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{{Short description|American bodybuilding organization}} {{Short description|American bodybuilding organization}}{{Under construction|placedby=User:ViperSnake151}}{{Infobox organization
{{more citations needed|date=January 2018}}
{{Infobox organization
|name=World Bodybuilding Federation |name=World Bodybuilding Federation
|image=World Bodybuilding Federation old logo.png |image=World Bodybuilding Federation old logo.png
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== History == == History ==
===Creation=== ===Creation===
] created the WBF<ref></ref> as competition to the long established ] (IFBB). In 1990, McMahon initially denied that he was starting a bodybuilding organization, instead stressing that he was only starting a magazine called ''Bodybuilding Lifestyles''. He hired famed bodybuilding personality ] to oversee the publication. ] created the WBF as competition to the long established ] (IFBB). In 1990, McMahon initially denied that he was starting a bodybuilding organization, instead stressing that he was only starting a magazine called ''Bodybuilding Lifestyles''. He hired famed bodybuilding personality ] to oversee the publication.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|date=2019-03-07|title=Vince McMahon's Attempt to Take Over Bodybuilding|url=https://www.muscleandfitness.com/athletes-celebrities/news/vince-mcmahons-failed-attempt-take-over-world-bodybuilding/|access-date=2021-05-24|website=Muscle & Fitness|language=en-US}}</ref><ref name=":1">{{Cite web|last=Dilbert|first=Ryan|title=Vince McMahon's Failed Attempt to Take over Bodybuilding|url=https://bleacherreport.com/articles/2542941-vince-mcmahons-failed-attempt-to-take-over-bodybuilding|access-date=2021-05-24|website=Bleacher Report|language=en}}</ref> McMahon also invested in a line of ] known as ICOPRO (Integrated Conditioning Program). These ventures were part of efforts by Titan Sports to diversify beyond its flagship ] business, <ref name=":2">{{Cite web|date=2020-03-17|title=When Bodybuilding Met Wrestling: The Bizarre Tale of the World Bodybuilding Federation|url=https://barbend.com/world-bodybuilding-federation/|access-date=2021-05-24|website=BarBend|language=en-US}}</ref>


The magazine secured a booth at the IFBB ] contest held on September 15, 1990 in ]. Tom Platz asked if he could make a speech, unbeknownst to the Weider Brothers (who ruled the IFBB with an iron fist). Platz used that platform to announce what he termed the "new dawn of bodybuilding". The Weider brothers were so annoyed with this upstaging that Platz was given a lifetime ban from the IFBB. At the conclusion of that competition, the booth handed out press releases announcing the WBF's formation. The press release stated that the WBF would "revamp professional bodybuilding with dramatic new events and the richest prize money in the history of the sport." It also mentioned that Tom Platz would be Director of Talent Development for the organization. The magazine secured a booth at the ] competition on September 15, 1990 in ], where Platz and McMahon made appearances and signed autographs. Tom Platz asked if he could make a speech to the crowd, unbeknownst to the IFBB's co-founders ] and ]. Platz used that platform to announce that Titan Sports would be forming the World Bodybuilding Federation, and proclaimed that they planned to "kick the IFBB's ass".<ref>{{Cite book|last=Muchnick|first=Irvin|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/244769018|title=Wrestling Babylon : piledriving tales of drugs, sex, death and scandal|date=2007|publisher=ECW Press|isbn=978-1-55490-761-8|location=Toronto |oclc=244769018}}</ref><ref name=":1" /> A group of models subsequently entered the auditorium to distribute a promotional pamphlet.<ref name=":2" />


At the conclusion of that competition, the booth handed out press releases announcing the WBF's formation. The press release stated that the WBF would "revamp professional bodybuilding with dramatic new events and the richest prize money in the history of the sport." It also mentioned that Tom Platz would be Director of Talent Development for the organization.<ref name=":0" /> In a press conference the next day, McMahon explained that the WBF planned to feature "bodybuilding the way it was meant to be"—which was interpreted by some as a thinly-veiled reference to a lack of ]; the 1990 Mr. Olympia competition was the first to employ drug testing of participants, although criticism of the change by attendees led the IFBB to reverse course the following year.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Only Natural For Bodybuilders|url=https://archive.seattletimes.com/archive/?date=19940318&slug=1900879|url-status=live|access-date=2021-05-24|website=The Seattle Times}}</ref><ref name=":2" />
===1991===
McMahon announced at the company's unveiling on January 30, 1991 in ]'s ] that the WBF had signed thirteen competitors, many IFBB regulars, to long-term contracts: Aaron Baker, Mike Christian, Vince Comerford, David Dearth, Berry DeMey, Johnnie Morant, ], ], Jim Quinn, Mike Quinn, Eddie Robinson, ], and Troy Zuccolotto. They were dubbed the "WBF BodyStars."


===Inaugural event===
The first competition aired June 15, 1991 live on pay-per-view from ]. ] was brought in to co-host the event with McMahon and ]. The show was met with mixed reviews: critics noted that the WBF's attempt at developing characters for each BodyStar went against Vince McMahon's initial promise to keep professional wrestling away from bodybuilding. To promote the show, both the WBF BodyStars and the ] Superstars appeared on a series of '']'' episodes.
In a January 30, 1991 press conference at the ] in New York City, McMahon presented the inaugural members of the WBF's roster, and announced the organization's inaugural championship.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /> The federation signed 13 competitors, many IFBB regulars, to long-term contracts, including Aaron Baker, Mike Christian, Vince Comerford, David Dearth, Berry DeMey, Johnnie Morant, ], ], Jim Quinn, Mike Quinn, Eddie Robinson, ], and Troy Zuccolotto.<ref name=":0" />
McMahon brought in top nutritionists who advocated a more Keto type diet pre-competition (high fat, low carb, low protein) The result left much "smoother" and less "Ripped" competitors than had been at IFBB shows.


The competitors had been lured to the WBF with lucrative contracts of at least $100,000 per-year (in addition to competition purses), with Strydom's reportedly valued at $400,000 per-year.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /> The IFBB warned that it would ] any competitor who moved to the WBF.<ref name=":0" /> In an effort to compete with the WBF, it increased the top prize of ] to $100,000, while its 1991 Night of Champions event featured an opening sketch with its competitors destroying ] engraved with the names of the 13 people who had signed to the WBF.<ref name=":2" />
===1992===


The WBF sought to combine traditional bodybuilding competitions with ] elements similar to the WWF's programming and events. The roster were promoted as the "WBF BodyStars" (a parallel to the WWF marketing its performers as "superstars"), and adopted ] personas (such as Tony Pearson being billed as "The Jet Man", for example). During the lead-up to the inaugural WBF Championship ], the participants made appearances and cut ] during WWF programming.<ref name=":2" /> WWF performers also promoted the WBF, and a celebrity episode of the game show '']'' was played between teams representing the WBF and WWF.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /><ref name=":2" />
On the weekend of February 1–2, 1992, McMahon announced "the Ultimate Personal Fitness Weekend," in which fans could visit WBF Headquarters to learn & train with Gary Strydom, Mike Quinn, Eddie Robinson, Jim Quinn, and others.


The first WBF Championship would be held at the ] in ] on June 15, 1991, which was hosted by talk show host ] and ], with guest appearances by WWF performers ] and ]. The competition would consist of two mandatory pose rounds, followed by an "entertainment" round, where the competitors each appeared in a pre-recorded short that concluded live on-stage. The event's presentation wrestling-inspired features such as entrance videos for each competitor, and the use of pyrotechnics.<ref name=":2" /> Strydom would win the inaugural WBF Championship, receiving $275,000.<ref name=":2" />
McMahon made a deal with ], to bring him in as a competitor. He was billed as "The Legend" Lou Ferrigno, and a contender for Gary Strydom's WBF Championship. As the appearance date approached, McMahon and Ferrigno couldn't reach a final agreement and the appearance was scrapped.


The show was met with mixed reviews: some critics praised the event's emphasis on production values and the competitor's personalities, but felt that its use of sports entertainment gimmicks drew too many comparisons to wrestling.<ref name=":2" />
The June 13, 1992 competition was broadcast live on ] from ]. Professional wrestler ] was scheduled to participate on this show as a guest performer but was involved in a ] accident prior to the event. He was instead interviewed via ] during the live pay-per-view broadcast.


===Going drug-free, 1992 championship===
After the event received a low buyrate, Vince McMahon called the owners of IFBB on July 15, 1992 and announced that the WBF was disbanding. A short time later, McMahon was indicted on charges of distributing steroids to professional wrestlers.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1994/04/28/nyregion/wrestling-promoter-fights-steroid-charges.html |title=Wrestling Promoter Fights Steroid Charges |work=] |date=28 April 1994 |access-date=11 November 2016 }}</ref>

In a continued effort to build crossovers between the WBF and wrestling, it hired ] away from the WWF's chief competitor ]. Luger would serve as a co-host for a weekly WBF television series, ''WBF BodyStars.''<ref>{{cite web|date=April 23, 2006|title=The Return Of Gary Strydom!|url=http://www.bodybuilding.com/fun/lonnie14.htm|access-date=April 25, 2007|publisher=]}}</ref>

In June 1991, shortly after the WBF Championship, former WWF ringside doctor George Zahorian was convicted of illegally supplying ] to multiple WWF wrestlers Later, McMahon himself would be ] as well; the WWF would soon introduce a drug testing policy in response to the indictment, .<ref name=":3">{{Cite news|date=1993-11-29|title=MCMAHON, TITAN FACE STEROID INDICTMENTT, LAWLER EXPECTS TO BE CLEARED OF ALL CHARGES|work=]|access-date=}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|date=28 April 1994|title=Wrestling Promoter Fights Steroid Charges|work=]|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1994/04/28/nyregion/wrestling-promoter-fights-steroid-charges.html|access-date=11 November 2016}}</ref><ref name="nyn">{{cite web|date=1994-07-12|title=Nailz the Wrestler Testifies He Was Told to Use Steroids|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1994/07/12/nyregion/nailz-the-wrestler-testifies-he-was-told-to-use-steroids.html|url-access=subscription|work=The New York Times|accessdate=2021-04-29}}</ref> In August 1991, in an attempt to build mainstream interest in the WBF, it announced that it would sign former bodybuilder and '']'' star ], in a deal reported to be $900,000 per-year.<ref>{{Cite web|date=1991-08-09|title="Incredible Hulk" star resumes bodybuilding|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1696&dat=19910809&id=I90hAAAAIBAJ&sjid=k0cEAAAAIBAJ&pg=6627,2002679&hl=en|url-status=live|access-date=2021-05-24|website=|publisher=Associated Press}}</ref><ref name=":1" /> In an interview on '']'', he stated that he was attracted to the WBF for his return to competitive bodybuilding because it had the "strictest drug testing in all of professional sports."<ref name=":3" /> Despite claiming prior to its 1991 championship that steroid testing would be used, the WBF did not actually perform any tests during the competition.<ref name=":3" />

Promotional material for the 1992 WBF Championship, scheduled for June 13, 1992 in ], billed Ferrigno as a top contender for Strydom's title.<ref name=":1" /> In March 1992, three months prior to the Championship, McMahon publicly announced that the WBF would begin conducting ] for its competitions. Titan Sports would hire ] to oversee the drug testing programs for the WWF and WBF.<ref name=":2" /><ref name="dppppav">{{cite book|author=], Mike Mooneyham|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fhNgjI3pSPkC&q=mauro+di+pasquale+steroid+hunter+sex+lies+and+headlocks&pg=PA117|title=Sex, Lies, and Headlocks: The Real Story of Vince McMahon and World Wrestling Entertainment|date=February 24, 2004|publisher=Crown Publishing|isbn=978-1-4000-5143-4|page=117|accessdate=August 7, 2013}}</ref> The '']'' reported that in a company meeting, "most of the guys freaked out about being told to give up all their drugs just three months before a contest, despite many willingly spouting the drug-free company line", and that Ferrigno quit the WBF shortly afterward (citing his upcoming and legitimate ] as reasoning, but subsequently jumping to IFBB to compete at Mr. Olympia later that year), as "the idea of competing without drugs, as he was so proudly talking of on ] months earlier, apparently wasn't even considered as an option".<ref name=":3" />

Promotion for the 1992 championship on ''WBF BodyStars'' subsequently emphasized that the event would be "drug-free", despite the fact that many of the participants would fail drug tests in the weeks leading up to the event, leading to fines and six-week suspensions that reduced morale.<ref name=":3" /><ref name=":2" /> The ''Wrestling Observer Newsletter'' noted that "while the idea of promoting a show where the majority of participants had recently failed a steroid test as drug-free on the surface was both ludicrous and fraudulent, the funny thing is, when show time came, it appeared that in the preparatory period for the show among the crew, there was less steroid use than at any contest of that level in recent years."<ref name=":3" /> Many of the competitors relied on Di Pasquale's ] as al alternative to ].

Lex Luger was scheduled to participate in the championship as a guest performer, but was involved in a ] accident prior to the event. He was instead interviewed via ] during the pay-per-view.<ref>{{cite web|title=RETRO SPECIALIST – WWE 15 Yrs. Ago: The Best & Worst Moments of 1992 (Part 1 of 2)|url=http://www.pwtorch.com/artman/publish/article_20068.shtml|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070528092339/http://www.pwtorch.com/artman/publish/article_20068.shtml|archive-date=May 28, 2007|access-date=April 25, 2007|publisher=Pro Wrestling Torch}}</ref><ref name=":2" /> The resulting competition was marred by most of the competitors being relatively out-of-shape due to the lack of steroids.<ref name=":2" />

=== Demise ===
After the second event received only around 3,000 pay-per-view buys,<ref name=":2" /> on July 15, 1992, McMahon called Ben and Joe Weider to tell them that the WBF had been disbanded, and encouraged them to allow the WBF members to rejoin the IFBB.<ref name=":2" />


== Champions == == Champions ==
Line 85: Line 95:


== ''WBF BodyStars'' == == ''WBF BodyStars'' ==
''WBF BodyStars'' was a weekly television program that aired weekends in 1992 on ]. ] was advertised as the show's host prior to its première, but he never made an appearance. Instead, it was co-hosted by Vince McMahon, Cameo Kneuer, and ]. The show followed the training lifestyles of the bodybuilders, featured a variety of skits and humorous quips, and offered general bodybuilding and health-related advice. ''WBF BodyStars'' was a weekly television program that aired weekends in 1992 on ]. ] was advertised as the show's host prior to its première, but he never made an appearance. Instead, it was co-hosted by Vince McMahon, Cameo Kneuer, and ], the last of which . The show followed the training lifestyles of the bodybuilders, featured a variety of skits and humorous quips, and offered general bodybuilding and health-related advice.


The program changed its title to ''BodyStars'' in late 1992 after the WBF had disbanded. At that point, the program was primarily used to promote McMahon's ICOPRO line of bodybuilding supplements. Having lost much of its appeal, the show was soon taken off the air. The program changed its title to ''BodyStars'' in late 1992 after the WBF had disbanded. At that point, the program was primarily used to promote McMahon's ICOPRO line of bodybuilding supplements. Having lost much of its appeal, the show was soon taken off the air.


== ICOPRO == == Legacy ==
Even after the WBF was shut down, WWF programming continued to regularly plug ICOPRO products through at least 1995,<ref>{{Cite web|date=2020-05-08|title=Induction: ICOPRO - Inedible COlonic PROduct|url=http://wrestlecrap.com/inductions/icopro/|access-date=2021-05-24|website=WrestleCrap - The Very Worst of Pro Wrestling!|language=en-US}}</ref> to the point that an ICOPRO banner was displayed inside ] during a throwback-themed leg of the '']'' ] in 2018.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://411mania.com/wrestling/raw-25-manhattan-center/|access-date=2021-05-23|title=Live Notes From RAW 25 At Manhattan Center: How Many Segments Expected, ICOPRO, More|work=411Mania|language=en-US}}</ref>
ICOPRO ('''I'''ntegrated '''Co'''nditioning '''Pro'''gram) was a line of ] developed by Frederick C. Hatfield, Ph.D., Director of Research & Development, and marketed by Vince McMahon from 1992 through 1995.

The commercial slogan for ICOPRO was "You've Gotta Want It!"

''WBF BodyStars'' and ''WWF Superstars'' helped promote the product; the "ICOPRO" banner can be seen on footage of WWF events from 1992 through 1995. In an homage to its repeated promotion during the era, the ICOPRO banner was used at ] during a throwback-themed leg of the '']'' ] in 2018.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://411mania.com/wrestling/raw-25-manhattan-center/|access-date=2021-05-23|title=Live Notes From RAW 25 At Manhattan Center: How Many Segments Expected, ICOPRO, More|work=411Mania|language=en-US}}</ref>


==References== ==References==

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World Bodybuilding Federation
[REDACTED]
FormationSeptember 15, 1990
DissolvedJuly 1992
PurposeProfessional bodybuilding
Parent organizationTitan Sports

The World Bodybuilding Federation (WBF) was a bodybuilding organization founded in 1990 by Vince McMahon that lasted until 1992. It was a subsidiary of Titan Sports, which owned and operated the World Wrestling Federation (now WWE).

History

Creation

Vince McMahon created the WBF as competition to the long established International Federation of BodyBuilding (IFBB). In 1990, McMahon initially denied that he was starting a bodybuilding organization, instead stressing that he was only starting a magazine called Bodybuilding Lifestyles. He hired famed bodybuilding personality Tom Platz to oversee the publication. McMahon also invested in a line of bodybuilding supplements known as ICOPRO (Integrated Conditioning Program). These ventures were part of efforts by Titan Sports to diversify beyond its flagship professional wrestling business,

The magazine secured a booth at the 1990 Mr. Olympia competition on September 15, 1990 in Chicago, where Platz and McMahon made appearances and signed autographs. Tom Platz asked if he could make a speech to the crowd, unbeknownst to the IFBB's co-founders Ben and Joe Weider. Platz used that platform to announce that Titan Sports would be forming the World Bodybuilding Federation, and proclaimed that they planned to "kick the IFBB's ass". A group of models subsequently entered the auditorium to distribute a promotional pamphlet.

At the conclusion of that competition, the booth handed out press releases announcing the WBF's formation. The press release stated that the WBF would "revamp professional bodybuilding with dramatic new events and the richest prize money in the history of the sport." It also mentioned that Tom Platz would be Director of Talent Development for the organization. In a press conference the next day, McMahon explained that the WBF planned to feature "bodybuilding the way it was meant to be"—which was interpreted by some as a thinly-veiled reference to a lack of drug testing; the 1990 Mr. Olympia competition was the first to employ drug testing of participants, although criticism of the change by attendees led the IFBB to reverse course the following year.

Inaugural event

In a January 30, 1991 press conference at the Plaza Hotel in New York City, McMahon presented the inaugural members of the WBF's roster, and announced the organization's inaugural championship. The federation signed 13 competitors, many IFBB regulars, to long-term contracts, including Aaron Baker, Mike Christian, Vince Comerford, David Dearth, Berry DeMey, Johnnie Morant, Danny Padilla, Tony Pearson, Jim Quinn, Mike Quinn, Eddie Robinson, Gary Strydom, and Troy Zuccolotto.

The competitors had been lured to the WBF with lucrative contracts of at least $100,000 per-year (in addition to competition purses), with Strydom's reportedly valued at $400,000 per-year. The IFBB warned that it would blacklist any competitor who moved to the WBF. In an effort to compete with the WBF, it increased the top prize of Mr. Olympia 1991 to $100,000, while its 1991 Night of Champions event featured an opening sketch with its competitors destroying headstones engraved with the names of the 13 people who had signed to the WBF.

The WBF sought to combine traditional bodybuilding competitions with sports entertainment elements similar to the WWF's programming and events. The roster were promoted as the "WBF BodyStars" (a parallel to the WWF marketing its performers as "superstars"), and adopted kayfabe personas (such as Tony Pearson being billed as "The Jet Man", for example). During the lead-up to the inaugural WBF Championship pay-per-view, the participants made appearances and cut promos during WWF programming. WWF performers also promoted the WBF, and a celebrity episode of the game show Family Feud was played between teams representing the WBF and WWF.

The first WBF Championship would be held at the Trump Taj Mahal in Atlantic City on June 15, 1991, which was hosted by talk show host Regis Philbin and Bobby "The Brain" Heenan, with guest appearances by WWF performers Miss Elizabeth and Randy Savage. The competition would consist of two mandatory pose rounds, followed by an "entertainment" round, where the competitors each appeared in a pre-recorded short that concluded live on-stage. The event's presentation wrestling-inspired features such as entrance videos for each competitor, and the use of pyrotechnics. Strydom would win the inaugural WBF Championship, receiving $275,000.

The show was met with mixed reviews: some critics praised the event's emphasis on production values and the competitor's personalities, but felt that its use of sports entertainment gimmicks drew too many comparisons to wrestling.

Going drug-free, 1992 championship

In a continued effort to build crossovers between the WBF and wrestling, it hired Lex Luger away from the WWF's chief competitor WCW. Luger would serve as a co-host for a weekly WBF television series, WBF BodyStars.

In June 1991, shortly after the WBF Championship, former WWF ringside doctor George Zahorian was convicted of illegally supplying anabolic steroids to multiple WWF wrestlers Later, McMahon himself would be indicted as well; the WWF would soon introduce a drug testing policy in response to the indictment, . In August 1991, in an attempt to build mainstream interest in the WBF, it announced that it would sign former bodybuilder and The Incredible Hulk star Lou Ferrigno, in a deal reported to be $900,000 per-year. In an interview on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, he stated that he was attracted to the WBF for his return to competitive bodybuilding because it had the "strictest drug testing in all of professional sports." Despite claiming prior to its 1991 championship that steroid testing would be used, the WBF did not actually perform any tests during the competition.

Promotional material for the 1992 WBF Championship, scheduled for June 13, 1992 in Long Beach, billed Ferrigno as a top contender for Strydom's title. In March 1992, three months prior to the Championship, McMahon publicly announced that the WBF would begin conducting drug testing for its competitions. Titan Sports would hire Mauro Di Pasquale to oversee the drug testing programs for the WWF and WBF. The Wrestling Observer Newsletter reported that in a company meeting, "most of the guys freaked out about being told to give up all their drugs just three months before a contest, despite many willingly spouting the drug-free company line", and that Ferrigno quit the WBF shortly afterward (citing his upcoming and legitimate carpal tunnel surgery as reasoning, but subsequently jumping to IFBB to compete at Mr. Olympia later that year), as "the idea of competing without drugs, as he was so proudly talking of on Carson months earlier, apparently wasn't even considered as an option".

Promotion for the 1992 championship on WBF BodyStars subsequently emphasized that the event would be "drug-free", despite the fact that many of the participants would fail drug tests in the weeks leading up to the event, leading to fines and six-week suspensions that reduced morale. The Wrestling Observer Newsletter noted that "while the idea of promoting a show where the majority of participants had recently failed a steroid test as drug-free on the surface was both ludicrous and fraudulent, the funny thing is, when show time came, it appeared that in the preparatory period for the show among the crew, there was less steroid use than at any contest of that level in recent years." Many of the competitors relied on Di Pasquale's ketogenic diet as al alternative to anabolic steroids.

Lex Luger was scheduled to participate in the championship as a guest performer, but was involved in a motorcycle accident prior to the event. He was instead interviewed via satellite during the pay-per-view. The resulting competition was marred by most of the competitors being relatively out-of-shape due to the lack of steroids.

Demise

After the second event received only around 3,000 pay-per-view buys, on July 15, 1992, McMahon called Ben and Joe Weider to tell them that the WBF had been disbanded, and encouraged them to allow the WBF members to rejoin the IFBB.

Champions

Results

WBF Championship - 1991

June 15, 1991 from the Taj Mahal in Atlantic City, New Jersey
  • 1. Gary Strydom
  • 2. Mike Christian
  • 3. Berry de Mey
  • 4. Jim Quinn
  • 5. Eddie Robinson

WBF Championship - 1992

June 13, 1992 from Long Beach Convention and Entertainment Center in Long Beach, California
  • 1. Gary Strydom
  • 2. Jim Quinn
  • 3. Aaron Baker
  • 4. Berry de Mey
  • 5. David Dearth

Home video

Both the 1991 and 1992 WBF Championship events were released by Coliseum Video.

WBF BodyStars

WBF BodyStars was a weekly television program that aired weekends in 1992 on USA Network. Matt Lauer was advertised as the show's host prior to its première, but he never made an appearance. Instead, it was co-hosted by Vince McMahon, Cameo Kneuer, and Lex Luger, the last of which . The show followed the training lifestyles of the bodybuilders, featured a variety of skits and humorous quips, and offered general bodybuilding and health-related advice.

The program changed its title to BodyStars in late 1992 after the WBF had disbanded. At that point, the program was primarily used to promote McMahon's ICOPRO line of bodybuilding supplements. Having lost much of its appeal, the show was soon taken off the air.

Legacy

Even after the WBF was shut down, WWF programming continued to regularly plug ICOPRO products through at least 1995, to the point that an ICOPRO banner was displayed inside Manhattan Center during a throwback-themed leg of the WWE Raw 25th anniversary special in 2018.

References

  1. ^ "Vince McMahon's Attempt to Take Over Bodybuilding". Muscle & Fitness. 2019-03-07. Retrieved 2021-05-24.
  2. ^ Dilbert, Ryan. "Vince McMahon's Failed Attempt to Take over Bodybuilding". Bleacher Report. Retrieved 2021-05-24.
  3. ^ "When Bodybuilding Met Wrestling: The Bizarre Tale of the World Bodybuilding Federation". BarBend. 2020-03-17. Retrieved 2021-05-24.
  4. Muchnick, Irvin (2007). Wrestling Babylon : piledriving tales of drugs, sex, death and scandal. Toronto : ECW Press. ISBN 978-1-55490-761-8. OCLC 244769018.
  5. "Only Natural For Bodybuilders". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 2021-05-24.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. "The Return Of Gary Strydom!". Bodybuilding.com. April 23, 2006. Retrieved April 25, 2007.
  7. ^ "MCMAHON, TITAN FACE STEROID INDICTMENTT, LAWLER EXPECTS TO BE CLEARED OF ALL CHARGES". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. 1993-11-29.
  8. "Wrestling Promoter Fights Steroid Charges". New York Times. 28 April 1994. Retrieved 11 November 2016.
  9. "Nailz the Wrestler Testifies He Was Told to Use Steroids". The New York Times. 1994-07-12. Retrieved 2021-04-29.
  10. ""Incredible Hulk" star resumes bodybuilding". Associated Press. 1991-08-09. Retrieved 2021-05-24.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  11. Shaun Assael, Mike Mooneyham (February 24, 2004). Sex, Lies, and Headlocks: The Real Story of Vince McMahon and World Wrestling Entertainment. Crown Publishing. p. 117. ISBN 978-1-4000-5143-4. Retrieved August 7, 2013.
  12. "RETRO SPECIALIST – WWE 15 Yrs. Ago: The Best & Worst Moments of 1992 (Part 1 of 2)". Pro Wrestling Torch. Archived from the original on May 28, 2007. Retrieved April 25, 2007.
  13. "Induction: ICOPRO - Inedible COlonic PROduct". WrestleCrap - The Very Worst of Pro Wrestling!. 2020-05-08. Retrieved 2021-05-24.
  14. "Live Notes From RAW 25 At Manhattan Center: How Many Segments Expected, ICOPRO, More". 411Mania. Retrieved 2021-05-23.

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