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Post by Undertaker/Paul Heyman on May 9, 2008 17:21:42 GMT -5
Ok now this is the history for Wrestling Entertainment Wars.
The Year is 2008 and all Three Shows of The WWE Were Going fine. No problems were upheld. Until One fateful Day Something so small it shouldn't have even been noticed by the WWE came up. This was a reporter. All they thought was it was a normal reporter. But this Reporter was not normal at all. He had once been in the WWE as an Interviewer but when he got injured by Stone Cold Steve Austin He was forced into a retirement home in 2005 at the age of 34. He came back in 2007 but instead of a warm welcoming he was told to Get lost and never come back.
Now back to the Reporter. He wanted to get back at the WWE so First He went to Raw in disguise watched the whole show then started passing messages onto The Wrestlers saying about how the WWE has tricked them and are going to Let Raw go into Retirement and bring in a better and newer show. Then he went to ECW and said that WWE has tricked them saying that ECW isn't as extreme as it used to be. So hey are cutting them loose. Then he went to Smackdown and did the same snitching on them. Finally At the Next PPV All the General Managers and their assistants showed up to it and eachh one of them announced they were ripping up the brands contract for The WWE and becoming their own companies.
Thats all i can think of if the other Co-Owners General Managers would like to add anything just modify this.
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Post by William Regal on May 11, 2008 7:27:22 GMT -5
I was thinking along the lines of...
The WWE is in financial ruin, the merchandise isn't selling, no-one is buying tickets and no-one is buying the Video-Games. Vince McMahon decides to sell his (and his families) entire stock to each brand of the show, giving each show equal power. The McMahons then headed off to Japan where they are now currently residing.
Now, each brand has 33.3% of the company under their control. In the beggining, everything is running smoothly, the WWE is getting fans back, merchandise is selling, and more wrestlers are joining the business. But then, each General Manager starts to argue over Air time, Main Event spots at Pay-Per-Views, and who gets to be the "company spearhead" (Which company would be seen as the "Main Company".) Since each brand owns the same amount of the company as each other, these disputes cannot be resolved.
So, each brand becomes its own company, competing against the other brands for television ratings, merchandise sales and Arena bookings...and now, the Wrestling Entertainment Wars have officially begun!
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Post by Undertaker/Paul Heyman on May 12, 2008 0:38:26 GMT -5
Both are good enough for me
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Post by William Regal on May 12, 2008 4:13:57 GMT -5
Lets make it both! lol
Possibly a combination of?
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Post by Undertaker/Paul Heyman on May 12, 2008 4:15:35 GMT -5
A combination yea that sounds right to me. As Of Now Locked. (wait i forgot you can stilll post)
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Post by William Regal on May 12, 2008 4:17:12 GMT -5
Hahahahahaha!
Anyway, i'll type up a combination of both tomorrow, since i don't have enough time now
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Post by William Regal on May 14, 2008 1:16:16 GMT -5
The WWE is in financial ruin, the merchandise isn't selling, no-one is buying tickets and no-one is buying the Video-Games. Vince McMahon decides to sell his (and his families) entire stock to each brand of the show, giving each show equal power. The McMahons then headed off to Japan where they are now currently residing.
Now, each brand has 33.3% of the company under their control. In the beggining, everything is running smoothly, the WWE is getting fans back, merchandise is selling, and more wrestlers are joining the business. But then, a crafty reporter who despises wrestling decides to use this moment of complacementness to his advantage. He travles to each show, forever filling the minds of the GMs with lies (Eg-Tellng them that the other two companies are planning to take over their company by joining forces) So then, as a result of this, each General Manager starts to argue over Air time, Main Event spots at Pay-Per-Views, and who gets to be the "company spearhead" (Which company would be seen as the "Main Company".) Since each brand owns the same amount of the company as each other, these disputes cannot be resolved.
The Reporter has begun the war...
So, each brand becomes its own company, competing against the other brands for television ratings, merchandise sales and Arena bookings...and now, the Wrestling Entertainment Wars have officially begun!
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