WWE
World Wrestling Entertainment,
Inc. (WWE)
is an American publicly traded, privately controlled entertainment company that
deals primarily in professional
wrestling, with major revenue sources also coming from film, music,
product licensing and direct product sales. WWE also refers to the professional wrestling promotion itself, founded by Jess McMahon and Toots Mondt in 1952
as Capitol
Wrestling Corporation. As of 2014, it is the largest wrestling promotion in the
world, holding approximately 320 televised and non-televised events a
year, and broadcasting to about 36 million viewers in more than 150 countries.[9] The company's headquarters are
located in Stamford,
Connecticut, with offices in New York
City, Los
Angeles, London, Shanghai, Tokyo,Singapore, Munich, Mumbai, and Mexico City.
As in
other professional wrestling promotions, WWE shows are not legitimate sporting
contests, but purelyentertainment-based, featuring storyline-driven, scripted, and choreographed matches,
though they often include moves that can put performers at risk of injury if
not performed correctly. WWE first publicly acknowledged this in 1981, breaking
the gentlemen's
agreement that
previously existed among promoters. Since the 1980s, WWE publicly branded their
product as sports entertainment, which is considered to acknowledge the
product's roots in competitive sport and dramatic theater.
The
company's majority owner is Vince
McMahon, who serves as chairman and chief executive officer (CEO) of the company. Along
with his wife Linda,
children Shane and Stephanie, and son-in-law Paul Levesque (known
professionally as Triple H), the McMahon family holds approximately 70% of
WWE's equity and 96% of thevoting
power in the
company. As of August 2014, due to ongoing problems with the company, Eminence
Capital, a New York based hedge fund, acquired 9.6% stake of WWE while the McMahon family retains
90.4% interest.
The
current entity was previously known as Titan
Sports, Incorporated on February 21, 1980 which acquired Capitol
Wrestling Corporation (the holding company for the World Wrestling Federation)
in 1982 and later formed a separate corporation in Delaware that may have
initially been called WWF, Inc. before being renamed Titan Sports, Inc. which
is then legally merged the Massachusetts corporation. Titan was renamed World Wrestling Federation, Inc. in 1998, then World Wrestling Federation Entertainment,
Inc. in 1999
and finallyWorld Wrestling Entertainment, Inc. in 2002. Since 2011, the company has
officially branded itself solely as "WWE", which is no longer an
initialism, though the company's legal name was not changed.
Company
history
Prior to Titan Sports
WWE's origins can trace back as
far as 1952 when Roderick
James "Jess" McMahon and Toots Mondt created
the Capitol
Wrestling Corporation Ltd.
(CWC), which later joined the National
Wrestling Alliance in 1953.
McMahon, who was a successful boxing promoter, began working with Tex Rickard in 1926.
With the help of Rickard, he began promoting boxing at the third Madison Square Garden. In
November 1954, Jess McMahon died and Ray Fabiani, one of Mondt's associates,
brought in Vincent
James McMahon.[15] McMahon
and Mondt were very successful and soon controlled approximately 70% of the
NWA's booking, largely due to their dominance in the heavily populated
Northeast region. In 1963, McMahon and Mondt left the NWA and Capitol created
the World Wide Wrestling Federation (WWWF), following a dispute with the NWA
over "Nature
Boy" Buddy Rogers being
booked to hold the NWA World
Heavyweight Championship.[16] Both men
left the company in protest following the incident and formed the WWWF in the
process, awarding Rogers the new WWWF
World Championship in April
of that year. He lost the championship to Bruno Sammartino a month
later on May 17, 1963, after suffering a heart attack a week
before the match.
Capitol
operated the WWWF in a conservative manner compared to other pro wrestling
territories;[17] it ran its major arenas monthly rather than
weekly or bi-weekly, usually featuring a babyface champion
wrestling various heels in programs that consisted of
one to three matches.[18] After
gaining a television program deal and turning preliminary wrestler Lou Albano as a
manager for Sammartino's heel opponents, the WWWF was doing sell out business
by 1970.
Mondt
left Capitol in the late sixties and although the WWWF had withdrawn from the
NWA, Vince McMahon, Sr. quietly re-joined in 1971. At the annual meeting of the
NWA in 1983, the McMahons and Capitol employee Jim Barnett all
withdrew from the organization.[16] Capitol then renamed the World Wide
Wrestling Federation to the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) in 1979.
Titan Sports Inc. (1979–98)
1980–92
The son of Vincent J. McMahon, Vincent K. McMahon along with his wife Linda McMahon, founded Titan Sports, Inc,
originally in Massachusetts in 1979,[20][21] and was incorporated on February 21, 1980
in the Cape Cod
Coliseum offices.
The younger McMahon bought Capitol from his father in 1982, effectively seizing
control of the company. Seeking to make the WWF the premier wrestling promotion
in the world, he began an expansion process that fundamentally changed the
industry.[22] At the same time, it was initially
headquartered in Greenwich,
Connecticut.
In an
interview with Sports
Illustrated, McMahon noted:
“
|
In the old days, there were wrestling fiefdoms all over the
country, each with its own little lord in charge. Each little lord respected
the rights of his neighboring little lord. No takeovers or raids were
allowed. There were maybe 30 of these tiny kingdoms in the U.S. and if I
hadn't bought out my dad, there would still be 30 of them, fragmented and
struggling. I, of course, had no allegiance to those little lords.
|
”
|
Upon
taking over Capitol, McMahon immediately worked to get WWF programming on
syndicated television all across the United States. This angered other
promoters and disrupted the well-established "boundaries" of the
different wrestling promotions. In addition, the company used income generated
by advertising, television deals, and tape sales to secure talent from rival
promoters.
McMahon
gained significant traction when he hired AWA talent Hulk Hogan, who had achieved popularity
outside of wrestling, notably for his appearance in Rocky III as Thunderlips.[23] McMahon signed Roddy Piper as
Hogan's rival, and then shortly afterward signed Jesse Ventura. Other wrestlers joined the
roster, such asJimmy Snuka, The
Magnificent Muraco, The Iron
Sheik, Nikolai
Volkoff, Junkyard
Dog, Paul
Orndorff, Greg
Valentine and Ricky Steamboat.
Vince
McMahon - Majority owner/Chairman/CEO of WWE.
The WWF
would tour nationally in a venture that would require a huge capital
investment, one that placed the WWF on the verge of financial collapse. The
future of McMahon's experiment came down to the success or failure of McMahon's
groundbreaking concept, WrestleMania.
WrestleMania was a major pay-per-view success, and was (and still is)
marketed as the Super
Bowl of
professional wrestling. However, the concept of a wrestling supercard was
nothing new in North America; the NWA had been running Starrcade a few
years prior. In McMahon's eyes, however, what separated WrestleMania from other
supercards was that it was intended to be accessible to those who did not watch
wrestling. He invited celebrities such as Mr. T,Muhammad Ali, and Cyndi Lauper to
participate in the event, as well as securing a deal with MTV to
provide coverage. The event and hype surrounding it led to the term Rock 'n' Wrestling Connection, due to
the cross-promotion of pop-culture and professional wrestling.
The WWF
business expanded significantly on the shoulders of McMahon and his babyface hero
Hulk Hogan for the next several years. The introduction of Saturday Night's Main Event on NBC in 1985 marked the first time
that professional wrestling had been broadcast on network television since the
1950s, when the now-defunct DuMont
Television Network broadcast
matches of Vince McMahon Sr.'s Capitol Wrestling Corporation. The 1980s
'Wrestling Boom' peaked with WrestleMania
III at the Pontiac Silverdome in 1987, which set an
attendance record of 93,173, a record that still stands today. A rematch of the Wrestlemania III main
event between WWF champion Hulk Hogan and André the Giant took place on The Main Event soon after and was seen by 33 million
people, the most-watched wrestling match in North American television history.
In 1985,
Titan moved its offices to its present location in Stamford, Connecticut, before
the present building was built nearby in 1991. Subsequently, a "new"
Titan Sports, Inc. (originally WWF,
Inc.) was established in Delaware in 1987 and was consolidated
with the Massachusetts entity in February 1988.
New Generation (1993–97)
The WWF was hit with
allegations of steroid abuse and distribution in 1992
and was followed by allegations of sexual
harassment by WWF
employees the following year.[27] McMahon
was eventually exonerated, but it brought bad public relations for the
WWF. The steroid trial cost the company an estimated $5 million at a time of
record low revenues. This helped drive many WWF wrestlers over toWorld
Championship Wrestling (WCW),
including Hulk Hogan. During this period, the WWF promoted wrestlers comprising
"The New Generation", featuring Shawn Michaels, Diesel, Razor Ramon, Bret Hart and The Undertaker, in an effort to promote new
talent into the spotlight.
In
January 1993, the WWF debuted its flagship cable program Monday Night Raw. WCW countered in May
1995 with its own Monday night program, WCW Monday Nitro, which aired in the same
time slot as Raw.[28] The two programs would trade wins in the
ensuing ratings competition (known as the
"Monday Night Wars") until mid-1996. At that point, WCW
expanded Nitro to three hours and began a nearly two-year
ratings domination that was largely fueled by the introduction of The New World Order (nWo), a stable led by former
WWF performers Hulk Hogan, Scott Hall (the former Razor Ramon), and Kevin Nash
(the former Diesel).[29]
The Attitude Era (1997–2001)
As the Monday Night Wars continued between Monday Night Raw and WCW's Monday Nitro, the WWF would transform
itself from a family-friendly product into a more adult oriented product, known
as The
Attitude Era. The era was spearheaded by WWF VP Shane McMahon (son of
owner Vince McMahon) and head writerVince Russo.
1997
ended with McMahon facing real-life controversy following Bret Hart's controversial departure from
the company, dubbed as the Montreal
Screwjob.[30] This proved to be one of several founding
factors in the launch of the Attitude Era as well as the creation of McMahon's
on-screen character, "Mr. McMahon".
Prior to
the Montreal Screwjob which took place at the 1997 Survivor Series, former WCW talent were
being hired by the WWF, including Stone
Cold Steve Austin,Mankind and Vader. Steve Austin was slowly
brought in as the new face of the company despite being promoted as an anti-hero, starting with his Austin 3:16speech shortly after defeating Jake Roberts in the
tournament finals at the King of
the Ring pay-per-view
in 1996.
World Wrestling Federation, Inc. / World
Wrestling Federation Entertainment, Inc. (1998–2002)
On May
6, 1998, Titan Sports, Inc. was renamed World Wrestling Federation, Inc. It was
renamed World Wrestling Federation Entertainment, Inc. a year later.
On April
29, 1999, the WWF made its return to terrestrial
television by
launching a special program known as SmackDown on the fledgling UPN network.
The Thursday night show became a weekly series on August 26, 1999—competing
directly with WCW's Thursday-night program Thunder on TBS. In
2000 the WWF, in collaboration with television network NBC, announced the creation of the XFL, a new professional football league
that debuted in 2001.[32] The
league had high ratings for the first few weeks, but initial interest waned and
its ratings plunged to dismally low levels (one of its games was the
lowest-rated prime-time show in the history of American television). NBC walked
out on the venture after only one season, but McMahon intended to continue
alone. However, after being unable to reach a deal with UPN, McMahon shut down
the XFL.[33]
On
October 19, 1999, World Wrestling Federation, Inc. launched an initial public offering as a publicly traded company,
trading on the New York
Stock Exchange(NYSE) with the issuance of stock then valued at $172.5 million.[34] The company has traded on the NYSE since
its launch under ticker symbol WWE.
Acquisition of WCW and ECW
By the
fall of 1999, The Attitude Era had turned the tide of the Monday Night Wars
into WWF's favor. After Time Warner merged with AOL, Ted
Turner's control over WCW was considerably reduced, and the newly
merged company announced a complete lack of interest in professional wrestling
as a whole, and decided to sell WCW in its entirety. Although Eric Bischoff,
whom Time Warner fired as WCW president in October 1999, was nearing a deal to
purchase the company, in March 2001 McMahon acquired the rights to WCW's
trademarks, tape library, contracts and other properties from AOL Time Warner
for a number reported to be around $7 million.[36] Shortly after WrestleMania X-Seven, the WWF launched the
Invasion storyline integrating the incoming talent roster from WCW and Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW). With this purchase, WWF
now became by far the largest wrestling promotion in the world. The assets of
ECW, which had folded after filing for bankruptcy protection in April 2001, were
purchased by WWE in mid-2003.
World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc. / WWE
(2002–present)
Current
WWE minority owners and front office executives Paul "Triple H" Levesque,
and his wifeStephanie McMahon -
who both also perform as wrestlers for the company.
On May
5, 2002, World Wrestling Federation Entertainment announced it was changing
both its company name and the name of its wrestling promotion to World
Wrestling Entertainment (WWE). Although mainly caused by an unfavorable ruling
in its dispute
with the World Wide Fund for Nature regarding the "WWF" initialism, the
company noted it provided an opportunity to emphasize its focus on
entertainment.[38]
Harry
"Slash" Grivas and
Roderick Kohn had filed a lawsuit against the WWE in June 2003 due to the music
being used for its programming and DVDs without consent or payment. It also
stated that the rights to original music used by Extreme Championship Wrestling that WWE had been using also
during the
Invasion storyline of 2001. The case was resolved on both sides with a settlement that saw
WWE purchase the catalogue outright in January 2005.[39]
On April
7, 2011, WWE corporate announced that the company was ceasing use of the full
name "World Wrestling Entertainment" and would henceforth refer to
itself solely as "WWE", making the latter an orphan initialism. This was said to
reflect WWE's global entertainment expansion away from the ring with the
ultimate goal of acquiring entertainment companies and putting a focus on
television, live events, and film production. WWE noted that their new company
model was put into effect with the relaunch of Tough Enough, being a non–scripted
program (contrary to the scripted nature of professional wrestling) and with
the launch of the WWE
Network (at the
time scheduled to launch in 2012; later pushed back to 2014). However, the
legal name of the company remains as "World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc."
Brand
extension
In March 2002, WWE decided to
create two separate rosters, Raw and SmackDown due to the overabundance of talent left
over from the Invasion
storyline. This was dubbed as the WWE Brand Extension. Despite much of
the originally drafted talent departing by 2004, WWE continued to separate the
shows, taking on younger talent, and holding a Draft Lottery every
year. On May 26, 2006, WWE announced the relaunch of Extreme Championship Wrestling as a WWE brand. The new ECW program
aired until February 16, 2010.
Beginning
with the August 29, 2011, episode of Raw, it was
announced that Raw would feature talent from both Raw and SmackDown, and would be known as Raw Supershow (the "Supershow" suffix would be
dropped on July 23, 2012). Championships previously exclusive to one show or
the other were available for wrestlers from any show to compete for; the
"Supershow" format would mark the end of the brand extension, as all
programming and live events since the initial announcement was made have
featured the full WWE roster.[41]
In 2013,
the company built a sports
medicine and training center in east Orange County, Florida in
partnership with Full Sail
University in Winter Park, Florida. The training facility
is targeted at career development for wrestlers and athletic development.[42]
WWE Network
Main
article: WWE Network
On
February 24, 2014, WWE launched a 24/7 streaming network. The network includes
past and present WWE shows, pay-per-views, and shows from the WWE Library.[43] The network reached 1,000,000 subscribers
on January 27, 2015 under one year of its launch, with WWE claiming that it was
thus "the fastest-growing digital subscription service ever".[44]
Terminology
WWE
employs a variety of special terms, including defining their product as 'sports
entertainment'. Fans are referred to as 'the WWE Universe'. A male wrestler
is known as a 'WWE Superstar'; a female wrestler a 'WWE Diva', while
retired wrestlers are known as 'WWE Legends'. Criticism has been directed at
WWE for using these terms, with WWE being described as "ashamed" and
"very conflicted about its nature", as well as been questioned why
female wrestlers could not be superstars.[45]
WWE stock
and corporate governance
On October
19, 1999, WWF, which had been owned previously by parent company Titan Sports,
launched an initial
public offering as a
publicly traded company, trading on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) with the issuance of
stock then valued at $172.5 million.[34] The company has traded on the NYSE since
its launch under ticker symbol WWE.[35]
The
company has actively marketed itself as a publicly traded company through
presentations at investor conferences and other investor relations initiatives.[46] In June 2003, the company began paying a
dividend on its shares of $0.04 per share.[47] In June 2011, the company cut its dividend
from $0.36 to $0.12.[48]
In 2014,
WWE's stock value underwent a significant correction, losing 63.1 percent, or
$1.4 billion, of its market
capitalization after Lemelson Capital Management, an investment management firm, released a report on
March 17, 2014 saying the stock was substantially overvalued and should be shorted. In its short thesis[49]and
again on April 8, 2014,[50] the firm criticized what it said were
deficiencies in the company's executive
management team and
announced that it was short WWE stock. The report placed fair value of WWE
shares (which closed that day at $30.37) between $8.25 and $11.88.[49] Following release of the Lemelson Capital
report, WWE's stock price plummeted 63.1 percent over eight weeks, closing at
$11.27 on May 16, 2014, representing a $1.4 billion loss in the company's
market capitalization. Lemelson Capital Management criticized WWE's executive
management for what it said was "a period of ongoing losses, execution
failures and material misstatements."[ Several
hours after the firm's announcement, former Louisiana Attorney General Charles
Foti announced that his law firm would begin an investigation into whether WWE
had violated state or federal securities law.[62] The firm simultaneously announced that it
had covered its short position and taken a stake in the company at the
substantially lower price.[60][61][61][63] The Lemelson Capital report also was
followed by broad criticism of WWE's management by financial media. As of 2014,
the company's Board of Directors has eight members: Vince McMahon, the
company's Chairman of the Board and CEO; Stuart U. Goldfarb, President of
Fullbridge, Inc.; Patricia A. Gottesman, former President and CEO of Crimson
Hexagon; David Kenen, the former Executive Vice President of the Hallmark Channel; Joseph H. Perkins,
former President of Communications Consultants; Frank A. Riddick, III, CEO of
Shale-Inland Group, Inc.; Jeffrey R. Speed, former Executive Vice President and
Chief Financial Officer of Six Flags;
Laureen Ong, former President of Travel
Channel;Stephanie McMahon, Chief
Brand Officer of WWE;
Paul "Triple H" Levesque, Executive Vice-president, Talent, live events,
and creative
Wellness program
The
World Wrestling Federation had a drug-testing policy in place as early as 1987,
initially ran by an in-house administrator. In 1991, wrestlers were subjected
to independent testings for anabolic
steroids for the
first time.[73] The independent testing was ceased in 1996.
The
Talent Wellness Program is a comprehensive drug, alcohol, and cardiac screening
program initiated in February 2006, shortly after the sudden death of one
of their highest profile talents, 38 year-old Eddie Guerrero.[75] The policy tests for recreational drug use and abuse of prescription
medication, including anabolic steroids.[75] Under the guidelines of the policy, talent
is also tested annually for pre-existing or developing cardiac issues. The drug
testing is handled by Aegis Sciences Corporation. The cardiac evaluations are
handled by New York Cardiology Associates P.C.
After
the double
murder and suicide committed
by one of its performers, Chris
Benoit, with a possible link to steroids abuse encouraged by WWE, the United States House Committee on Oversight and
Government Reform requested
that WWE turn over any material regarding its talent wellness policy.
In
August 2007, the program was defended by WWE and its employees in the wake of
several illegal pharmacy busts that linked WWE performers to steroid purchases
even after the policy was put into place. Ten professional wrestlers were
suspended for violating the Wellness Policy after reports emerged they were all
customers of Signature Pharmacy in Orlando,
Florida. According to a statement attributed to WWE attorney Jerry
McDevitt, an eleventh wrestler was later added to the suspension list.[77][78][79]
Because
of the Wellness Policy, physicians were able to diagnose one of its performers
with a heart ailment that would otherwise likely have gone unnoticed until it
was too late. In August 2007, then-reigning United States Champion Montel Vontavious Porter (real name Hassan Assad) was
diagnosed with Wolff–Parkinson–White
syndrome,[80] which can be potentially fatal if gone
undiagnosed. The ailment was discovered while Assad was going through a routine
Wellness Policy checkup.
On
September 13, 2010, WWE updated their list of banned substances to include muscle relaxers.
Legal disputes
In 1994,
Titan Sports had entered into an agreement with the World Wide Fund for Nature (also trademarked WWF), an
environmental organization, regarding Titan's use of the "WWF"
acronym, which both organizations had been using since at least March 1979.
Under the agreement, Titan had agreed to cease using the written acronym
"WWF" in connection with its wrestling promotion, and to minimize
(though not eliminate) spoken uses of "WWF" on its broadcasts,
particularly in scripted comments. In exchange, the environmental group (and
its national affiliates) agreed to drop any pending litigation against Titan,
and furthermore agreed not to challenge Titan's use of the full "World
Wrestling Federation" name or the promotion's then-current logo.[82]
In 2000,
the World Wide Fund for Nature sued World Wrestling Federation Entertainment
Inc. in the United
Kingdom, alleging various violations of the 1994 agreement.[83] The Court of Appeal agreed
that the promotion company had violated the 1994 agreement, particularly in
regards to merchandising. The last televised event to market the WWF logo was
the UK based pay-per-view Insurrextion 2002. On May
5, 2002, the company launched its "Get The F Out" marketingcampaign and changed all
references on its website from "WWF" to "WWE", while
switching the URL from WWF.com to WWE.com.[38] The next day, a press release announced the
official name change from World
Wrestling Federation Entertainment, Inc. to World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc., or
WWE, and the change was publicized later that day during a telecast of Monday Night Raw, which
was broadcast from the Hartford
Civic Center in Hartford, Connecticut.
Following
the name change, the use of the WWF "scratch" logo became prohibited
on all WWE properties. Additionally, past references to the WWF trademark and initials in 'specified
circumstances' became censored.[84] Despite
the litigation, WWE was still permitted use of the original WWF logo, which was
used from 1979 through 1994 and had been explicitly exempted under the 1994
agreement, as well as the similar "New WWF Generation" logo, which
was used from 1994 through 1998. Furthermore, the company could still make use
of the full "World Wrestling Federation" and "World Wrestling
Federation Entertainment" names without consequence. In 2003, WWE won a
limited decision to continue marketing certain classic video games from THQ and Jakks Pacific that
contained the WWF "scratch" logo.[85] However, the packaging on those games had
all WWF references replaced with WWE.
Starting
with the 1,000th episode of Raw in July 2012, the WWF "scratch"
logo is no longer censored in archival footage due to WWE reaching a new
settlement with the World Wide Fund for Nature.[86] In addition, the WWF initials are no longer
censored when spoken or when written in plain text in archival footage. Since
then, full-length matches and other segments featuring the WWF initials and
"scratch" logo have been added to the WWE website and the WWE Classics on Demandservice.
This also includes WWE Home
Video releases
since October 2012 starting with the re-release of Brock Lesnar: Here Comes The Pain.[87] In exchange, WWE is no longer permitted to
use the WWF initials or logo in any new, original footage, packaging, or
advertising, with any old-school logos for retro-themed programming now using
the original WWF logo, but modified without the F.[88]
Expansion beyond wrestling
In
addition to licensing wrestling and performers' likenesses to companies such as Acclaim, THQ/2K Sports, and Mattel to
produce video games and action
figures, WWE has moved into other areas of interest in order to market
their product.
Active properties
·
WWE Libraries: a subsidiary of WWE that owns the largest
collection of professional wrestling videos and copyrights for other
promotions.
·
WCW, Inc.: a subsidiary created in 2000 that owns the rights to
the video library and intellectual property for World Championship Wrestling.
·
WWE Studios: a subsidiary of WWE created in 2002 to create and
develop feature film properties. Formerly known as WWE Films.
·
WWE Music Group: a subsidiary that specializes in compilation
albums of WWE wrestlers' entrance themes. The group also releases titles that
have been performed by WWE wrestlers.
·
WWE Home Video: a subsidiary that specializes in distributing
compilation VHS, DVD, and Blu-ray Disc copies of WWE pay-per-view events,
compilations of WWE wrestlers' performances, and biographies of WWE performers.
·
WWE Books: a subsidiary of WWE that serves to publish
autobiographies of and fiction based on WWE personalities, behind-the-scenes
guides to WWE, illustrated books, calendars, young adult books, and other
general "Nonfiction" books.
·
WWE Performance Center: a subsidiary of WWE that serves as the
training and performance center for future employees.
·
WWE Network: a subscription-based video streaming service
launched in 2014 using the infrastructure of Major
League Baseball Advanced Media.
·
WWEShop.com: a website established as the place to buy
officially licensed WWE related apparel, gear, and other merchandise.
·
WWE Jet Services, Inc.: a subsidiary formed in 2013 to manage
the financing and operations of the company's fleet of private jets.
Defunct
properties
·
World Bodybuilding Federation: a subsidiary of Titan Sports that
was launched in 1990 which promoted professional bodybuilding through a television show, magazine,
and annual pay-per-view events. It was closed in 1992.
·
XFL, LLC: folded in 2001, was a partially owned subsidiary of
WWF launched in 2000 which comprised eight league-owned professional football teams. The league included television
broadcasts on NBC (the other co-owners of the league), UPN and TNN.
·
The World Entertainment, LLC: a subsidiary of the World
Wrestling Federation Entertainment that operated a restaurant, night club, and
memorabilia shop in New York City as The World, formerly known as WWF New York
launched in 1999. Closed in 2003. Hard
Rock Cafe took the building
itself since 2005.
·
WWE Kids: a website and comic set aimed at the children's end of
the wrestling market, comics were produced bi-monthly. It was launched on April
15, 2008 and discontinued in 2014, the same year WWE Magazine discontinued.
·
WWE Niagara Falls: a retail and entertainment establishment that
was located in Niagara Falls,
Ontario and owned by WWE. It was
open from August 2002 through March 2011.
Charity
·
WWE has had a partnership with the Make-A-Wish Foundation which spans three decades.[89] Multi-time WWE champion John Cena has granted more wishes than any
celebrity in history, having completed his 400th wish in April 2014.[90]
·
Since 2012, WWE partners with Susan
G. Komen for the Cure to raise
awareness for breast cancer during the month of October. Their
partnership includes offering special charity-related wrestler merchandise, as
well as adding a pink color scheme to the sets and ring ropes; 20% of all
October purchases of WWE merchandise go to the organization.[91]
·
In June 2014, Connor's
Cure[92] is a non-profit charitable organization
established by Triple H and Stephanie
McMahon, which they have personally funded through Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh
Foundation named in honor of Pittsburgh native Connor Mason Michalek (2005 - April 25, 2014) who died two
months earlier from Medulloblastoma,
a rare tumor that affects the brain and spinal cord.
·
WWE has sponsored the Special
Olympics since 2014.
Tapout
In March
2015, WWE announced a partnership with Authentic
Brands Group to
relaunch Tapout, formerly a major MMA-related
clothing line, as a more general "lifestyle fitness" brand. The
apparel, for men and women, is expected to be released in spring of 2016.
Through 2015, WWE will market the brand through various products, including
beverages, supplements and gyms.[95] WWE will
hold a 50% stake in the brand, and so will advertise it regularly across all
its platforms, hoping to give it one billion impressions a month,
and take some of the fitness market from Under Armour. All employees and students of
the WWE
Performance Center will
wear the clothes.
According
to WWE's press release, "The next generation of Tapout preserves the
original brand essence and drives a hard-body, fitness-centric message
positioned around motivation, discipline and determination."[97]
Championships
and accomplishments
Current champions
Championship
|
Current champion(s)
|
Reign
|
Date won
|
Days
held |
Location
|
Notes
|
WWE World Heavyweight
Championship
|
Seth Rollins
|
1
|
March 29, 2015
|
12
|
Santa Clara, California
|
Defeated Roman Reigns and previous champion Brock Lesnar in a Triple threat match atWrestleMania.
|
WWE Intercontinental
Championship
|
Daniel Bryan
|
1
|
March 29, 2015
|
12
|
Santa Clara, California
|
Defeated R-Truth, Dean Ambrose, Luke Harper, Dolph Ziggler, Stardust and previous championBad News
Barrett in a Ladder match at WrestleMania.
|
WWE United States Championship
|
John Cena
|
4
|
March 29, 2015
|
12
|
Santa Clara, California
|
Defeated Rusev at WrestleMania.
|
WWE Tag Team Championship
|
Tyson Kidd and Cesaro
|
1
(2, 1) |
February 22, 2015
|
47
|
Memphis, Tennessee
|
Defeated The Usos at Fastlane.
|
WWE Divas Championship
|
Nikki Bella
|
2
|
November 23, 2014
|
138
|
St. Louis, Missouri
|
Defeated AJ Lee at Survivor
Series.
|
Other
accomplishments
Accomplishment
|
Latest winner
|
Date won
|
Royal Rumble
|
Roman Reigns
|
January 25, 2015
|
Money in the Bank
|
Seth Rollins
|
June 29, 2014
|
André the Giant Memorial
Trophy
|
Big Show
|
March 29, 2015
|
Developmental territory champions
Championship
|
Current champion(s)
|
Reign
|
Date won
|
Days
held |
Location
|
Notes
|
NXT Championship
|
Kevin Owens
|
1
|
February 11, 2015
|
58
|
Orlando, Florida
|
Defeated Sami Zayn at NXT
TakeOver: Rival.[98]
|
NXT Tag Team Championship
|
Blake andMurphy
|
1
|
January 15, 2015
|
85
|
Winter Park, Florida
|
Defeated The Lucha Dragons (Kalisto and Sin Cara) on NXT.[99]
|
NXT Women's Championship
|
Sasha Banks
|
1
|
February 11, 2015
|
58
|
Orlando, Florida
|
Defeated Bayley, Becky Lynch and previous champion Charlotte in a Fatal 4-Way match atNXT TakeOver: Rival.[100]
|
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