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Dance Party USA (1986–92) Love Me, Love Me Not (1986–87) Bumper Stumpers (1987) USA Up All Night (1989–98) Camp Midnite (1989) American Bandstand (1989) USA Updates (1989–2000) USA World Premiere Movie (1989–96; banner for TV movies produced exclusively for, or co-produced by, USA) USA Gonzo Games (1991–92) Case Closed (1992–94 ...
Starting on December 5, 1982, Southwest Championship Wrestling became the first weekly wrestling program on the USA Cable Network, airing Sundays at 11:00 a.m. Eastern Time. As a result of the new national exposure, SWCW staged a one-night tournament in Houston, Texas, to determine an "Undisputed World Heavyweight Champion."
WWF All American Wrestling is a cable television program that was a predecessor to Tuesday Night Titans and Saturday Night's Main Event, originally filling the 11:00 a.m. Eastern Time slot on Sundays vacated by the cancellation of Southwest Championship Wrestling. The show ran from September 4, 1983 to October 16, 1994 on the USA Network.
USA Network (or simply USA) is an American basic cable television channel owned by the NBCUniversal Media Group division of Comcast's NBCUniversal.It was originally launched in 1977 as Madison Square Garden Sports Network, one of the first national sports cable television channels.
August 8 – Scott D'Amore announced the relaunch of Maple Leaf Wrestling as Maple Leaf Pro Wrestling (MLP) with its inaugural two-night event, "Forged in Excellence", scheduled to take place between October 19 and 20. September 13 – WWE SmackDown returned to USA Network after airing on Fox since October 2019.
The origins of the WWE Network can trace back to 2000 when USA Network filed a lawsuit against the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, known as WWE since 2002) due to a breach of contract which saw most of its programming moved to Viacom-owned TNN and MTV. The Delaware Chancery Court ruled in favor of the WWF in June 2000.
Beginning as WWF's Monday Night Raw, the program first aired on January 11, 1993, on the USA Network as a replacement for Prime Time Wrestling, which aired on the network for eight years. The original Raw was sixty minutes in length and broke new ground in televised professional wrestling. Traditionally, wrestling shows were pre-taped on sound ...
The Wednesday Night War or Wednesday Night Wars was a period of mainstream televised American professional wrestling in which All Elite Wrestling (AEW)'s Dynamite debuted on TNT opposite WWE's NXT on USA Network in a competition for Nielsen ratings each week. [1] The ratings war lasted from October 2, 2019, to April 7, 2021.