As long as he stays off the mic, he will be ok...this was his downfall...
Definitely looks good but the short salt and pepper hair...umm not sure
As for getting a call from WWE....hell no.....
Mcmahon is all about second chances but his court affairs with Warrior were very bad.....also do we remember when he went to WCW in 96 to battle Hogan and how bad this was???
McMahon gave him a second chance......actually he gave Warrior a third chance.
WWF fired the Ultimate Warrior in 1991, because he (at the last minute) demanded more money ($500,000, I think) and threatened to sit out SummerSlam, if he didn't paid up front.
He got re-hired in 1992, came back with shorter, different-colored hair and about 20 lb. lighter (which fueled the rumors that the Ultimate Warrior died and the '92 version was another guy).
He got the axe that year for violating the company's short-lived drug policy (which may or may not have been about anabolics), shortly after which, he legally changed his name from Brian James (Jim) Helwig to "Warrior".
His third stint was in 1996, shortly after which he got canned for repeatedly not showing up at house shows where he was advertised. UW initially claimed it was because of his father's death. McMahon, however, states that while it was true that his father died, Warrior had not talked to his father in a decade.
The long diatribe of an promo he did with Hulk Hogan in WCW in 1998 (when he speaks about the virtues of justice untying his hands so that he can fulfull another destiny) refers to the lawsuit he put on McMahon in 1996 for $6 million and/or the rights to use the "Ultimate Warrior" name outside the WWF.
After the abysmal match he had with Hogan at Halloween Havoc, Eric Bischoff wanted to re-negotiate his contract. But, Warrior wanted too much money and given his limited (and pitiful) in-ring performances, Bischoff felt it wasn't worth it, even though he wanted to keep him long-term (despite the vast perception that WCW hired Warrior, solely/primarily to let Hogan avenge his loss at WrestleMania 6).
While the saying goes that you "never say never" in wrestling, I wouldn't bet my house on McMahon looking to employ the Ultimate Warrior a fourth time, especially since McMahon has found that making new stars is easier (and cheaper) that overpaying old ones.