Included a segment called "It Seemed Like A Good Idea at the Time," which was meant as a look back at bad gimmicks of the past. This included Kamala (Jim Harris) and The Blue Meanie (Brian Heffron), neither of which were created by WWE. (Jerry Lawler and Harris himself created the Kamala gimmick in Lawler's Continental Wrestling Association in Memphis in 1982, and Raven (Scott Levy) created the Meanie gimmick in ECW in 1995, based off of the villains in Yellow Submarine (1968)).
Included Trish Stratus winning the "Diva of the Decade" Award, even though she had only been with the company since February 2000. The other nominees were Sunny (Tammy Sytch, who was in WWE from 1995-1998), Sable (Rena Lesnar, then Mero, who was there from 1996-1999), Chyna, (who was there from 1997-2001) and Lita (Amy Dumas, who debuted in 2000 and was still with the company at the time). Sytch, Mero and Chyna were all in exile at the time (Sable returned on Chris (2003) (April 3, 2003), and left in August 2004. Sunny was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame in 2011. Chyna was never brought back, as she was forced out because of tensions between herself and Triple H (Paul Levesque) and Stephanie McMahon.) Terri Runnels, who debuted for WWE in 1996 as Marlena and was the first one to use the word "Diva" on WWE TV, and was still with the company at the time, was not even nominated.
"Stone Cold" Steve Austin won the "Raw Superstar of the Decade" Award, but Vince McMahon accepted the Award on Austin's behalf, as Austin was off of TV due to his legal problems related to his hitting his wife Debra (Debra McMichael).
Paid tribute to André René Roussimoff, Brian Pillman, Owen Hart, Rick Rude, Gorilla Monsoon, Yokozuna, Joey Marella (Joseph A. Marella) and Davey Boy Smith.