Eric Bischoff(I)
- Actor
- Producer
- Writer
Eric Bischoff was born on May 27th, 1957, in Detroit, Michigan, USA. He
graduated from the University of Minnesota with a Bachelor of Science
Degree in Business Administration and a minor in radio, television and
film. He ran a successful construction company and pitched low-level
marketing ideas to buyers until joining the American Wrestling Alliance
in the late 80s. The company was falling into a black hole, and AWA CEO
Verne Gagne gave the company to Eric when it was beyond repair (the AWA
folded in 1991). After trying in vain to get a job at the WWF, the
wrestling business's top federation, Bischoff joined World Championship
Wrestling, a failing company owned by Ted Turner. After paying
attention to the mistakes of those in power at WCW, Eric was promoted
to Senior Vice President of WCW. In 1994, he signed the WWF's top draw,
Hulk Hogan. Subsequent signings of wrestling legends Randy Savage, Lex
Luger, Scott Hall, Kevin Nash, Sean Waltman, and Roddy Piper later
followed. In 1995, the same year that WCW returned a profit for the
first time in its history, Eric Bischoff convinced Ted Turner to give
him a prime-time slot in order to compete with the WWF's top show,
"Monday Night Raw". Thus the birth of WCW Nitro, wrestling's first
week-to-week live prime time show. Insiders predicted short and certain
death for WCW, as no other wrestling company had ever successfully
competed with the WWF. In its first week, Nitro beat out WWF Raw in the
Nielson Ratings. Eric Bischoff served as the head commentator on the
show and shockingly declared war on the WWF by giving away the results
to the WWF's taped shows and publically insulting their direction. On
his 39th birthday in 1996, Bischoff revealed a WWF main-eventer, Scott
Hall, to be working for WCW. It was an angle that led to the reason
wrestling hit its boom period... the New World Order (or nWo, a heel
faction that Bischoff eventually joined). The angle was immediately
successful, and secured WCW's spot as the new number one wrestling
promotion in America. WCW Nitro defeated WWF Raw by a wide margin for
95 consecutive weeks in the ratings. In 1997, the WWF came its closest
to going out of business. Their top star and champion, Bret "The
Hitman" Hart, left for WCW in November, under extremely controversial
circumstances which left WWF owner Vince McMahon looking shady and
deceitful. Insiders predicted it as the final nail in the coffin for
the WWF, but amazingly, McMahon was able to capitalize on his bad
reputation by playing it off on television in a much-publicized angle
with "Stone Cold" Steve Austin. This, coupled with the shocking "crash
TV" gimmicks developed by then-head WWF writer Vince Russo (who
Bischoff would later work alongside), allowed the WWF to finally
compete with WCW again. It was a see-saw battle between WCW and the WWF
in 1998, with the WWF gaining the upperhand by the year's end, and
eventually being secure in its #1 spot by mid-99. Meanwhile Eric
Bischoff, who was known for his smugness towards the competition,
suddenly had to contend with not only the WWF growing in popularity,
but also with the new "higher ups" at TNT who wanted to produce "family
entertainment". Under these crippling restrictions, anyone would (and
did) fail when trying to compete with the lewd WWF: Eric was relieved
of his duties as WCW president on September 10th, 1999, after years of
being seen as the WCW savior, once dubbed by sheet-writer Wade Keller
as "the executive with the Midas-touch". When followers to his position
only worsened the state of WCW, shockingly, Bischoff was brought back
on April 10th of 2000, exactly six months after being demoted. Eric was
to work alongside creative director Vince Russo (who had jumped ship
from the WWF), but after disputes, Eric quietly walked away after seven
weeks on the job. He returned in late 2000 with financial backers,
Fusient Media Ventures, to purchase WCW from Time Warner. The deal was
allegedly sabotaged, and Eric lost the company to the WWF. He then took
some time off from wrestling to work on other television projects. In
2003, the unthinkable occurred: Eric was hired as an on-air talent by
his old rival Vince McMahon, whose (renamed) WWE was nowhere near as
popular as it had been during the famous "Monday Night Wars". On the
February 23rd addition of RAW, Bischoff is finally scheduled to face
McMahon in a match. Although Eric Bischoff is a solid talent in the
WWE, his arrogance is more contrived than it had been during his glory
years as the young, successful, in-your-face head of the only wrestling
company to ever overtake the WWF as the top promotion in the business.
Eric has truly changed the wrestling world and is second only to Vince
McMahon in terms of overall importance to the current landscape.
McMahon credits Bischoff for lighting a fire under the WWF and forcing
it to revamp its style to fit with the times. Bischoff was a visionary
and an innovator whose contributions are widely acknowledged and
embraced. He currently resides in Scottsdale, Arizona with his wife,
Loree, and two children, Garett and Montanna.