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{{Not verified|date=February 2007}} |
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{{otheruses4|Vincent Kennedy McMahon, current WWE Chairman|his father|Vincent J. McMahon}} |
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{{Infobox Wrestler |
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|name=Vince McMahon |
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|image=Vince McMahon 2.jpg |
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|names=Vince McMahon <br /> '''Mr. McMahon''' <br /> Vincent Kennedy McMahon |
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|real height= 6 feet 3 inches (191cm) |
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|real_weight= 248 lb (112 kg) |
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|birth_date = {{birth date and age|1945|8|24}} |
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|death_date = |
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|birth_place =] |
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|resides = ] |
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|billed = |
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|retired=}} |
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'''Vincent Kennedy McMahon''' (born ], ] in ]) is an ] ] promoter, occasional ], on-screen personality, former ], and ]. |
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He is the ] and majority ] of ] (WWE) and also is currently the interim General Manager on the ] brand. |
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==Professional career== |
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===World Wide Wrestling Federation (1971-1979)=== |
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Early in his Wrestling career, Vince became the play-by-play announcer for television matches after he replaced Ray Morgan in 1971; a role he regularly maintained until November 1997. |
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Throughout the 1970s, McMahon became a prominent force in his father's company, and pushing for the renaming of the company to the World Wrestling Federation (WWF). The young McMahon was also behind the famous ] vs. ] match of 1976, the year that his daughter ] was born. |
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===World Wrestling Federation / Entertainment (1979-present)=== |
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In 1979, the WWWF became the WWF, which now is WWE, and Vince purchased the ], which held both ] and wrestling events. In 1980, he incorporated Titan Sports, Inc., which would purchase the Capitol Wrestling Corporation from his father in 1982. |
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Against his father's expressed wishes, McMahon began a national expansion process that would fundamentally change the business. By 1983, Vince had full control and ownership of the WWF and its future direction, having bought out all of his father's former partners, including ]. As part of the deal, Vince promised Monsoon lifetime employment, and Monsoon did remain affiliated with the WWF until his death. |
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Vince's father died in 1984, leaving his son behind to carry on his pro wrestling legacy. The first thing that he did as full owner of the WWF was to break away from the ], as his vision of a new, national wrestling promotion was incompatible with their old-school promoting philosophy. |
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After '']'', ] began to expand on his new-found ] and returned to Vince McMahon's all-new ]. Hogan won the ] on ], 1984—just weeks after his return—and McMahon helped engineer Hogan's immersion into the mainstream entertainment media, in which Hogan was portrayed as the ultimate all-American good guy. McMahon did not stop there, however, inviting rock and pop stars such as ] and ] to participate in WWF ] in what would come to be called the "Rock 'n' Wrestling Connection". The popularity of the WWF increased exponentially as ] often featured wrestling in its programming to follow the exploits of music stars and other celebrities in the wrestling world. McMahon called the incorporation of pro wrestling among other types of entertainment such as music and movies ]. With Hulk Hogan as the performer and McMahon as the promoter, the two worked to take the pro wrestling business to places that no one ever deemed imaginable. |
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Around the same time, McMahon publicly admitted the secret behind ] in pro wrestling: that its outcomes were predetermined, moves planned and rehearsed, and that wrestlers played ] roles much like ] ]s do. While general knowledge to most wrestling fans, this admission broke the final taboo of the old ways of wrestling and earned McMahon much ire among old-school fans, wrestlers, and promoters, who were already incensed at McMahon for his invasion into long-held NWA territories. Then-NWA Champion ] was very vocal of his frustrations toward McMahon and the WWF; when promoting a show in his hometown of ], Race supposedly attempted to burn down a WWF ring. Interestingly, Race jumped ship to the WWF just two years later and became "King" Harley Race. |
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The culmination of the Rock 'n' Wrestling Connection was the first-ever '']'' event at ] in ]. McMahon promoted the event across the country on closed-circuit TV (] technology was not yet sufficiently developed.), pouring all of his and his company's resources into what was widely seen in the business as a long shot. The investment paid off, and the inaugural ''WrestleMania'' was a resounding financial success. The show became an annual event, held every March or April. McMahon followed the success of the event by launching a series of other yearly pay-per-view events including '']'', held roughly every ], '']'' in 1988 and the '']'' in 1988. |
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===The Trial=== |
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In 1990, McMahon ventured outside of wrestling by founding a ] company called the ] (WBF). At roughly the same time, some die-hard NWA territories run by ] sold up to ], thus creating ] (WCW). These territories had been badly bruised by McMahon's tactics of placing his shows directly opposite Crockett's and threatening PPV carriers with withholding his ''WrestleMania'' if they showed Crockett's shows. WCW never really troubled the WWF at this juncture when it came to TV ratings or attendances. |
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] |
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However, around 1992, things began to change. The WBF went out of business as alleged ] abuse among both McMahon's wrestlers and bodybuilders came under scrutiny. By 1994, things were slowly turning in WCW's favor, especially when they signed Hulk Hogan. |
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McMahon was put on ] in 1994, accused of distributing steroids to his wrestlers. As a legal move, his wife Linda was made ] of the WWF during the trial. He was acquitted of all charges though he admitted to taking steroids himself in the ]. The prosecution made Hulk Hogan its star witness, and his testimony in the trial severely damaged the two's friendship even though Hogan's testimony defended McMahon. After Hogan's testimony, McMahon would go before the media declaring that he wished that Hogan had not lied about him on the witness stand. McMahon later stated his intention by the comment was to vilify Hogan before he entered WCW. Despite not being convicted, McMahon and the WWF took a major public relations hit. The WWF's popularity sharply declined from that point, mainly in part to even more poor ideas and matches being served up in Vince's enforced absence. |
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===Other Business=== |
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In 2000, McMahon again ventured outside the world of professional wrestling by launching the ]. The league eventually began in February 2001 with McMahon making an appearance at the first game. The league, however, fared worse than the WBF and quickly folded. Also in 2001, McMahon acquired ] and later ] in bankruptcy court, leaving McMahon and the World Wrestling Federation as the only major wrestling promotion left in North America. |
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In 2003, after being forced to ], McMahon again ventured outside the wrestling ring and launched ]. |
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==Mr. McMahon== |
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], ] and ] on ''SmackDown!'']] |
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'''Mr. McMahon''' is the on-screen character of Vince McMahon, with the ] of an often egotistical ] boss. The character spawned from the real-life hatred many wrestling fans had for McMahon following the ]. |
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Although Mr. McMahon was loathed for his actions as the evil owner of the WWF, the character proved to be one of the most memorable heels in professional wrestling history. Despite Mr. McMahon's evil intentions, many fans continue to respect the character for the history it's had, particularly with "Stone Cold" Steve Austin, who was Mr. McMahon's nemesis at the character's apex. |
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Several other gimmicks have become integral parts of McMahon's on-camera persona, such as his throaty exclamation of "You're fired!", and his "power walk" - an over-exaggerated strut towards the ring, swinging his arms and bobbing his head from side to side in a cocky manner. This is usually accompanied by a comment from ], such as "There's only one man I know that walks like that." The power walk is used to get a reaction out of the audience (especially when he's a heel), but it also provides comic relief as well. WWE Superstar ] had joked on the ''RAW Exposed'' special that aired before ], that Vince "somehow walks like he's got a broomstick shoved up in his ass". According to ], the power walk was inspired by one of Vince McMahon's favorite wrestlers as a child, Dr. Jerry Graham. |
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====Vince McMahon Kiss My Ass Club==== |
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Following the collapse of the ] at ], Mr. McMahon created the "Vince McMahon Kiss My Ass Club", which consisted of various WWE superstars or officials being ordered to kiss his backside in the middle of the ring. |
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The first member of the "Kiss My Ass Club" was ], who did it on the grounds of being rehired by the WWF as he had served as the commissioner of The Alliance. The following candidate was "Stone Cold" Steve Austin, who assaulted McMahon to be the womens champion rather than go through with the indignity. Laughing from ringside, ] was forced to take Austin's place. For betraying him at ], Mr. McMahon ordered ] to also go through with it. The club was proclaimed closed by ] after he forced Mr. McMahon to kiss ]'s backside on an episode of ''SmackDown!'' |
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Although the gimmick was "officially" retired by The Rock, it has reappeared on various occasions. Mr. McMahon has ordered various others to go through with the indignity over the years, including ] and ]. Prior to ], ] became a member of the club after Shane McMahon forced him into it; Shawn later forced Shane to kiss Vince's ass. Triple H also assaulted McMahon rather than go through with it, prompting him and Shawn Michaels to re-form D-Generation X and feud with McMahon. |
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] has the dubious distinction of being only the second member of the club to willingly kiss McMahon's backside, on the grounds that it would save ]'s job. She promptly betrayed him, and Foley was fired instead. |
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Mr. McMahon has been on the receiving end of the indignity on several occasions, as he's kissed the backsides of the aforementioned Rikishi, as well as ] when ] shoved his face into it at ]. |
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The gimmick has also spawned its own Internet based cartoon entitled "Mr. McMahon's Kiss My Ass Club - The WWE's Most Valuable Asset." The cartoon series produced by ] debuted on WWE.com on ], ]. |
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====Firings==== |
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In numerous ], Mr. McMahon uses his ability to terminate whomever he feels from either a position or the company. The termination is usually preceded by the aforementioned throaty exclamation of "You're fired!" |
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This is a list of those whom he has fired on-screen. |
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*] - was scapegoated after friend, Steve Austin, assaulted the McMahon family at WWE Homecoming in 2005. Ross was later brought back at "]" and again at WrestleMania 22, until finally returning full time. |
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*] - Kane was quickly re-hired the same night. |
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*] - was fired as WWF commissioner, although Shawn notified McMahon that he couldn't be fired as per his contract. |
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*] - was actually fired by Triple H for fast-counting him and costing him the Federation championship, although the decision was supported by McMahon. |
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*] - numerous times; once as Dude Love, once as WWE commissioner, and most recently, following a segment of the aforementioned "Kiss My Ass Club." |
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*] - as an ] for ''RAW.'' |
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*] - after it was proven that Hogan was indeed "Mr. America." |
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*] - as General Manager of ''SmackDown!'' |
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*] - twice, once in 2003, although he was quickly rehired and permanently in December 2005. |
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*] - after he failed to declare a victor in an Undertaker/Kane match in October 1998. |
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*] - for failing to join the aforementioned "Kiss My Ass Club" and for failing to break ]'s Master Lock. |
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*] - for losing to ] on the ] edition of ''RAW.'' |
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*Every WWE fan - prior to firing Jim Ross, McMahon vented his rage by "hiring" everyone who was watching him for the sole purpose of "firing" them seconds later. |
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*A pyro technician - who caused a freak explosion of one of the fireworks, leading McMahon to initially believe that it was ] who caused the explosion. |
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====Feuds with non-wrestlers==== |
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On an episode of WWE Monday Night RAW, Bischoff was brought out by Vince McMahon's executive assistant Jonathan Coachman so that he could announce the completion of his book "Controversy Creates Cash." Bischoff began ] at McMahon, saying that he was fired "unceremoniously" as the RAW General Manager, that there would be no Mr. McMahon if it wasn't for Bischoff's over-the-top rebellious ideas, and that ] was nothing but a rip off of the ]. |
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More recently, Mr. McMahon has been involved in a feud with ]. This feud was escalated on the ], ] edition of ] when Trump dropped cash from the ceiling of the arena to the audience, after saying that Vince doesn't know what the fans want.<!-- Stop adding the WrestleMania match, announced matches that have not yet occured do not go into articles. --> |
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==Controversy== |
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On ], ], McMahon was accused of ] by a worker at a ] tanning bar <ref></ref>. The worker said that he "groped her and harassed her". At first, the charge appeared to be discredited because McMahon was in Miami for the ] at the time in question; it was soon clarified that the alleged incident was reported to police on the day of the Rumble, but actually took place the day before<ref></ref>. |
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On ], a Florida television station reported that no charges would be filed against McMahon as a result of the investigation. |
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McMahon has also come under fire for constantly placing himself into sexual angles with many WWE Divas, including ], ], ], ], ], and ]. |
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McMahon's ] as a whole has been the center of controversy in the past, especially in the "Attitude Era" of what was the World Wrestling Federation - including ] for their sexual references, and ] for his trademark drinking of beer and flipping the middle finger. |
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On the ], Stephanie comments that she had to nix a potential ] angle. According to her, Vince was to reveal himself as the father of her baby; when she said no, he pushed for Shane to be the father, but she turned that idea down as well. She also nixed Vince's idea that her wedding to Triple H be aired live on PPV, and said that the only reason Vince ever hired Eric Bischoff was to be able to say that his longtime nemesis once worked for him. |
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==Other media== |
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In 2001, Vince McMahon was interviewed by '']'' and performed an interview with his son ] for the second issue of Playboy Magazine in the year. |
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In March 2006 (at age sixty) McMahon was featured on the cover of '']'' magazine. In the months after its publication, it could be seen in McMahon's office during backstage segments. A large version of the cover was used as a weapon during McMahon's match with ] at WrestleMania 22 and was defaced by D-Generation X upon their reunification during an episode of ''RAW''. |
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==McMahon DVD== |
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] |
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On ] ], a two-disc DVD set showcasing McMahon's career was released. The DVD is simply titled ''McMahon''. The box art symbolizes the blurred reality between Vince McMahon the person and Mr. McMahon the character. |
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The DVD includes the following McMahon matches: |
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*vs. ] <small>''(]'', ] ], ])</small> |
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*vs. Steve Austin – ] <small>''(]'', ] ], ])</small> |
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*with ] vs. Steve Austin – ] ] <small>''(]'', ] ], ])</small> |
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*vs. ] – ] <small>('']'', ] ], ])</small> |
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*vs. Shane McMahon – ] <small>('']'', ] ], ])</small> |
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*vs. ] – Street Fight match <small>('']'', ] ], ])</small> |
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*vs. ] – Street Fight match <small>('']'', ] ], ])</small> |
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*vs. ] – ] <small>('']'', ] ], ])</small> |
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*vs. ] – ] <small>('']'', ] ], ])</small> |
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While much of the DVD paints McMahon in a good light (the chapter on the ] gives the impression it was a daring idea and not a massive failure), several segments did point out some of his drawbacks. ] accuses Vince of destroying his father ] and the ], almost everyone besides Vince talks of how horrible the ] angle was, and many wrestlers discuss how stubborn Vince can be and how he refuses to listen to others. It also became apparent that some have been offended by McMahon claiming to be the leader of a religion called '''McMahonism'''. |
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==Personal life== |
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Vince married Linda McMahon on ] ] in ]. The two met in church when Linda was 13 and Vince was 16. They were introduced by Vince's mother, Vicky Askew. They have two children: ] and ], both of whom work for WWE. |
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He has a $12 million penthouse in New York City, a $40 million mansion in Greenwich, Connecticut, a $20 million vacation home in Boca Raton, Florida{{Fact|date=February 2007}}, and owns the $30 million WWE Challenger 604 private jet that is sometimes seen on television. He was worth approximately 1.7 billion dollars after his company went public in 1999. He was on the Forbes 400 in 2000 at 1.1 billion and by 2001 had dropped off at 700 million. As of 2007, his 56 million shares of WWE are valued at around 900 million dollars. He is no longer on Forbes list of billionaires. |
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Vince wanted to be a wrestler when he was young but his father wouldn't let him (he was told that promoters do not appear on the show and should stay apart from his wrestlers). |
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Vince has two grandsons : Shane and wife ]'s sons, Declan James McMahon & Kenyon Jesse McMahon. He also has one granddaughter Aurora Rose Levesque, daughter to Stephanie and ] |
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McMahon has undergone several severe injuries in recent years, including neck surgery in 1994, a motorcycle accident in 1999, and severe ] tears in both legs while diving into the ring at the ]. Vince sat down when he arrived in the ring and, remarkably, did not appear to be in any pain when the camera did a close-up of him. |
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===Handshake contracts=== |
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McMahon was known at one time to work out verbal agreements with wrestlers ending with a handshake. Ric Flair stated in his autobiography that their agreement reached in 1991 called for Flair to make an uncertain salary of at least 2.4 million U.S. dollars and the understanding that Flair could leave the WWF if he ever felt that he was being pushed as anything less than a main eventer. McMahon abandoned this practice after WCW signed several stars away, such as Lex Luger, Scott Hall and Kevin Nash, and now signs talent to standard wrestler contracts. |
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==Wrestling facts== |
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*'''Finishing and signature moves''' |
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::*'''''Mac Stunner''''' (]) |
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==Championships and accomplishments== |
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*''']''' |
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:*] Winner |
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:*1-time ] |
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:* Owner Of World Wrestling Entertainment (Current) |
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:* Owner of the intellectual properties of World Championship Wrestling and Extreme Championship Wrestling |
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*''']''' |
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:*1997 Feud of the Year (vs. Eric Bischoff) |
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:*1998 Feud of the Year (vs. ]) |
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:*1999 Feud of the Year (vs. Steve Austin) |
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:*2001 Feud of the Year (vs. ]) |
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:*2002 Feud of the Year (vs. ]) |
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:*2003 Feud of the Year (vs. ]) |
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:*2006 Match of the Year – vs. ] <small>('']'', ] ])</small> |
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*''']''' |
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:*Member of the ] (inducted in 1996) |
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:*1987 Best Booker |
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:*1988 Best Promoter |
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:*1998 Best Booker |
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:*1998 Best Promoter |
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:*1999 Best Booker |
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:*1999 Best Promoter |
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:*2000 Best Promoter |
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:*1998 Feud of the Year (vs. Steve Austin) |
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:*1999 Feud of the Year (vs. Steve Austin) |
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:*1999 Best Non-Wrestler |
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:*2000 Best Non-Wrestler |
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*'''Other Accomplishments''' |
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:*] Walk of Famer |
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:*Sport's Illustrated 'Sportsman of the Year' 2006 Nominee |
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:*Created WrestleMania |
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==References== |
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<references/> |
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*{{cite book|author=Assael, Shaun and Mooneyham, Mike|title=Sex, Lies, and Headlocks: The Real Story of Vince McMahon and the World Wrestling Federation|publisher=Three Rivers Press|location=New York, New York|year=2004|id=ISBN 1-4000-5143-6}}<!--Citing exact chapters/pages would help--> |
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==External links== |
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{{wikiquote}} |
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{{McMahonFamily}} |
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