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I noticed Luger's book was available on Kindle.

 

Not worth it.  I wrote a small review of it over at my old site Drop ToeHold as I got my hands on a review copy.  There's no real meat to anything in his book and he just flies through everything.

 

Super disappointed, but here's a bit about showing up unannounced on WCW Monday Nitro and pissing off Hogan:

 

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"When I arrived at the Mall of America, I had a towel over my head and was immediately escorted to the inner bowels of the mall, well away from the locker room and central concourse area where everything was happening. It wasn’t until that moment that I knew how it was all going to come down. ‘At the very end of the show you’ll come out in your street clothes,’ Eric told me, ‘and get nose-to-nose with Hulk Hogan."

 

"My entrance was definitely a surprise — to the crowd and to the other wrestlers gathered there.

 

I walked up to Hogan and said my line: ‘I’m back at the WCW to wrestle with the big boys.’

 

I was still in Hogan’s face when they signaled for a short commercial break. Knowing we were off the air momentarily, I broke character and smiled at Hogan. It was a big mistake.  'Wipe that grin off your face, or I'll knock it off. You're stealing money from me and my family right now,' he said to me through gritted teeth.

 

I immediately stopped smiling.

 

After the show I tried to apologize to him, but he brushed me off. I learned a big lesson from him that night: never break character when on camera in front of the fans — even on a commercial break.”

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I'm not a big fan of Bob Holly, as a performer or as a human being, but I'll be damned if his book doesn't sound like one of the more straight-forward style autobiographies.

 

I still can't get over Bret Hart talking about an Asian masseuse washing him with her vagina. That's a thought I never need in my mind again.

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Coke is a strong drug, brudda...

 

Jimmy Snuka: Superfly: "I always say this, and I mean it: every match I've ever worked is my favorite. Every opponent is my favorite opponent. Every moment is my favorite moment. My favorite match is the one I'm wrestling at that present time. I just love them all." (p. 130)Jimmy Snuka: Superfly: "I really loved getting back in the ring with Don Muraco in ECW [1994]. The two of us were still magic together. We probably would still have it if we got back in the ring today, brudda." (p. 136)

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I'm not a big fan of Bob Holly, as a performer or as a human being, but I'll be damned if his book doesn't sound like one of the more straight-forward style autobiographies.

 

It really is.

 

I'm not completely through it, but he's not afraid to tell it like he sees it or burn a bridge or two. Hope he's saved well, 'cause he's highly unlikely to ever be employed again in any capacity by WWE or TNA.

 

Actually, I just noticed he's still on the WWE alumni page. He doesn't really have a bad word to say about Vince McMahon, but couldn't care less about HHH.

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Totally awesome coffee table book my wife got me for my birthday last month.
 

Virtually every top 80's wrestler has a two-page spread (Hogan, Piper types get more) with a full page pic and short bio. Some of the pictures are really, really awesome.

 

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That line from Jericho's second book about Hogan had me chuckling for a solid 3 minutes. Hogan doing things on the fly seems like it could be awesome.

 

Jericho's first book was one of my favorite reads when I read books more often. How is the second one?(besides the awesome line about Hogan?)

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That line from Jericho's second book about Hogan had me chuckling for a solid 3 minutes. Hogan doing things on the fly seems like it could be awesome.

 

Jericho's first book was one of my favorite reads when I read books more often. How is the second one?(besides the awesome line about Hogan?)

 

It's not nearly as good as the first.  It's about half wrestling stuff (which is good and offers some good backstage WWE insights) and half Fozzy stuff which I personally didn't give a shit about.

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Some of those quotes at the top of the page are gold.  Especially like the story about Ray Patterson's wife and the Andre-DiBiase drinking game.

 

Oh, and Hogan complaining about Hall and Nash being lazy (more talk, less wrestling) and bringing in their cronies = mind blown.

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That line from Jericho's second book about Hogan had me chuckling for a solid 3 minutes. Hogan doing things on the fly seems like it could be awesome.

 

Jericho's first book was one of my favorite reads when I read books more often. How is the second one?(besides the awesome line about Hogan?)

 

It's not nearly as good as the first.  It's about half wrestling stuff (which is good and offers some good backstage WWE insights) and half Fozzy stuff which I personally didn't give a shit about.

 

 

Jericho is definitely going to be another Foley-esque case illustrating the law of diminishing returns. I know he's working on a third book, and it will probably be not as good as the first one, and worse than the second.

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Posted Image

 

Totally awesome coffee table book my wife got me for my birthday last month.

 

Virtually every top 80's wrestler has a two-page spread (Hogan, Piper types get more) with a full page pic and short bio. Some of the pictures are really, really awesome.

 

 

That looks really nice. What's the circa on that book?

 

EDIT: When was Adonis with Heyman? Also I've never seen him with his black hair in his Adorable gear...

 

 

That line from Jericho's second book about Hogan had me chuckling for a solid 3 minutes. Hogan doing things on the fly seems like it could be awesome.

 

Jericho's first book was one of my favorite reads when I read books more often. How is the second one?(besides the awesome line about Hogan?)

 

It's not nearly as good as the first.  It's about half wrestling stuff (which is good and offers some good backstage WWE insights) and half Fozzy stuff which I personally didn't give a shit about.

 

 

Same here, A LOT of it was skipped through.

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That line from Jericho's second book about Hogan had me chuckling for a solid 3 minutes. Hogan doing things on the fly seems like it could be awesome.

 

Jericho's first book was one of my favorite reads when I read books more often. How is the second one?(besides the awesome line about Hogan?)

 

It's not nearly as good as the first.  It's about half wrestling stuff (which is good and offers some good backstage WWE insights) and half Fozzy stuff which I personally didn't give a shit about.

 

 

Jericho is definitely going to be another Foley-esque case illustrating the law of diminishing returns. I know he's working on a third book, and it will probably be not as good as the first one, and worse than the second.

 

 

Yeah I absolutely loved Jericho's first book because, much like Foley's first, it had that world hopping, anything can happen, wild cast of characters thing going for it.  The second book covered stuff that most of us, as wrestling fans, had already watched and heard about in the dirt sheets and online.  Some of it was interesting (his payout for his Mania match with Hunter standing out) but a lot of it felt familiar. 

 

The Fozzy stuff did absolutely nothing for me as I'm not a big heavy metal fan so all the people he'd bring up and mark out over meeting meant nothing to me.  I guess if you're a big metal head you'd probably get more out of it.

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Posted Image

 

Totally awesome coffee table book my wife got me for my birthday last month.

 

Virtually every top 80's wrestler has a two-page spread (Hogan, Piper types get more) with a full page pic and short bio. Some of the pictures are really, really awesome.

 

 

That looks really nice. What's the circa on that book?

 

EDIT: When was Adonis with Heyman? Also I've never seen him with his black hair in his Adorable gear...

Book was published between April '87 (Stan Lane is with the Midnight Express) and summer '88 (Brody and Adonis are still alive) so I'd guess holiday season '87 or early '88. And as others pointed out, after WM 3 Adonis goes to the AWA with dark hair + Adorable gear + Heyman as his manager.

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If someone could post the blurb in Jericho's first book about the Penis Colada, that'd be great...

 

 

"The room burst into gales of laughter when one of the referees downed his drink after returning from the bathroom. Apparently this guy had never heard of the "hold on to your drink" rule, because when he was gone someone had used their swizzle stick as a swizzle stick. "Ha! You just drank a Penis Colada," Rudy said as Cluck guffawed with the rest of the gang. "We got you! We got you with the Penis Colada!" I would have gone postal and kicked the crap out of everyone and their coladas, but this guy just said with a sheepish grin, "The Penis Colada...oh you got me again!" Again? AGAIN?"

 

 

 

Has Jericho talked about a third book?

 

He hints at it at the end of his second.

 

 

He said on twitter earlier this week that he's already 100,000 words in.

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"At least I got a finisher at this point. I hadn’t had a real finish up until then. I used something off the top rope back when I was Sparky Plugg: either a cross body, a splash, or a kneedrop. After I’d become “Hardcore,” I usually won matches by using foreign objects.

I did use a pump-handle slam sometimes, but Vince Russo came to me around the time they were starting to push the hell out of Test and asked if I would mind giving the move to him. “Do I have a choice?” I asked. He replied, “Not really.” So why ****ing ask me?!

I tried the Falcon Arrow for a while but didn’t really like it. It didn’t help that Russo wanted to call it “the Hollycaust.” That got stopped quickly when the office decided the name would offend a lot of people. After I watched a whole bunch of documentaries on the subject, I understood. It’s something people don’t want to be reminded of. To try and shock people, Russo probably would have pushed for me to use it to beat Bill Goldberg, Billy Kidman, and all the other Jewish wrestlers." - Bob Holly

Yes, he had to watch documentaries on the Holocaust to get it.

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