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How WrestleMania and Raw Started Underlying Cycles In WWE's Product
When wrestling fans discuss different title reigns, their lengths and numbers attributed to certain wrestlers, a question that arises is Will Bruno Sammartinos seven year WWWF Title reign ever be surpassed? And almost always, the answer is no. They say todays audience doesnt have the patience for another seven year reign. And while that is true, most of the reason can be credited with how WWF altered their product, going back to 1985.
When WrestleMania was announced, the biggest wrestling extravaganza of all time, fans were lead to expect something big. And while the event arguably doesnt stand the test of time, it delivered back then. It was a success, and while this was on closed circuit television, it started the successful concept for WWF called pay per views. Once Hulk Hogan, then reigning champion, beat Andre The Giant at WrestleMania 3, there was no possible challenger with more credibility. How do you sell WrestleMania 4? You vacate the title, and hold a night long tournament. The excitement of a new champion being crowned sells the show.

A cycle started where big storylines climaxed at WrestleMania, with significant parts happening at other pay per views. The Mega Powers exploded at Wrestlemania 5, and a big tag match involving Hogan, Beefcake, Savage and Zeus happened at Summer Slam. In what became an almost annual tradition, the WWFs World Title changed hands at WrestleMania. Warrior beat Hogan, Hogan beat Slaughter, Yokozuna beat Bret Hart (and Hogan beat Yokozuna) etc. Fans expected something exciting and important in late March/early April. Title changes are naturally more exciting than titles being retained, which explains the aforementioned unofficial tradition.
WrestleMania, Monday Night Raw, and monthly pay per views started underlying cycles in the product.
As you all remember, before Monday Night Raw, all the WWEs tv shows (Superstars, Challenge, Prime Time Wrestling, All American Wrestling) were based out of a studio with a host (Sean Mooney or Gene Okerlund) discussing various things. The live event report, ongoing feuds, upcoming pay per views, etc. Over the course of a show they brought us a few taped matches and some taped promos made by wrestlers in front of green screen backgrounds.
The overall purpose of these shows was not really to bring excitement, but really to draw out and develop storylines. (Saturday Night Main Event could be considered an exception, but this show was only on once a month, and after a while it was aired considerably less, so its overall contributions to the product lessened)
When Monday Night Raw started, the entire format of the WWF, and eventually the industry, was changed. The purpose of Raw was not to develop story lines over a long period of time, but rather to give the viewers excitement week in and week out. Raw was made the flagship show right from the beginning. Considering this and that most of the new footage for the WWF was coming from this show, it shaped the overall product of the WWF. The old style of developing storylines over a long period of time were now over. Raw was formatted to give shock value and be thrilling to the home viewer, and that is what WWF fans grew to want in a wrestling show.

It became rather difficult to promote these angles over a longer period of time considering that in order to deliver this excitement that the fans wanted, the wrestlers had to get in the ring and do their interviews and somehow make major developments in their feuds every single week. With so many exciting additional developments to these feuds, the storylines lacked their overall quality that they once had.
But thats not necessarily a bad thing. During the Monday Night Wars is when I feel WWF programming really hit the mark with how Raw was structuring their shows. The structure was geared towards weekly excitement, not slow developments. A roaring boil, not a low simmer. In order to compete with Monday Nitro, WWF tried to give us something thrilling almost every segment. You could argue it came at the expense of well crafted narratives between good and evil, but it was made up for in the product becoming a non-stop rollercoaster ride.
When we watched Superstars or Prime Time Wrestling back in the day, we might see a sneak attack from one feuding wrestler to another, but more often than not, we got two separate interviews, each trashing the other. Overall, the product was more geared towards character development rather than plot advancements. Everything was more focused on wrestlers selling themselves rather than intricate plot twists.
The way most storylines work is that they make an emotional connection with the fan. The fans will then be connected with the wrestler through the many twists and turns that their character will take. This means they become exposed to that particular wrestler for a certain period of time over and over again. If the fans are going along with the wrestler through too many storylines , they become over exposed to the wrestler. This is when the wrestler starts to become stale and rather boring.
Now regarding monthly pay per views, they too made substantial alterations. There were four main ppvs a year. This meant that there were usually only four main times when a feud could be culminated. Sometimes a rivalry would go on for two ppvs, which would span half a year. This means that during this time period, when we were emotionally connected with a top main event wrestler in some way, we saw them go through three-four emotional ups and downs, twists and turns in one year. There are only so many of these that a main event wrestler can go through before we begin to become tired of their character and feel that they start to become stale. But at the pace of the Rockin Wrestling Era, it was harder for a wrestler to grow stale due to the storylines being so few and far between.

Take a look at Hulk Hogan in 1987 (some of this was mentioned in the beginning paragraphs) Hulk Hogan focused on facing Andre The Giant at WrestleMania 3, then defeated his team at Survivor Series that year (there was no Summer Slam yet). He developed an alliance with Randy Savage, and Andre with Ted Dibiase. Hogan wrestled Andre to a double disqualification at WM 4, and teamed with Savage to defeat The Mega Bucks at the first Summer Slam. Then once friction started between them, the Mega Powers exploded at WrestleMania 5. A three year span, the Hulkster really went through two major programs: against Andre (with Dibiase eventually added in) and aligning with and going against Macho Man. That really wasnt that much compared to today.
In the mid nineties, the ppvs increased to twelve a year, meaning that a main event wrestler would now be going through more feuds a year. This meant that the shelf life of a wrestler became shorter, in that the time would come sooner that they would become stale and the fans would grow tired of them.
Look at John Cena in 2005. He started off focusing on winning the Royal Rumble, and came up short. He then won a tournament to challenge JBL at WrestleMania 21 for the WWE Title, and won both the tournament and the belt. Throughout the rest of 2005 on pay per view he wrestled JBL (rematch), Chris Jericho twice, Christian, Kurt Angle multiple times, Shawn Michaels, and had a Raw storyline with Eric Bischoff. While Cena continued to be a good draw through the next ten years, many fans grew tired of Cena, and within a few years considered him stale. (Reading through posts in the IWC, no longer the minority voice it once was, can show this to you.) In 2008 he was pushed to the backburner, losing in feuds to Triple H, JBL and Batista.
In Sammartinos time, there were no pay per views. Fans didn't need thrilling plot developments on a consistent basis. They didnt have these expectations. He and Bob Backlund being champion for years was reasonable then. Backlunds character didnt need to go through emotional, exciting incidents every week. There were no pay per view cycles, thus it took longer for fans to grow impatient with wrestling characters.
John Cena has been the face of WWE since 2005. But he hasnt always been champion, and he hasnt always had the most spotlight. Similarly, when once the ppv cycle started, Hogan took a year off from being champion, and for a while Ultimate Warrior was arguably getting more spotlight. This isn't Sammartino's era, the brightest stars will burn out if you're not careful.
The concept of WrestleMania, starting in 1985, has shaped the WWE product as we know it today. It was gradual, but it has started underlying cycles within the WWE product. It eventually lead to twelve pay per views a year, and once Raw started, the entire product moved at a much faster pace. WWF/E may have started sacrificing some quality storylines, but in my opinion, WWE Raw can be an incredible roller coaster ride (like during the Monday Night War). It has also lead to wrestlers becoming stale much faster than in Brunos era, but you could say that would have happened anyway, with people today having such short attention spans. Regardless, WrestleMania and Raw have changed the landscape of World Wrestling Entertainment.