Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling AJW 19 5 6 Ring of Honor ROH 8 5.5 7 World Championship Wrestling WCW 7 6 8 Asistencia Asesoría y Administración/Lucha Libre AAA Worldwide: AAA 6 5 9 Revolution Pro Wrestling: RevPro 5 6 10 Pro Wrestling Noah: Noah 5.25 11 Pro Wrestling Guerrilla PWG 5 Jim Crockett Promotions: JCP 13 Consejo Mundial de Lucha ...
New Japan Pro-Wrestling (New Japan Pro-Wrestling Co., Ltd. and TV Asahi Corporation) December 1, 2014 Nico Pro: DWANGO Co. NWA All Access: National Wrestling Alliance and FITE (Lightning One, Inc. and Triller) OTT On Demand: Over the Top Wrestling: OVW Wrestling Network: Ohio Valley Wrestling (Gladiator Sports Network) Premier Pro Wrestling ...
All Japan Pro Wrestling Japan: Nippon TV: 1972–2000 All Japan Pro Wrestling: NJPW World Pro-Wrestling Japan: NET: 1973–1977 TV Asahi: 1977–present New Japan Pro-Wrestling: Lucha Libre Internacional Dominican Republic: Canal 9: 1973–1997 WW(W)F All-Star Wrestling United States: Syndicated: 1974–1986 World Wrestling Federation
The wrestling franchise is hoping for a huge global and multigenerational audience following years of success on TV and drama inside and outside the ring. WWE begins its Netflix era after years of ...
Upon the launch of the TV Parental Guidelines in 1997, WWF (WWE was known as the World Wrestling Federation until May 2002) programming was rated TV-PG. Beginning with the January 18, 1999 episode, Raw shifted to a TV-14 rating amidst direct competition with World Championship Wrestling's (WCW) flagship show Nitro during the Monday Night War ...
In the latest TV ratings, CBS’ Big Brother drew Thursday’s largest audience (3.5 million total viewers) and tied for the nightly demo win (even while ticking down to a 0.7 rating); read recap.
ESPN also began airing professional wrestling for the first time, first airing Pro Wrestling USA shows—which were created as an alliance between the NWA and AWA in 1984, in an effort to counter the national success the WWF was gaining—and later AWA shows, after Pro Wrestling USA fell apart by 1986. The WWF also became an international ...
On December 25, 1971, Georgia Championship Wrestling made its television debut with a special Christmas program. Beginning in late January 1972 the promotion's regular series, Big Time Wrestling, began airing on Saturday afternoons on WQXI-TV in Atlanta; the show was recorded for later broadcast over WJBF in Augusta and WTOC-TV in Savannah, stations located in two of GCW's major cities.