Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
With this in mind, Mankind (who used a smelly sock named "Mr. Socko" as part of his gimmick) asked his former enemy if he could help with his fight against The Undertaker and Big Show. The Rock reluctantly accepted, and later that night the two captured The Undertaker and Big Show's WWF Tag Team Championship when they pinned Big Show after a ...
Michael Francis Foley [16] [4] was born in Bloomington, Indiana, [16] on June 7, 1965. [4] [16] He is of Irish descent, [17] and has an older brother named John.Shortly after his birth, he moved with his family to the Long Island town of East Setauket, about 40 miles east of New York City, where he attended Ward Melville High School.
Mankind vs. The Undertaker was a professional wrestling match between Mankind (Mick Foley) and The Undertaker (Mark Calaway) of the then-World Wrestling Federation (WWF), and took place inside a Hell in a Cell, a 16-foot (4.9 m) high steel cage structure with a roof.
The fourth match was an "I Quit" match between Ric Flair and Mick Foley. In the beginning, Foley stuffed his smelly gym sock, Mr. Socko , down Flair's gullet to apply the Mandible claw . Flair nearly passed out from the sock’s foul smell, but since the match was an “I Quit” match, Foley was unable to capitalize.
Foley also spoke out forcefully against the former president ahead of the 2020 vote. Trump has been courting his old associates from the WWE — and their male-dominated supporters — in the lead ...
The event was held at the Scottrade Center in St. Louis, Missouri.. The Royal Rumble is an annual gimmick pay-per-view (PPV) produced every January by WWE since 1988—in April 2011, the promotion ceased going by its full name of World Wrestling Entertainment, with "WWE" becoming an orphaned initialism. [4]
Federal food regulators raised their alarm for recalled eggs sold from Costco stores over possible salmonella exposure, reclassifying the targeted product to its highest risk level.
The new Netflix docuseries, "Jerry Springer: Fights, Camera, Action," explores the controversial popularity of "The Jerry Springer Show" in the '90s.