Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
WWE Libraries Inc., [2] branded as the WWE Legacy Department, [3] is an American media company that consists of the largest collection of professional wrestling videos and copyrights in the world. [4] The Legacy Department is a subsidiary of WWE, the professional wrestling subsidiary of TKO Group Holdings.
In 1999, Zicari and Tom Byron founded the XPW professional wrestling promotion. He appeared on shows as the owner as well as a manager under the name of Rob Black. His heel (bad guy) stable was called the "Black Army" and featured wrestlers such as John Kronus, Terry Funk, Abdullah the Butcher, and Juventud Guerrera. XPW folded in 2003 because ...
The Right to Censor (frequently referred to as RTC) was a villainous professional wrestling stable in the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now known as WWE) from mid-2000 to mid 2001. The group was a parody of the Parents Television Council (PTC), [ 2 ] [ 3 ] which was protesting the level of violence and sexual content in WWF programming, and ...
Find out what happened to the Von Erich wrestling family, the wrestlers still alive now, the curse and more. The tragic true story behind 'The Iron Claw,' Zac Efron's new wrestling movie Skip to ...
Gypsy Mac will be one of 12 pro wrestlers competing in the Pride of the Desert professional wrestling event on Nov. 4. It will be held at Oscar's Palm Springs during Greater Palm Springs Pride.
No Holds Barred: The Match/The Movie was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE). The program aired on December 27, 1989, and consisted of the film No Holds Barred in its entirety, followed by a match previously recorded at a Wrestling Challenge taping on December 12 at the Nashville Municipal Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee.
The first trailer for “The Iron Claw,” a movie based on the famous Texas-based wrestling Von Erich family, was released on Wednesday.. Coming from studio A24, the movie follows the rise and ...
She began wrestling in the early 1950s and her first reported match happened in 1954. [5] With her older sisters, Babs Wingo and Ethel Johnson, she was part of the first Black trio sister team. [6] Marva Scott was posthumously inducted into the Women’s Wrestling Hall of Fame in 2023. [1]