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Professional wrestling in the United States, through the advent of television in the 1950s, and cable in the 1980s, began appearing in powerful media outlets, reaching never before seen numbers of viewers. It became an international phenomenon with the expansion of the World Wrestling Federation (WWF).
A tradition of combining wrestling and showmanship may originate in the early 1800s in Western Europe, Britain, and Ireland, when showmen presented wrestlers under names such as ""Herculean" Flower" [5] and "Edward, the steel eater", "Gustave d'Avignon, the bone wrecker", or "Bonnet, the ox of the low Alps" and would wrestle one another and challenge members of the public to attempt to knock ...
Wrestling fans widely suspected that professional wrestling was fake, but generally did not care as long as it entertained. In 1933, wrestling promoter Jack Pfefer divulged the inner workings of the industry with New York Daily Mirror, maintaining no pretense that wrestling was real and sharing planned results just before the matches took place.
After the Roman conquest of the Greeks, Greek wrestling was adopted by the Roman culture and became Roman Wrestling during the period of the Roman Empire (510 BC to AD 500). [citation needed] By the eighth century, the Byzantine emperor Basil I, according to court historians, won in wrestling against a boastful wrestler from Bulgaria. [18]
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 ...
Pro wrestling may be scripted, but the risks are real. This is especially true at the independent levels, when wrestlers are not part of a bigger company like WWE or All Elite Wrestling.
On Nov. 19 in Iowa City, nearly 15,000 people gathered to watch the No. 3 Iowa wrestling program take on No. 16 Oregon State. Busch Lights, Carver Cones and other merchandise were flying off the ...
During the summer of 1999, WWF's parent company, Titan Sports, was renamed World Wrestling Federation Entertainment, Inc. (WWFE, Inc. or WWFE), and on October 19, 1999, became a publicly traded company, offering 10 million shares priced at $17 each, [46] and began trading on the New York Stock Exchange in October 2000.