5 Best And 5 Worst WWE RAW Guest Hosts

Not quite the Rock’n’Wrestling Connection that took place in the 1980s.

To many fans, 2009 wasn€™t a good year for the WWE. Part of this attitude stems from the decision to have a different person act as guest host for one episode of RAW. I€™m assuming that this was done as a means of getting the WWE more media attention, and to hopefully attract new viewers to the show. Unfortunately, this wasn€™t any kind of re-creation of the Rock€™n€™Wrestling Connection that took place in the 1980s. While Hulkamania and the early period of the 80s Golden Era brought top stars and A-list celebrities to WWE programming, the same could not be said for the Guest Host period. It was a time when they brought in celebrities who, for the most part, either didn€™t know enough about WWE€™s product to really make a difference, or they didn€™t care. Though a few were interesting, most were subpar, at least. Below is a list of the five best and worst guest hosts of Monday Night RAW, from the period starting in the middle of 2009, to Mach 2011. However, it€™s not like there€™s much of a distinction between those two categories. The guest host segments were weird and unnecessary most of the time anyway. So here are the five best guest hosts, followed by the five worst, based on how much they truly contributed to the show.
Contributor

Alexander Podgorski is a writer for WhatCulture that has been a fan of professional wrestling since he was 8 years old. He loves all kinds of wrestling, from WWE and sports entertainment, to puroresu in Japan. He holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from Queen's University in Political Studies and French, and a Master's Degree in Public Administration. He speaks English, French, Polish, a bit of German, and knows some odd words and phrases in half a dozen other languages.