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WWF LiveWire is a WWF television program that aired Saturday mornings on the USA Network from September 21, 1996 to September 23, 2000 and on TNN from September 29, 2000 to August 18, 2001. The show was used to summarize the weekly events in WWF programming and featured interviews with WWF personalities and allowed the fans to phone-in and ask ...
USA World Premiere Movie (1989–96; banner for TV movies produced exclusively for, or co-produced by, USA) USA Gonzo Games (1991–92) Case Closed (1992–94) Free 4 All (1994–95) Quicksilver (1994–95) CNET Central (1995–99) USA Action Extreme Team (1995–98) USA Live (1995–97) The Big Date (1996–97) WWF LiveWire (1996–2000; moved ...
It replaced WWE's previous highlight show, WWF LiveWire. Its name is a reference to the same catchphrase used by WWE legend, Stone Cold Steve Austin . The show was originally broadcast domestically in the United States from May 24, 2002 [ 1 ] to September 2005, when it was removed from domestic syndication.
WWF Free for All United States: Pay-Per-View: 1996–2009 World Wrestling Federation: Big Japan Pro Wrestling Japan: Samurai TV: 1996–present Big Japan Pro Wrestling: WWF LiveWire United States: USA Network: 1996–2000 TNN: 2000–2001 World Wrestling Federation: Promo Azteca TV Mexico: Azteca TV: 1996–1998 Promo Azteca: WWF Friday Night's ...
Television shows produced by World Wrestling Entertainment, currently called WWE. Subcategories This category has the following 8 subcategories, out of 8 total.
Saturday Morning Slam marked the WWE's first Saturday morning pro-wrestling show since Livewire in 2001. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] It is one of the WWE programming yet to be shown on the WWE Network . The program had a TV Parental Guidelines rating of TV-G to meet the standards and practices of the timeslot; thus, more aggressive wrestling moves permissible ...
A combination of a poor line up, sub-standard venue, lack of talent and holding the show on a Thursday night led to a show on October 3, 1996, drawing the smallest crowd in the history of Memphis wrestling: just 372 fans, paying $1,800, to the Big One Flea Market. The future of the promotion was being questioned, following the previous week's ...
In 1985, longtime wrestling fan Ted Turner invited Watts to air MSW's weekly TV show on Turner's SuperStation TBS network. Turner wanted an alternative to the World Wrestling Federation show airing in the coveted 2-hour, Saturday-evening timeslot, which the WWF had acquired when it bought out the majority ownership of Georgia Championship ...