Haha, you do realize the ECW fans were chanting 'boring' because of the WWE overload on the show? Randy Orton, or for that matter, Kurt Angle (who refused to work for ECW because of a certain match where a certain Raven was crucified. Look for "Chairshot from hell" if you have no idea what I'm talking about.) had no business being in an ECW ring. IIRC, the buildup to said PPV was horribly overbooked, which was a far cry from the original ONS which was supposed to be just that, a One Night Stand.
Also, regarding the original ECW, for every Terry Funk or Tommy Dreamer match, there was a Mikey Whipwreck, Eddie Guerrero, Chris Benoit or Jerry Lynn match. Saying its fans weren't/aren't appreciative of wrestling is just revealing one's sheer ignorance of the subject at hand. Tajiri/Whipwreck formed one of the vilest, yet fun to watch tag teams ever, only being pipped to the post by possibly my favourite tag team, Los Guerreros.
Also, I fail to understand why most of the smarks are so intent on proving technical wrestling to be the only form of wrestling one should enjoy. As much as we do critique the behind-the-scenes process, a good in-ring product, be it of any form, is equally adept at entertaining. I love a good brawl or a good spot-fest as much as a good technical battle. That's one of the reasons I cut John Cena some slack. He can turn up at a good brawl and hold his own, as he showed in the TLC versus Edge or that under-rated 'I Quit' match against JBL. Anyone who reads through my posts in this thread would think I dislike Hollywood Dwayne, but that couldn't be farther from the truth. He was a fantastic entertainer, and Rock v Hogan was just, for lack of a more creative term, electrifying. Which is why it annoys me when people just slate these wrestlers and their in-ring capability, judging them solely on the scale where Samoa Joe, AJ Styles and Bryan Danielson rule the roost. ECW had a very solid in-ring product, and that, along with Paul Heyman's brilliant booking, was the reason for its success. Not the blood and the gore.
Obviously, ONS '06 was a bloody long time after the original ECW's peak. And the promotion's legend lived on for so long that bandwagon jumpers were bound to exist. These people listened to the stories of ECW's heyday and swore by it, considering it to be the Messiah of wrestling, without knowing a thing about what the Original was all about. It was these bandwagon jumpers that you heard on your DVD, Matt. Not the originals.