FULL EDIT BREAKDOWN: (0:00) So the video begins with Roman Reigns talking about how he’s changed this industry during his epic title reign by referencing the ‘cinema’ meme while paying homage to different generations of the bloodline. This entire segment is backed by the drums from Cody Rhodes’ theme song, which foreshadows the end of his dominance and a nod to the end of this video. (0:12) The main video now begins here by showing the first main component of Pro Wrestling: Live Events. This was done by showing the anticipation building from the crowd while listening to some of the best MCs/announcers - Paul Heyman, Howard Finkel and Michael Buffer. Then Michael’s famous “Let’s Get Ready To Rumble” line blends seamlessly into Triple H’s DX “Suck It” which was made as a parody to what WCW were doing. (0:24) Moving into the next section: Entrances. Starting with Stone Cold’s glass breaking which is one of the most iconic sound effects which always leads to a massive pop from the crowd. This section highlights the importance of a wrestlers entrance because it’s the visual, physical and sonic embodiment of each person’s character and personality. The background song mentions being the best so it cuts to CM Punk who calls himself the “Best in the World”. The song references “holding my title” so it cuts to Randy Orton holding up two championship belts. The song then references “fearing no enemy and we can’t rival” so it shows Sting standing up to the nWo and transitions to the Undertaker facing off against a few of his many challengers to his streak. Sting and Undertaker were two wrestlers who fans wanted to see in the ring with their dark personas, so I transition to a few more dark characters such as Kane, The Fiend and The Brood faction. As The Brood rises from the stage it transitions to Cody Rhodes also rising from the stage. As he looks up it moves to showing a few explosive entrances from Goldberg, Brock Lesnar and Batista. (0:39) Transitioning out of the entrances with Scott Hall, it now moves into the third component: Iconic Catchphrases. The few picked here were “Hey Yo” from Scott Hall, “Acknowledge Me” from Roman Reigns, “Ooh Yeah” from Macho Man, “Finally The Rock Has Come Back…” from The Rock merged with “The Champ Is Here” from John Cena and “In Your City” from The Usos closed off by “We’re Here” from three Wyatt Family. (0:52) The next section moves on to another key aspect of the growth of Pro Wrestling: New Eras. This part starts with the two most pivotal moments in wrestling narrative history during the Monday Night Wars, with Hulk Hogan turning heel and Stone Cold dropping his “Austin 3:16” promo. The section also references Shane Douglas’ ECW promo around the same time ushering in a new era there followed by two more pivotal moments in the last two decades with John Cena declaring “Ruthless Aggression” and Roman Reigns returning as “The Tribal Chief / Head Of The Table”. (1:20) As Kurt Angle takes a slap from John Cena, it smoothly transitions into the most recent biggest storyline leading up to Wrestlemania 40. This clip starts the 5th section covering: OMG Moments and Crowd Engagement. This sections shows some of the most outrageous action that has taken place mixed with crowd reactions including some iconic ones such as The Miz girl and Undertaker streak guy. It then moves to some moments where superstars got in and amongst the crowd such as Becky Lynch, Sting, ECW invading and The Shield. The song references an “entrance” which allowed me to briefly reference the Roman Reigns and Cody Rhodes feud with homages to their fathers. It then shifts back into betrayal storylines which led to Evolution and The Shield breaking up. There’s also a small callback made to the Broken Matt Hardy gimmick while he betrays his brother Jeff with a chair a few years prior. So many betrayals using chairs haha! (1:47) The next section here showcases iconic showdowns between The Rock and several other Mount Rushmore level rivals in Steve Austin, Hollywood Hogan and John Cena. This gradually moves into more emotional moments that took place in the ring such as Randy Savage reuniting with Miss Elizabeth and Shawn Michaels retiring Ric Flair with a super kick. (1:58) We suddenly get interrupted by Paul Heyman who’s about to deliver a ‘shoot’ promo. This section focuses on how real life can sometimes blends into kayfabe. The two main storylines that took place were the departures of Bret Hart and CM Punk from WWE. Their situations mirrored each others quite closely with both intending to leave while still holding the title. Other shoot promo’s around the same theme were MJF pleading to be fired from AEW while The Miz tells Daniel Bryan to leave to get back into wrestling. Then it returns back to Bret Hart and CM Punk who both claim to be the ‘best’ in their respective ways with this segment ending with the ultimate self promoter, Ric Flair. (2:28) The previous segment ends with Ric Flair’s iconic “Woo” which allows a seamless transition into the 8th section which is all about: Comedy. The Jay Lethal and Ric Flair Woo Off was one of the funniest moments in wrestling history. It then flicks to other funny moments and mistakes that can only happen through Live TV - including Steiner Math and The Shockmaster Debut. (2:55) As The Shockmaster descends, Rey Mysterio rises to kick off another important component of pro wrestling: High Flyers and In-Ring Technicians. I tried to stitch all the following clips with as many match cuts as possible since a lot of wrestling moves are reused and repackaged by different performers. This was also a good point to pay tribute to some of the best indie wrestlers and smaller promotions so there’s a few nods to New Japan Pro Wrestling, Ring of Honor and TNA - the indie rivalries referenced here were (AJ Styles vs Adam Cole, Omega vs Okada, Ricochet vs Will Ospreay). This segment ends with some epic high flying moves which had people capturing the moment with their flash cameras. From here, the mutliple flashes instantly switch to the lights coming from people’s phones which signifies a new generation of fans. (3:30) As people have their lights on from their phones, it introduces a more emotional segment which pays tribute to some the legends who have passed away - Bray Wyatt, Eddie Guerrero, Ultimate Warrior and Terry Funk. I added a heartbeat effect to the soundtrack to match what’s being said. And when Ultimate Warrior mentions the spirit living on it cuts to Hogan and Warrior lifting Andre The Giant who now has a battle royal named after him. Finally, Terry Funk gives his famous promo about having a dream, which is the perfect transition to show The American Dream Dusty Rhodes and introduce Cody Rhodes needing to finish his story. (4:08) This section begins the outro of the video which is built around the latest movement in wrestling where fans came together to make sure Cody achieved his father’s dream of winning the WWE title. The earlier part is carried by Scott Hall’s Hall of Fame speech about “bad guys”. This was the perfect opportunity to show similarities with the nWo and The Bloodline taking over. (4:41) The ending segment. This part is a quick montage of the how the past two years had unfolded between Cody and Roman which involved Royal Rumble, victories, mind games, emotional promo’s, The Rock returning as The Final Boss and Seth Rollins involvement starting with him being one of Dusty’s kids. As Seth takes the revenge chair shot from Roman, there’s a reference to how Mankind won his title against The Rock after Stone Cold hit him with a chair, similar to how Undertaker returned to chokeslam The Rock in Wrestlemania XL. Also during this section, I’ve touched on Cody Rhodes’ relationship with Triple H… from Cody destroying the throne, to wearing a skull during his WM40 entrance to then shaking HHH’s hand being accepted as his champion. The last bit here is covered by Cody’s promo in AEW about going from “Undesirable to Undeniable” to match the visuals. (5:09) This last segment shows Triple H starting off a new era, with shots of the current WWE roster, old and young. I also included the new one shot style camera technique being used now which is a sign of this new era of presentation and production from Triple H. (5:22) The final moment shows a promo taken in 2012 by Seth Rollins declaring Cody Rhodes as the future of this industry - another little detail in this epic long term story that took place between Roman and Cody and shows how wrestling is great.
FULL EDIT BREAKDOWN:
(0:00) So the video begins with Roman Reigns talking about how he’s changed this industry during his epic title reign by referencing the ‘cinema’ meme while paying homage to different generations of the bloodline. This entire segment is backed by the drums from Cody Rhodes’ theme song, which foreshadows the end of his dominance and a nod to the end of this video.
(0:12) The main video now begins here by showing the first main component of Pro Wrestling: Live Events.
This was done by showing the anticipation building from the crowd while listening to some of the best MCs/announcers - Paul Heyman, Howard Finkel and Michael Buffer. Then Michael’s famous “Let’s Get Ready To Rumble” line blends seamlessly into Triple H’s DX “Suck It” which was made as a parody to what WCW were doing.
(0:24) Moving into the next section: Entrances.
Starting with Stone Cold’s glass breaking which is one of the most iconic sound effects which always leads to a massive pop from the crowd. This section highlights the importance of a wrestlers entrance because it’s the visual, physical and sonic embodiment of each person’s character and personality. The background song mentions being the best so it cuts to CM Punk who calls himself the “Best in the World”. The song references “holding my title” so it cuts to Randy Orton holding up two championship belts. The song then references “fearing no enemy and we can’t rival” so it shows Sting standing up to the nWo and transitions to the Undertaker facing off against a few of his many challengers to his streak. Sting and Undertaker were two wrestlers who fans wanted to see in the ring with their dark personas, so I transition to a few more dark characters such as Kane, The Fiend and The Brood faction. As The Brood rises from the stage it transitions to Cody Rhodes also rising from the stage. As he looks up it moves to showing a few explosive entrances from Goldberg, Brock Lesnar and Batista.
(0:39) Transitioning out of the entrances with Scott Hall, it now moves into the third component: Iconic Catchphrases. The few picked here were “Hey Yo” from Scott Hall, “Acknowledge Me” from Roman Reigns, “Ooh Yeah” from Macho Man, “Finally The Rock Has Come Back…” from The Rock merged with “The Champ Is Here” from John Cena and “In Your City” from The Usos closed off by “We’re Here” from three Wyatt Family.
(0:52) The next section moves on to another key aspect of the growth of Pro Wrestling: New Eras.
This part starts with the two most pivotal moments in wrestling narrative history during the Monday Night Wars, with Hulk Hogan turning heel and Stone Cold dropping his “Austin 3:16” promo. The section also references Shane Douglas’ ECW promo around the same time ushering in a new era there followed by two more pivotal moments in the last two decades with John Cena declaring “Ruthless Aggression” and Roman Reigns returning as “The Tribal Chief / Head Of The Table”.
(1:20) As Kurt Angle takes a slap from John Cena, it smoothly transitions into the most recent biggest storyline leading up to Wrestlemania 40. This clip starts the 5th section covering: OMG Moments and Crowd Engagement. This sections shows some of the most outrageous action that has taken place mixed with crowd reactions including some iconic ones such as The Miz girl and Undertaker streak guy. It then moves to some moments where superstars got in and amongst the crowd such as Becky Lynch, Sting, ECW invading and The Shield. The song references an “entrance” which allowed me to briefly reference the Roman Reigns and Cody Rhodes feud with homages to their fathers. It then shifts back into betrayal storylines which led to Evolution and The Shield breaking up. There’s also a small callback made to the Broken Matt Hardy gimmick while he betrays his brother Jeff with a chair a few years prior. So many betrayals using chairs haha!
(1:47) The next section here showcases iconic showdowns between The Rock and several other Mount Rushmore level rivals in Steve Austin, Hollywood Hogan and John Cena. This gradually moves into more emotional moments that took place in the ring such as Randy Savage reuniting with Miss Elizabeth and Shawn Michaels retiring Ric Flair with a super kick.
(1:58) We suddenly get interrupted by Paul Heyman who’s about to deliver a ‘shoot’ promo. This section focuses on how real life can sometimes blends into kayfabe. The two main storylines that took place were the departures of Bret Hart and CM Punk from WWE. Their situations mirrored each others quite closely with both intending to leave while still holding the title. Other shoot promo’s around the same theme were MJF pleading to be fired from AEW while The Miz tells Daniel Bryan to leave to get back into wrestling. Then it returns back to Bret Hart and CM Punk who both claim to be the ‘best’ in their respective ways with this segment ending with the ultimate self promoter, Ric Flair.
(2:28) The previous segment ends with Ric Flair’s iconic “Woo” which allows a seamless transition into the 8th section which is all about: Comedy.
The Jay Lethal and Ric Flair Woo Off was one of the funniest moments in wrestling history. It then flicks to other funny moments and mistakes that can only happen through Live TV - including Steiner Math and The Shockmaster Debut.
(2:55) As The Shockmaster descends, Rey Mysterio rises to kick off another important component of pro wrestling: High Flyers and In-Ring Technicians. I tried to stitch all the following clips with as many match cuts as possible since a lot of wrestling moves are reused and repackaged by different performers. This was also a good point to pay tribute to some of the best indie wrestlers and smaller promotions so there’s a few nods to New Japan Pro Wrestling, Ring of Honor and TNA - the indie rivalries referenced here were (AJ Styles vs Adam Cole, Omega vs Okada, Ricochet vs Will Ospreay). This segment ends with some epic high flying moves which had people capturing the moment with their flash cameras. From here, the mutliple flashes instantly switch to the lights coming from people’s phones which signifies a new generation of fans.
(3:30) As people have their lights on from their phones, it introduces a more emotional segment which pays tribute to some the legends who have passed away - Bray Wyatt, Eddie Guerrero, Ultimate Warrior and Terry Funk. I added a heartbeat effect to the soundtrack to match what’s being said. And when Ultimate Warrior mentions the spirit living on it cuts to Hogan and Warrior lifting Andre The Giant who now has a battle royal named after him. Finally, Terry Funk gives his famous promo about having a dream, which is the perfect transition to show The American Dream Dusty Rhodes and introduce Cody Rhodes needing to finish his story.
(4:08) This section begins the outro of the video which is built around the latest movement in wrestling where fans came together to make sure Cody achieved his father’s dream of winning the WWE title. The earlier part is carried by Scott Hall’s Hall of Fame speech about “bad guys”. This was the perfect opportunity to show similarities with the nWo and The Bloodline taking over.
(4:41) The ending segment. This part is a quick montage of the how the past two years had unfolded between Cody and Roman which involved Royal Rumble, victories, mind games, emotional promo’s, The Rock returning as The Final Boss and Seth Rollins involvement starting with him being one of Dusty’s kids. As Seth takes the revenge chair shot from Roman, there’s a reference to how Mankind won his title against The Rock after Stone Cold hit him with a chair, similar to how Undertaker returned to chokeslam The Rock in Wrestlemania XL. Also during this section, I’ve touched on Cody Rhodes’ relationship with Triple H… from Cody destroying the throne, to wearing a skull during his WM40 entrance to then shaking HHH’s hand being accepted as his champion. The last bit here is covered by Cody’s promo in AEW about going from “Undesirable to Undeniable” to match the visuals.
(5:09) This last segment shows Triple H starting off a new era, with shots of the current WWE roster, old and young. I also included the new one shot style camera technique being used now which is a sign of this new era of presentation and production from Triple H.
(5:22) The final moment shows a promo taken in 2012 by Seth Rollins declaring Cody Rhodes as the future of this industry - another little detail in this epic long term story that took place between Roman and Cody and shows how wrestling is great.
This deserves way more views, incredible editing
@@Max-du9uo Thank you!
This video deserves more views, more likes, more comments.
Thank you! Hopefully it will reach more people here… because it’s going viral on TikTok 🥵
You cooked and we ate good 🔥
Happy to have served 🍴👨🍳🫡
Absolutely phenomenal video! The footage, transitions, memories ... bravo, sir!
Thanks for watching 🫡
Bro just dropped the hardest edit ever.
And he cooooooked 🔥
Thanks so much broooo 🤝
This deserves millions of views. I'm sharing it
Thanks! 🙏
Sick edit.
I acknowledge you ☝️
dude just dropped the coolest pw edit ever and went sleep
😂 I was definitely tired after making this! Needed a good rest. Thanks for watching 👊
🔥🔥🔥
Este vídeo es cine
Muchas gracias 🙂
woww this is incredible when somone asked why do you like oe watch wrestling or wwe
Thanks so much! 🙏