AEW & ITV announce extension of UK TV deal

Heading into the new year, AEW has reached an agreement to extend its television deal in the United Kingdom.

It was announced today that AEW and ITV have extended their existing media rights deal for 2025. ITV has been AEW’s broadcast partner in the UK since the promotion launched in 2019, and Dynamite and Collision will continue to air tape-delayed on ITV4 and ITVX.

“ITV will continue to show weekly episodes of AEW programming, with AEW Dynamite every Friday night and AEW Collision every Wednesday night on ITV4 and ITVX,” a press release said. “The renewal for 2025 takes ITV into its sixth year as AEW’s free-to-air UK partner, first broadcasting AEW Dynamite in 2019.”

In the press release, Tony Khan was quoted as saying: “We are thrilled to extend AEW’s partnership with ITV to continue bringing the best wrestling action to fans all across the United Kingdom. We thank all of our incredible fans in the UK as well as everyone at ITV for their loyal support of AEW since our inception.”

Richard Botchway, Commissioning Editor at ITV, added: “We are proud to continue to be the UK free-to-air broadcast partner for AEW. We’re looking forward to continuing our relationship into 2025, bringing the UK audience every minute of action across ITV and ITVX.”

While ITV is AEW’s free-to-air partner in the country, UK viewers are able to watch Dynamite and Collision live if they subscribe to Triller’s AEW Plus service.

The first AEW TV episode of 2025 will be a special Fight for the Fallen edition of Dynamite from Asheville, North Carolina on New Year’s Day. In the United States, that will be the first AEW show simulcast live on Max in addition to its regular airing on TBS.

AEW reaches deal to air Collision on UK TV

AEW sources have confirmed that a deal has been reached for Collision to air in the UK market on Wednesday nights on ITV 4. 

The first episode, taking place this Saturday in Chicago, will air on ITV 4 on Wednesday, June 21st.

The time slot is not confirmed past that at least some shows will air at 9 PM. AEW didn’t confirm the nature of the time slot past that it would be Wednesday nights.

Dynamite and Rampage both air on the station in revolving time slots on Friday and Tuesday, respectively. Dynamite usually airs at 9 PM, but often airs later in a time slot that revolves. Rampage usually airs after 11 PM in a time slot that changes by the week.

The live, commercial-free airings of Collision will be part of the AEW+ subscription package on FITE, That is available in most countries throughout the world with the exception of markets where there is a local live rights owner such as TNT in the US and in Canada where it will stream on TSN+ and not air on television.

AEW Rampage to air on ITV & ITV4 in the United Kingdom

AEW has had a major upgrade when it comes to television in the U.K. with both ITV and ITV4 airing Rampage starting this week, as well as Dynamite being unedited on ITV.

ITV’s main station is the second most-watched television station in the U.K. behind BBC 1.

Rampage debuts on Tuesdays nights at 11:05 p.m. on ITV4, with a replay late Thursday night on ITV.  It will be a late night airing with this week being at 11:40 p.m. to 12:40 a.m.

Rampage previously only aired on the FITE streaming service as part of the monthly pay service in the U.K. market where viewers get both Dynamite and Rampage live and commercial free.

The other upgrade is that Dynamite, which first airs late Friday nights in a revolving time slot on ITV 4, will have its ITV Monday night airing airing increase from an edited one-hour show to the full two hours.  

The show also airs in a revolving time slot usually starting at 11 p.m. or later.  While we only get ratings in the Observer for the ITV 4 Friday night show, which usually does anywhere from 100,000 to 185,000 viewers, the Monday night show when we did get numbers was doing more than 250,000 viewers making it by far the most widely seen wrestling show in the U.K.  That is due to the station as WWE programs are on a pay TV service with far less distribution.

ITV announces changes to AEW Dynamite airing schedule

On Wednesday morning, ITV announced scheduling changes for AEW Dynamite that will give UK fans the opportunity to see the show sooner on free TV.

In a tweet, the network announced the following:

  • Dynamite will now be available to view in the ITV Hub starting at 7 PM on Thursday night.
  • A re-air will be on ITV4 at 11:20 PM Friday night.
  • Another re-air will be on ITV4 at 8:20 AM Sunday morning.
  • The one-hour highiight show will remain on Monday nights on the main ITV channel at 11:45 PM.

When the initial airing schedule was announced last week, UK fans were not happy they would have to wait for four days to see Dynamite. AEW president Tony Khan said he was going to work with ITV to try to get an earlier airing scheduled.

Fans outside the U.S. can also stream Dynamite live for $4.99 a month or $2.99 an episode on Fite.tv.

ITV announces initial framework of AEW UK TV deal

With a week to go, AEW’s UK TV deal was finally announced Wednesday afternoon but left some fans frustrated at what they learned.

British free-to-air network ITV’s wrestling account tweeted that AEW Dynamite will air on their ITV 4 channel on Sundays at 8:20 AM with one-hour highlight shows airing on their main network Mondays at 11:45 PM.

Reaction from fans on Twitter wasn’t overwhelmingly positive, focusing on the delay from Wednesday to Sunday. However, the wording on the tweets seemed to indicate some details are yet to be worked out or announced:

“Announcement! ITV is to show brand new weekly wrestling show AEW: Dynamite on free to air television from next month. The run will start with the full two hour show on @ITV4 on Sun 6 Oct at 0820 followed by a one hour highlights programme on ITV on Mon 7 Oct at 11.45pm.

Shows will run sequentially leading up to PPV events, including before 9 November Full Gear, so more details, including subsequent schedule information, to follow soon…”

AEW president Tony Khan said as much, tweeting “We’ll work together to ensure there will always be a free to air broadcast of the most recent episode of AEW: Dynamite before Saturday PPVs including Full Gear. We’ll also be announcing a live viewing solution soon for the UK + many other countries with great AEW fans. Thank you!”

Our Dave Meltzer said there is more to the deal, but there is nothing to report at this time.

From All-Star through AEW: The history of pro wrestling on ITV

By Bradley Craig, British wrestling historian and author exclusively for F4WOnline.com

The presentation of All Elite Wrestling’s Buy In pre-show and its Double or Nothing pay-per-view marks British TV network ITV’s latest foray into professional wrestling.

Its last, launching World of Sport Wrestling as an in-house entertainment brand, was its first actual attempt to provide its own content. Unfortunately, the viewership rapidly declined over the course of its first series, and it appears that outsourcing is the direction that the network is looking to pursue through its broadcasting of an AEW product.

But, ITV has a long and established history of working with external wrestling content providers. 

Domestically, the channel partnered with Joint Promotions and later All-Star Wrestling to provide its content. However, the broadcaster has worked with global brands for its wrestling output, including stateside promotions such as WWE and WCW. 

Paving the way for commercial television throughout British shores, Independent Television network (ITV) was launched in 1955. Upon its inception, the channel was tasked to produce viable programming in competition to the BBC television service, and was the only alternative for viewers at the time. As Joint Promotions was formed as a monopoly wrestling organization in post-WWII Britain, it was inevitable that its status as the clear market leader would provide it with the greatest broadcast opportunities upon the advent of television. 

ITV quickly established a partnership with Joint, and their first collaborative broadcast of pro wrestling was held on November 9th, 1955. Eventually, this would lead to a weekly diet of matches by 1960, most notably on Saturday afternoons as part of a cluster of sports programming called Let’s Go. The coverage was a ratings success, the high point of which was a famed May 25, 1963, rematch between rival heels Mick McManus and Jackie Pallo, held on the same day as the FA Cup Final (the culminating match of the most prestigious knockout soccer tournament in England) which some insist to have attracted a television viewership of 16 million viewers. 

Within a few years, the Saturday afternoon schedule of ITV sports coverage was reconfigured. From January 2, 1965, the channel debuted World of Sport, a variety sports show that would continue to showcase professional wrestling as a regular fixture. Similar in format to ABC’s Wide World of Sports in the United States, it would remain an institution for domestic wrestling fans until its eventual cancellation on September 28, 1985. Nevertheless, professional wrestling would remain a part of ITV’s Saturday programming.

The standalone show, simply titled Professional Wrestling, would evolve into a rotation of footage provided by Joint Promotions, All-Star and, from 1987, the WWF (incidentally, one of the advertised matches set for UK broadcast was a match between Bret Hart and Tom Magee). In 1988, the show was axed, ending a tradition of 33 years of pro wrestling coverage on ITV.

After the cancellation of British wrestling in 1988, some regions within the ITV network did showcase other American promotions, but the most prominent of these was its deal with WCW which lasted from 1989-1995. In its early years, ITV was a commercial network consisting of several regional franchisees across the United Kingdom. Within this network, Grampian Television was the local broadcaster for the majority of northern Scotland from 1961 through 2006. And it was on Grampian that WCW was presented for the first time to a British audience with its initial transmission on January 10th, 1990: a Wednesday night at 1:30 AM.

Advertised on local newspaper listings as Superstars of Wrestling, the show was actually a repurposed version of WCW Pro Wrestling, created specifically for the international market. It was contained within a block of programming called Night Time, a nocturnal cluster of shows produced by the Granada franchise of ITV being broadcast to several regions across the network in England and Wales, as well as the Grampian region within Scotland. The shared production output between regional franchisees was essential; it was made in an effort to reduce budgets during their low-viewership late hours. 

A number of changes were implemented to ensure that WCW Pro Wrestling was immediately accessible to the British market during its initial run. Although it retained the same opening sequence and featured many of the same matches, new commentary was recorded by Lance Russell and later Eric Bischoff to specifically remove any references to upcoming PPVs or house show dates being promoted for the domestic circuit. In fact, the commentators would frequently refer to the show as “International Pro”, recognizing that it was an adapted version and not the original syndicated show that was transmitted across the United States. Almost all linking segments were removed, and replaced with additional matches from other WCW tapings.

Despite an unenviable late-night slot, and an irregular broadcast run in which the airing days and start times were frequently shifted, WCW Pro Wrestling was a success. Introducing a new audience to the superstars of WCW, its popularity steadily increased, which led to the inaugural 1991 tour of the United Kingdom and Ireland and opening up merchandise opportunities. 

As a result of the increased brand awareness, WCW was awarded a more regular fixture on ITV.

In addition to its established slot within the Night Time schedule, feedback to some sporadic weekend airings of WCW Pro Wrestling had been well-received. In response, the network had decided to give WCW the timeslot which was once synonymous with wrestling during the era of World of Sport. 

On May 29, 1992, WCW made the transition to late afternoons every Saturday with each episode usually starting around 3:50 PM and finishing before the release of the domestic soccer results. A key change was made to the wrestling programming. From its first Saturday broadcast, the international version of WCW Pro Wrestling was substituted in favor of WCW Worldwide, which had just been given a substantial production overhaul in early April. On commentary, long-time Worldwide host Tony Schiavone would be joined by Jesse “The Body” Ventura, their banter being a significant departure from the solo commentary which was prevalent on Pro Wrestling.

Furthermore, Worldwide was given a fresh opening title sequence and on-screen graphics, and various format changes to modernize the show. These included exclusive interviews with the wrestlers and, most notably, the addition of WCW Magazine newsflash segments which updated viewers on relevant storyline happenings within the promotion. Each episode would end with a teaser of the following week’s feature attraction main event in order to entice the viewer to return. 

Despite the shows being broadcast several weeks beyond their initial United States air date, the product appeared visually fresher than ever. The Turner production values were a sharp contrast from the Saturday afternoon fare that the British pro wrestling audience had accepted for years. In less than one year of securing the timeslot, the decision was made to tour the UK for a second time in March 1993. 

With the improved production values placing greater emphasis on the personalities of the talent, WCW was able to generate mainstream interest in its roster and be in a stronger position to launch its licensed products. One publicity tour in promotion of the WCW Official Video range featured Johnny B. Badd and Van Hammer on a number of media appearances including magazine and radio interviews, and were also the focus of a segment on the BBC daily lunchtime magazine show Summer Scene. However, it was another summertime event which truly illustrated both the live-event potential and the mainstream appeal of professional wrestling in the United Kingdom.

On August 29, 1992, WWF held its annual SummerSlam pay-per-view spectacular at Wembley Stadium in London. Headlined by an unforgettable Intercontinental Championship match between brothers-in-law Bret Hart and Davey Boy Smith, the show was an unparalleled success. Drawing a reported crowd of over 80,000 to the live show, it was a spectacular which likely prompted WCW to galvanise its efforts in the promotion of a second UK tour. 

By the autumn of that same year, the announcement was made. WCW was coming back to the United Kingdom, this time for The Real Event tour. With Bischoff promoting the tour in various market-specific WCW Magazine segments that were edited into the UK broadcasts of WCW Worldwide, the company was in a stronger position to communicate its return to its core television viewers. WCW Magazine, which occasionally modified its content for the UK market, ran adverts for the live events. By the New Year, ITV started to promote the tour, setting promotional interviews with Sting for Look-In, and its daily program, Good Morning Britain.

But it was the availability of another wrestling star who had an equally strong influence on the appeal of The Real Event to local fans. 

In the autumn of 1992, the WWF career of Davey Boy Smith had come to an end. Amidst a steroid scandal that rocked the Federation, Smith was one of several names who departed with the company as it came under increasing scrutiny from the mainstream media in the United States. However, in the United Kingdom, there was little to diminish the box office value of Smith. As the most prominent British wrestling star of his era, he was a proven commodity and had been cultivated by the WWF as the top attraction of its European tours.

His acquisition by WCW in January 1993 was timeous for the promotion of The Real Event as the national media heavily publicized the arrival of “The British Bulldog”. In WWF, the reach of Smith’s wrestling matches were constrained by the boundaries of its exclusive deal with satellite television provider Sky. For the first time since the 1980s, he could be appreciated by the larger ITV audience. Capitalising on his appeal, he rapidly became the key focus of WCW’s marketing adverts and press releases within local newspapers in an effort to build momentum in the weeks leading to the tour. 

But, at the same time, WCW was in the midst of a significant managerial change, due to the abrupt resignation of Bill Watts from the role of Executive Vice President of Wrestling Operations in February. As an interim solution, Wrestling Operations would be administered by Ole Anderson while the booking of talent was under the direct supervision of Dusty Rhodes. Despite the internal upheaval, the promotional appeal of The Real Event was unaffected. In fact, sales figures of tickets were indicating record business. 

It would later be reported that the company drew a record-breaking gate of 11,500 fans at its sold-out March 11th event from Wembley Arena, over 10,500 fans to its NEC Birmingham show, a capacity crowd of 8,000 fans to the G-MEX in Manchester, another 5000 person sell-out at the AECC in Aberdeen, and two crowds of approximately 3,000 to Kings Hall, Belfast and The Point in Dublin. 

Critical reviews of the tour were highly praised. Coming off the SuperBrawl III PPV, the roster appeared motivated to excel in front of some of their largest paid audiences on international soil. But the success was illustrated in the statistics. In terms of consecutive business, it was WCW’s most lucrative schedule of house shows that the company had promoted to that point.

WCW would retain this national timeslot within most of the ITV regions until 1995. With no major national broadcast shopfront for its product, the streak of commercially viable UK live events came to an end.

For ITV, there would be no significant national presence of professional wrestling on the network until the pilot broadcast of the domestic production of WOS Wrestling in 2016. 

However, a repurposed version of WCW Worldwide would later return to a national terrestrial audience in the summer of 1999 through a partnership with Channel 5, which lasted until the closure of the promotion in 2001. The timeslot proved somewhat successful as the novelty spurred another set of international tours presented by WCW which maintained box office appeal during a time when its domestic gate returns had shown sharp decline.

But it would not be long before the company’s prime competitor would secure a deal with a national broadcaster. 

In December 1999, when WWF’s partnership with Sky was set for renewal, the promotion secured a deal with Channel 4 to showcase WWF Heat on Sunday afternoons as part of a cluster of shows under the T4 banner (a programming block aimed at teenage and young adult viewers), together with five of its PPVs per year, commencing with the 2000 Royal Rumble. 

In terms of viewership potential, the presentation of AEW Buy In on ITV 4 presents the greatest reach for a US-based promotion since the WWFs deal with Channel 4 ended in 2001. But AEW’s Double or Nothing pay-per-view is being presented to a new audience via a broadcaster with a historic link to professional wrestling that can be traced back 64 years. 

In the short term, it is clear that ITV is willing to take a gamble with AEW’s debut at Las Vegas.

What remains a subject of speculation is the broadcaster’s commitment to professional wrestling as a long-term property and the international opportunities that might be born from that investment. 

AEW announces UK broadcast details, pre-show for Double or Nothing

All Elite Wrestling has revealed how fans in the United Kingdom will be able to watch Double or Nothing.

The Double or Nothing main card will air as a pay-per-view on ITV Box Office at 1 a.m. local time in the UK on Sunday, May 26 (Saturday, May 25 in the United States). There will also be an hour-long pre-show called “Buy-In” that will air for free on ITV4.

AEW’s Casino Battle Royale will be part of the pre-show, along with a singles match between Kip Sabian and Sammy Guevara. The winner of the Casino Battle Royale will receive a future title shot against the first AEW World Champion.

Jimmy Havoc, Billy Gunn, MJF, Michael Nakazawa, Jungle Boy, Glacier, Sonny Kiss, and Joey Janela were listed as Casino Battle Royale entrants in a press release that AEW and ITV issued. There will be 21 wrestlers in the battle royal. Five will start the match, with waves of five entering every three minutes after that. The 21st entrant will then enter on their own.

“We’re delighted to announce this partnership with AEW, whose entry into professional wrestling is already making a massive impact on the industry and promises to deliver an electrifying event later this month, and a fantastic experience for our viewers and wrestling fans in the UK,” Niall Sloane, ITV’s director of sport, said. “Joining forces with AEW for this event is faithful to ITV’s More Than TV strategy to develop direct relationships with viewers through big events available on its platforms.”

“We’ve stated since our launch that we want to make this the greatest time ever to be a professional wrestling fan, and part of this plan is to make our product as accessible as possible to a global audience,” AEW president/CEO Tony Khan said. “Since our launch in January, we’ve signed the best talent, sold out our debut show in record time, and we’ve built relationships and formed bonds with the best media partners like ITV. This collaboration with ITV is so important to AEW, ITV is the best in the UK, they were always my first choice to be our international PPV partner for DOUBLE OR NOTHING, and we’re looking forward to a great show.”

The price for Double or Nothing on ITV Box Office is listed as £14.95. It was noted that a pre-event show called “Before the Bell” will air for free on ITV4 and ITV Box Office in the build up to the Double or Nothing broadcast.

AEW has yet to officially announce broadcast details for Double or Nothing and Buy-In in the United States, though Double or Nothing has already been listed as a PPV on some cable systems.

World of Sport announces nine-show tour for early 2019

World of Sport Wrestling is hitting the road in 2019 for its first tour since being revived on ITV.

The promotion announced a nine-show tour today that will take place in the United Kingdom in January and February 2019. The dates are:

  • January 18 — Southampton, England (O2 Guildhall)
  • January 19 — Newport, Wales (Newport Centre)
  • January 20 — Bournemouth, England (International Centre)
  • January 25 — Stoke, England (Victoria Hall)
  • January 26 — Blackpool, England (Tower Ballroom)
  • January 27 — Aberdeen, Scotland (AECC)
  • February 1 — Scarborough, England (Spa Grand Hall)
  • February 2 — Northampton, England (Derngate)
  • February 3 — London, England (York Hall)

Tickets go on sale to the general public at 10 a.m. local time on September 7.

Following a New Year’s Eve special that aired in 2016 and the series getting postponed after being scheduled to start last year, World of Sport taped 10 episodes of television in May. They began airing on ITV at the end of July, with four more episodes left to be shown. These are the first World of Sport shows to be announced since May’s tapings.

ITV’s World of Sport announces tapings for next month

After months of questions, World of Sport Wrestling has resurfaced and is taping television imminently.

The next set of World of Sport tapings will take place over the course of three days, starting on May 10 and running through May 13. All of the tapings will take place at Epic Studios Norwich in Norfolk, England. It isn’t currently known what talent will appear at the taping, though some of the contracted talent for ITV include Dave Mastiff and Grado.

It had been reported in recent weeks in the Wrestling Observer Newsletter that the ITV contracted talent were told that the World of Sport promotion was looking to run shows again next month, with the idea of running a limited series. ITV has had interest in pro wrestling since taping and airing a pilot episode of World of Sport Wrestling back on New Years Eve 2016. They have not taped television since then, with a planned taping featuring Impact Wrestling talent being postponed back in May of last year due to prolonged contract negotiations.

At the same time, WWE is once again running shows in the United Kingdom. The upcoming United Kingdom Championship tournament will air in June at the Royal Albert Hall in London.

ITV World of Sport tapings postponed

The ITV World of Sport TV tapings scheduled for May 25th and 26th at the Preston Guild Hall have been postponed.

The story was first reported yesterday by Pro Wrestling Insider, but at the time, the talent was not aware and those at Impact didn’t respond to questions regarding the story. Today, some talent has received word and Sha Samuels and Dave Mastiff went on Twitter talking about being available for independent dates that weekend.

The tapings are to be rescheduled and an announcement is expected shortly regarding this.

No direct reason has been given other than changes in the makeup of the project.

The plan was to tape ten shows, which would start airing in July, and then if ratings were successful, it would become a regular Saturday afternoon program. Because of the power of ITV, it would immediately become the most watched wrestling show in the country. For a comparison, the pilot show, airing on December 31st, a bad day for viewing, did 1.25 million viewers while Raw and SmackDown struggle to do 50,000 viewers, albeit in a far worst time slot, and with the limited penetration of Sky.

There is talks of delaying the project until the fall, suing soccer as the Saturday afternoon lead-in, similar to how it was done in the 70s and 80s. But that is not the primary reason for the delay.

World of Sport returning to ITV for initial 10-episode series

ITV and Impact Wrestling announced today officially that World of Sport will return to ITV with tapings at the Preston Guild Hall on May 25th and 26th.

The announcement was of a 10-episode series. ITV greenlit the series which would be largely funded by Anthem Entertainment, which would run the wrestling end, with Jeff Jarrett in charge of the wrestling.

They announced tickets would go on sale on April 7th at Gigsandtours.com, Ticketmaster.co.uk, and prestonguildhall.co.uk.

There will be a launch announcement on March 27th at 2 p.m. in Manchester where more details will be announced, including the roster, as well as a Q&A.

We had reported on this already in the Observer a few weeks ago, noting that the show would be airing at 5 p.m. on Saturdays and start in July. ITV has only committed to the ten shows as a trial.

The release featured photos of wrestlers with Grado, Davey Boy Smith Jr., and Dave Mastiff front and center. Rockstar Spud and Magnus from TNA are also part of the roster of the show.

While no deal has been closed, Jim Ross had been earmarked as the host of the show. Officially, only Alex Shane, who co-hosted the pilot with Ross that aired on December 31st, is an announcer. Grado will enter the tapings billed as the World of Sport champion based on the first episode.