Editor’s note: This column originally appeared on cagesideseats.com and was written by David Bixenspan (@davidbix). I thought it was an entertaining look back at a promotion that didn’t last very long.
Over the last 2 decades or so, there have been numerous attempts at creating major wrestling promotions out of thin air. They’d get a decent cable network contract and/or spend obscene amounts of money for a huge syndicated network on broadcast stations. Some wouldn’t get past a pilot TV taping that never aired anywhere while others wouldn’t even run a single show. They came in all types: Promotions that exclusively featured women (in all but one, the majority of the women were models, actresses, and stuntwomen trained specifcally for the show), promotions taped at theme parks, promotions allegedly funded by Nigerian billionaires, promotions announcing the hiring of wrestlers who had been dead for years, promotions airing bootleg Japanese tapes, and more.