Gimmicks

Angus King
1992
Heel
Finisher(s) Body Slam
His professional debut name, used in 1992 for the Central States Wrestling Association (CSWA) out of Hannibal, Missouri. A raw, oversized rookie with no developed character. The run left almost no footprint and was quickly abandoned as Jacobs bounced between territories hunting for an identity, the first of a long string of throwaway names before stardom.

The Christmas Creature
1992
USWA Heel
Finisher(s) Two-handed Chokelift
A bizarre seasonal monster Jacobs played for the Memphis-based USWA in December 1992, an “evil Christmas” character in a garish costume sewn by his mother, complete with a green mask, candy-cane-striped sleeves, and tinsel. During this time, he challenged Jerry Lawler for the USWA Unified World Heavyweight Championship before vanishing by the end of the month.


Doomsday
1993 – 1994 | 1997
USWA Heel
Finisher(s) Chokeslam
A grim powerhouse persona Jacobs carried through the USWA, Kentucky’s Tri-State Wrestling, and the Indianapolis-based Championship Wrestling in the mid-90s, with a few dates in Japan for Pro Wrestling Fujiwara Gumi. The name stuck with him longer than most, even as his WWF Kane run was beginning, including a later USWA run in 1997, when he won the USWA Heavyweight Championship from Spellbinder.

Mike Unabomb
1995
Heel
Finisher(s) Sidewalk Slam, Powerbomb
In early 1995, Jacobs joined Jim Cornette’s Smoky Mountain Wrestling (SMW) as Mike Unabomb, a menacing powerhouse heel. He teamed first with Eddie Gilbert and then formed The Dynamic Duo with Al Snow, working the tag ranks promotion. The gritty SMW run sharpened his ring work and big-man presence, serving as his last significant territory stop right before the WWF came calling with the Isaac Yankem deal.

Dr. Isaac Yankem, DDS
1995 – 1996
WWF Heel
Finisher(s) DDT
A grotesque evil dentist hired by Jerry Lawler to torment Bret Hart, complete with a soiled lab coat and a sadistic obsession with rotten teeth. The cartoonish horror gimmick was based on revulsion rather than real menace, and it never connected. He battled Hart in singles and cage matches through 1995 before the act fizzled, lingering into 1996.

Fake Diesel
1996 – 1997
WWF Heel
Finisher(s) Jackknife Powerbomb
After Kevin Nash left for WCW, the WWF slapped his name and look onto Jacobs, casting him as a counterfeit Diesel in a storyline mocking the departures of Nash and Razor Ramon. Towering but charisma-starved, the impostor borrowed the Jackknife Powerbomb and lurked around the upper card without ever fooling anyone. Universally rejected, the gimmick was scrapped after Royal Rumble 1997, freeing Jacobs for the reinvention that would define him.

The Big Red Machine
1997 – 2003
Finisher(s) Chokeslam, Tombstone Piledriver
Kane (The Big Red Machine) became Jacobs’ defining persona when he debuted as The Undertaker’s masked half-brother. Silent and menacing, he tore through the first Hell in a Cell at Badd Blood and spoke only through an electrolarynx for years. He won the WWF Championship from Stone Cold Steve Austin at King of the Ring 1998, captured tag gold with Mankind and X-Pac, and reigned as the Attitude Era‘s signature monster.

Unmasked Kane
2003 – 2011
WWE Heel
Finisher(s) Chokeslam, Tombstone Piledriver
Forced to reveal his face after losing a Mask vs. Title match to Triple H, Kane became more unstable and violent. He immediately shifted from a silent monster to a more openly erratic and dangerous figure. This version of Kane carried into major stories like his 2004 angle with Lita, his ECW Championship win in 2008, and his 2010 Money in the Bank cash-in, which led to a World Heavyweight Championship reign and a bitter feud with The Undertaker.

Team Hell No
2012 – 2013
WWE Face
Finisher(s) Chokeslam
Back behind the mask, Kane was paired with Daniel Bryan in court-ordered anger management, and their bickering odd-couple act became the surprise comedy hit of the roster. Dubbed Team Hell No by the fans, the volatile duo shouted over each other, demanded hugs, and somehow held the WWE Tag Team Championship for months. It humanized the monster without defanging him, proving Kane could draw laughs as easily as fear before the team split.

Corporate Kane
2013 – 2015
WWE Heel
Finisher(s) Chokeslam
Kane traded the mask for a business suit and a corporate title, serving The Authority as its smug, bureaucratic Director of Operations. The gimmick presented him as a buttoned-up executive trying to operate within WWE’s corporate structure while still carrying the threat of his monster persona. He would occasionally remove the tie and revert to his violent side to enforce the directives of Stephanie McMahon and Triple H, showing that the monster was still underneath.

Demon Kane
2015 – 2021
WWE Heel
Finisher(s) Chokeslam, Tombstone Piledriver
The mask returned for the “Demon Kane” treated in storyline as a separate, unkillable entity from his corporate self, splitting the character in two during a feud with Seth Rollins. The throwback monster resurfaced in violent flashes over the following years, brutalizing the likes of Braun Strowman and aiding the Authority. Increasingly part-time as he became a real-life Tennessee mayor, he made his last sporadic appearances before a 2021 WWE Hall of Fame induction.














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