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WWE currently produces 12 shows yearly and now charges US$39.95 for each, except for WrestleMania, which is US$49.95. Until recently, World Wrestling Entertainment had a once-a-month pay-per-view schedule, which they had from the late '90s until 2003 totalling twelve a year. This trend escalated to the point that by 1996, both companies showed monthly events on pay-per-view. By the end of February 1999, the In Your House name was nonexistent. Initially, the WWF used the In Your House brand, but beginning in 1996 began using other names to compliment the In Your House name (such as Badd Blood and No Way Out), to avoid confusion.
#PRO WRESTLING PPV LOGOS SERIES#
These four events - the Royal Rumble in January, WrestleMania in March or April, SummerSlam in August, and Survivor Series in November - were the only annual pay-per-view offerings (other than the King of the Ring) from the WWF until 1995, after rival World Championship Wrestling had expanded the number of their pay-per-view shows. The first SummerSlam was held in Madison Square Garden in August 1988. The event became a pay-per-view the following year. The debut of the Royal Rumble in January 1988 was actually shown on the USA Network, where it drew the highest rating to that time in the network's history.
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The vast majority of companies showed Survivor Series (only three opted to remain loyal to their contract with the NWA), and the resulting financial blow to Starrcade was in many ways the beginning of the end for Jim Crockett Promotions. The WWF informed cable companies that if they chose to carry Starrcade, they would not be allowed to carry future WWF events. The first Survivor Series event was offered on November 29 1987, scheduled directly against NWA's Starrcade, traditionally considered to be that promotion's biggest yearly event. The first two WrestleMania's were undeniable financial successes, and after WrestleMania III became perhaps the best known event in wrestling history, the WWF decided to expand their pay-per-view offerings. It is a commonly held misconception that the first WWF pay-per-view was November 1985's The Wrestling Classic, a tournament held at the Rosemont Horizon near Chicago, but the first WrestleMania event, in March of the same year, was available on pay-per-view in some markets. Pay-per-view events are a big part of the revenue stream for WWE. One event is usually three hours long and features six to twelve matches.
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Each month, World Wrestling Entertainment holds one or two annual pay-per-view events.