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bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
This would be one of the worst news of sport if true (sorry I still can't accept this truth).

Colombia plane crash: 'At least six survivors' as flight carrying 81 people, including a Brazilian football team, crashes near Medellin

"first division soccer team" means not the national team....

Yes it was true my friend.:( My deepest condolences to the families and friends of the victims of this tragedy.
 

Equation

Lieutenant General
This would be one of the worst news of sport if true (sorry I still can't accept this truth).

Colombia plane crash: 'At least six survivors' as flight carrying 81 people, including a Brazilian football team, crashes near Medellin


"first division soccer team" means not the national team....

This is sad and one of any sports team flight nightmares. My condolences to the victims families and love ones.
 

SteelBird

Colonel
Yes it was true my friend.:( My deepest condolences to the families and friends of the victims of this tragedy.
I first saw this news on Facebook. You know Facebook is unreliable and it said "Brazilian football team". I thought it was the national team of Brazil. If it was, I would be very very sad and couldn't accept the truth. I just hope that it was just rumors/fake news. I went on searching the web and found the report above and also read from CNN to confirm it's true. However, the ill fate football team was a league team, not a national team. Still, it's a huge lost (of the sport world in a whole, and football in particular).
 
I really don't think this will get past Chinese censors for a whole slew of reasons if it closely resembles WWE in the US. Anyone know how popular or not WWE-like "physical theatre" is in China currently?

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SPORTS NEWS | Thu Dec 8, 2016 | 3:21pm EST
WWE's China hopes rest on Bin Wang's big shoulders
By Jessica Toonkel | ORLANDO, FLA.

Three mornings a week, 22-year-old Bin Wang, a native of China's Anhui province, enters a beige, low-rise building tucked into an office park in Orlando, Florida, to spend hours body-slamming people.

In a few weeks, the 230-pound (104-kg) Wang, who arrived in the United States in June, will be joined by seven other Chinese athletes hand-picked by World Wrestling Entertainment Inc, in the hope that one of them will become the first Chinese WWE "superstar."

WWE, the $1.5 billion company known for big personalities and outrageous story lines, wants its Chinese wrestlers to be the next television sensation in China, a market where other U.S. media companies have faltered.

In June, WWE announced it had signed Wang - whose fighting name is "Tian Bing" - and entered into an exclusive deal with Chinese online video provider PPTV to live stream its popular "Raw" and "SmackDown" shows in the country, dubbed into Mandarin.

WWE hopes to succeed where others have failed, by bringing its own WWE Network online streaming service - currently available in 180 countries - to China, according to George Barrios, WWE's chief financial and strategy officer.

WWE is looking for a partner, which could be PPTV, so it can offer WWE Network in China and ultimately live stream events in China featuring its Chinese talent.

Stamford, Connecticut-based WWE is betting that China, with a population of over 1.4 billion and an expanding, digital-savvy middle class, will fuel the growth if its two-year-old streaming service, which has so-far amassed about 1.5 million U.S. subscribers at a price of $9.99 per month.

Since 2000, twice as many Chinese citizens as Americans have joined the middle class, defined as households making the annual equivalent of $50,000 to $500,000, according to Credit Suisse. The online streaming video market in China is expected to be worth $7.85 billion by 2021, up from $2.67 billion this year, according to Digital TV Research.

Attracting Chinese fans could also help WWE woo Chinese investors. Chinese conglomerate Dalian Wanda and other Chinese firms looked at mixed martial arts franchise Ultimate Fighting Championship before talent agency WME-IMG bought it for $4 billion earlier this year, industry bankers told Reuters. Wanda declined to comment.

RISKS

There are regulatory and political risks. Chinese regulators can shut WWE's operations down at any time if they deem them inconsistent with the country's values.

Earlier this year, Chinese regulators unexpectedly forced Alibaba Group Holding to end its online streaming partnership with Walt Disney Co just months after it was launched, to comply with recent regulations limiting foreign content online.

For the same reason, regulators shut down Apple Inc's online book and movie sales in China.

WWE may also come to rue its close ties with U.S. President-elect Donald Trump, a member of the WWE Hall of Fame who used to appear regularly at matches.

Trump used China as a regular punching bag during his campaign and caused ire in Beijing last week by taking a congratulatory call from Taiwan's president, breaching decades of diplomatic practice.

Trump picked WWE co-founder Linda McMahon as head of the U.S. Small Business Administration on Wednesday, deepening his connection with the company. Nevertheless, WWE is not concerned its ties with the Trump administration might affect its effort in China, according to a source familiar with the situation, who wished to remain anonymous.

WWE's partnership with PPTV, which is owned by Chinese conglomerate Suning Holdings Group, may protect against any backlash because its parent has close ties to the Chinese government, industry experts said.

The Chinese government does not pre-approve scripts. WWE does send China videos of Wang in training, said Paul "Triple H" Levesque, whose is WWE's head of talent and live events.

PHYSICAL THEATER

In June, Levesque went to Shanghai to audition Chinese athletes to come to Orlando for training.
"The biggest thing we look for is charisma," Levesque said, on a recent visit to Orlando.

WWE is also keen to find talent with a story that will resonate in China.

For example, one woman athlete from a rural village in northern China had not told her parents she was auditioning. When asked what she would do if she was accepted, she said she would have to disobey them and follow her dream.

Telling that story to young girls across China, where women are beginning to chart their own paths, is hugely powerful, Levesque said. That woman will arrive in Orlando in January.

WWE believes the underlying story line of good versus evil will translate to China, and it is a matter of helping viewers there understand WWE's unique mixture of sport and entertainment, Levesque said: "It's physical theater."

At WWE's performance center in Orlando, there are two remote-controlled cameras beaming practice sessions to head office in Stamford. One live streams into WWE Chief Executive Vince McMahon's office and the other into Levesque's office, an indication of how important new talent is to WWE.

"I leave it on in my office all the time," Levesque said.

Wang, who stands 6 feet 3 inches (1.9m), is one of the fighters hoping he will stand out and capture the bosses' attention, and ultimately, that of his country.

"My dream is for Chinese fans to know I am here," he said.

(Reporting By Jessica Toonkel; Editing by Anna Driver and Bill Rigby)
 

broadsword

Brigadier
"Big Wang" will be his other name naturally, I suppose.

OT. That is the bane of our Chinese names, at least for some of us. You can't twist names like Nakamura, Mohammad, Ramirez, Sarjeet, but some Chinese have to adopt some Western names out of necessity. My given name also sounds like an awesome phallic.
 

Equation

Lieutenant General
I really don't think this will get past Chinese censors for a whole slew of reasons if it closely resembles WWE in the US. Anyone know how popular or not WWE-like "physical theatre" is in China currently?

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"Big Wang" will be his other name naturally, I suppose.

OT. That is the bane of our Chinese names, at least for some of us. You can't twist names like Nakamura, Mohammad, Ramirez, Sarjeet, but some Chinese have to adopt some Western names out of necessity. My given name also sounds like an awesome phallic.

Oh no I hope WWE is NOT making him into the "evil" North Korean or PRC bad guy to play in the popular muse of the American audience with their anti communism rhetoric. I remember racist characters such as Iraqi Pete and the Iron Sheik? :rolleyes:

Ya can read more about it on this page.
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broadsword

Brigadier
That will never happen because it goes against Trump's "Make America Great Again" philosophy. Or else Trump will ask Linda McMahon to fire the executives responsible for such a stupid blooper. WWE is targeting the vast CCP market, like Hollywood.

They will have to look for another common heel.
 

Equation

Lieutenant General
Ok...this ARMY losing streak (14 :() to NAVY ends TODAY!:mad:
Check out both teams throw back unis. The Navy's version is a throwback to the best team they ever had during when Roger Staubach was the QB, the Army is dedicating to the old 82nd Airborne Division logo with the West Point grey traditional color (looks more like a possible retro Oakland Raiders unis to me).

GO ARMY SINK NAVY!!:D

5848304be02ba738018b7ddf-1600

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