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see ecw was hardcore
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Our History
ECW began operating in 1992 as Eastern Championship Wrestling. On 08/27/1994, the name was changed from Eastern to Extreme.
It operates in Philadelphia, with spot shows in the surrounding Pennsylvania area. The wrestling operations are currently
handled by Paul Heyman (manager Paul E Dangerously) who bought the promotion from former owner Tod Gordon in 1996. It is currently
available on the Sports Channel America syndication package and on AIN satellite. ECW has, as of 1997, also branched out in
the pay-per-view universe, putting on three shows in 1997 with four more planned for 1998. Current top stars are Shane Douglas,
Rob Van Dam, Sabu, and more. ECW does not rely on the traditional face/heel structure. Instead, uses high-impact, fast paced
action to get its wrestlers over. Additionaly, ECW has the distinction of using "real" music for it's wrestlers,
and fairly obscure music at times at that. The opening theme music used to consist of a combination of Nine Inch Nails' "Closer"
(the heartbeat that spells out E-X-T-R-E-M-E) which cuts to White Zombie's "Thunderkiss '65" (the guitar part and the Pitbull's
music). After Barely Legal, they switched a specially written, non-commercial piece of music as their new theme. It was also
used for Rob Van Dam's WWF matches. On April 11, 2001, ECW declared bankruptcy making it officially dead. On that week,
Paul Heyman made his WWF debut as a color commentator replacing Jerry "The King" Lawler. Other ECW stars began to appear on
WWF television including Justin Credible, Rhino, Spike Dudley, and Jerry Lynn. HHG Corportation, the parent company of
Extreme Championship Wrestling, has officially filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. The petition was filed in New York on April
4th by Paul Heyman. The company was listed as having Assets totaling $1,385,500. Included in that number was $860,000 in accounts
receivable owed the company by In Demand Network (PPV), Acclaim Entertainment Inc. (video games), and Original San Francisco
Toy Company (action figures). The balance of the assets were the video tape library ($500,000), a 1998 Ford Truck ($19,500)
and the remaining inventory of merchandise ($4,000). The liabilities of the company totaled $8,881,435.17. The bankruptcy
filing included hundreds of claims, including production companies, buildings ECW ran in, TV stations ECW was run on, travel
agencies, including one owned by Bob Ryder, phone companies, attorney's fees, wrestlers, and other talent. Wrestlers and
talent were listed, with amounts owed ranging from $0 for Sabu and Steve Corino to hundreds, and in some cases, thousands
of dollars. The highest amounts owed to talents are Rob Van Dam ($150,000), Tommy Dreamer ($100,000), Joey Styles ($50,480),
Shane Douglas ($48,000) and Francine ($47,275). On July 9, 2001, ECW was recreated in Atlanta, Georgia on WWF's "RAW is
WAR." During a tag tem match between WCW's Lance Storm and Mike Awesome and WWF's Kane and Chris Jericho, a group of WWF wrestlers
came out and confronted the WCW tag team, then they slowly turned and attacked the WWF tag team. This group of wrestlers are:
Tommy Dreamer, Rob Van Dam, Lance Storm, Mike Awesome, Justin Credible, The Dudley Boyz, Tazz, Raven, and Rhyno. Paul Heyman
announced the invasion of this new group and suddenly formed a "merge" with WCW when Shane McMahon announced that Stephanie
McMahon-Helmsley is the new "owner" of ECW.
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