>In the aftermath, the Hart Foundation was effectively dissolved, Bret, Bulldog, and Neidhart left, while Owen also seems to have left as well
>the RAW after survivor series was oddly tamer than you would expect, the crowd wasn't as loud as you would for just witnessing the second most controversial on screen moment in WWE history, life seemingly continued as normal, there were also segments dedicated to Vince explaining himself to JR for what went down that night, saying that Bret refused to do business with him and he was forced to do what he had to do, "Bret screwed Bret" was the message, Vince stopped being an on-screen character afterwards.
>After Pillman cut the feud short, Dustin turned heel on his own family and divorced his wife on the spot while being interviewed a moment that felt way too horrifyingly realistic to be in a wrestling show, this marked the start of "The Artist Known as Goldust" arc where he would come out in one of the most disgusting outfits he possibly could wear every RAW, it was sickening to watch, but it was extremely effective in repulsing both the audience and his opponents.
>they had Cornette do some shoot promos in the middle of Raw out of nowhere for some reason, shitting on the NWO, Eric Bischoff, Hogan, Nash, and even the WWF itself in the last Raw of 1997.
>Dec 15th episode of RAW would also be pivotal, the first ever "Scratch logo" was shown in a video package just before the Survivor Series main event, but this is where is where it became official, another key moment was the "Cure For the Common Show" promo by Vince McMahon, directly announcing to the audience of more changes to the content of WWF TV, the very first time WWF officially acknowledge how much different their programming had shifted in tone over the course of the year, some people say this is where the Attitude Era officially starts, and I can see why, its the explicit statement of support from the chairman himself that the Adult-oriented content is the way to go