай бұрын
@@nonstickmeat Sid was great. Great look, good in the ring, decent promo. As long as it wasn't softball season...
@christophernear69908 ай бұрын
@@donhill1825lmao "Sid good in the ring" Delusional
@donhill18258 ай бұрын
@@christophernear6990 I'm guessing you're one of those people that thinks that all big men except for Undertaker suck if their work doesn't look like Shawn Michaels'. It's the same weird standard that Kevin Nash gets held to for some reason.
@mikem104818 ай бұрын
My Mother died in 95, unexpectedly. I needed someone to live my life through. Fast forward a year later and the early Austin promos in November 96, I completely was fascinating with the Austin character.
@anthonyclark94418 ай бұрын
I hope HBK gets a Video in this Series. I know he's not everyone's favorite, but he is legitimately one of the Greatest to do it, and this Series is so good, I really want to see one about him. Nobody else could have made what he made out of being a Male Stripper Character. Yes, for those who don't know, HBK was definitely a Male Stripper Character, and no one could have done with that, what he did with it. Just ask Marcus Alexander Bagwell, and Scotty Riggs.
@lorettaallen2368 ай бұрын
I am going through a messy divorce and your channel is my favorite... sometimes you gotta just unwind with some classic wrestling bios, thanks for getting me to a happy place every time i watch
@deancreambetweens6 ай бұрын
This channel has gotten me through my dad's passing a few months back. WB is the best
@BrandanTheBroker8 ай бұрын
There's a question looking back at his entire run as Stone Cold that keeps popping up: Was Stone Cold ever really a face, or just a heel that had some redeemable traits that resonated with us all? Yes, a rabbit hole question with possibly no end, but could be worth a deep dive.
@TheEman5908 ай бұрын
I think about that every so often. I remember when Roddy Piper asked Hogan, "Do you think they would've loved you so much if they didn't hat me?" And looking at Steve's opponents with the Heel anti American Hart Foundation, the Heat magnet Rock when he was in the Nation, the DX Shawn Michaels who was cool, funny and anti authoritiy but also, rude, obnoxious and arrogant, and Vince becoming the Mr. McMahon character slowly but surely after the 1997 Survivor series, I definitely believe it helped Austin grow in popularity as they wanted to see Austin wipe the floor with them. And as Bios here points out, the no nonsense attitude, anti authority blue collar type worked in his favor and, in my opinion, was the perfect catalyst or antithesis of Heel Bret, heel Rock, Heel Shawn and Heel Vince.
@CMDHistoria8 ай бұрын
Imagine if the “curtain call” doesn’t happen. HHH isn’t “punished” and SCSA doesn’t win KotR and doesn’t cut the 3:16 promo.
@porknbeanz8 ай бұрын
I've often wondered if Vince didn't budge on the Ringmaster gimmick, if Steve would have jumped back to ECW. Just a think piece but with his desire to wrestle and his burnt bridge with WCW he could have easily became the savior of ECW and even if he possibly jumped back to WWF afterwards it could have kept the ECW running a bit longer, if not saved the promotion for the long run
@miguelnewmexico86418 ай бұрын
@@bryanmack4054 well duh. that's simple physics. and the sky is blue.
@JordanJMyers8 ай бұрын
Glad I was a teenager during this amazing time. Stone Cold will always be my fav.
@JordanJMyers8 ай бұрын
@@joehigashi3584 lol hell yeah
@BOABModels8 ай бұрын
I got into WWF in 2000 when Austin was out injured - I knew of him as I played Smackdown! and of course he was mentioned on TV, but all of his rise was something from before. That's why I like these kind of videos - they show so much that I missed at the time.
@brandonperkins1768 ай бұрын
Stunning?! Tossed it out the window! Stone Cold Steve Austin, one HELL of a wrestler, and a legend
@tripleh3278 ай бұрын
The respect of stone cold for the hitman is well known And hart expressed multiple times that he regretted not having the possibility to do another dance with Austin on the ring Bret was the multitimes world champ And he made Austin look like a a true warrior Bret did one of his best works with Austin both with promos and in ring perfomance At a time where others where all about politicking and don t playing ball Bret did his absolute best to help elevating stone cold He gave him legitimate credibility as a tough unbreakable block of rock and made him enter like a meteorite the main event scene Both men deserve all the credit and applause for their rivalry and series of matches Truly one of the best rivalry in prowrestling
@DanXJ198 ай бұрын
I think HHH is himself too. Would anyone say The Cerebral Assassin was a character after he ditched the Connecticut Blueblood gimmick?
@Colonel_RamRod7 ай бұрын
Lmfao well all things considered especially how and who he married that Connecticut Blueblood gimmick may have been the real HHH
@ignatiusjackson2358 ай бұрын
Dude, I was expecting the glass to shatter at the very beginning! 😂
@TheBandit025Nova8 ай бұрын
HELL YEAH
@thegamingprozone19417 ай бұрын
Same 😂
@jenkinju6078 ай бұрын
The way Slaughter took that stunner has always been so epic to me
@criminalmindsgirl29368 ай бұрын
The poster boy for the Attitude Era!
@djlune7 ай бұрын
That kurt angle and Steve Austin cowboy hat segment took me out just because of the simple fact that Stone Cold was laughing when he saw the mini cowboy hat 😂😂😂😂
@elleni-418 ай бұрын
Im a 28 year wwe fan, since 1995,I've seen many documentaries on Austin..n ill be watching this one too...love ur channel..👍👌💙💙
@bhumibolrushing78308 ай бұрын
Its amazing what that little kick before the stunner does for the whole presentation of steve austins finishing move.
@rattlehead10038 ай бұрын
The opening is super spooky. Like Unsolved Mysteries.
@AFCManUk8 ай бұрын
I started watching WWE during the time Austin was out with that long neck injury, and The Rock and Triple H were the main Heel/Face wrestlers. Everyone was talking about 'Stone Cold' Steve Austin being the best, but I was like, 'Who?'' When he returned at Backlash 2000, I thought, "Hey, it's 'Stunning' Steve Austin from the old WCW, but without the hair!" Didn't take me long to realise why he was the GOAT :)
@AlphaProto8 ай бұрын
Stone Cold Steve was an awesome heel. His early Stone Cold promos were awesome (Black and White barking dog promo). They were so good that even though he was a heel he was getting a babyface pop. Also WWF was pretty family friendly back in the 1990s. So when he was dropping cuss words it really shocked people.
@That_Guy-8 ай бұрын
The unedited survivor series 96 promo is GOAT ED
@NoID420698 ай бұрын
Still when i hear that glass shatter I get butterflies. ICONIC
@JADIP-hl8yd8 ай бұрын
You should do a "what could have been" series with story lines that were ended too early. I think it'd be fun to speculate on what could have been. Like Pillman vs Stone cold. The story line would have been epic.
@Godeater132738 ай бұрын
Most wrestling journalists, historians, and Vince himself have consistently stated that nobody was a bigger box office attraction at their peak than Stone Cold Steve Austin. Nobody drew as many people to house shows than Austin. Nobody sold more merch than Austin, and no one was as big on PPV as Austin, the only guy who came close was Rocky who also got absolutely massive.Just go back and watch 1995 and 1996 and see how poor the WWF/WWE was doing, then once Austin starts heating up in 97 everything starts to change. By 1998 the WWF/WWE was making over 50 million in revenue, a complete turnaround. Me and my brother and his friends were obsessed with Austin and loved everything he did. It only started going sideways when he turned heel, and even then it was really difficult to dislike him.
@benchwarmerss91658 ай бұрын
lol idk man. That turn of heel kinda made me stop watch wrestling. Waited all that time,with that long as ramp to see that? Then he started yelling what like lil John? It was tooo much
@Godeater132738 ай бұрын
@@benchwarmerss9165 that's why I said it went side ways when he turned heel...
@benchwarmerss91658 ай бұрын
@@Godeater13273I was solely speaking to the difficulty of liking him. Once he turned that was it for some not just me. But I will say the people who did still like him most def out numbered those who didn’t
@Godeater132738 ай бұрын
Oh i agree. The heel turn just did not feel natural at all. Well it was okay at first because Austin did not really alter his character that much, he just got more vicious but as time went on he started hugging Vince and wearing cowboy hats and singing songs. It's funny now and I can appreciate it now but back then.......it was just too much unwanted change. @@benchwarmerss9165
@jamesabernethy78968 ай бұрын
I've seen bits and pieces of the evolution of Steve Austin, I really like this. I normally save Reiving the War as workout videos but try and watch these types on release.
@raggamuffinmcgee8 ай бұрын
Hahaha! They're my workout and run videos too but I had to click on this one outside of work hours. Was thinking I wasthe only one.
@stsolomon6188 ай бұрын
If you think wrestling bio is a great wrestling channel, then gimme a hell yeah!
@Caseycarlo8 ай бұрын
It's crazy to think about if he wasn't set back by injury the knees and then the neck how much longer and crazier his run would have been. the GOAT. I love his more athletic style sad injuries had to make the style that he was more known for
@mattk36548 ай бұрын
I always liked forward to seeing what Stonecold was gonna do on Monday nights even when he wasn't actually wrestling anymore. As long as he was gonna be there, I'd definitely tune in to see it.
@dustinlawson58828 ай бұрын
i grew up in the late 80s early 90s so if someone mentions wrestling my first 2 thoughts are hulk hogan and steve austin!
@gezeo7508 ай бұрын
It’s funny looking back at the early stages of Stone Cold and how unreasonably angry he was about EVERYTHING! Dude was SO intense! It’s like well God damn Steve calm down! 😂
@Mrryn8 ай бұрын
Stone Cold may seem like an odd choice for this but honestly, the more subtle and nuanced "non-gimmick gimmicks" like the Stone Cold character make for a very interesting deep dive to fit the pieces together. By that token, and fitting both due to Austin being the topic of this video and of current news, I think Mr. McMahon would be another great choice for this series down the line.
@0N3R1OfficialWSR8 ай бұрын
Stone Cold Steve Austin, & The Rock were the reason I started watching WWF, & since WCW wasn't really found anything exciting from 97 till WWF bought WCW out, I would watch Raw Is War & during commercial breaks I would flip the channel to Nitro.
@KINGMONKEY19898 ай бұрын
If you're going to create a wrestler then you just cant get any better than the Stone Cold character.
@jeromelancashire32788 ай бұрын
Not exactly who I had in mind when I asked for a superhero.
@TheBigTunaShow8 ай бұрын
the best wrestler ever..people watched stone cold whoop ass cuz it was a real ass whoopin'
@ZachlikesMetal8 ай бұрын
The best wrestler ever! dude was the baddest guy during the attitude era.
@DeeRickJames2013 ай бұрын
Every wrestling fan had a inner Stone Cold in them..He didn't even have to wrestle, just his presence got the people going
@ronnieahm8 ай бұрын
He's my all time fave wrestler, oh hell yeah!!
@NickJC10867 ай бұрын
Great video. Really brought back memories of watching Stone Cold on Raw (on Austar at the time) as a young 13 year old in 1999. Good times
@matthewschmidt22808 ай бұрын
Thank you for your channel. It brings back so many good memories.
@dannyolortegui37767 ай бұрын
This channel really needs to do a video on the Curtain Call Incident
@bjg86388 ай бұрын
As a teenager in the attitude era from Texas with an old man who hated his boss and drank beer like water, Steve Austin is 100% the real deal. Was lucky enough to see his match at Mania 38 in Cowboys Stadium, and I know it's a meme, but I really did feel like a kid again. The absolute best in my opinion, Austin 3:16 forever. That one episode of Raw where Vince, Gerry Briscoe and Pat Patterson went to Austin's hometown to provoke him into attacking Vince for some reason or another, that wasn't my hometown but it easily could have been lol
@MeVsMeYahtzee8 ай бұрын
Another great video. Love the Game changer explanation.
@MALITH6668 ай бұрын
Though I do love comedic Austin a lot. It added layers to show the man can switch back and fourth. And the comedy work between him and Kurt are just one of a kind.
@EAESPN8 ай бұрын
that thing about teenagers was correct, I was not necessarily against "the man" in school per-say but even before I watched anything with stone cold, I was always giving the middle finger and telling teachers what I thought when I knew/thought I was right (middle school) so when I started watching I was hooked because I did feel relatable to stone cold, I think in some ways I had a different attitude (no pun intended) about how I talked kinda mimicking him, and well sorry to all the teachers because I was not the old "3 16" at the time either
@Brochnick8 ай бұрын
Well done! If anything, you may have understated Stone Cold's cultural influence. I was in middle school in '96 & remember a teacher saying "Mr. Thaltz 3:16 says do your damn work!" Needless to say, we loved it!
@jamaalmoses88218 ай бұрын
Timing. Austin broke in during the last days of the territories..guys like Austin,HHH,Taker,and Foley were able to bridge eras..so Stone Cold knew the old school ways of getting over combined w new school attitude.
@dontbesuchamorty8 ай бұрын
Another Wrestling Bios Banger 🎉
@jesterr71336 ай бұрын
I was in the fourth row at St. Valentine's Day Massacre. Who would have thought that it would become one of the most famous events in pro wrestling history. I remember being a teenager going with my mother and stepfather, neither of whom were fans of pro wrestling, but sat through it because they wanted me to be happy. It was a night i will never forget.
@ratedmgamer98198 ай бұрын
Stone Cold Steve Austin is the very definition of what a Game Changer is. His career, while marred by his neck and knee issues, is the story book pro wrestling career. A career of trials and tribulations, triumphs and failures, and overcoming the odds. An absolute success story of someone who went from a nobody to an absolute icon of a generation.
@gochasingwaterfalls99707 ай бұрын
I was a big Stunning Steve fan from his WCW days I even rooted for him as the Ringmaster when he first entered the WWF but once he switched to Stone Cold you could see that was going to be his ticket to the main event. I do still love his Hollywood Blonde and Colonel Parker days though. Great character 100%
@kieransp20108 күн бұрын
The missus is away, I'm on a wrestling bios binge and having a few beers... This is my peace 😂
@omerta3167 ай бұрын
Went from Stunning Steve Austin to Steve Austin, stunning everyone
@OscarGonzalez-ix7dj8 ай бұрын
Stone Cold is my favorite all time wrestler he is the reason i started watching wrestling again n maaan was it worth it i started watching after wrestlemania 14 i remember my friends talking bout it
@Sushil-Shaun7 ай бұрын
Stone cold Steve Austin the Most Iconic Favourite Important star of WWE ever Every one Revolves Around him He is the Man of Business
@bigferd45348 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video! Nicely done and thank you for the trip down memory road. Stone Cold was the man in my neck of the woods.
@LitchAzazel8 ай бұрын
It's always so crazy to me to think of how short his run really was. He didn't become champion until after Wrestlemania in 98. In 1999 he wasn't wrestling a lot of matches on RAW and was even absent from some PVPs before being completely written off. He came back and was face for a brief moment before turning heel at Wrestlemania in 2001. Even though his heel wasn't that long, he only wrestled briefly until his retirement at wrestlemania in 2003. On paper that sounds like a lot of years, but when you actually watch all the RAWs, SmackDowns and PVPs, it really doesn't seem that way.
@KhansDen8 ай бұрын
Without a doubt, an absolute megastar. Badass? Sure. Everyone knows that. But he was so incredibly believable, in everything he did. He said what he thought, and he did what he said. He was "real". That is what I respect so much about him.
@CrybabyHorror5 ай бұрын
Please keep doing these! These are so fun to watch. As for suggestions: I think Abyss would be cool and the 3 faces of Foley Keep up the awesome work!
@jessscott25427 ай бұрын
Stone cold is the greatest character of all time. Growing up in the attitude era was legendary tv
@doctormasterdevil8 ай бұрын
These young punks will never know or get to experience anyghing like this. Every raw, every smackdown was ppv quality edge of your seat experiences.
@imal258 ай бұрын
WILL SEE YOU TOMORROW FOR RETRACING THE STEPS HAVE A GOOD NIGHT AND TAKE CARE.
@miguelnewmexico86418 ай бұрын
fuckin what?
@WrestlingandFilmReviews8 ай бұрын
Steve Austin in WCW did submission moves, Austin even fought young Scott Steiner in WCW. My top 3 submission wrestlers: 1. Bret Hart 2. Scott Steiner 3. Steve Austin
@miguelnewmexico86418 ай бұрын
no Shamrock? or even Dean Malenko, the man of 1000 holds?
@WrestlingandFilmReviews8 ай бұрын
Everybody has different list.@@miguelnewmexico8641
@Dr_12128 ай бұрын
Hell Yea 🍻
@RolfWrenWalsh8 ай бұрын
You all know that my entire life, and until the day I die I will forever, live, breathe, bleed, and defend WCW until my last breath. However, I have said this thousands of times. The Submission Match at WM13 is the single greatest, and most important match in the history of professional wrestling. The story told during the match, the double turn, the ending, etc. Everything about it is sheer absolute perfection, and it's what officially shot Austin to the Moon, and we are STILL feeling the effects of it to this day. It made wrestling cool again, no matter which company you watched. The merchandise sales (especially on the WWE side), the hundreds of pop culture crossovers, everything happened simply because of this one match. And that's just during the Monday Night War, nevermind all that came afterwards. I always say "WCW For Life" to anyone that will listen, but there is simply no denying the overall impact of that Submission Match at WM13. The WWE and Wrestling Industry as a whole would not be what they are today if not for this One. Single. Match. As much as I love and defend WCW, I truly believe the seeds of the beginning of the end of the company began at WM13. We just didn't know it at the time, as it was very subtle (in hindsight). WCW For Life.
@miguelnewmexico86418 ай бұрын
name 2 good things about WCW.
@karon7188 ай бұрын
I love these creating a wrestler videos it reminds me of the early days of the channel with the bios.
@matthewtaylor47498 ай бұрын
Stone Cold was the only reason I started watching wwf back in 2000.
@louclarkson60988 ай бұрын
Excellent job. An absolute juggernaut of a legacy and you did it justice.
@oilfan94458 ай бұрын
I wanna meet him in person. That'd be an item checked off my bucket list.
@kylemcgill29668 ай бұрын
The 🐐
@ryanmccarthy20332 ай бұрын
Im so greatful for this mans videos
@jbanks9798 ай бұрын
It does go to show just how much in getting a character over depends as much on timing, creative, and a performer who fully buys into what he’s supposed to be selling. The raw clay of stone cold was always there- it just took the genesis of the attitude era, finally finding a gimmick that complemented what he was good at, and the drive to kick the ass of everyone who ever doubted him.
@benchwarmerss91658 ай бұрын
I initially thought this is what wrestling bios would be lol. Came to this channel and it was something completely different which is great
@jonathanhighsmith92898 ай бұрын
Back when wrestling was good tv and casual fans could sit and watch
@JordanJMyers8 ай бұрын
Austin and McMahon are like Batman and the Joker. Just a perfect match that everyone couldn't get enough of.
@calvinlimgo6 ай бұрын
Rock and stone cold are one of a kind talent
@yuorbuddy8 ай бұрын
Top notch work.
@ignatiusjackson2358 ай бұрын
I'm thinking... if there was no Stone Cold, there would be no The Rock, because they would have probably kept the yoing Rocky Maivia babyface. Oouff.
@jmalb428 ай бұрын
I loved his heel turn.
@DJDoubleCee8 ай бұрын
I think Stone Cold could have had a longer wrestling career if it wasn’t for Owen Hart. May he rest in peace though.
@RebelliousEra8 ай бұрын
I think he would’ve had a longer career as Frost McFang
@WesleyWilkins-qf2ky8 ай бұрын
Yeah… he retired early because of the injury so it’s quite obvious.
@PunkRJH908 ай бұрын
Chono had a reasonably long career after Austin (ironically enough) did the same move to him. It didn't help that Austin immediately came back after the injury, instead of taking some time off.
@benjaminmee37518 ай бұрын
Probably but he had neck issues before the piledriver
@deadend10418 ай бұрын
@@benjaminmee3751 That's probably true I've heard that before. Still I think Owen Hart was not a very safe wrestler he hurt a number of people and he is not criticized because he died. He was more dynamic and exciting than Brett but he was also not as safe.
@ronin79978 ай бұрын
I would love to see a Rey Mysterio CAW retrospective, especially considering how he's never been a heel in his career.
@CheknoEternity8 ай бұрын
His name alone draws you in. Like really think about how cool his name is alone. Extremely creative and very well thought out. The name alone is lightning in a bottle. The sequences of him getting his name alone is like something you’d get out of a Tarantino movie.
@pleaseshutup70538 ай бұрын
Very true
@adamwebb811427 күн бұрын
These create a wrestler videos are sweeeet, are you gonna do Davy boy Smith and his rise as the master of chinlockery? 😂❤
@darksalvation39338 ай бұрын
Simply the GOAT.
@jackcarraway47077 ай бұрын
14:20 As a kid in the 90s, this shirt and the NWO shirt were the only times I went apeshit for clothes on Christmas.
@host24988 ай бұрын
8:13 I believe that the algorithm or all random name generators were initially based off of WWE's creative process
@guyverjay12897 ай бұрын
Stone Colds heel turn was great up until HHH tore his quad
@linozone248 ай бұрын
A creating a wrestler on the loose cannon would be interesting to watch
@brianlarsen99528 ай бұрын
Woooooooooooooo Really enjoy this series. Looking forward to more
@Colonel_RamRod7 ай бұрын
And as a 8 year old kid watching, I wanted to be Stone Cold when I grew up. I never followed through but he was just so over dude ❤ still my favorite next to Macho Man 5:10 oh Bischoff how wrong you were 😂💀
@TheAutistWhisperer8 ай бұрын
I also liked Stone Cold's heel turn.
@mechmoh14217 ай бұрын
How do you make a stone cold documentary without talking about the rivalry with the rock??? Like how do you leave that out??? This brings you from 9/10 to 6/10 documentary in my humble opinion.
@liveevil63868 ай бұрын
Steve got his wife and therefore gimmick name from Chris Adams, better than a 'duck 2 get it again'
@HawwkBigity8 ай бұрын
Great content brotha keeps it up🤙🤘
@BenedictNarwhal8 ай бұрын
Definite game changer....not sure about him ever being a technical genius but a legend nonetheless.
@michaelcooper49868 ай бұрын
Brett Hart could make any wrestler look like they won the freaking lottery
@SoloSeason8 ай бұрын
It’s crazy he was trained by the judo kick and never used it
@jamesprez72967 ай бұрын
THE GOAT..............BY A MIIIILE
@jim12428 ай бұрын
would love to see creating a wrestler on undertaker or mankind one day
@Weezing3367 ай бұрын
I think Michaels vs Austin at Mania is the best match of both men's career.