Renee Young and Booker T just seemed right to Fox.

The duo stood out as the network auditioned hosts for its new “WWE Backstage” studio show Tuesdays on FS1, starting Nov. 5 at 11 p.m.

“We felt like we had something we could build upon with those guys,” Brad Zager, Fox Sports’ executive vice president/head of production and operations, said in a phone interview.

Young has risen through the ranks of WWE as an interviewer after joining the company in 2012. She became the first woman to join the “Monday Night Raw” announce team full-time in September of 2018 and previously hosted the WWE Network studio-style show, “Talking Smack.”

It was announced last week Young had gotten the nod for “WWE Backstage” and would also be a “special contributor” and contribute commentary when “SmackDown” moves to Fox tonight as part of a five-year, $1 billion deal.

The FS1 show is a perfect gig for Young in her bosses’ minds. The network saw it right away. Zager said Young “killed the audition” and it felt like she was “a Fox Sports personality immediately.”

“Her sweet spot, and she’ll admit this, is the studio, interviewing, hosting, doing air traffic control,” Kevin Dunn, WWE’s executive vice president for television and production, said by phone. “She’s really good at it.”

Booker T, a WWE Hall of Famer, brought the energy Fox was looking for. He has recently been part of WWE’s pay-per-view kickoff panels.

“When he wasn’t there, it felt like we were almost lacking something,” Zager said.

Young and Booker T will host a first-of-its-kind WWE offering because it will be produced by Fox and “feel like a Fox Sports studio show,” according to Dunn. The vision for the one-hour “WWE Backstage” goes beyond highlights and recapping the top stories from WWE. It will do that, too, but the hope is the duo can bring a different perspective to the events. It will also include current and former WWE stars brought on as guests.

The show will take time to look back on great matches and moments in WWE history. It will relive them with the wrestlers who were part of those matches, as well as talk about current news and the state of WWE.

“I think they are looking for some controversy there,” Dunn said. “They are looking for some must-see guests. They are gonna get some guests and push on [them] and ask them what they think of our business and how everything’s doing. I think they want to take it to a different level of WWE.”

Fox has screen-tested numerous current and former WWE superstars; even CM Punk has been rumored. The network is not done deciding how it will handle the other analysts and potential recurring guests with the show still more than a month away.

Fox absolutely wants them to walk the audience through the great WWE moments of the past. It’s about deciding who will do it and how often it will happen.

“I’m not saying that’s gonna be weekly,” Zager said. “But those segments are gonna be part of that show.”