[quote name='mykevermin']Yeah, thought so. They want to become like MTV has - an immensely popular channel, with fewer and fewer people bitching that they "never show any music videos anymore." Because the generation who remembers MTV as the channel for music videos are old and cranky and outside the demographic who would watch MTV (I mean us, really). MTV morphed from what I/we know it as to the "

-up" channel - that is, a litany of series about the celebrating and exalting the most audacious

-ups in American society. Teenagers who get knocked up, filthy rich bastard children crying at their birthday party because they didn't get the Maserati they demanded, and teenage parents (perhaps the sequel to those who got knocked up). MTV is the brand, not an acronym for "Music Television." I think that's what WWE sees here, in part.
Thing is, MTV transitioned slowly into that channel and had the marketing power and financial resources of Viacom behind them. WWE has pro wrestling behind them, not CBS/Viacom. Vince McMahon is incredibly wealthy, and WWE a huge corporation. But he's mistaking himself for Sumner Redstone, which is the kind of hubris that has led to every non-wrestling project he'd worked on failing miserably.
At any rate, this is what we feared. Little to no emphasis on wrestling. The very bloody appeal of the channel is, to me, a 24/7 wrestling channel. Every other activity engaged in by more than 4 people has a whole

ing channel devoted to it. Baseball, football, golf. No, there's no Hungarian Strongmen Contest Channel, but that's just a matter of time. Okay, or roller derby, either. Thanks for pointing that out.
The very appeal of WWE as a network in a cable market of hundreds of bland, similar networks is that WWE's wrestling library offers something no other channel can. If they want to syndicate old episodes of "227" or create a Glee knock off with an all-WWE-Sooperstar™ cast, well, bully for them. But what's the goddamned point, then?
EDIT: Early review for the WWE movie "That's What I Am."

That's precisely what I was thinking when I saw that first commercial on Monday.[/QUOTE]
Funny they call it a tolerance tale considering the crap they let be said on television sometimes.