10 Times WCW Went Too Far

10. The Spike Heard Around The World

There can be no blood on television. No blood on television. No blood on television. Dusty, no blood on television.

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That seems very simple to understand. You don't need to cover the chalkboard in the words, Bart Simpson-style, for the message to get across. That was the situation in those early days of WCW, when Ted Turner bought Jim Crockett Promotions and renamed it World Championship Wrestling. Turner was interested in wrestling but knew enough to leave the actual booking of the show up to those with experience, so he decided to place Dusty Rhodes in charge of the show. Dusty was free to book as he pleased, with the exception of the 'no blood on television' rule.

So Dusty Rhodes went ahead and bled his face off on television.

In an attempt to get the massively popular Road Warriors over as heels (as well as desperately trying to regain some sympathy as a babyface), Dusty booked an angle where Road Warrior Animal stabbed him in the eye using one of those famous shoulder-pad spikes. The angle was supposed to generate molten heat in the lead to Starrcade '88, which was scheduled to be co-headlined by a tag match between the Road Warriors and the team of Dusty and Sting. Dusty bleeding buckets on TV put the match in jeopardy, but Ted Turner decided to wait until the event was done to serve Dusty his papers.

This was less WCW going too far and more Dusty Rhodes not listening to instructions, but it remains a famous example of a company flailing in the sea. Looking back, the angle itself got very little TV time, a storm in a tea-kettle sort of thing, albeit one that could have been avoided had the grown adult been able to follow one very simple rule.

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