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WWE ECW

WWE ECW (officially known as simply ECW and colloquially known as ECW on Sci-Fi or ECW on Syfy and WWECW, a portmanteau of both "WWE" and "ECW") is an American professional wrestling television program that was produced by WWE, based on the independent Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW) promotion that lasted from 1992 to 2001. The show's name also referred to the ECW brand, in which WWE employees were assigned to work and perform, complementary to WWE's other brands, Raw and SmackDown.

WWE ECW
Created by
StarringECW roster
Opening theme"Bodies" by Drowning Pool (2006–2007)
"Don't Question My Heart" by Saliva & Shinedown (2008–2010)
Country of originUnited States
No. of seasons5
No. of episodes193
Production
Camera setupMulticamera setup
Running time46 minutes
Production companyWWE
Original release
NetworkSci-Fi/Syfy
ReleaseJune 13, 2006 (2006-06-13) –
February 16, 2010 (2010-02-16)[1]

ECW debuted on June 13, 2006, on Sci Fi in the United States and Global Television Network in Canada on Saturday mornings and ran until its final episode on February 16, 2010, on the rebranded Syfy. It was replaced the following week with WWE NXT.[1] Every episode is available for on-demand viewing via the WWE Network and Peacock.[2]

Throughout the shows existence, ECW had been broadcast from over 120 arenas, over 80 cities and towns, and four countries: United States, Canada, United Kingdom, and Italy in 2007.

Show history edit

Launch on Sci Fi edit

WWE acquired the rights to Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW)'s trademarks and video library in 2003 and later began reintroducing ECW through content from the ECW library and a series of books, which included the release of The Rise and Fall of ECW documentary.[3] The enormous popularity of ECW merchandise prompted WWE to organize ECW One Night Stand, an ECW reunion pay-per-view in 2005.[3] The financial and critical success of the event motivated WWE to organize a second One Night Stand the following year. With rejuvenated interest in the ECW product, WWE began exploring the possibility of reviving the promotion full-time. The news that WWE was planning to bring back ECW was leaked in the middle of April as Vince McMahon decided to revive ECW as a full-time brand.[4] Reports beforehand stated that WWE was prepared to bring back ECW immediately after WrestleMania 22.[5]

On May 25, 2006, WWE announced the launch of ECW as a stand-alone brand, congruous to Raw and SmackDown!, with its own show on Sci Fi (now Syfy).[6] Despite initial concerns that professional wrestling would not be accepted by Sci Fi's demographic, network President Bonnie Hammer stated that she believed ECW would fit the channel's theme of "stretching the imagination".[7] Sci Fi (now known as Syfy) is owned by NBC Universal, parent company of USA Network and exclusive cable broadcaster of Raw and Smackdown. ECW's weekly series was originally given a thirteen episode run as a "summer series" on Sci Fi. The premiere received a 2.79 rating, making it the highest rated show on cable in its time slot.[8] Because of its good ratings it was granted an extended run through the end of 2007.[9] On October 23, 2007, the network renewed the series through 2008.[10] Prior to the show's launch, WWE opted to cancel its webcast Velocity and replace it with the new ECW program.[11]

Original format (2006) edit

ECW was initially produced differently from WWE's other shows. For televised events, the main ring-facing cameras were placed on a different location in the arena while the wrestling ring itself featured an ECW logo on the mat and blank turnbuckle covers. The male performers were referred to "Extremists" instead of "Superstars" while female performers were called "Vixens" rather than Divas. However, the show steadily began being produced following the same format of the other shows. As opposed to the original promotion, match rules, such as count outs and disqualifications, were now standard. Matches featuring the rule set of the original promotion were then classified as being contested under "Extreme Rules" and were only fought when specified.

Former ECW owner Paul Heyman served as the on-air "ECW Representative" (a reference to how Heyman had been identified on Monday Night Raw back in 1997). According to an interview in the UK newspaper The Sun, Heyman wrote the show's weekly scripts and submitted them to writers for possible changes, and then Vince McMahon for final approval. Following December to Dismember, Heyman was relieved from both his on and off-air duties with World Wrestling Entertainment.[12]

Change in format (2007–2010) edit

 
The ECW set used from October 31, 2006-January 15, 2008.

While the show started out a ratings success, it began drawing criticism from fans of the original ECW early on. This was most evident by the negative crowd reaction "old school" fans gave the main event of Batista vs. Big Show at the August 1, 2006 show from Hammerstein Ballroom, which often held original ECW events while it was a company.[13][14] After Heyman left in late 2006, there was no ECW authority figure until August 14, 2007, when Armando Estrada was announced as the General Manager.

On May 6, 2008, ECW celebrated its 100th episode on Sci Fi.[15] On June 3, 2008 Estrada was replaced by Theodore Long as General Manager of ECW. ECW moved to 9:00 p.m. Eastern/8:00 p.m. Central on September 30, 2008.[16] ECW moved back to 10:00 p.m. Eastern/9:00 p.m. Central on May 5, 2009.[17] On the April 7 edition of ECW it was announced that Theodore Long was returning to SmackDown to fulfill the role of General Manager. From this point the Interim General Manager was named as Tiffany who took over as full-time General Manager on the June 30, 2009 episode.[18] On July 7, 2009, the Sci Fi Channel renamed itself to "Syfy", prompting WWE to rename the show ECW on Syfy to reflect the changes.[19][20] In 2009 a "superstar initiative" was established for the purpose of introducing new talent to WWE programming, mainly those from WWE's developmental territory Florida Championship Wrestling to ECW's roster.[20]

Cancellation and aftermath edit

On February 2, 2010, WWE Chairman Vince McMahon announced that ECW would be going off the air and would be replaced with a new weekly program in its slot in which McMahon announced as "groundbreaking, original show." It was later announced that the show would air its final episode on February 16, 2010. On the February 9, 2010 episode of ECW, the new show's name was announced as WWE NXT.[21]

Online presence edit

At ECW's launch, WWE.com introduced Hardcore Hangover, a video feature which allowed fans in the United States and Canada to stream or download video footage from the weekly show.[22] On October 16, 2007, it was replaced by a new feature which made full episodes of the show available for streaming on WWE.com the day after they aired. After gathering a list of names from fans and conducting an online poll, the feature was named ECW X-Stream on October 31, 2007.[23] Past episodes of ECW were previously viewable on the video streaming website Hulu,[24] which are available on the WWE Network.

Production edit

 
ECW's version of the universal WWE HD set used from January 22, 2008-February 16, 2010.

ECW shows were held in large arenas as a part of the taping schedules of WWE's other shows. This was in sharp contrast to the original Extreme Championship Wrestling which ran most of its events in smaller venues.[25] The show generally aired live on Tuesdays directly before — when touring the west coast — or after SmackDown was taped,[26][27] though it was also recorded and placed on a broadcast delay until later in the night depending on what circumstances dictated.[28] ECW had originally separated itself from WWE, featuring ECW's old black ring ropes, the ECW logo in the middle of the ring and no WWE logo to be seen on the turnbuckles or on the ring apron. However, they slowly began to become more of a WWE show than prior, when they made the ring ropes silver instead of the black ones and when they went HD, put the WWE logo on the turnbuckles, and the WWE.COM advertising on the left and right side of the ring aprons and removed the ECW logo from the ring.

ECW's initial theme song was "Bodies" by Drowning Pool, which had been used by WWE for Extreme Championship Wrestling before the establishment of the brand. "Don't Question My Heart" by Saliva featuring Brent Smith was later used to open ECW for the rest of the program's run. The songs "Famous" by Puddle of Mudd was used for one week, and a censored version of "This Is The New Shit" by Marilyn Manson was used for a few weeks.[29] On January 22, 2008, ECW began broadcasting in HD, along with a new HD set, which is shared among all three WWE brands.[30]

Special episodes edit

Episode Date Rating Notes
WWE vs. ECW June 7, 2006 3.1[31] Special pilot episode
ECW's premiere episode June 13, 2006 2.8[31] Series debut
Best of ECW 2006 December 26, 2006 1.4[32] Featured clips from 2006
Best of ECW 2007 December 25, 2007 1.1[33] Featured clips from 2007
100th episode May 6, 2008 1.0[9] Celebrated the show's 100th episode
Best of ECW 2008 December 23, 2008 1.2[9] Featured clips from 2008
Best of ECW 2009 December 22, 2009 1.2[9] Featured clips from 2009
Final episode February 16, 2010 1.14[34] Series finale

On-air personalities edit

Authority figures edit

Authority figures Position Date started Date finished Notes
Vince McMahon Owner, Chairman, and CEO May 22, 2006 February 16, 2010
Paul Heyman Representative May 22, 2006 December 5, 2006 Resigned after Big Show lost the ECW World Championship
Armando Estrada General Manager August 14, 2007 June 3, 2008 Lost the position when Theodore Long was announced as his successor
Theodore Long General Manager June 3, 2008 April 7, 2009 Appointed as General Manager by the WWE Board of Directors. Tiffany served as "Assistant General Manager" from June 3, 2008 – April 7, 2009
Tiffany General Manager April 14, 2009 February 16, 2010 Served as "Interim General Manager" from April 14, 2009 – June 23, 2009, after Long returned to SmackDown to become General Manager again. Opted to fully take over the position on ECW until the show's ending

Commentators edit

Commentators Date started Date finished
Joey Styles, Tazz, Jim Ross, and Jerry Lawler June 7, 2006
Joey Styles and Elijah Burke November 14, 2006
Joey Styles and Tazz June 13, 2006 April 8, 2008
Mike Adamle and Tazz April 15, 2008 July 22, 2008
Todd Grisham and Tazz July 29, 2008
Todd Grisham and Matt Striker August 5, 2008 September 16, 2008
September 30, 2008 March 31, 2009
Jim Ross and Matt Striker
September 23, 2008[35]
Josh Mathews and Matt Striker April 7, 2009 October 20, 2009
Josh Mathews and Byron Saxton October 27, 2009 February 16, 2010

Ring announcers edit

Ring announcers Date started Date finished
Lilian Garcia June 7, 2006
Justin Roberts June 13, 2006 September 4, 2007
September 29, 2009
Tony Chimel September 11, 2007 September 22, 2009
November 24, 2009 December 8, 2009
Lauren Mayhew October 6, 2009 November 17, 2009
Savannah December 15, 2009 February 16, 2010

Recurring segments edit

Segments Hosts Year(s) Notes
Kelly's Exposé Kelly Kelly 2006 Striptease segment.
Discontinued and replaced by Extreme Exposé[36]
Striker's Classroom Matt Striker 2006–2007 In-ring "educational" segment
Extreme Exposé Kelly Kelly, Layla, and Brooke Adams 2007 In-ring dance segment.[37]
Discontinued following Brooke's release from WWE[38][39]
15 Minutes of Fame John Morrison 2007 Fifteen-minute match challenge for a future ECW Championship match against Morrison.
Discontinued following Morrison's defeat by CM Punk[40]
The Dirt Sheet John Morrison and The Miz 2008–2009 In-ring interview segment.
Discontinued after The Miz and Morrison were drafted to Raw and SmackDown respectively
The Peep Show Christian 2009–2010 In-ring interview segment.[41]
Discontinued when the brand closed
The Abraham Washington Show Abraham Washington 2009–2010 On-stage interview segment.
Discontinued when the brand closed

International broadcasters edit

In addition to being broadcast on Syfy, Mun2, and Universal HD in the United States, ECW was broadcast on a number of channels in many different countries.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Caldwell, James (February 5, 2010). "WWE Officially Announces NXT's Debut Date Replacing ECW, Only Two Episodes Remaining". Pro Wrestling Torch. Retrieved February 5, 2010.
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  3. ^ a b Shields, Brian; Sullivan, Kevin (2009). WWE: History of WrestleMania. p. 58.
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External links edit

this, article, about, television, program, promotion, that, operated, from, 1992, 2001, which, show, based, extreme, championship, wrestling, brand, same, name, brand, officially, known, simply, colloquially, known, syfy, wwecw, portmanteau, both, american, pr. This article is about the WWE television program For the promotion that operated from 1992 to 2001 on which the show was based see Extreme Championship Wrestling For the WWE brand of the same name see ECW WWE brand WWE ECW officially known as simply ECW and colloquially known as ECW on Sci Fi or ECW on Syfy and WWECW a portmanteau of both WWE and ECW is an American professional wrestling television program that was produced by WWE based on the independent Extreme Championship Wrestling ECW promotion that lasted from 1992 to 2001 The show s name also referred to the ECW brand in which WWE employees were assigned to work and perform complementary to WWE s other brands Raw and SmackDown WWE ECWCreated byVince McMahon Paul HeymanStarringECW rosterOpening theme Bodies by Drowning Pool 2006 2007 Don t Question My Heart by Saliva amp Shinedown 2008 2010 Country of originUnited StatesNo of seasons5No of episodes193ProductionCamera setupMulticamera setupRunning time46 minutesProduction companyWWEOriginal releaseNetworkSci Fi SyfyReleaseJune 13 2006 2006 06 13 February 16 2010 2010 02 16 1 ECW debuted on June 13 2006 on Sci Fi in the United States and Global Television Network in Canada on Saturday mornings and ran until its final episode on February 16 2010 on the rebranded Syfy It was replaced the following week with WWE NXT 1 Every episode is available for on demand viewing via the WWE Network and Peacock 2 Throughout the shows existence ECW had been broadcast from over 120 arenas over 80 cities and towns and four countries United States Canada United Kingdom and Italy in 2007 Contents 1 Show history 1 1 Launch on Sci Fi 1 1 1 Original format 2006 1 1 2 Change in format 2007 2010 1 1 3 Cancellation and aftermath 1 2 Online presence 2 Production 2 1 Special episodes 3 On air personalities 3 1 Authority figures 3 2 Commentators 3 3 Ring announcers 3 4 Recurring segments 4 International broadcasters 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksShow history editLaunch on Sci Fi edit WWE acquired the rights to Extreme Championship Wrestling ECW s trademarks and video library in 2003 and later began reintroducing ECW through content from the ECW library and a series of books which included the release of The Rise and Fall of ECW documentary 3 The enormous popularity of ECW merchandise prompted WWE to organize ECW One Night Stand an ECW reunion pay per view in 2005 3 The financial and critical success of the event motivated WWE to organize a second One Night Stand the following year With rejuvenated interest in the ECW product WWE began exploring the possibility of reviving the promotion full time The news that WWE was planning to bring back ECW was leaked in the middle of April as Vince McMahon decided to revive ECW as a full time brand 4 Reports beforehand stated that WWE was prepared to bring back ECW immediately after WrestleMania 22 5 On May 25 2006 WWE announced the launch of ECW as a stand alone brand congruous to Raw and SmackDown with its own show on Sci Fi now Syfy 6 Despite initial concerns that professional wrestling would not be accepted by Sci Fi s demographic network President Bonnie Hammer stated that she believed ECW would fit the channel s theme of stretching the imagination 7 Sci Fi now known as Syfy is owned by NBC Universal parent company of USA Network and exclusive cable broadcaster of Raw and Smackdown ECW s weekly series was originally given a thirteen episode run as a summer series on Sci Fi The premiere received a 2 79 rating making it the highest rated show on cable in its time slot 8 Because of its good ratings it was granted an extended run through the end of 2007 9 On October 23 2007 the network renewed the series through 2008 10 Prior to the show s launch WWE opted to cancel its webcast Velocity and replace it with the new ECW program 11 Original format 2006 edit ECW was initially produced differently from WWE s other shows For televised events the main ring facing cameras were placed on a different location in the arena while the wrestling ring itself featured an ECW logo on the mat and blank turnbuckle covers The male performers were referred to Extremists instead of Superstars while female performers were called Vixens rather than Divas However the show steadily began being produced following the same format of the other shows As opposed to the original promotion match rules such as count outs and disqualifications were now standard Matches featuring the rule set of the original promotion were then classified as being contested under Extreme Rules and were only fought when specified Former ECW owner Paul Heyman served as the on air ECW Representative a reference to how Heyman had been identified on Monday Night Raw back in 1997 According to an interview in the UK newspaper The Sun Heyman wrote the show s weekly scripts and submitted them to writers for possible changes and then Vince McMahon for final approval Following December to Dismember Heyman was relieved from both his on and off air duties with World Wrestling Entertainment 12 Change in format 2007 2010 edit nbsp The ECW set used from October 31 2006 January 15 2008 While the show started out a ratings success it began drawing criticism from fans of the original ECW early on This was most evident by the negative crowd reaction old school fans gave the main event of Batista vs Big Show at the August 1 2006 show from Hammerstein Ballroom which often held original ECW events while it was a company 13 14 After Heyman left in late 2006 there was no ECW authority figure until August 14 2007 when Armando Estrada was announced as the General Manager On May 6 2008 ECW celebrated its 100th episode on Sci Fi 15 On June 3 2008 Estrada was replaced by Theodore Long as General Manager of ECW ECW moved to 9 00 p m Eastern 8 00 p m Central on September 30 2008 16 ECW moved back to 10 00 p m Eastern 9 00 p m Central on May 5 2009 17 On the April 7 edition of ECW it was announced that Theodore Long was returning to SmackDown to fulfill the role of General Manager From this point the Interim General Manager was named as Tiffany who took over as full time General Manager on the June 30 2009 episode 18 On July 7 2009 the Sci Fi Channel renamed itself to Syfy prompting WWE to rename the show ECW on Syfy to reflect the changes 19 20 In 2009 a superstar initiative was established for the purpose of introducing new talent to WWE programming mainly those from WWE s developmental territory Florida Championship Wrestling to ECW s roster 20 Cancellation and aftermath edit On February 2 2010 WWE Chairman Vince McMahon announced that ECW would be going off the air and would be replaced with a new weekly program in its slot in which McMahon announced as groundbreaking original show It was later announced that the show would air its final episode on February 16 2010 On the February 9 2010 episode of ECW the new show s name was announced as WWE NXT 21 Online presence edit At ECW s launch WWE com introduced Hardcore Hangover a video feature which allowed fans in the United States and Canada to stream or download video footage from the weekly show 22 On October 16 2007 it was replaced by a new feature which made full episodes of the show available for streaming on WWE com the day after they aired After gathering a list of names from fans and conducting an online poll the feature was named ECW X Stream on October 31 2007 23 Past episodes of ECW were previously viewable on the video streaming website Hulu 24 which are available on the WWE Network Production edit nbsp ECW s version of the universal WWE HD set used from January 22 2008 February 16 2010 ECW shows were held in large arenas as a part of the taping schedules of WWE s other shows This was in sharp contrast to the original Extreme Championship Wrestling which ran most of its events in smaller venues 25 The show generally aired live on Tuesdays directly before when touring the west coast or after SmackDown was taped 26 27 though it was also recorded and placed on a broadcast delay until later in the night depending on what circumstances dictated 28 ECW had originally separated itself from WWE featuring ECW s old black ring ropes the ECW logo in the middle of the ring and no WWE logo to be seen on the turnbuckles or on the ring apron However they slowly began to become more of a WWE show than prior when they made the ring ropes silver instead of the black ones and when they went HD put the WWE logo on the turnbuckles and the WWE COM advertising on the left and right side of the ring aprons and removed the ECW logo from the ring ECW s initial theme song was Bodies by Drowning Pool which had been used by WWE for Extreme Championship Wrestling before the establishment of the brand Don t Question My Heart by Saliva featuring Brent Smith was later used to open ECW for the rest of the program s run The songs Famous by Puddle of Mudd was used for one week and a censored version of This Is The New Shit by Marilyn Manson was used for a few weeks 29 On January 22 2008 ECW began broadcasting in HD along with a new HD set which is shared among all three WWE brands 30 Special episodes edit Episode Date Rating NotesWWE vs ECW June 7 2006 3 1 31 Special pilot episodeECW s premiere episode June 13 2006 2 8 31 Series debutBest of ECW 2006 December 26 2006 1 4 32 Featured clips from 2006Best of ECW 2007 December 25 2007 1 1 33 Featured clips from 2007100th episode May 6 2008 1 0 9 Celebrated the show s 100th episodeBest of ECW 2008 December 23 2008 1 2 9 Featured clips from 2008Best of ECW 2009 December 22 2009 1 2 9 Featured clips from 2009Final episode February 16 2010 1 14 34 Series finaleOn air personalities editAuthority figures edit See also Professional wrestling authority figures Authority figures Position Date started Date finished NotesVince McMahon Owner Chairman and CEO May 22 2006 February 16 2010Paul Heyman Representative May 22 2006 December 5 2006 Resigned after Big Show lost the ECW World ChampionshipArmando Estrada General Manager August 14 2007 June 3 2008 Lost the position when Theodore Long was announced as his successorTheodore Long General Manager June 3 2008 April 7 2009 Appointed as General Manager by the WWE Board of Directors Tiffany served as Assistant General Manager from June 3 2008 April 7 2009Tiffany General Manager April 14 2009 February 16 2010 Served as Interim General Manager from April 14 2009 June 23 2009 after Long returned to SmackDown to become General Manager again Opted to fully take over the position on ECW until the show s endingCommentators edit Commentators Date started Date finishedJoey Styles Tazz Jim Ross and Jerry Lawler June 7 2006Joey Styles and Elijah Burke November 14 2006Joey Styles and Tazz June 13 2006 April 8 2008Mike Adamle and Tazz April 15 2008 July 22 2008Todd Grisham and Tazz July 29 2008Todd Grisham and Matt Striker August 5 2008 September 16 2008September 30 2008 March 31 2009Jim Ross and Matt Striker September 23 2008 35 Josh Mathews and Matt Striker April 7 2009 October 20 2009Josh Mathews and Byron Saxton October 27 2009 February 16 2010Ring announcers edit Ring announcers Date started Date finishedLilian Garcia June 7 2006Justin Roberts June 13 2006 September 4 2007September 29 2009Tony Chimel September 11 2007 September 22 2009November 24 2009 December 8 2009Lauren Mayhew October 6 2009 November 17 2009Savannah December 15 2009 February 16 2010Recurring segments edit Segments Hosts Year s NotesKelly s Expose Kelly Kelly 2006 Striptease segment Discontinued and replaced by Extreme Expose 36 Striker s Classroom Matt Striker 2006 2007 In ring educational segmentExtreme Expose Kelly Kelly Layla and Brooke Adams 2007 In ring dance segment 37 Discontinued following Brooke s release from WWE 38 39 15 Minutes of Fame John Morrison 2007 Fifteen minute match challenge for a future ECW Championship match against Morrison Discontinued following Morrison s defeat by CM Punk 40 The Dirt Sheet John Morrison and The Miz 2008 2009 In ring interview segment Discontinued after The Miz and Morrison were drafted to Raw and SmackDown respectivelyThe Peep Show Christian 2009 2010 In ring interview segment 41 Discontinued when the brand closedThe Abraham Washington Show Abraham Washington 2009 2010 On stage interview segment Discontinued when the brand closedInternational broadcasters editIn addition to being broadcast on Syfy Mun2 and Universal HD in the United States ECW was broadcast on a number of channels in many different countries Country Network RefAlgeria and The Middle East Showtime 42 Argentina Brazil Chile Costa Rica and Mexico FX Latin America 43 44 45 Australia Fox8 46 Bangladesh India Pakistan and Nepal TEN Sports 47 48 49 Cambodia MyTV 50 Canada Global TV 51 Finland MTV3 MaxFrance Action 52 Germany Sky Deutschland 53 Italy Sky Italia 54 Malaysia Astro Super Sport 55 New Zealand The Box 56 Philippines Jack TV 57 Portugal SportTV 3 58 Singapore SuperSportsSouth Africa e tv 59 Taiwan Videoland Max TV 60 United Kingdom and Ireland Sky Sports 3 61 62 See also editList of ECW WWE alumni ECW Hardcore TV ECW on TNNReferences edit a b Caldwell James February 5 2010 WWE Officially Announces NXT s Debut Date Replacing ECW Only Two Episodes Remaining Pro Wrestling Torch Retrieved February 5 2010 WWE ECW WWE Network Retrieved October 11 2017 a b Shields Brian Sullivan Kevin 2009 WWE History of WrestleMania p 58 Madigan TJ April 29 2006 WWE love affair with ECW to continue Slam Sports Canadian Online Explorer Retrieved September 24 2007 Baines Tim August 28 2005 WWE has eyes on return of ECW Slam Sports Canadian Online Explorer Retrieved September 24 2007 WWE brings ECW to Sci Fi Channel WWE Retrieved June 2 2006 Sci Fi grapples with summer wrestling series Retrieved May 21 2006 It will have a nice little twist that will fit in the brand permanent dead link Sci Fi Channel pins the competition with ECW s triumphant return to television The Futon Critic Retrieved July 8 2007 a b c d Sci Fi Channel Extends ECW Retrieved October 11 2006 SCI FI Channel Reups WWE S ECW Through 2008 WWE October 23 2007 Archived from the original on October 25 2007 Retrieved October 23 2007 Baines Tim April 30 2006 WWE s finally going to get Extreme again Slam Sports Canadian Online Explorer Retrieved September 24 2007 Heyman out Retrieved December 23 2006 The New ECW End that Chanting Now Online Onslaught Archived from the original on October 25 2008 Retrieved August 12 2007 ECW on SciFi Reax 1 Pro Wrestling Torch Archived from the original on September 29 2007 Retrieved August 12 2007 Preview Extreme Centennial WWE April 29 2008 Retrieved April 30 2008 Lost Sanctuary Among SCI FI s Fall Premieres The Futon Critic July 3 2008 ECW On Sci Fi Changing Timeslots Again Sexiest WWE Divas Archived 2009 04 18 at the Wayback Machine Sports Entertainment Scoops April 15 2009 Shows Eng Joyce July 7 2009 Sci Fi Morphs Into Syfy Seattle Post Intelligencer Retrieved July 8 2009 permanent dead link a b Medalis Kara A June 30 2009 Extreme Changes World Wrestling Entertainment Retrieved February 4 2010 Caldwell James February 4 2010 Caldwell s WWE Superstar TV Report 2 4 Complete coverage of Team Morrison vs Team McIntyre six man tag awesome Bourne vs Carlito match Pro Wrestling Torch Retrieved February 5 2010 Hardcore Hangover WWE Retrieved October 25 2007 Watch it Again Exclusively on WWE com WWE Retrieved October 17 2007 Hulu to stream full episodes of SmackDown ECW WWE Retrieved June 12 2009 The History of Extreme Championship Wrestling Pro Wrestling History Retrieved August 12 2007 WWE Makes Changes To Compete With WSX Archived from the original on February 7 2007 Retrieved February 7 2007 ECW TV Staying Live Archived from the original on February 14 2007 Retrieved February 7 2007 WWE Smackdown amp ECW Tapings 12 12 06 Archived from the original on February 10 2007 Retrieved February 7 2007 Saliva goes Extreme WWE com WWE Goes HD WWE Archived from the original on September 24 2012 Retrieved January 15 2008 a b 2008 Nielson Ratings on Gerweck net Archived 2009 03 01 at the Wayback Machine 2006 Nielson Ratings on Gerweck net Archived 2009 03 02 at the Wayback Machine 2007 Nielson Ratings on Gerweck net Archived 2009 03 01 at the Wayback Machine Final ECW Rating WWE Diva Hires a Designer Jericho News More Archived 2010 06 10 at the Wayback Machine Resultats ECW du 23 09 2008 thetvstop com Archived from the original on July 4 2011 Retrieved November 7 2011 Hoffman Brent An Extreme Debut WWE Retrieved January 11 2011 Shields Brian Sullivan Kevin 2009 WWE Encyclopedia DK p 99 ISBN 978 0 7566 4190 0 Kelly Kelly profile Online World of Wrestling Retrieved July 25 2007 Brooke released WWE Archived from the original on February 25 2009 Retrieved November 1 2007 Medalis Kara A John Morrison Challenges All WWE Retrieved August 8 2007 Medalis Kara A May 12 2009 The Peep Show s explosive return World Wrestling Entertainment Retrieved February 8 2010 WWE s Algeria Schedule World Wrestling Entertainment Archived from the original on March 15 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 WWE s Argentina Schedule World Wrestling Entertainment Archived from the original on February 8 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 WWE s Brazil Schedule World Wrestling Entertainment Archived from the original on March 17 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 WWE s Mexico Schedule World Wrestling Entertainment Archived from the original on February 9 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 WWE s Australia Schedule World Wrestling Entertainment Archived from the original on February 9 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 WWE s Bangladesh Schedule World Wrestling Entertainment Archived from the original on July 4 2009 Retrieved February 17 2010 WWE s India Schedule World Wrestling Entertainment Archived from the original on March 17 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 WWE s Pakistan Schedule World Wrestling Entertainment Archived from the original on June 3 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 WWE s Cambodia Schedule World Wrestling Entertainment Archived from the original on February 28 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 WWE s Cambodia Schedule World Wrestling Entertainment Archived from the original on February 8 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 WWE s France Schedule World Wrestling Entertainment Archived from the original on February 10 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 WWE s Germany Schedule World Wrestling Entertainment Archived from the original on March 14 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 WWE s Italy Schedule World Wrestling Entertainment Archived from the original on March 3 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 WWE s Malaysia Schedule World Wrestling Entertainment Archived from the original on February 28 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 WWE s New Zealand Schedule World Wrestling Entertainment Archived from the original on May 27 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 WWE s Philippines Schedule World Wrestling Entertainment Archived from the original on February 9 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 WWE s Portugal Schedule World Wrestling Entertainment Archived from the original on March 2 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 WWE s South Africa Schedule World Wrestling Entertainment Archived from the original on March 17 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 WWE s Taiwan Schedule World Wrestling Entertainment Archived from the original on April 15 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 WWE s United Kingdom Schedule World Wrestling Entertainment Archived from the original on February 8 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 WWE s Ireland Schedule World Wrestling Entertainment Archived from the original on March 25 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 External links editECW at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title WWE ECW amp oldid 1183819125, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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