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For years, the WWE has called itself "sports entertainment" instead of pro wrestling. Since the early 2000s, back even when World Wrestling Entertainment was still called WWF, the company has carefully referred to its scripted grappling as "sports entertainment" rather than "professional wrestling." Now, it seems that the verboten phrase — "pro wrestling" — is back as part of a series of changes made after McMahon left the company. A source familiar with internal policies at WWE told Business Insider that use of the term "pro wrestling" has been relaxed in the past year. For the moment, pro wrestling did indeed win out over sports entertainment.
Persons: John Cena, , Michael Cole, Vince McMahon, McMahon, — Ibou, Cena Organizations: WWE, Service, Undertaker, Wrestling Entertainment, XFL, Netflix, Wrestling, Sports Entertainment, Rock
I stayed up all night in the UK to watch WrestleMania 40. I'm not a WWE type. AdvertisementThis weekend I made good on a long-held promise: to watch all eight hours of WrestleMania 40 with my boyfriend, across two nights. AdvertisementI also didn't think I was a WWE type. We also live in the UK, where WrestleMania airs at 1 a.m., so we were giving up on serious amounts of sleep.
Persons: I'm, , Seth, Freakin, Rollins, Seth Rogen Organizations: WWE, Service
CNN —An undertaker turned academic, Alexandra Morton-Hayward became interested in brains — specifically how they decompose — during her former job. To understand why, the anthropologist has compiled a unique archive of information about 4,405 brains unearthed by archaeologists. No other soft tissue survived amongst the bones, which were dredged from a heavily waterlogged grave. Morton-Hayward works in a lab in Oxford, England, where she has helped build a collection of 570 ancient brains. Interestingly, many of the oldest brains are preserved in this unknown way, Morton-Hayward said.
Persons: Alexandra Morton, Hayward, , , Martin Wirenfeldt Nielsen, wasn’t, He’s, ” Wirenfeldt Nielsen, Alexandra L, Morton, It’s, “ I’m Organizations: CNN, University of Oxford, Morton, South Denmark University Hospital, University of Southern, Stone Age, Royal Society B Biological Sciences, Hayward Locations: Morton, Bristol, England, Russia, Oxford, Stone, Stone Age Sweden, Sint, Ypres, Belgium, Polish
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Big 12 Commissioner Brett Yormark said his still-evolving conference remains committed to having a championship game even as the College Football Playoff expands from four to 12 teams after this season. “I know there’s been a lot of discussion amongst the commissioners about what that might look like, but as it relates to the Big 12, we love this game. 19 Oklahoma State at the home of NFL's Dallas Cowboys, where it has a contract to play its championship game through 2031. Some Longhorns fans booed and chanted at Yormark when he was walking off the field into a tunnel before the Big 12 championship game. Yormark said the partnership is a differentiator for the Big 12 because of the wrestling organization's 150 million social media followers.
Persons: Brett Yormark, I’m, ” Yormark, Yormark, , I’ve, there’s, Joey McGuire, Nelly Organizations: College, Oklahoma State, NFL's Dallas Cowboys, Southeastern Conference, Longhorns, Texas Tech, Red Raiders, Texas, Big, WWE, Jay, AP Locations: ARLINGTON , Texas, Texas, Oklahoma, Arizona, Arizona State , Colorado, Utah, Austin, New
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Quinn Ewers and the Texas Longhorns are leaving the Big 12 with bookend championships and still hoping for a chance at the College Football Playoff. Longhorns fans heartily booed and chanted “S-E-C!, S-E-C!” while Big 12 Commissioner Brett Yormark addressed the crowd before presenting the championship trophy to Ewers. It was the fourth Big 12 title for the Longhorns (12-1, No. 18 CFP) had won seven of eight games to get to its second Big 12 title game in three years. Murphy and Manning both took snaps on the final drive for Texas over the final 6 1/2 minutes against Oklahoma State.
Persons: — Quinn Ewers, , Brett Yormark, Ewers, T’Vondre, Everybody’s, Steve Sarkisian, Sarkisian, ” Yormark, Keilan Robinson, it’s, Ollie Gordon II, CJ Baxter's, Alan Bowman, Rashod Owens, Gordon, Adonai Mitchell, Ja'Tavion Sanders, Mitchell, Sanders, Maalik Murphy, Arch Manning, Murphy, Manning, Bert Auburn's Big, ___ Organizations: Texas Longhorns, Big, College Football, Texas, Oklahoma State, Longhorns, Texas Tech, SEC, CFP, Alabama, Cowboys, Outland, WWE, T, Dallas Cowboys, AP Locations: ARLINGTON , Texas, Texas, Yormark, Oklahoma, Michigan, Ewers
For many New Yorkers, the city’s subways are the performance spaces they encounter most often. Everyday, dancers and musicians put on a subterranean revue that uses mass transit as a stage. In recent years, this moving festival has included “Subway Mania,” an homage to one of professional wrestling’s most popular period: the late 1990s to early 2000. The scene caught the attention of Shyama Venkateswar, 57, who was on her way home to Forest Hills, Queens. Her sons, now young adults, had watched World Wrestling Entertainment shows growing up, she said, so she followed the wrestlers aboard the train and abandoned her trip home.
Persons: , Kane, Stone, Steve Austin, Shyama Venkateswar Organizations: Lexington, Wrestling Entertainment Locations: Manhattan, Forest Hills, Queens
"The Burial" stars Jamie Foxx as real-life lawyer Willie Gary, who won a $500 million case in 1995. Elliott isn't the only ex-client of Willie Gary and his firm, Gary Williams Parenti Watson & Gary, to be angry about how she was treated. Lawyer Willie Gary poses for a selfie with a guest at a screening of "The Burial." Attorney Willie Gary and his client Don King speaking to the press in 2005. She has so far managed to seize $102,000 from an account the Gary firm had with Truist.
Persons: Jamie Foxx, Willie Gary, Gary —, , Gary, Ernestine Elliott, Ford —, Elliott, Elliott isn't, Gary Williams Parenti Watson, Tommy Lee Jones, Luisa Esposito, Grant Halverson, Willie Gary's, Willie, couldn't, Jeremiah O'Keefe, O'Keefe, Loewen couldn't, Loewen, Gary Parenti, Don King, Jim McIsaac, Ford, schemed, he'd, Gary's cocounsels, Lawrence Fox, Fox, Bruce Green, Green, Gary didn't, Sharron Mangum, Mr, Mangum, Marietta Goodman, Coke, Jillian Nedd, Nedd, Ardria Clark, Tamesha Marshall, Pharr, Clark, Marshall, Ray Rogers, He's, leafleted, Rogers, Willie Lewis, Troy Fulks Jr, Fulks, Lewis, Esposito, she'd, didn't, Justice II, hasn't, Gary's, Debra Sweeting, it's, Sweeting, we're, Variety Organizations: Service, Disney, Nissan, Hollywood, reneging, Gary Parenti Facebook, Anheuser, Busch, Yorker, Group, New Yorker, Fordham, Cola, Coke, FBI, Gary, Florida Bar Association, Palm Beach Post, Florida Power, dimes, Finance Group, Wings, Justice, Boeing, Gary Foundation Locations: Georgia, Florida, Mississippi, New York City, New York, Palm Beach, Flint , Michigan, disbursements
For all the versions of Beyoncé we’ve seen in her career — beauty queen, vixen, scorned women — stand-up comedian might be her most uninhibited. But as much as the Renaissance World Tour is limned with the beauty of aliveness and vitality, it is also preoccupied with mortality. She is deeply aware of the precarity of Black, queer and trans life. The shift between the ecstasy of the concert and the reality of the world was so disconcerting it was almost physically painful. But Beyoncé isn’t the undertaker; she is directing the second-line band at the funeral procession.
Persons: Beyoncé, we’ve, , , livin, Breonna Taylor, George Floyd, O’Shae Sibley, vogueing, Barbara Ann Teer, Albert Einstein Organizations: National Black Theater Locations: York, Brooklyn, Las Vegas, Jacksonville, Fla
‘Medusa Deluxe’ Review: Curl Up and Die
  + stars: | 2023-08-10 | by ( Jeannette Catsoulis | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Suffused with the sting of hair spray and the scent of Herbal Essences, “Medusa Deluxe” swaggers onto our screens, all cigarette smoke and mirrors. From its playfully inventive opening to its flash-forward finale, Thomas Hardiman’s wild — and wildly impressive — first feature, set during a British regional hairdressing competition, is a proudly indelicate, painstakingly structured pleasure. Playing out in real time and shot to suggest a single, continuous take, the plot circles the sudden death of the show’s star stylist, who has been found backstage, minus his scalp. As his competitive rivals and their models await questioning by unseen detectives, everyone is under suspicion, not just the creepy security guard with the urgent requests for wet wipes. There’s the mouthy Cleve (Clare Perkins, whose opening monologue is a doozy), a stylist with barely controlled anger issues; the devout Divine (Kayla Meikle), who works part-time for an undertaker and is hence no stranger to dead heads; and the scheming Kendra (Harriet Webb), who may have fixed the contest in cahoots with its silver-pompadoured organizer (Darrell D’Silva).
Persons: Thomas Hardiman’s, Cleve, Clare Perkins, Kayla Meikle, Harriet Webb, Darrell D’Silva Locations: cahoots
Wolfe Research reiterated WWE as outperform, noting that the return of Vince McMahon could jolt the company's TV rights renewal process. Earlier, Wolfe Research published a note downgrading WWE shares in error. Stephanie McMahon resigned earlier this month from her role as co-CEO and chairwoman following the unanimous election of her father, Vince, as company's executive chairman. "We think there's more game theory to Vince's return than what meets the eye," Supino said in the correct note to clients. Supino said Vince's return could give a "shot in the arm" to the 2025 TV rights renewal process and his willingness to sell could drive up prices for the rights.
CNN —On one side of the pitch was a team made up some of the biggest names in world soccer. Described as a “real bunch of ragamuffins” by the author Geoffrey Douglas, the US beat a star-studded England side 1-0 at the 1950 World Cup. I mean, a plucky group of underdogs just beat what was generally universally recognized as the best team in the world,” Holroyd told CNN Sport. PA Images/ReutersAnd so when the 1950 World Cup approached, there was little national interest or coverage of the US’ participation. On the other side of the pond, hopes were sky high for a star-studded England team.
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