WCW Saturday Night was the weekly Saturday night TV show on TBS, produced by the now-defunct World Championship Wrestling.
The show began under that name in 1992 as the showcase of WCW's top talent, evolving from two previous wrestling programs on TBS - Georgia Championship Wrestling, which began on the station (then known as WTCG-TV) in January 1972 and ran under that name until early 1984, when it became World Championship Wrestling. On July 14, 1984 (a.k.a. Black Saturday), Vince McMahon bought the Georgia promotion, only to sell it back to Jim Crockett Promotions in mid-1985. JCP elected to have the show's name remain World Championship Wrestling. The program name would also become the promotion's name following the purchase of JCP by Ted Turner in 1988.
In addition, there was also a Sunday edition of World Championship Wrestling; however, in later years, Sunday editions became infrequent. In spring of 1988, TBS replaced Sunday Edition with a new Sunday wrestling show called NWA Main Event.
In all of its iterations, WCW Saturday Night would normally air for two hours. During baseball season, however, it would typically air for one hour, to be immediately followed by an Atlanta Braves game. The show featured a hi-tech, futuristic design with a unique entry way of slide-open doors and billowing smoke as the performers made their way to the ring. "The Professor" Mike Tenay, Scott Hudson, and Lee Marshall commonly took the role of play-by-play announcers as well as backstage interviewers.
Episodes of WCW Saturday Night were filmed well in advance, with the exception of one live edition, which is detailed below in Trivia.
1980s TV shows in the United States | 1990s TV shows in the United States | 2000s TV shows in the United States | Saturday | World Championship Wrestling shows | TBS network shows
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"WCW Saturday Night".
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