WWF Shotgun Saturday Night

WWF Shotgun Saturday Night
Format Sports entertainment
Professional wrestling
Created by World Wrestling Entertainment
Country of origin United States
Production
Running time 60 minutes
Broadcast
Original run January 4, 1997 – August 21, 1999

WWF Shotgun Saturday Night was a professional wrestling television program produced by the World Wrestling Federation (WWF). It aired from January 4, 1997 through August 21, 1999 as a syndicated broadcast. Shotgun Saturday Night was replaced by WWF Jakked in 1999.

History

The show's original concept was unusual for its time, since it aired on late Saturday nights from various New York City nightly locations. The promotion pushed the program as an "edgier" project than its normal weekly offerings, partially as a response to ECW's growing popularity.

Shotgun Saturday Night debuted on January 4, 1997 from the Mirage Nightclub in New York. One of the most memorable moments of the debut episode occurred when Marlena climbed on the ring apron during a match between Goldust and The Sultan, and removed her top, causing the Sultan to be distracted and lose the match. Though she was wearing pasties, and though her back was facing the camera, this incident was a precursor for the tone of WWF programming for the next several years.

Later episodes of Shotgun Saturday Night were broadcast from the All-Star Cafe in Times Square, the Mirage Nightclub in Long Island, and New York Penn Station.

There were several unique elements to the show that did not appear on any other WWF programming at the time. For example, due to the confining nature of the locales it was initially broadcast from, Shotgun Saturday Night used a somewhat smaller ring than a standard twenty foot by twenty foot WWF ring. All three ring ropes were taped yellow; something that was not replicated until WWE NXT debuted in February 2010. Later in its broadcast run, Shotgun Saturday Night stopped being filmed live from New York City.

The show was commentated by Vince McMahon and Sunny in the beginning, with Jim Ross and Brian Pillman performing the same duties until mid-1997, Pillman got pulled from commentary after beating up a fan on the June 28th 1997 episode of Shotgun, Kevin Kelly, Michael Cole, Jim Cornette and Vince Russo also served as commentators. Stone Cold Steve Austin also served as a surprise guest commentator on one episode along with Owen Hart.

Alternate versions

The WWF also aired a similar syndicated show at the time called WWF Shotgun, which aired in the afternoon and was more family-friendly. This show was later replaced with WWF Metal in 1999. Another syndicated version was called WWF Shotgun Challenge that aired in other markets. From 1997 until 1999, matches from WWF Shotgun were aired on the international version of WWF Superstars with commentary by Michael Cole and Kevin Kelly, and in January 1999, Gorilla Monsoon joined them.

In the New York media market, the show was rebranded as WWF New York in 1997 and 1998, airing on WPIX and WPXN-TV ,and later WLNY. It was shown late at night, airing at 2:00 a.m., Eastern time (WPXN aired the series on Saturday mornings).

In March 1998, the WWF aired 11:Alive which aired the matches in the same order as WWF New York, but with different commentary that made less references to New York. The show aired on Saturday mornings and only ran four episodes until being discontinued. That final episode was hosted by Michael Hayes as a preview show to WrestleMania XIV.

External links