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Viewers are confused about whether WWE could be leaving Netflix following a recent announcement about ESPN’s new streaming service. Earlier, ESPN confirmed that its new streaming application will launch on August 21,
WWE and NBCUniversal announced Wednesday that John Cena's retirement match will take place at Saturday Night's Main Event on Dec. 13.
It's a new era of sports streaming! ESPN's all-in-one DTC streaming service and new app are live. Here's everything you need to know.
Even though WWE is moving its PLEs to ESPN later this year, the company isn’t severing its relationship with Peacock. According to a new report from Sports Business Journal, Peacock and WWE have reached a new,
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Wrestlezone on MSNWWE Wrestlepalooza Officially Announced, Reported Planned Main Events
WWE Wrestlepalooza will take place on September 20 on the ESPN app, going head-to-head with AEW All Out. The company took to social media this afternoon to officially announce the event, tweeting out: “BREAKING NEWS: WWE Wrestlepalooza will be the first Premium Live Event on @espn!
Earlier this month, it was announced that WWE and ESPN reached an agreement for the broadcaster to become the exclusive home of premium live events starting in 2026. The deal reportedly was for a whopping total of $1.625 billion over five years, with an annual value of $325 million.
In a surprise announcement, WWE reveals that Wrestlepalooza will stream on ESPN, not Peacock. The move happens sooner than expected, setting up a head-to-head showdown with AEW's All Out on September 20.
Wrestlepalooza will run directly opposite All Elite Wrestling's marquee PPV, AEW All Out. Launching a new PPV on the same day as All Out continues WWE's recent pattern of running events opposite the No. 2 U.S. wrestling promotion.