Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Chris_KreskiChris Kreski - Wikipedia

    Following the departures of Vince Russo and Ed Ferrara, Kreski became the head writer of the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE) in 1999 during the Attitude Era. He is widely credited with writing captivating and layered storylines , and was at the helm of WWF creative in some of its all-time peak years of both ratings and profitability .

  2. WWE History: A Look at Chris Kreski, the Best WWE Writer Ever. Matthew Hemphill December 30, 2011. Chris Kreski isn't a name that most pro wrestling fans are going to know off the top...

  3. Feb 9, 2018 · © 2024 Google LLC. He's not someone that gets mention a lot in the wrestling business but he left a huge impact for the WWF.

    • Feb 9, 2018
    • 1686
    • RedWolf316
  4. A Raw script from the Chris Kreski era of September 2000. It's only five pages long, and has very little hard scripting, mostly being bullet points and summarizations of events the talent will fill in on their own.

  5. ehh246. Chris Kreski, the unsung hero of the Attitude Era? Everyone knows about Vince Russo and his "Jerry Springer" booking style where it succeeded in WWF and faltered when he had no filter in WCW. However, almost nothing is said about Russo's successor, Chris Kreski. From October 1999 to November 2000, Chris was the head writer on WWF.

  6. Sep 28, 2022 · There's so many claims on message boards that Kreski was the main creative force behind WWF in 2000, but there's seemingly very little (no) accounting from wrestlers and behind the scenes people when it comes to his contributions.

  7. Mar 25, 2019 · The late Chris Kreski was the primary WWE writer at the time, and his approach to writing angles with storyboards marked an incredible increase in quality, flow, and consistency. While there were some still trashy elements to WWE programming at the time, the good far outweighed the bad.