1987: The Year WWF Became TOO BIG to Control
2026 · Wrestling · Wrestling
1987: The Year WWF Became TOO BIG to Control
1987: The Year WWF Became TOO BIG to Control
2026
Wrestling
March 29th, 1987. WrestleMania III. 93,173 fans (or was it 78,000?) watch Hulk Hogan slam André the Giant in what becomes the most iconic moment in wrestling history. The WWF is untouchable. The money is flowing. The mainstream press is watching. Vince McMahon has won. But this isn't a story about triumph. This is the story of how winning too hard, too fast, and too completely can be the most dangerous thing that ever happens to you. How the same year that gave us wrestling's greatest spectacle also planted the seeds of creative stagnation, locker room collapse, and the steroid culture that would nearly destroy the company. 1987 is remembered as the peak of the Golden Era. And it was. But it was also the moment the machine began eating itself—quietly, invisibly, and irreversibly. **In This Video:** - Why WrestleMania III's success became a creative trap - How Hulkamania froze the main event scene in place - The expansion that outgrew WWF's own infrastructure - When steroids shifted from advantage to expectation - How Vince McMahon stopped promoting wrestling and started manufacturing mythology - The hidden legacy that wouldn't explode until 1991 You don't lose control when you're losing. You lose control when you think you've already won. **SUPPORT THE CHANNEL:** 👍 Like this video if you want more deep-dive wrestling history 💬 Comment with your thoughts on the Golden Era 🔔 Subscribe for more wrestling documentaries that go beyond the mythology --- #vincemcmahon #hulkhogan #ultimatewarrior #machoman #wrestlemania