Georgia Championship Wrestling's (GCW) first weekly television series had premiered on
Atlanta-based WTBS (then WTCG; now
WPCH) in 1972, when station owner
Ted Turner purchased the rights to air the program from competing station WQXI (now
WXIA). From that date, GCW's program aired for two hours (from 6:00-8:00pm, and later from 6:05-8:05pm following the introduction of the "
Turner Time" scheduling format in 1981) every Saturday night. In 1976, GCW became the first
National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) territory to earn a national
cable television contract as the soon-to-be-renamed
Superstation WTBS began to be carried by various cable and satellite providers nationwide. In 1982, GCW renamed its weekly program
World Championship Wrestling, a name the entire promotion would grow to be identified by. Brothers
Jack and
Gerald Brisco had major stakes in the organization, while
Ole Anderson was
head booker and was basically in charge of operations. GCW's program was hosted by NWA announcer
Gordon Solie, who also hosted programs for various other NWA-affiliated
wrestling promotions at the time.
World Championship Wrestling was a program featuring the "
rasslin'" style of wrestling, that emphasized a more athletic product and put less emphasis on cartoonish gimmicks. The following year,
Vince McMahon, who as owner of the
World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE) promoted the cartoonish gimmicks that GCW fans were not traditionally receptive to and who in recent months had begun to expand his promotion nationwide, took control of the other major cable television contract at the time when he purchased
Southwest Championship Wrestling's Sunday morning timeslot on
USA Network for his
All American Wrestling program. In 1984, in addition to the cable contract and his nationally syndicated offerings (
WWF Championship Wrestling and
WWF All-Star Wrestling), McMahon expanded further by premiering
Tuesday Night Titans on USA Network. Later in 1984, McMahon decided that, as part of his continued expansion, the WWF needed a second national cable outlet for its weekly programming. The only other cable deal available at the moment was the one GCW had with WTBS; if McMahon was able to acquire this timeslot, he would hold a
monopoly on all nationally televised
professional wrestling in the United States. Consequently, he approached Turner with an offer to buy the Saturday night GCW timeslot, only for Turner to reject him out of hand. McMahon, undeterred, tried to find another way of securing the time slot for the WWF; he discovered that method shortly after his rejection by Turner. McMahon approached the Brisco brothers and
Jim Barnett, the fourth owner of GCW, and discussed a potential sale. All three men agreed to sell their stakes in GCW to McMahon, giving the WWF the
controlling stake in the company and McMahon access to its Saturday night timeslot. The last
World Championship Wrestling program under GCW control aired on July 7, 1984. ==Slot takeover and reception==