Women of Wrestling
WOW - Women Of Wrestling, aka WOW!, is a women's professional wrestling promotion founded in 2000 by David McLane, previously the founder of Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling. It is based in Los Angeles, California, and is owned by McLane and Los Angeles Lakers owner and president Jeanie Buss.[1] The promotion launched a series of syndicated programs in the 2000-01 television seasons in 102 TV markets[2] using a similar format of character driven performers, with names befitting a comic book series, such as Jungle Grrrl, an inmate tag-team complete with orange jump suits named Caged Heat, a Hollywood starlet named Lana Star, and the Persian Princess.[3]
Women Of Wrestling | |
---|---|
Genre | Women's professional wrestling Professional wrestling |
Created by | David McLane |
Developed by | Jeanie Buss |
Starring | WOW Superheroes roster |
Narrated by | David McLane Stephen Dickey |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of seasons | 6 |
No. of episodes | 77 (as of November 23, 2019 ) |
Production | |
Production locations | Los Angeles, California |
Camera setup | Multicamera setup |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Release | |
Original network | KTNV-TV (2011–2012) KVCW (2012–2019) AXS TV (2019–2020) |
Picture format | 480i (SDTV) 1080i (HDTV) |
Original release | September 1, 2000 – present |
External links | |
Website |
WOW programs were able to stand out from other wrestling programs by offering television viewers and live event audience an all female troupe of performers who played campy villains and heroines in all sizes and nationalities.[4] By being the only entertainment source of its kind, WOW captured a strong adult demographic following with its primary audience, the male television audience (18–49 years of age) generating 25% higher ratings than its secondary audience of young women (18-24), teens, and tweens (7-12).
After a long hiatus, in December 2014, WOW! announced their launch into digital media in 2015. Marketed as "WOW Superheroes", its characters are empowered women from all different backgrounds and professions.[5] Season 2 of the show premiered on March 1, 2016, on YouTube.[6] Its fourth season premiered February 28, 2017.[7] On April 20, 2017, MGM Television announced that Mark Burnett, MGM's President, Television Group & Digital, and Jeanie Buss formed a partnership to develop new content across a range of unscripted programming and digital formats for WOW!.[8]
Beginning with season 5, WOW will be broadcast on AXS TV. The two companies inked a deal in June 2018 for a weekly program,[9] to be called WOW: Women of Wrestling, tapings for which commenced on October 10, 2018 at the Belasco Theater in Los Angeles,[10] set to launch in early 2019.[9] WOW debuted on January 18 as part of AXS's Friday Night Fights schedule that also includes New Japan Pro Wrestling and AXS TV Fights.[10] This marked WOW's first return to network television since 2000.[11]
Company history
Initial run (2000–2001)
WOW programming was aired in first-run syndication, often late at night and packaged with other sports-entertainment programming. The programs quickly became the highest rated wrestling shows in the markets of New York and Los Angeles and demonstrated ability regardless of the region, market size or time-period to grow each television stations audience. The promotion aired about twenty four original one-hour episodes, fielding a single pay-per-view, Women of Wrestling Unleashed. With its headquarters in Los Angeles, WOW held its live events which were taped for broadcast from the Great Western Forum in Inglewood, California. The organization's first live event attendance was a mere 400+, but its audience grew to over 5,000 customers over the period of only six events, and its website peaked in one month with slightly over 10 million unique visitors.
The majority of WOW's performers were rookies to the business, recruited from backgrounds in modeling, acting, stunt work, and martial arts. Selina Majors (who wrestled as Bambi) and Thug (who wrestled as Peggy Lee Leather) were the trainers for the company. Jeanie Buss appeared regularly on WOW programming, although not as an in-ring participant.
Dormant (2001–2012)
Due to the ever soft and declining advertising market during this time, WOW was not able to take advantage of its momentum and ceased production after completing 24 original episodes and one live pay-per-view event. WOW ceased television production by fall 2001. WOW, although off the air in the United States after 2001, continued to exist through international distribution deals with the markets of Israel, Russia, India, Canada, South Africa, Kenya, the Middle East, Turkey, Malaysia, the Dominican Republic and other countries airing the WOW shows.
David McLane would attempt to relaunch the show again a few times over the next decade, with no success. One attempt in 2002 included a partnership with Kiss frontman Gene Simmons.[12] Starting in July 2011, the WOW website reported the WOW original shows started airing on the ABC affiliate KTNV in Las Vegas.[13] The series continues to be distributed internationally. In 2013, Coors Light sponsored several live events in Las Vegas at the Eastside Cannery Casino and Hotel, where new programs were produced.
Relaunch (2012–present)
On May 29, 2012, McLane and Buss announced their intention to produce new episodes of the series.[14][15] On Sunday, December 9, 2012, at 11 a.m. on The CW Las Vegas station KVCW, WOW! returned to television[16] in advance of the "WOW! Pandemonium Tour 2013". WOW! kicked off the tour in Las Vegas, Nevada, with their first live event on January 19, 2013.
The new programming of WOW featured some of the original WOW wrestlers such as Lana Star, Jade, Delta Lotta Pain, Loca, Thug, Jungle Grrrl and Selina Majors with the addition of new talent who auditioned for WOW in the months prior to December 9, 2012, television show. The WOW wrestlers are now referred to as "SuperHeroes". New WOW SuperHeroes are characters known as Frost, Fire, Stephy Slays, Keta Rush, La Niña and a Mexican star named Azucar. Original WOW Girl Selina Majors serves as the official trainer of WOW's new talent.[17] Joining the roster are independent wrestlers Santana Garrett and Amber O'Neal.
On June 18, 2018, The Hollywood Reporter announced that WOW will air weekly on AXS TV beginning in early 2019.[9] WOW returned to network broadcast for the first time since 2001 on January 18 as part of AXS's Friday Night Fights lineup.[10][18] On June 2020 it was announced that AXS TV and WOW parted ways[19]
Seasons
Superheroes (5–present)
WOW Superheroes
Ring name | Real name | Notes |
---|---|---|
Abilene Maverick[20] | Callee Wilkerson[21] | |
Adrenaline[22] | Priscilla Zuniga | WOW Tag Team Champion |
Adriana Gambino[23] | Noelle Giorgi | |
Amber O'Neal[24] | Kimberly Dawn Davis[25] | |
Angelica Dante[26] | Unknown | |
The Beast[27] | Twana Ferguson[28] | WOW World Champion |
Cali Ray[29] | Kristen Young[30] | |
Casey Dakota[31] | Sarah Stallman | |
Chainsaw[32] | Unknown | |
Chantilly Chella[33] | Rachel Kelvington Bostic[34] | |
The Dagger[35] | Michelle Blanchard[36] | |
The Disciplinarian[37] | Robyn Reid | |
Dixie Darlings[38] | Airial Le, Cathy Le | |
Eye Candy[39] | Willow Nightingale | |
Exodus[40] | Unknown | |
Faith the Lioness[41] | Faith Jefferies | |
Fire[42] | Kiera Hogan | WOW Tag Team Champion |
Fury[43] | Harlow O'Hara | |
Genesis[40] | Unknown | |
Havok[44] | Jessica Cricks[45] | |
Hazard[46] | Beth Crist | |
Holidead[47] | Camille Ligon[48] | |
Jessie Jones[49] | Jessie Belle McCoy[50] | |
Jolene[51] | Airial Le | |
Jolynn[51] | Cathy Le | |
Jungle Grrrl[52] | Erica Porter[53] | |
Keta Rush[54] | Keta Meggett[55] | |
Khloe Hurtz[56] | Katie Forbes[57] | |
Malia Hosaka[40] | Malia Hosaka | |
Mezmeriah[58] | Arelys Rodriguez | |
Nikki Krampus[59] | Unknown | |
Princess Aussie[60] | Simone Sherie | Papua New Guinea Warrior |
Papua New Guinea Warrior[61] | Tyrone Evans Clark | associated with Princess Aussie[60] |
Razor[62] | Sarah Rodriguez[63] | |
Reyna Reyes[64] | Gisele Shaw | Formerly known as Azteca from the fifth season |
Sassy Massy[65] | Alisha Maher | |
Serpentine[66] | Melissa Cervantes[67] | Formerly known as Kobra Moon from the fifth season |
Siren the Voodoo Doll[68] | Unknown | |
Spike[69] | Unknown | |
Stephy Slays[70] | Stephanie Mason | |
Teal Piper[71] | Ariel Toombs | |
The Temptress[72] | Katarina Leigh Waters[73] | |
Tessa Blanchard[74] | Tessa Blanchard | |
Venomous | Unknown |
Other on-air personnel
Ring name | Real name | Notes |
---|---|---|
Lana Star[75] | Lana Kinnear[76] | Manager of Faith the Lioness |
Samantha Smart[77] | Kristen Garner[78] | Manager of The Disciplinarian |
Sophia Lopez[79] | Leslie Garza[80] | Manager of Nikki Krampus and Serpentine |
Broadcast team
The following section pertains to announcers who cover WOW broadcasts. This group includes presenters, ringside commentators, ring announcers and backstage interviewers.
Ring name | Real name | Notes |
---|---|---|
Brigiite Valdez | Brigiite Valdez | Field reporter |
David McLane | David McLane | Commentator Host |
EZ Rider | Eleanor Kerrigan | Commentator |
Shaul Guerrero | Shaul Guerrero | Ring announcer |
Stephen Dickey | Stephen Dickey | Commentator |
WOW other personnel
- Dan Masters: Announcer and backstage interviews (2012 – present)
- Lee Marshall: Announcer (2000 - 2001)
- Ed Ryba: Voiceovers (2001)
- Andrew M. Somers: Voiceovers (2000 - 2001)
- Julie Day: Backstage interviews (2000 - 2001)
- James Furlong: Music composer (2013–present)
- Josh Milton: Referee
- Jeff McGowan: Referee
- Jesse Hernandez: Referee
- Andrew Hecker: Voiceovers and director
WOW World Championship
Reigns
As of February 4, 2021.
No. | Overall reign number |
---|---|
Reign | Reign number for the specific champion |
Days | Number of days held |
+ | Current reign is changing daily |
No. | Champion | Championship change | Reign statistics | Notes | Ref. | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date | Event | Location | Reign | Days | ||||
1 | Terri Gold | September 1, 2000 | WOW | Inglewood, CA | 1 | 105 | Won a battle royal to become the inaugural champion. | |
2 | Danger | December 15, 2000 | WOW | Inglewood, CA | 1 | 51 | This episode aired on tape delay on January 13, 2001. | |
3 | Terri Gold | February 4, 2001 | WOW Unleashed | Inglewood, CA | 2 | 27 | ||
— | Vacated | March 3, 2001 | — | — | — | — | WOW ceased television production sometime after March 3, 2001. | |
4 | Lana Star | January 19, 2013 | Live event | Los Angeles, CA | 1 | 49 | WOW claimed that following the tapings at Great Western Forum, several of its performers continued wrestling on various independent shows. In a non televised event in LA, Lana Star defeated Terri Gold in a WOW sanctioned match for the championship. | |
5 | Jungle Grrrl | March 9, 2013 | WOW! Pandemonium Tour 2013 | Las Vegas, NV | 1 | 1,300 | Jungle Grrrl won the championship at WOW! Pandemonium Tour 2013. This episode aired on tape delay on August 26, 2016. | |
6 | Santana Garrett | September 29, 2016 | WOW | Los Angeles, CA | 1 | 742 | This was a triple threat match also involving The Beverly Hills Babe. | [81] |
— | Vacated | October 11, 2018 | — | — | — | — | After a match between Jungle Grrrl, Santana Garrett and Tessa Blanchard ended in double pinfall with Garrett and Jungle Grrrl pinned Blanchard, David McLane stated that the referee decided to not award the WOW World Championship to Garrett and Jungle Grrrl. This episode aired on tape delay on February 15, 2019. | [82] |
7 | Tessa Blanchard | October 11, 2018 | WOW Season 5: Episode 5 | Los Angeles, CA | 1 | 217 | Blanchard defeated Jungle Grrrl for the vacant WOW World Championship. This episode aired on tape delay on February 15, 2019. | [82] |
8 | The Beast | May 16, 2019 | WOW Season 6: Episode 11 | Los Angeles, CA | 1 | 630+ | This episode aired on tape delay on November 23, 2019. | [83] |
List of combined reigns
As of February 4, 2021.
† | Indicates the current champion |
---|
Rank | Wrestler | No. of reigns |
Combined days |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Jungle Grrrl | 1 | 1,300 |
2 | Santana Garrett | 1 | 881 |
3 | The Beast † | 1 | 630+ |
4 | Tessa Blanchard | 1 | 217 |
5 | Terri Gold | 2 | 132 |
6 | Danger | 1 | 51 |
7 | Lana Star | 1 | 49 |
WOW World Tag Team Championship
Inaugural tournament (2000–2001)
Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Final WOW Unleashed | ||||||||||||
Caged Heat (Delta Lotta Pain and Loca) | Pin | |||||||||||||
The Asian Invasion (Jade and Lotus) | 3:44 | |||||||||||||
Caged Heat | Pin | |||||||||||||
Beckie and Bronco Billie | 4:05 | |||||||||||||
Beckie and Bronco Billie | Pin | |||||||||||||
Danger and Riot | 6:48 | |||||||||||||
Caged Heat | Pin | |||||||||||||
Harley's Angels | 5:42 | |||||||||||||
The Beach Patrol (Sandy and Summer) | Pin | |||||||||||||
The Daughters Of Darkness (Misery and Mystery) | 6:43 | |||||||||||||
The Beach Patrol | 4:34 | |||||||||||||
Harley's Angels | Pin | |||||||||||||
Harley's Angels (Charlie Davidson and EZ Rider) | Pin | |||||||||||||
Boom Boom and Caliente | 5:05 | |||||||||||||
Reigns
As of February 4, 2021.
No. | Overall reign number |
---|---|
Reign | Reign number for the specific champion |
Days | Number of days held |
+ | Current reign is changing daily |
No. | Champion | Championship change | Reign statistics | Notes | Ref. | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date | Event | Location | Reign | Days | ||||
1 | Caged Heat (Delta Lotta Pain and Loca) |
January 20, 2001 | WOW Unleashed | Inglewood, CA | 1 | 42 | Defeated Harley's Angels (Charlie Davidson and EZ Rider) to become the inaugural champions. | |
— | Vacated | March 3, 2001 | — | — | — | — | WOW ceased television production sometime after March 3, 2001. | |
2 | Caged Heat (Delta Lotta Pain and Loca) |
January 19, 2013 | WOW | Inglewood, CA | 2 | <1 | Returned as champions. | |
3 | The All American Girls (Amber O'Neal and Santana Garrett) |
January 19, 2013 | WOW! Pandemonium Tour 2013 | Las Vegas, NV | 1 | 1,349 | ||
— | Vacated | September 29, 2016 | — | — | — | — | Caged Heat's attorney Sophia Lopez provided evidence to the Women Wrestling Association that the All American Girls' broke the tag team match's rules multiple time in their championship win over Caged Heat. Therefore, WWA decided to vacate the WOW World Tag Team Championship. | [84] |
4 | Adrenaline and Fire | May 16, 2019 | WOW Season 6: Episode 11 | Los Angeles, CA | 1 | 630+ | Adrenaline and Fire defeated Monsters of Madness (Jessicka Havok and Hazard) in the tournament finals to win the vacant championship. This episode aired on tape delay on November 23, 2019. | [85] |
Combined reigns by team
As of February 4, 2021.
† | Indicates the current champion |
---|
Rank | Wrestler | No. of reigns |
Combined days |
---|---|---|---|
1 | The All American Girls (Amber O'Neal and Santana Garrett) | 1 | 1,349 |
2 | Adrenaline and Fire † | 1 | 630+ |
3 | Caged Heat (Delta Lotta Pain and Loca) | 2 | 42 |
Combined reigns by wrestler
Rank | Wrestler | No. of reigns |
Combined days |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Amber O'Neal | 1 | 1,349 |
Santana Garrett | 1 | 1,349 | |
3 | Adrenaline † | 1 | 630+ |
Fire † | 1 | ||
5 | Delta Lotta Pain | 2 | 42 |
Loca | 2 | 42 |
WOW Unleashed
WOW Unleashed | |||
---|---|---|---|
Promotion | Women of Wrestling | ||
Date | February 4, 2001 | ||
City | Inglewood, California | ||
Venue | Great Western Forum | ||
Attendance | ~9,500 | ||
Pay-per-view chronology | |||
|
WOW Unleashed was a professional wrestling pay-per-view from Women of Wrestling. It took place on February 4, 2001, from the Great Western Forum in Inglewood, California. The PPV suffered from technical difficulties and a low buyrate.[86] A second PPV, Spring Vengeance, was announced for April 8, 2001, during Unleashed, but never came to fruition. The announcers were Lee Marshall and former manager Bobby "The Brain" Heenan. Regular announcer David McLane, also the promotion's President, served as Master of Ceremonies.[87][88]
- Event results
No. | Results | Stipulations | Times[89] |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Randi Rah Rah defeated Jacklyn Hyde | Singles match | 2:15 |
2 | The Beach Patrol (Sandy and Summer) vs. Farah and Paradise ended in a no contest | Tag team match | 2:30 |
3 | Tanja The Warrior Woman defeated Jane Blond | Singles match | 2:47 |
4 | Nicki Law (with Kristy Order) defeated Heather Steele | Singles match | 2:02 |
5 | Boom Boom and Caliente defeated The Asian Invasion (Jade and Lotus) | Tag team match | 4:43 |
6 | Bronco Billie defeated The Disciplinarian | Singles match | 3:55 |
7 | Roxy Powers vs. Slam Dunk ended in a double disqualification | Singles match | - |
8 | Riot defeated Wendi Wheels | Hardcore match | 9:40 |
9 | Jungle Grrrl defeated Beckie | Splash match | 9:45 |
10 | Caged Heat (Delta Lotta Pain and Loca) (with Vendetta) defeated Harley's Angels (Charlie Davidson and EZ Rider) (with Thug) | Tag team match for the inaugural WOW World Tag Team Championship | 5:42 |
11 | Terri Gold defeated Danger (c) | Singles match for the WOW World Championship | 4:20 |
12 | Lana Star and Patti Pizzazz defeated Ice Cold and Poison | Hair vs. hair match | 5:16 |
13 | Thug defeated Selina Majors | Steel cage match | 15:01 |
|
See also
References
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