Today
John and Chad are joined by arguably the man most identifiable with being the
"voice of WCW", former ring announcer David Penzer. Looking back on WCW, few
names can be as closely associated with the product as David Penzer. Appearing
on Monday Nitro from it's inception through extinction and serving an important
role as arena pitchman, Penzer's job went far beyond just being inside the ring.
We learn more about the man behind the mic then ever before and how without
David Penzer some of WCW's greatest moments would not have had his very distinct
voice behind it.
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Ring Announcer David Penzer on Hulk Hogan's Impact in WCW
On his infamous segments and working with Chris Jericho:
It wasn't scripted word for word or thing for thing, it was planned.
Chris wanted to turn heel and so we came up with this little idea driving down
the road. He would lose and rip off my tuxedo and beat up my chair and the next
week he would come and give me a new tux jacket and a new chair and then he
would lose and beat it up again. That lasted a few weeks and then I think Terry
Taylor was also involved in booking that angle. Then he turned heel and the rest
is history but it was fun to be apart of it. Me and Chris spent a lot of time
hanging out and Chris is a fun person to be around and I think people know
that.
The expansion of WCW programming and management's hands off
approach:
At the time you had WCW Monday Nitro that was so popular and then you
had Thunder so you had five hours of live to tape television a week and Eric
gravitated towards that. So WCW Saturday Night and the syndicated shows became
and were "B" shows and mostly then Eric and "the powers that be" weren't
involved in the booking of those shows. At one point WCW Saturday Night was
booked by me, Tony Schiavone, Arn Anderson and Jimmy Hart. Jimmy used to worry
that we were doing such good storylines with the secondary guys that the ratings
would get so good that he would end up getting removed because they didn't want
to get ratings any bit closer to the big shows.
His colorful look and tuxedo style:
Everyday when you dress for work for the most part you can
dress the way you feel or the mood you're in. I had the black slacks and the
white shirt and black jacket and that was my gimmick. So the only thing I got to
change was my cummerbund. When I realized that this was going to last I would go
out to different places and if I saw anything off the wall or zany I'd buy them
and take four or five sets with me on the road for a trip and whatever mood I
was in I'd throw it on. It gave me a real cool opportunity to sort of be me.
People bring that up, that it made me stand out a little bit and everybody
especially in the entertainment business needs to do something that helps them
stand out.
Did he have an issue with WCW brining in Michael Buffer for Main
Events:
Was I happy that he was making a 100,000 times more then I was to say
"Let's Get Ready to Rumble"? It wasn't the highlight of my life but let's get
something straight, this is America. This is the land where anybody can come up
with an idea whether it's the Pet Rock or a catchphrase and they can make
millions and millions of dollars and that's what makes this country great. So
while, I'm not going to lie it's frustrating that he's making more for one line
then I'm making in three weeks, I never let it get to me. If I just keep working
hard and honing my craft and doing things on the side, someday I'll get there
and maybe I'll be the guy that comes in and does the Main Event. You never know
what could have happened if WCW stayed around. I was so involved with so many
different facets with booking committee's and talent relations that if this
thing was still around I could have been a VP of something. I just kept working
hard and never let the small stuff bother me. It was a great line and he
deserved to be able to make his money to go out and get the crowd going and it
certainly got the crowd going.
Was he shocked to see Vince McMahon buy WCW:
I don't know if anyone was shocked to see it end. The writing was on the
wall and something was going to happen and even Eric had a company that he had
called Fusient Media that had actually done their due diligence portion
of the sale to buy it. I think the two things that shocked me were that they
sold it to WWE, to find out it was so cheap and also that they cancelled the
programming. The ratings for Nitro were still at the top 20 ratings of all cable
television and it still had a healthy audience at it's worst. The pay per views
didn't sell out, the house shows weren't doing well but Nitro was still a brand
that people would go out and see. To see that (Ted) Turner had lost his power
with the AOL/TIme Warner merger and they brought somebody in who wasn't a
wrestling fan and I think that was the shock that Vince bought it for so cheap.
I had told this story on another podcast, the way I found out it had happened. A
friend of mine called me and told me to turn to WWF.com and there was a splash
page that said WWF PURCHASES WCW and that's literally how I found out. There was
speculation and rumors but that's how I found out. I had said on the podcast and
the guy made a big deal out of it that I cried and I didn't really cry
literally, but figuratively I shed some tears because I had really worked hard
and was shocked. Just to set the record straight I didn't really have tears in
my eyes. The whole thing happened so fast.
David Penzer also discusses his time with TNA and what led to his
arrival and departure, his additional duties in WCW, the impact Hulk Hogan and
the nWo made, his announcing style, the creation of WCW Nitro, his favorite
wrestlers to announce and much more...
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