Sport, fritid och hobby
BIGGER! BETTER! BADDER!: WRESTLEMANIA III and the Year It All Changed
Utgiven av ECW Press,Canada
Format
Häftad
Sidor
320 sidor
Språk
Engelska
Utgiven
apr. 2025
Jämför priser
Från 234 kr234 kr
265 kr
349 kr
Priserna uppdateras löpande från säkra och trygga butiker.
Om boken
How did WrestleMania III legitimize wrestling as entertainment and reshape the industry? Greenberg lays it bare and offers insights into WWE's evolution and WrestleMania's lasting impact
On an overcast day in 1987, the pro wrestling landscape was altered forever when a reported 93,173 fans converged on the Pontiac Silverdome outside Detroit to see Hulk Hogan defend his championship against Andr the Giant. For several years, Vincent Kennedy McMahon had been transforming old-time rasslin' into mainstream "sports entertainment," incorporating A-list celebrities into storylines and forcing even cynics to follow the proceedings. But the massive turnout for WrestleMania III convinced sponsors, licensees, and media conglomerates that the company that would become World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) was no longer a fringe diversion for the unwashed masses; it was now legitimate physical theater worthy of global attention. From this point forward, it would be acceptable for devotees to make the annual pilgrimage to WrestleMania from the far corners of the Earth, the way others journeyed to the World Cup or Super Bowl.
BIGGER BETTER BADDER is the story behind the seminal event, told from the perspective of company executives, wrestlers who appeared on the card, fans who attended the show, and other wrestling personalities. But wrestling author and historian Keith Elliot Greenberg also examines the entire industry at the time, including insights from representatives from the rival promotions McMahon was putting out of business as pro wrestling transitioned from a regional phenomenon into an international juggernaut.
Fler böcker av Keith Elliot Greenberg
Se allaLiknande böcker
Alla i Sport, fritid och hobbyBästa pris234 kr
Gå till butik