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WWE Heat (formerly known as Sunday Night Heat and also known as Heat) is an American professional wrestling television program that was produced by World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) and aired from August 2, 1998 to May 30, 2008.
WGN Weekend Morning News (Saturday edition, 1992–98; Sunday edition, 1992–94) The Bozo Super Sunday Show (1994–2001) Illinois Instant Riches/Illinois' Luckiest (1994–2000) WGN Morning News (simulcast of morning newscast; September 6, 1994 – 1997 and February 3-December 12, 2014) [4] Adelante, Chicago (1995–2014)
Night Heat is a Canadian police crime drama series that aired on both CTV in Canada and CBS in the United States. Original episodes were broadcast from 1985 to 1989. [1] Night Heat was the first Canadian original drama series that was also aired on a United States television network during its original broadcast. [2]
Halftime Heat was a professional wrestling show produced by World Wrestling Federation (WWF). The event was pre-recorded and aired on January 31, 1999, the night of Super Bowl XXXIII, at the Tucson Convention Center in Tucson, Arizona. On January 26, 1999 WWF recorded their episode of February 1 Raw. Prior to the recording the empty arena match ...
In Your House was a series of monthly professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) events first produced by the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE) in May 1995. They aired when the promotion was not holding one of its then-five major PPVs (WrestleMania, King of the Ring, SummerSlam, Survivor Series, and Royal Rumble), and were sold at a lower cost.
Before the event went live on pay-per-view, Rob Van Dam defeated René Duprée in a match taped for Sunday Night Heat. [31] The first match was a six-man tag team match between The Dudleys (Bubba Ray Dudley, D-Von Dudley, and Spike Dudley) and the team of Rey Mysterio, Billy Kidman, and Paul London.
There was also a match that occurred on the Sunday Night Heat pre-show. The event marked the second time the Elimination Chamber format was used by WWE; the first was at Survivor Series 2002 . SummerSlam (2003) grossed over $715,000 ticket sales from an attendance of 16,113 and received about 415,000 pay-per-view buys, more than the following ...
WWE Velocity was primarily used to summarize major occurrences on the latest episode of SmackDown!, which aired Thursday and later Friday nights on UPN. Due to the WWE Brand Extension, Velocity aired matches and content from the SmackDown brand. [1] The format was set to mirror that of WWE Heat and its relation to the Raw brand. [1]