I really like watching Robson Green when he is on the telly I like watching him in Grantchester when it is on to on itv I think he is very good in that. I also like his Tales Of Northumberland TV series that he dose sometimes to that is on itv that is when he goes to other places in the North East and walks around other places over here in the North East and also dose countryside walks in the North East to.
This is one of my favourite Wwe Royal Rumbles it is Wwe Royal Rumble 88 it was on and aired on the 24th January 1988 when I was just one year old when I was a baby. I am going to watch it on the Wwe Network sometime to it is the very first Wwe Royal Rumble pay per view that Hacksaw Jim Duggan won that year. It is on for 2 hours and 23 minutes just under 2 and a half hours.
I am going to watch this sometime it is one of my favourite wrestling dvds it is Wwe Live In The UK November 2010. It was on the Sky Sports on the telly at the time when I was twenty four when I was in my mid twenties when I was younger. It is Superstars RAW Smackdown and NXT all Live at The MEN Arena in Manchester.
I like watching Vanessa Feltz on Talk TV sometimes I think she is really good. I think she talks about some very interesting stuff sometimes. She is on most nights on Talk TV on her own talk show on Talk TV and I love watching the Sky News channel Talk TV all the time to. I think they have some very good people and very good hosts on Talk TV to.
NXT UK lasted for four years and included 215 episodes broadcast over five seasons. The brand’s purpose was to help WWE enter the British wrestling market (and from there, the rest of the European market) while also serving as another developmental territory for the bigger brands in the US. But NXT UK was shut down in September 2022, with its replacement NXT Europe scheduled to launch in early 2023. When asked why WWE was going through all the trouble of rebranding when NXT UK was already established and functioning, Triple H explained that a lot of it had to do with the COVID Pandemic. “When we started NXT UK, the desire was to sort of replicate what we were doing in the U.S. and we got a start on it and then COVID hit and slowed everything down, and then we needed to rethink it. So we got to a place where we were ready to go again but it’s sort of tough to rebrand something and reboot it while you’re still running it. So we shut it down. As Europe evolves and grows once we bring that back I think we will begin to see it replicating a bit more of what you see in the U.S.” Triple H further explained that there’s also a practical need for something like NXT Europe. He explained that it’s so much costlier to bring people from far away countries all the way to the United States, and that having another ‘feeder territory’ that’s closer geographically like the UK or continental Europe. Triple H had this to say “It’s very difficult for us to find athletes, bring them to the US to begin training. It’s a very long process for us. We can get them into Europe in a much quicker fashion and get them training much quicker, much faster, and have success in a shorter period of time. So it becomes a very key hub for us. I think once Europe is established you will see us begin to look at branching that out into other markets as well.