ESPN's Partnership With WWE Is A Game-Changer

big dog cowboy

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ESPN's Partnership With WWE Is A Game-Changer
OCT 14, 2015 @ 03:01 PM

WWE_Rollins_Seth_561cc7a2e4b0ffa7afe5c5a1-1940x1293.jpg

NEW YORK, NY – AUGUST 23: Seth Rollins celebrates his victory over John Cena at the WWE SummerSlam 2015 at Barclays Center of Brooklyn on August 23, 2015 in New York City. (Photo by JP Yim/Getty Images)

Professional wrestling is real.

That would be the implication of WWE highlights appearing on—or, as some may consider it, blaspheming—the hallowed grounds of the world’s premier sports network.

During Tuesday’s edition of SportsCenter, ESPN announced a partnership with WWE to feature weekly segments of wrestling highlights. The partnership couldn’t have come at a better time for both industry-leading franchises.

ESPN has been struggling with declining subscriber numbers and ratings. Ad revenue was off 3 percent in the three months ended June 27, according to the Wall Street Journal, which dissected the network’s troubles in detail here. ESPN’s ratings dip is tied in part to the rise in popularity of online streaming services like Netflix NFLX +0.91%, which is posing big problems for the television industryat large.

ESPN cut ties with three of its biggest stars this year — Keith Olbermann, Colin Cowherd and Bill Simmons – in an exodus that was not without its share of controversy. ESPN is now looking to regroup by ”nurturing big-name stars,” as President John Skipper put it, in a climate where ratings are shrinking.

Sound familiar?

WWE has had its own share of struggles that are eerily similar to that of ESPN’s. Monday’s edition of Raw once again drew a record-low viewership, 3.285 million. With John Cena nearing the end of his run on top of WWE, the promotion is in a transitional period as first-time champion Seth Rollins (who guested during the aforementioned SportsCenter broadcast) looks to be one of many fresh faces to lead WWE into the future.

Read more: http://www.forbes.com/sites/alfredk...tm_campaign=yahootix&partner=yahootix&ref=yfp

 

Rogah

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This partnership doesn't worry me anywhere near as much as their cozy partnership with certain NCAA conferences (*cough* SEC *cough*).
 

BoysFan4ever

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Seth sure looks good in that picture! Although I don't like the white much. He'll never have 2 belts again. :(

I still don't get why ESPN would do that. Wrestling is oversaturated already. Why put it out there more?
 

RonSpringsdaman20

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I said this in another wrestling thread.....But the WWE needs to bring in a new audience, or recovers some of the past viewers... Good Move on their part. Espn is disney, gives them another outlet to advertise through...

scratch each other backs.
 

jrumann59

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I said this in another wrestling thread.....But the WWE needs to bring in a new audience, or recovers some of the past viewers... Good Move on their part. Espn is disney, gives them another outlet to advertise through...

scratch each other backs.

Because its Disney that means WWE is staying int he PG era.
 

TellerMorrow34

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It's a good thing for WWE in particular. It could bring them some new fans and such.

I'm not sure what it does for ESPN exactly but I suppose it could bring them new viewers from the wrestling fan base.

Pretty cool either way.
 

RonSpringsdaman20

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It's a good thing for WWE in particular. It could bring them some new fans and such.

I'm not sure what it does for ESPN exactly but I suppose it could bring them new viewers from the wrestling fan base.

Pretty cool either way.

My guess would be.... kids will tune in to ESPN, possibly becoming future viewers. But they can have more in show advertisements during the wrestling programs (as will as ad time) for disney in general.
 

Yakuza Rich

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I don't see it as a game changer.

ESPN will help WWE become slightly more mainstream and the WWE will help ESPN slightly in the ratings.

It doesn't resolve any problems in that the WWE programming is atrocious and will likely remain atrocious until Vince McMahon is either too old to run things or dies. And once that spike in ratings (if that even happens) starts to plateau, Disney will not be happy and seek for other ways to increase revenue because that's how corporate America works these days.





YR
 

big dog cowboy

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I don't see it as a game changer.

ESPN will help WWE become slightly more mainstream and the WWE will help ESPN slightly in the ratings.

It doesn't resolve any problems in that the WWE programming is atrocious and will likely remain atrocious until Vince McMahon is either too old to run things or dies. And once that spike in ratings (if that even happens) starts to plateau, Disney will not be happy and seek for other ways to increase revenue because that's how corporate America works these days.

I think you nailed it YR.
 

MichaelWinicki

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I agree with Vince. I don't see the "game changer" part of this. It's not like folks that watch ESPN aren't aware of the WWE and visa versa. And it's not like there's a lack of WWE programming... if anything there's too much of it.

If I recall at one time ESPN showed AWA wrestling.
 

LittleBoyBlue

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I don't see it as a game changer.

ESPN will help WWE become slightly more mainstream and the WWE will help ESPN slightly in the ratings.

It doesn't resolve any problems in that the WWE programming is atrocious and will likely remain atrocious until Vince McMahon is either too old to run things or dies. And once that spike in ratings (if that even happens) starts to plateau, Disney will not be happy and seek for other ways to increase revenue because that's how corporate America works these days.





YR

While it may or may resolve "anything" for wwe.

Vince McMahon = success ... Atrocious? Lol really?
 

Yakuza Rich

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While it may or may resolve "anything" for wwe.

Vince McMahon = success ... Atrocious? Lol really?

He's a terrible wrestling mind, but by far and away the greatest wrestling promoter in history.

The industry is now setup where the WWE will never be taken over, but all it can do is slowly dwindle away and get killed itself which will completely kill the industry for good.

Ratings have continually tanked and they have been on a slow decline in terms of profit. The network helped provide a new revenue stream which helped boost the stock. But once the network wears off...they'll be looking for new revenue streams and the product will continue to suffer.

Everything we hear from former writers i that ideas get put thru the ringer when Vince gets his hand on them and what starts off as an idea for one thing turns into a mess when Vince gets done with it. This is something that Vince has had a problem with as he had Pat Patterson book for him int he 80's and they had success and then Vince started to take more control of the book in the early 90's when they tanked. Eventually Vince (as reported in Mick Foley's Have a Nice Day) conceded that he was out of touch and gave the wrestlers more freedom to do what they wanted...and the Attitude Era took off and it exploded.

He's been back in controlling the writing for quite a few years and it shows. But, he's positioned the company as the only game in town.

He's like the college football coach that was once great and now has underwhelming teams, but they are still successful because of what he once built and then when he's gone the team will suck because he really left the team in bad shape.






YR
 
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