And speaking of being unpredictable, it was something that WCW excelled in and managed to use to its advantage every week on Nitro. You never knew what was going to happen, who might end up joining the NWO and who you could actually trust as a fan. This was wrestling the way we wanted it; wild and unchained, with no restrictions upon itself or its narrative. WCW was all about creating an atmosphere of insanity, the feeling that you just had to watch them over the WWF because of what you might miss. No one quite knew what was going on with Sting in the wake of the New World Order, especially considering that he began wearing the NWO colors of black and white while hanging out above the arena. It was a constant question, a recurring mystery that haunted WCW viewers for months until he turned the tide at Uncensored 1997 and stood beside WCW. It was emotion, excitement and power all in one PPV. This is what WWE needs to learn from, where the constant shift between good and evil plays with the expectation of every fan watching. Sting's decision to stand beside WCW was a moment that will live forever, something that the current day WWE product is in short supply of. Exciting wrestling isn't hard to do when you have talented workers, but telling a compelling wrestling story is all about the drama you put into it, and WCW was the best at it.