15 WWE Wrestlers Whose Props Defined Their Characters
15. Al Snow - Head
What does everybody want?...HEAD! An innuendo goldmine for WWE's creative writing staff, the frenzied psychosis that afflicted Snow's gimmick, a grinning lunatic with 'Help Me' scrawled backwards across his forehead, was personified, ironically so, by the inanimate mannequins head he would thrust into the air on his journey to the ring and which he used, on the rarest of rare occasions, to violently stove in the skull of a luckless opponent. This was a character Snow had cultivated during a brief return to ECW and brought back to WWE in the mid-nineties after becoming intrigued about paranormal psychology, with his portrayal of a deranged schizophrenic who regularly engaged in full-blown conversations with "Head" - an apt name if there ever was one and a prop he found on the street - earning him cult status at the height of the Attitude Era as the cornerstone of WWE's Hardcore division.