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The following is a list of the largest attendances in the history of the American professional wrestling promotion WWE. The list is dominated by WWE's flagship WrestleMania pay-per-view (PPV) event, which since 2007's WrestleMania 23 has been held exclusively in stadiums that typically have a seating capacity of at least 70,000 people or more.
[6] [7] Additionally, although not counted separately, the Super Bowl XXVII halftime show in 1993 was considered at the most watched television broadcast of all time with 133.4 million viewers; [8] this figure would later be surpassed in 2025 by the end of the second quarter and subsequent halftime show of Super Bowl LIX, with 135.7 and 133.5 ...
The two most-watched television broadcasts in Canadian history occurred during the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver. For the gold medal game of the men's hockey tournament at the 2010 Winter Olympics , played between the United States and Canada, confirmed 16.6 million Canadians watched the whole game, roughly one-half of the country's entire ...
The Rock (with Mr. McMahon), Mick Foley (with Linda McMahon) and The Big Show (with Shane McMahon) in 38:00 of a Fatal 4-Way match to retain the WWF Championship. WrestleMania X-Seven. Date: April ...
WrestleMania 40 is the most-streamed entertainment event ever on Peacock, Variety has learned exclusively. Per the NBCUniversal streamer, the two night event at Lincoln Financial Field in ...
WrestleMania 40 broke multiple WWE records and has become the most successful live event in the company’s history. WrestleMania 40 took place over two nights at Lincoln Financial Field in ...
Super Show-Down October 6, 2018: Melbourne, Victoria, Australia: Melbourne Cricket Ground: 70,309 Triple H vs. The Undertaker in a No Disqualification match: WWE: WrestleMania 29 April 7, 2013: East Rutherford, New Jersey: MetLife Stadium: 68,900 The Rock (c) vs. John Cena for the WWE Championship [14] [19] [20] WWE: WrestleMania 39 (Night 2 ...
The show involved wrestlers of low card to main event status. Following an episode's final match, the ring announcers informed viewers about next week's matches. Most of the events were held in Washington D.C.'s National Arena. Ray Morgan did the commentary for the show and "Friendly" Bob Freed and "Smiling" Sam Mason served as ring announcers.