Premiere The
first episode of Nitro was broadcast from the
Mall of America in
Bloomington, Minnesota on September 4, 1995. who parted ways with WCW following a backstage altercation with
Paul Orndorff. Absent from the first episode, he had been scheduled to face Hogan for the
WCW World Heavyweight Championship on the September 11 edition, but was replaced by Lex Luger, who issued a challenge to Hogan on the debut show. Vader would never perform on
Nitro, and embarked on a WWF career in January 1996.
Monday Night War (
Kevin Nash,
Hollywood Hogan and
Scott Hall) were major contributors to ratings success The advent of
Nitro brought with it a
television ratings rivalry with the WWF's
Monday Night Raw, known to wrestling fans as the "
Monday Night War". Throughout this period,
Nitro would grow in popularity and eventually surpass
Raw in the ratings for 83 consecutive weeks, beginning in June 1996. Since
Nitro was live, the show was seen as far less predictable than its WWF counterpart. Initially only sixty minutes in length (as was
Raw at the time),
Nitro was expanded to two hours following the
1996 NBA Playoffs (
Raw would later extend to two hours in February 1997). In January 1998, the show was extended to three hours. At its peak, the rivalry resulted in performers on either show trading verbal insults and challenges. In retaliation for a segment of
Raw in which
D-Generation X (DX) travelled to the
Norfolk Scope arena in
Norfolk where
Nitro was being broadcast (WWF was nearby in
Hampton, Virginia the same night), Eric Bischoff challenged Vince McMahon to face him in a match to be held at
Slamboree 1998; McMahon never formally recognized the challenge and did not appear. The July 6, 1998, episode of
Nitro from the Georgia Dome in Atlanta saw
Goldberg defeat Hollywood Hogan for the
WCW World Heavyweight Championship.
Nitro is best remembered for the
New World Order (nWo), with former WWF wrestlers
Scott Hall,
Kevin Nash and "Hollywood"
Hulk Hogan as rebellious heels plotting to take over WCW. Despite ratings success, both the angle and stable would later be criticized for the heel wrestlers almost never losing, and for what was seen as overexposure. As the nWo expanded, the stable would ultimately split into several warring factions within itself, while most WCW-branded wrestlers would eventually become neutral.
Changes Nitro's success forced WWF owner
Vince McMahon to usher in the more adult-oriented "
Attitude Era". In April 1998,
Raw beat
Nitro in the ratings for the first time in almost two years. The shows would continue to trade ratings wins back and forth until November 1998 when
Raw pulled ahead of
Nitro for good. WCW was frequently criticized for several faults, including an inability to create new stars while over-relying on established stars to support ratings. On January 4, 1999
Mick Foley, who had wrestled for WCW during the early 1990s as Cactus Jack, won the
WWF Championship as Mankind on a pre-taped episode of
Raw.
Nitro announcer
Tony Schiavone sarcastically commented on the match, which unexpectedly resulted in
Nitro losing in the ratings battle when several hundred thousand viewers switched over to
Raw to see the title change. That night's episode of
Nitro would be notorious for the "
Fingerpoke of Doom", in which a WCW World Heavyweight Championship match between Kevin Nash and Hollywood Hogan was quickly revealed to be a ruse that reunited the core members of the nWo as the "nWo Elite". The match was universally panned and was considered to have damaged WCW's credibility and begin their decline. In October 1999, former WWF writers
Vince Russo and
Ed Ferrara were hired by WCW. Both men attempted to bring their WWF-style writing to
Nitro, including edgier storylines, lengthier non-wrestling segments, and an increased amount of sexuality. Many WCW fans greatly resented Russo and Ferrara for changing their programming to be like the WWF, as they preferred the traditional method of wrestling over long skits, screwjobs, and risque innuendo that were widely popular among WWF audiences.
Nitro would be reduced to two hours in January 2000, returning the program to an 8-10 p.m. timeslot, with the first hour running unopposed and the second hour competing with the first hour of
Raw. Eric Bischoff would be brought back to
Nitro and was paired with Russo to "
reboot" WCW on April 10, 2000. None of these changes were able to help recover
Nitros ratings and Bischoff eventually left WCW in July 2000 after an incident involving Hogan and Russo at the
Bash at the Beach event. Russo would later suffer a severe
concussion after being speared through a cage by Goldberg, later leaving WCW on extended leave to recover. Further declines from late 2000 would see WCW search for new ownership beginning in early 2001. == Notable episodes ==