The Feast or Fired concept was clearly an attempt by TNA to leech off the success of WWE's Money in the Bank idea. Unfortunately their attempt at replicating this stipulation led to one of the most baffling and illogical match types in pro wrestling history. The concept revolves around four briefcases, each on the top of a pole stemming from each turnbuckle. The four lucky wrestlers who manage to retrieve one of the cases will open it to find one of the following: 1. A TNA World Heavyweight Championship shot 2. A TNA Tag Team Championship shot 3. A TNA X-Division Championship shot 4. A pink slip, signifying the immediate termination of their contract Wait, what!? Yes, TNA introduced a match in which one of the winners' reward is being fired. Christopher Daniels has suffered the indignity of opening the "Fired" briefcase twice, once as himself, and once as his masked alter-ego Curry Man. He only grabbed one of those briefcases himself; he actually won the other in a later match without knowing what was inside. In an infuriatingly lazy piece of booking sadly typical of TNA, they have never explicitly stated the time period in which the briefcase must be opened. If forced to pick one particular match to represent Feast or Fired in this list, we'd plump for the 2009 edition, in which three of the four "winners" were the star-studded team of Kevin Nash, Rob Terry, and Shawn Daivari. Samoa Joe was the actual good wrestler of the group (and thankfully managed to pick the World Title briefcase). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=04hLR4gsfQ0