|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW) is a professional wrestling brand of World Wrestling Entertainment, based on the independent promotion Extreme Championship Wrestling that lasted from 1992 to 2001. It debuted on June 13, 2006 with a weekly television series. The ECW brand is one of WWE's three brands, the other two being RAW and SmackDown!. This version can be seen on Sci Fi Channel in the United States, X-Treme Sports and Global in Canada, Lativi in Indonesia, Sky Sports 3 in the United Kingdom, Premiere in Germany, FX in Latin America, Ten Sports in India, Astro Supersport in Malaysia, Solar Sports in Philippines, FOX8 in Australia, SKY 1 in New Zealand, e.tv in South Africa, SIC Radical in Portugal and AFN Xtra .
History
On May 26, 2006, WWE announced the relaunch of ECW as a stand-alone brand that would complement WWE's RAW and SmackDown! brands and emanate weekly on the Sci Fi Channel. [1] Despite initial concerns that professional wrestling would not be accepted by Sci Fi Channel's demographic, network President Bonnie Hammer believed that ECW would fit the channel's theme of stretching the imagination. Sci Fi Channel is owned by NBC Universal, parent company of USA Network and exclusive cable broadcaster of WWE programming. To boost success of the new brand, ECW was cross-promoted on WWE programming in the weeks leading up to the 2006 One Night Stand. A prime time special called WWE vs. ECW Head to Head was aired on USA Network as part of the promotion. The ECW brand initially attempted to differentiate itself from WWE's other brands. The hard cameras were placed in a different location and the ring mat had an "ECW" logo on it. The male performers were also referred to as first, "Wrestlers", then, "Rebels" and finally "Extremists" as opposed to "Superstars", and female performers were called "Vixens" instead of Divas. Eventually, all of these features were dropped.
Behind the scenes, Dave Lagana, former head booker of SmackDown! replaced Heyman as head booker of the ECW brand. As of yet, no new on-air ECW Representative has been named. Changes were made to the brand that differentiated it from the original ECW promotion, including changing the original promotion's rules - where weapons were legal in all matches and there were almost never count outs or disqualifications. WWE classifies such matches as "Extreme Rules" bouts, and they are only fought on occasion. By default, all matches on ECW cards are now fought under standard rules unless specified otherwise. Just like WWE's other two brands, ECW is a featured part of WWE's "Big Four" cross-branded pay-per-view events: Survivor Series, Royal Rumble, SummerSlam and WrestleMania. The first pay-per-view event hosted by the ECW brand since its launch was December to Dismember. On March 14, 2007, WWE announced that all future PPV's would feature all three brands. [3] ECW on Sci FiECW's weekly series was originally given a run of a thirteen episode "summer series" by the Sci Fi Channel. Because of good ratings, it was granted an extended run through the end of 2007.[4] The premiere of ECW's weekly show on the Sci Fi Channel received a 2.79 rating, making it the highest rated show on cable in its time slot.[5] While the show started out a ratings success for both Sci Fi Channel and WWE, it began drawing criticism from fans of the original ECW early on. This was most evident by the negative crowd reaction "old school" fans gave the main event of Batista vs. The Big Show at the August 1, 2006 show from Hammerstein Ballroom.[6][7] Unlike the original promotion which primarily ran television tapings in smaller arenas, ECW shows are now held in larger arenas as a part of SmackDown!'s Tuesday taping schedule. ECW usually airs live on Tuesdays directly after SmackDown! has taped[8][9], however, it is occasionally taped before SmackDown!, and placed on a tape delay until later in the night[10] depending on what circumstances dictate. When touring the west coast, which is in the Pacific time zone ECW shows broadcast live before the SmackDown! event tapes To compliment the weekly television program, WWE.com introduced an online streaming video site called Hardcore Hangover that allows fans to stream on-demand video footage of the weekly show. Recurring segmentsIn addition to wrestling matches and backstage vignettes, ECW, like RAW and SmackDown! has had recurring weekly segments. The earliest segment, which began on the first episode - albeit unnamed - was Kelly's Exposé, and featured exhibitionist character Kelly Kelly performing a striptease for the crowd.[11] Kelly's Exposé took a hiatus when Kelly took a leave in December of 2006, and upon her return in January of 2007, she was joined by fellow divas Layla El and Brooke Adams to form Extreme Exposé, a three person dance troupe. Extreme Exposé now performs weekly, utilizing a different song and costume each week. Another recurring segment, which is only used on occasion, is Striker's Classroom. This segment is hosted by Matt Striker, who acts as a teacher (his former real-life profession) and insults the audience's intellectual capacity. It's sometimes utilized as a simple promo device, and other times as an interview segment. On-air personalitiesChampionsAuthority figuresFor a more descriptive list of authority figures from the ECW brand, see List of authority figures in professional wrestling
CommentatorsReferences
See also
External link
ko:익스트림 챔피언십 레슬링 it:Extreme Championship Wrestling he:Extreme Championship Wrestling ja:ECW no:Extreme Championship Wrestling sv:ECW tr:ECW
|
Sites |
Searched sites for "Extreme Championship Wrestling (WWE)" |
|
No sites found. |
Sorry, no matching site records were found. |
Want your site listed here?
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Submit
your site |
|
Relevant quality search results and fast easy navigation throughout the
different sections of the site, make Americola.com |