Episodios

  • NoSo Takeover #18: NXT TakeOver WarGames 2017 Review | Undisputed Era Dominates, War Games Returns, McIntyre vs. Almas
    Apr 2 2026

    NoSo Takeover returns as JT, Aaron and Jenny break down the long-awaited return of one of wrestling’s most brutal concepts at NXT TakeOver: WarGames 2017 (November 18, 2017).

    For the first time under the WWE banner, WarGames is reborn in NXT, featuring an all-out war between The Undisputed Era, SAnitY, and The Authors of Pain & Roderick Strong inside the double cage. The crew dives into how the match lived up to the legacy, the chaos inside the structure, and how Adam Cole and The Undisputed Era cemented themselves as the top faction in NXT.

    In the main event, Drew McIntyre defends the NXT Championship against Andrade “Cien” Almas, with Zelina Vega playing a crucial role in one of the biggest title changes in TakeOver history. JT, Aaron and Jenny break down Almas’ breakout moment and what it meant for NXT moving forward.

    Plus, the show covers: • Aleister Black vs. The Velveteen Dream in a star-making performance for both men • Ember Moon vs. Kairi Sane for the vacant NXT Women’s Championship • The evolution of NXT storytelling and TakeOver’s continued reputation for delivering elite in-ring action

    From match quality to long-term impact, the crew analyzes every key moment from a show that helped redefine modern NXT.

    Was this a worthy return for WarGames? Did it live up to the legacy? And where does this TakeOver rank all-time?

    🎧 Tune in and find out!

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    1 h y 35 m
  • The Jenny Position Episode 181: Talk’n Pop Returns! ER Rewatch Special: Best Episodes, Characters & Shocking Moments
    Apr 1 2026

    This is NOT an April Fool's Joke... After a two-year hiatus, Talk’n Pop is back for a special one-off episode!

    Jennifer Smith and Tim Capel reunite to revisit the iconic medical drama ER, breaking down the chaos, heartbreak, and unforgettable moments that made County General one of the greatest TV shows of all time. From standout episodes and legendary characters to hot takes and nostalgic reflections, nothing is off the table.

    Expect laughs, emotional damage, and a fun, unfiltered catch-up as they dive deep into the world of ER—what holds up, what surprised them, and why the series still resonates today.

    Whether you're a longtime fan or discovering ER for the first time, this is your ultimate throwback discussion.

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    3 h y 16 m
  • Shooting Sharp #50 - Turn Up the Heat
    Mar 31 2026
    Welcome to Shooting Sharp with Mike Rossi, Episode 50 - Turn Up The Heat

    Mike returns and recaps the last week of wrestling. WWE really began to ramp up the Wrestlemania Card as we are just over two weeks out and a lot of voids have now been filled. Mike runs through all that happened in WWE, including NXT, and their run up to Stand and Deliver this Weekend. Mike also hits on a pretty cursed TNA Genesis show from this past weekend. From there we touch on an odd week in AEW TV as they begin to build the Dynasty card. Then Mike previews the week ahead as always, including Stand and Deliver this Saturday in St. Louis.

    Catch Shooting Sharp every Tuesday on the North South Connection Podcast Network!

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    57 m
  • WWE WAR #97: Judgment Day 2007 — Data-Driven PPV Review & WWE Rankings
    Mar 30 2026

    Welcome to WWE WAR: Wrestling Above Replacement, the podcast where WWE history meets hard numbers. JT, Marcus, and Producer Jenny analyze every WWE pay-per-view using a consistent statistical grading system to determine which events truly stand the test of time.

    In this episode, the crew continues the 2007 WWE PPV season with a deep dive into WWE Judgment Day 2007. Every match and segment is evaluated using the WWE WAR formula, examining match quality, star power, card structure, and overall event impact as the guys continue constructing their ever-evolving all-time WWE PPV rankings.

    With championship clashes and major storyline developments coming out of WrestleMania season, Judgment Day 2007is put under the microscope to see how it performs when the numbers are applied.

    Does the show outperform expectations when measured by the WAR system? And where will Judgment Day 2007 land in the growing historical rankings?

    🎧 Tune in as another WWE pay-per-view enters the WAR ledger.

    In this episode:

    • Full Judgment Day 2007 statistical match analysis • Continued breakdown of the 2007 WWE PPV season • Deep dive into the WWE WAR scoring system • Updated all-time WWE PPV rankings • Data-driven debate mixed with classic wrestling fandom

    Perfect for fans of WWE history, Ruthless Aggression era pay-per-views, and analytical wrestling podcasts that look beyond opinion and into the numbers.

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    48 m
  • ChroNoSo #65 – WWF MSG April 1991, SuperStar, PrimeTime & more
    Mar 28 2026

    It’s… ChroNoSo! The North-South Connection Podcast Network takes you down memory lane each month by exploring one match from WWE history. This month on ChroNoSo, the crew dives into Post WrestleMania 7, April 1991. They cover the matches, as well as segments from MSG, Superstar, Wrestling Challenge & WrestleDream

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    1 h y 54 m
  • Ruthless #14: Survivor Series 2003 Fallout Begins | Raw & SmackDown (11/10–11/13) Review
    Mar 27 2026

    The Ruthless Era rolls on in Episode 14 as Matt and Richie Mars break down WWE Raw (11/10/03) and SmackDown (11/13/03), covering the final build to Survivor Series 2003 during one of WWE’s wildest periods.

    From John Cena’s early pitchman skills to unforgettable Ruthless Aggression–era chaos (yes… including maggots 😬), the guys dive into the stories, characters, and matches that defined WWE television in late 2003. Along the way, expect sharp analysis, nostalgic laughs, questionable hiking safety advice, and plenty of fun as they revisit two stacked go-home shows.

    Whether you’re a lifelong WWE fan or rediscovering the Ruthless Aggression Era, this episode delivers serious fun and pure wrestling nostalgia.

    Topics include:

    • WWE Raw & SmackDown (Nov. 2003) breakdown

    • Final storylines heading into Survivor Series 2003

    • John Cena’s evolution and mic work

    • Memorable moments, absurd segments, and match analysis

    • Ruthless Era vibes, chaos, and laughs

    🎧 Subscribe for weekly deep dives into classic and modern pro wrestling.

    Please check out the written review of Velocity and Heat as well.

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    2 h y 37 m
  • Extreme Three Way Dance #154: ECW TV Deep Dive (6/9/00 – 6/16/00) | Justin Credible’s Reign, Rhino Rising & ECW’s Chaotic Summer
    Mar 26 2026

    From the ECW Arena to the wild summer of 2000, the Extreme Three Way Dance crew is back breaking down another stretch of classic ECW television.

    On this episode, JT, Jenny, and Matt dive into the June 9, June 10 and June 16, 2000 episodes of ECW TV, a pivotal period as the promotion barrels toward ECW Heat Wave 2000. The crew discusses Justin Credible’s controversial run as ECW World Champion, the continued rise of Rhino as one of the company’s most dominant forces, and the ongoing chaos surrounding The Network’s influence over ECW.

    Along the way, the hosts break down the key matches, memorable promos, evolving storylines, and the unique energy that made ECW television unlike anything else in wrestling at the time.

    Plus: standout performers, segment grades, and the moments that defined ECW during one of the promotion’s most unpredictable stretches.

    Was ECW still capturing lightning in a bottle in the summer of 2000? Or were the cracks beginning to show?

    Tune in as the Extreme Three Way Dance continues its chronological journey through the history of Extreme Championship Wrestling.

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    1 h y 34 m
  • X-Position #19: X-Men Mojovision Review | Mojo, Marvel Comics, Story Breakdown & Analysis
    Mar 25 2026
    "What do they want to see? Umm, peace? Umm, freedom? Maybe good government? HA! They want blood! And guts! And love! And hate! They want entertainment!" The persistent globe trotting of season 2 sees the X-Men transported to their most exotic locale yet: the technologically advanced, oppressive dimension known as the Mojoverse! Here, the world religion is entertainment, with the titular Mojo as its God. Mojo - a spineless, fanatical, obese, bloviating mogul - is panic-stricken after losing his star attraction, Longshot (due entirely to his own mistreatment and talent exploitation). Mojo's non-existent attention span then seizes upon the X-Men, "primitive" figures from a "backwater" dimension as his next meal ticket. Championing them as the latest and greatest opiate for the increasingly fickle masses of his planet, Mojo abducts the mutant heroes and forces them to take part in his programming, broadcast live and worldwide for the approval of Mojo's mindless denizens. As a character who evolved to most prominently be employed as a commentary on empty consumer culture, particularly of America in the late 1980s, adapting Mojo for television is particularly cutting for a hit Saturday morning cartoon. Whereas Mojo was infamously used to satirize mass media expansion in light of the rapidly ballooning X-Men line of comics, whose core identity was being diluted and eroded through a seemingly endless number of spin-offs, the role of television and network ratings as a metaphor for this message arguably put some distance between the source and the object of criticism. Moving that source from the page to the screen places the X-Men: The Animated Series directly in the line of fire, making the show complicit in the trend being skewered. In this way, Mojo gives the producers free reign to poke fun at the success of their own creation. Tellingly, they don't even take the out of trying to discredit Mojo's philosophy that violence equals ratings, as the fighting team doesn't defeat the villain by way of their high-minded ideals - they beat him, seemingly to death, and depart. Disoriented, annoyed, and having learned nothing from the experience. Like basically all Mojo tales, this one suffers for the fact that nothing about it inherently belongs as an X-Men story. The same could be told with essentially any popular superhero or superpowered team. That's a limitation of the concept than the execution, however, as "Mojovision" represents the rare example of an adaptation somehow feeling even MORE faithful to its source by way of translation to TV. X-TRA: As originally conceived, Mojo was meant to represent a blight upon existence itself and described as, "an obscenity that goes on forever." This vision isn't totally irreconciliation with his depiction as a soulless, numbers-driven network executive guided by enshittification at every turn.
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    1 h y 4 m