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The album, which included a Sunny poster and a sticker sheet, was missing two tracks from Volume 2, Ken Shamrock and Dude Love's themes, but added Jake "The Snake" Roberts' and Faarooq's themes which were not included on Volume 2. It also differed in six tracks:
Mark William Calaway (born March 24, 1965), better known by his ring name The Undertaker, is an American retired professional wrestler.Widely regarded as one of the greatest professional wrestlers of all time, [13] Calaway spent the vast majority of his career wrestling for WWE and in 2022 was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame.
Aurelian Smith Jr. (born May 30, 1955) [1] better known by the ring name Jake "the Snake" Roberts, [2] [1] is an American retired professional wrestler and actor. He is signed to All Elite Wrestling (AEW), where he performs as the on-screen manager to La Facción Ingobernable, and he also serves as a special advisor for AEW's community outreach program, AEW Together.
Also appearing are Sgt. Slaughter, Dean Malenko, Demolition, the Powers of Pain, the Young Stallions, Jake "the Snake" Roberts, Tony Atlas, Slick and Stan Hansen. Tommy Fierro (center) loves ...
In mid-1991, The Undertaker aligned himself with Jake "The Snake" Roberts in his feud with The Ultimate Warrior. However, during an episode of Saturday Night's Main Event in February 1992, The Undertaker turned face and defended Randy Savage's manager and wife, Miss Elizabeth, from Roberts's attack. Two weeks later during a "Funeral Parlor ...
Jake Roberts: 15 Randy Savage 10:55 0 17 Jim Duggan: 19 Virgil 20:45 1 18 Irwin R. Schyster: 23 Roddy Piper 27:01 0 19 Jimmy Snuka: 14 The Undertaker 02:27 0 20 The Undertaker: 17 Hulk Hogan 13:51 1 21 ^ Randy Savage: 27 Ric Flair and Sid Justice 22:26 2 22 The Berzerker: 18 Hulk Hogan 09:00 0 23 Virgil: 20 Jim Duggan 07:29 1 24 Col. Mustafa ...
The rocks quickly started to come: rainbow rocks, floral rocks, be kind rocks, avocado rocks.
In Your House was a series of monthly professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) events first produced by the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE) in May 1995. They aired when the promotion was not holding one of its then-five major PPVs (WrestleMania, King of the Ring, SummerSlam, Survivor Series, and Royal Rumble), and were sold at a lower cost. [2]