First Monday Night Raw with KB

klunderbunker

Welcome to My (And Not Sly's) House
First Monday Night Raw
Date: January 11, 1993
Location: Manhattan Center, Manhattan, New York
Commentators: Vince McMahon, Rob Bartlett, Randy Savage

Well since it’s the anniversary of this, why not do it? Raw more or less ended SNME which I’ll do that last original episode soon enough, as in about an hour from now. This is the show that completely revolutionized wrestling as it was the first show to be aired weekly on prime time cable. The production values were WAY up also as the lighting and the effects were stuff that was unheard of. We’re gearing up for the 93 Rumble which kind of sucked but whatever. Let’s get to it.

Sean Mooney who I didn’t think had a job at this point welcomes us to the show and keeps Heenan from coming in. This would become a running joke on the first few shows until Monsoon threw him out of the company. The arena looks small but cool. Rob Bartlett was a comedian from the Don Imus show and he is easily the worst announcer of all time but to be fair, I’ve read some comments from him since and he completely admits that he was awful, so at least he’s not delusional.

Koko B. Ware vs. Yokozuna

Koko comes out to what would become Owen’s music which makes sense as they were partners around this time. I wonder what’s going to happen here. They say ass on the air which might be a first. The tag line was uncooked, uncut and uncensored. I never got the uncooked part. How is that appealing? Bartlett just makes fat jokes about Yoko which makes sense. Vince is about as excited as humanly possible to be here. Bartlett makes jokes implying that Koko is Gary Coleman which is kind of funny but just out of place here. After Koko gets in no offense for about 4 minutes, the Banzai Drop ends this.

Rating: N/A. It was a glorified squash which is fine. I’m not sure how good this was for the first match in history but that’s fine I guess. This was just to push Yoko so that certainly accomplished its job. A lot of the earlier shows were almost all squashes so get used to it.

Ad for the Rumble.

We get a prerecorded interview from Heenan who talks about Perfect being scared of Narcissus, who was more commonly known as Luger. Heenan is WAY too excited about Luger.

Steiner Brothers vs. Executioners

The Executioners are masked jobbers as if it matters. That goofy clown as Vince calls him is at ringside and gets too much attention. Apparently his name is Doink. As for the match, are you really expecting anything other than total destruction? Apparently Mitch Ferhat, a former Buffalo Bill, is coming to the WWF. He never got there. The Steiner Bulldog ends it.

Rating: N/A. It was more or less the same thing as we got a match earlier, but with two guys instead of one. This is fine as it establishes two dominant forces for new fans which is a good idea.

A woman says that she’s Bartlett’s aunt. Naturally it’s Heenan in drag. This simply does not get old.

Razor Ramon comes out for a “special” interview. He’s fighting Bret for the title at the Rumble in case you didn’t know. It’s exactly what you would expect it to be as it’s just Ramon talking about Bret and how he’ll win the title and we see a clip of him beating up Owen on Superstars, which is why Owen isn’t here tonight.

Ad for Headlock on Hunger, which was a charity thing they were doing at the time to feed hungry people in Somalia.

Tatanka likes the Headlock on Hunger.

Intercontinental Title: Max Moon vs. Shawn Michaels

Max Moon may or may not have been Konnan. Shawn is just getting used to being a midcard deal so don’t expect much here. I don’t think it’s him here as it might be Paul Diamond, who was one of the Orient Express. We get more and more New York jokes from Bartlett that only a handful of people would get. He was great on a morning talk show but WAY off on a wrestling show.

They get the three un line here twice in one match as they try so hard to get that over as a tagline before they realized it sucked. Bartlett, in something that blows my mind, does an impression of Mike Tyson calling into the show from prison. This goes on over two minutes. Make that three. THEY’RE STILL DOING IT.

Seriously they did this for half of the damn match. Is this supposed to be funny or something? Am I supposed to be amused? After what felt like forever, Shawn hits the kick and that stupid suplex that he was using as his finisher at the time for the pin.

Rating: C+. It was an average match, but it had the DUMBEST commentary in recorded history. The match gets bonus points for being ok with those voices going though so there we are.

Ad for WWF Mania, a Saturday morning show.

Gene does the control center for the Rumble, which more or less is him talking about the major matches and we get promos from some of the guys in said matches, in this case Shawn and Marty. This is short but it was very effective at summarizing the entire show into a 3 minute video. Well done. We run down some people in the Rumble and get comments from Perfect. Ok now this needs to end as it’s about five minutes now. This was the first winner gets a title shot and it’s at 4pm. That’s just odd.

We have an Amish man trying to get inside. Guess who it is. He asks if anyone knows how to get onto the roof. I feel like I’m watching a Trix Cereal commercial. Also, WHERE DOES HE GET THESE COSTUMES???

Kamala exists and that’s about it.

Damien Demento vs. Undertaker

Who else would you get to main event the first show? Bartlett makes fun of Taker and I’m already tired of him. Demento is the guy that freaked out on youtube recently and freaked out about modern wrestling. He’s annoying as hell and this is his career highlight. We go over the matches for next week and that’s about all that happens in this match. The Tombstone ends this quickly.

Rating: N/A. It’s like 3 minutes long and it’s more or less a squash. That’s not that interesting.

Doink sprays Crush with water to end the show.

Overall Rating: D+. This started off ok but it felt like there was no flow to it at all. It just wasn’t that good of a show as far as establishing people like it was supposed to do. This show definitely assumed that most people were long time fans of the show and that’s not a good idea to do on a brand new main show. Still though, this is one of those shows everyone should see at least once as it truly did completely revolutionize wrestling. Definitely take a look at it if you never have before or just to compare it to modern wrestling and see how much things have changed.
 
Just rewatched this (as i'm sure most have since WWE posted it on youtube) and I quite enjoyed it. The highlight of the show is the Michaels match. A real good match with some great back and fourth and a good finish. After that the Razor interview was the next best thing as it did a good job of setting up the Rumble title match and anytime I can see the clip of Razor attacking Owen its a good thing. The Yoko and Steiners matches were watchable and like you said the Taker match was a squash so can't really comment on it.

Overall I would give the show a C+, that could have been rated higher if it weren't for the horribal announcing that you mentioned.

How was the WWF champ at the time and the companys biggest star at the time Bret Hart not at the show?
 
Actually RAW was NOT the first weekly wrestling show in prime time. WWF Prime Time Wrestling aired every week in this time slot for several years. Instead of one show from one location, Prime Time was a collection of matches, usually solid mid card bouts (with some squash jobber bouts common on wrestling TV back then) taped at various locations on the house show circuit. I attended a house show in Erie PA in 1992. It took about a month for the matches to start airing on the Monday night show (or their other syndicated shows in local markets).

Among the more memorable moments that first aired on Prime Time Wrestling was Honky Tonk Man's upset win over Ricky Steamboat for the IC Title and Ric Flair's WWE Title win over Randy Savage.

Basically the original RAW was just a marketing ploy to get you to watch the same type of matches in the same prime time slot as before, only now they came from one location with one steady (although not very good) announcing team.
 
Points of interest on announcing and commentary included (not word for word):

"Macho Man" Randy Savage: Let's not forget about MY favorite wrestler, the Unnnnnndertaker! Oooh yeah!

and

Rob Bartlett: I think Yokozuna should spend more time at the salad bar instead of the sushi bar.
 
Recently rewatched this one as well. Set out to start rewatching (and writing about) the Monday Night Wars, but ended up starting at the beginning of RAW as a bit of a prologue.

Long story short, it's starting sloooow. This first show is noteworthy only in that it's the humble beginning of wrestling's most revolutionary television show. Wrestling on TV was not out of it's squash-match phase yet, by a few years. None of the matches on the card could be considered competitive, but the show does a good job of helping establish Royal Rumble '93 storylines, featuring Yokozuna, The Undertaker, and Shawn Michaels who would all play a large part in that PPV.

Match Of The Card: Shawn Michaels/Max Moon
Best Segment: Anything featuring Bobby Heenan & the Razor Ramon promo

They're leaning far too heavily on the "New York" gimmick in these early shows. Rob Bartlett was awful and out-of-place. I find myself wondering where this stuff was going and how in the world they thought it would get over.
 

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