Added: Nov 23, 2008
From: WrestleMusic
Duration: 0:35
WWF Jakked and WWF Metal were World Wrestling Federation syndicated shows which aired on the weekend from September 4, 1999 to May 18, 2002, replacing WWF Shotgun Saturday Night.For a short time the shows were changed to WWE Jakked and WWE Metal to keep with the company's name change to World Wrestling Entertainment. They were replaced by WWE Bottom Line and WWE Afterburn in syndication, with the live matches moving to WWE Velocity. In late 1999/early 2000, WWF Metal was advertised with the tagline "forged by attitude."Jakked aired on Saturday nights and was edgier while Metal aired in the afternoon and was more kid-friendly. Just like the shows they replaced, both shows had the same matches in a different order with different commentary teams. The shows were mainly for lower card wrestlers.From April 2002 until May 2002, when VELOCITY replaced JAKKED/METAL both shows were SmackDown! exclusive.Originally, Jakked was commented on by Michael Hayes and Jonathan Coachman while Metal was commented by Tom Prichard and Kevin Kelly. In 2001 - 2002, JAKKED was hosted by Michael Cole and Michael Hayes and Metal was handled by Jonathan Coachman and Kevin Kelly. However, in March 2002, changes were made again and Jakked featured Marc Lloyd and Al Snow, while METAL was hosted by Marc Lloyd and Michael Hayes.The tapings often contained their own unique moments of history. Dean Malenko's lengthy Light Heavyweight Championship reign was almost exclusively featured on these tapings. The series also featured WWF competitors wrestling up and coming future indie and Total Nonstop Action Wrestling stars. Future stars to appear included Mr. Kennedy (competing under his real name, Ken Anderson), Samoa Joe, Low Ki, and A.J. Styles.In 2001, professional wrestler Mike Bell was legitimately assaulted by Perry Saturn after a botched move, with Saturn dropping Bell on his head outside the ring.Rikishi debuted on the November 13, 1999 edition of "Jakked," with his last name spelled Fatu. This was the night before WWF Survivor Series at which Rikishi "ran over" Steve Austin. The main reason why it was revealed that Rikishi was the driver was because Scotty Too Hotty slipped that he had been with Rikishi at the time of the incident. Mick Foley said that he caught on that this was a lie because Rikishi had not debuted yet when, in fact, he had albeit not on a major WWF televisied show.WWF Metal replaced WWF Shotgun Challenge in 1999, using the same format as Shotgun with Exclusive matches, and RAW Recaps throughout the show. WWF Metal was shown Sundays at 10.00AM on Sky One. The UK's Metal timeslots were replaced by a new Smackdown! Highlight show, Afterburn in May 2002, and the matches that were taped for Metal, were now shown on "Velocity", which replaced 1 hour of Excess on Sunday Nights.
Channel: Sports
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