Sunday, November 1, 2009

WWE

The WWE, World Wrestling Entertainment, says that almost fifteen percent of their viewers are ages 11 and under and that comes out to about one million children, which a third of that estimate is girls.In a couple of well publicized cases, a seven year old boy killed his three year old brother when he punched him in the neck and in 1999; a ten year old boy received a broken neck for copying a wrestling move. He had to have two major surgeries, missed most of the fourth grade and had to wear a head stabilizing apparatus for several months. Today his range of motion is not very good and he is one of the lucky ones.
It’s not just the weapons that make backyard wrestling dangerous. It is kids that are copying the wrestling moves of their heroes that are the most dangerous part of backyard wrestling. They are performing the moves of their professional counterparts and are not trained to do these dangerous stunts. Stunts are just what they are too and the professional counterparts are even being hurt, paralyzed and killed from performing the stunts. Professional wrestlers have received concussions, broken necks, torn muscles and dislocated bones because of moves going awry and our children are performing these moves
Kids at these ages do not realize that the wrestling moves they are copying are very well choreographed by professional wrestlers and that when they punch their opponents; they are not really hitting them. When kids see wrestlers grimace or scream out in pain, they do not know that the wrestler is doing something called “selling” the move to make it look like he is hurt or injured.

WWE Chapion

Triple H Height: 6 foot and Weight: 260 pounds.He was born in Greenwich Conn.Triple H have many awards such as: 5-time WWE Champion, 5-time World Heavyweight Champion, 4-time Intercontinental Champion, World Tag Team Champion, 2-time European Champion, 1997 King of the Ring, 2002 Royal Rumble Match winner.He enter in WWE in May 1995.
In his first year in WWE, Triple H compiled an impressive winning streak. In May 1996, he had his first televised battle with Shawn Michaels on RAW. It was the beginning of what would become one of the most important pairings — as allies and foes — in WWE history. In October, Triple H faced Stone Cold at Buried Alive in the origins of another storied rivalry. Six days later, Triple H would capture WWE gold for the very first time, winning the Intercontinental Championship from Marc Mero on RAW.
Next, Triple H dominated the 1997 King of the Ring tournament, beating Mankind in the finals. In the pay-per-view battles and wild brawls that followed, Triple H would be introduced to all three “faces of Foley.” He forced a double count-out at Canadian Stampede, brawled with Mankind in a SummerSlam Steel Cage Match, and beat Dude Love at One Night Only in September.
Triple H captured the WWE Championship for the first time the night after SummerSlam 1999, beating Mankind. Remarkably, he lost that championship to none other than Mr. McMahon, who won his only world championship in an unscheduled match that saw Shane McMahon officiate. During the match, Stone Cold delivered a Stunner to the champ, allowing McMahon to get the shocking win. McMahon vacated the championship four days later, putting it up in a Six-Pack Challenge at Unforgiven, where Triple H won and regained the championship.