5 Best And 5 Worst WWE RAW Guest Hosts

3. Ozzy And Sharon Osbourne €“ WWE€™s Got Talent (November 2nd, 2009)

What started off as an entertaining segment soon turned into a rather boring and stupid time-filling part of RAW. Ozzy basically pulled off some of his catchphrases (EARLY BIRD!!!!), and other than that, he shamelessly plugged his own book and DX€™s book. Furthermore, he basically allowed himself to be manipulated into making that show€™s main event exactly what DX wanted. What is the point of €œgiving the guest host the power to decide matches€ when he just does lip service to one star in particular? Furthermore, America€™s Got Talent might be a popular show, but why would they try a cross-over talent show on RAW, a program built on athleticism? In their main segment, they hosted a talent show. It featured, among other things, Santino pretending to be Ozzy and biting the head off of a Batman action figure, which he didn€™t even accomplish. The next contender was Chris Masters, whose €˜talent€™ consisted of flexing his pectorals to the beat of €˜Crazy Train€™. While that might€™ve entertained a few people in the audience, it just demonstrated how little faith anyone backstage had in Chris Masters. Instead of actually wrestling, he was pulling off lame pectoral flexes. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CZlXNCzRC5Q Finally, we had a singing duet composed of Chavo Guerrero and Jillian Hall. It was meant to be bad comedy, and that€™s exactly what it was. Granted, Ozzy and Sharon did their best to make this an entertaining show, but all in all they did little to actually advance storylines or make the show unique. Apart from the RAW€™s Got Talent segment, there was nothing unique about this show.
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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.