Last week’s WWE Raw on Netflix viewership hits four-month low

The May 25 episode of WWE Raw hit a four-month viewership low on Netflix.

In new info released by the streamer on Tuesday, the show drew 2.5 million global views and 4.6 million global hours viewed. The views are the lowest reported since the January 19 episode’s 2.5 million although January 26’s numbers were never reported. The hours viewed were equal to the previous week.

Since hitting 3.3 million on April 20, global viewers have continued to tick downward.

The show finished seventh globally, trailing sixth place by 200,000 views. It finished in the top ten in 13 countries and was fifth in the U.S. It had a listed runtime of 1:47.

The show was the go-home for this last weekend’s Clash in Italy.

The leader for the week was the debut season of The Boroughs with 9.5 million global views and 59.4 million hours viewed.

Recent WWE on Netflix viewers

Last reported 10 weeks of WWE Raw on Netflix viewership:

Episode date (ascending)Global ViewsGlobal Hours
May 25, 20262.5 million4.6 million
May 18, 20262.6 million4.6 million
May 11, 20262.6 million4.8 million
May 4, 20262.7 million4.6 million
April 27, 20262.8 million5.2 million
April 20, 20263.3 million6.6 million
April 13, 20262.9 million5.6 million
April 6, 20262.9 million5.5 million
March 30, 20263.0 million5.5 million
March 23, 20262.9 million5.5 million
Average for last 10 weeks (rounded)2.82 million5.25 million

WWE Raw on Netflix SummerSlam go-home episode viewership revealed

Image: WWE

The Monday, July 28th episode of WWE Raw on Netflix — the go-home edition ahead of SummerSlam — brought in 2.7 million global views for the third straight week, and 5.5 million global hours viewed through its first seven days, according to the Netflix weekly Tudum report.

Raw Viewership Details:

The global views are identical to the last two weeks while the global hours viewed are down from the previous week’s 5.7 million.

The listed runtime of 1:59 was virtually identical from last week’s 2:01.

The show dropped to eighth globally for the week and hit the Top Ten in ten countries worldwide including the U.S., Canada, Mexico, United Kingdom, and India per usual.

The weekly average for the last ten weeks remains at 2.67 million global views with a slight uptick to 5.24 million global hours viewed.

Here’s Dave Meltzer’s thoughts on the numbers.

Raw Show Notes:

The show was the go-home edition for last weekend’s WWE SummerSlam and featured CM Punk and Gunther in a promo battle, The Bron Brons laying out Roman Reigns and Jey Uso, a men’s World Tag Team title match, and an eight-woman tag match among other bouts.

Last 10 weeks of WWE Raw on Netflix ratings/viewership:

Episode dateGlobal ViewsGlobal Hours
July 28, 20252.7 million5.5 million
July 21, 20252.7 million5.7 million
July 14, 20252.7 million5.4 million
July 7, 20252.6 million5.1 million
June 30, 20252.5 million4.6 million
June 23, 20252.6 million5.2 million
June 16, 20252.7 million5.0 million
June 9, 20252.9 million6.1 million
June 2, 20252.7 million5.0 million
May 26, 20252.6 million4.8 million
Average for last 10 weeks:2.67 million5.24 million

WWE Raw on Netflix July 7 episode sees viewership increases

Image: WWE

The Monday, July 7th episode of WWE Raw on Netflix brought in 2.6 million global views and 5.1 million global hours viewed through its first seven days, according to the Netflix weekly Tudum report.

The global views are slightly up from the June 30th all-time low of 2.5 million and match the June 23rd episode. Global hours viewed were 500,000 up from the 4.6 million of June 30th and in range of previous weeks. (Of note, the June 30th episode had an early start time of 6 PM Eastern.)

The listed runtime of 1:51 minutes was slightly up from the previous week’s 1:48.

The show was sixth globally for the week and hit the Top Ten in eight countries worldwide including the U.S., Canada, and the United Kingdom.

The average for the last ten weeks is 2.68 million global views and 5.16 million global hours viewed.

Show Notes:

  • The show featured Seth Rollins vs. Penta as a featured match, a Becky Lynch appearance, and Gunther addressing Goldberg which led to a surprise Goldberg appearance.

Last 10 weeks of WWE Raw on Netflix ratings/viewership:

Episode dateGlobal ViewsGlobal Hours
July 7, 20252.6 million5.1 million
June 30, 20252.5 million4.6 million
June 23, 20252.6 million5.2 million
June 16, 20252.7 million5.0 million
June 9, 20252.9 million6.1 million
June 2, 20252.7 million5.0 million
May 26, 20252.6 million4.8 million
May 19, 20252.7 million5.0 million
May 12, 20252.7 million5.1 million
May 5, 20252.8 million5.7 million
Average for last 10 weeks:2.68 million5.16 million

WWE Raw June 30 episode with early start time hits viewership lows

Image: WWE

The Monday, June 30th episode of WWE Raw on Netflix brought in 2.5 million global views and 4.6 million global hours viewed through its first seven days, according to their weekly Tudum report.

Both the global views and global hours viewed are all-time lows since moving to Netflix, but the show aired live at 6 PM Eastern instead of its usual 8 PM Eastern start time.

When compared to the first seven days for the June 23rd Raw, the global views number were down (2.6 million) as were global hours viewed (5.2 million).

The listed runtime of 1:48 minutes was slightly down from the previous week’s 1:52

It was fifth for the week globally and hit the Top Ten in 11 countries worldwide including the U.S., United Kingdom, India, Canada and Mexico.

Show Notes:

  • Raw was the Night of Champions fallout show and featured Penta & Sami Zayn vs. Bron Breakker & Bronson Reed, the continued push toward Saturday Night’s Main Event and Evolution, and an unadvertised run-in from CM Punk to attack Seth Rollins.

Last 10 weeks of WWE Raw on Netflix ratings/viewership:

Episode dateGlobal ViewsGlobal Hours
June 30, 20252.5 million4.6 million
June 23, 20252.6 million5.2 million
June 16, 20252.7 million5.0 million
June 9, 20252.9 million6.1 million
June 2, 20252.7 million5.0 million
May 26, 20252.6 million4.8 million
May 19, 20252.7 million5.0 million
May 12, 20252.7 million5.1 million
May 5, 20252.8 million5.7 million
April 28, 20253.0 million5.8 million
Average for last 10 weeks:2.72 million5.23 million

WWE Raw on Netflix June 23 viewership data revealed

Image: WWE

The Monday, June 23rd episode of WWE Raw on Netflix brought in 2.6 million global views and 5.2 million global hours viewed through its first seven days, according to their weekly Tudum report.

When compared to the first seven days for the June 16th Raw, the global views number is slightly down (2.7 million global views) while the global hours viewed is slightly up (5.0 million).

The global views are its lowest since the May 26th episode while the global hours views are the second-highest since May 12th.

The listed runtime of 1:52 minutes was slightly up from the previous week’s 1:47.

It was fourth for the week in the U.S. and hit the Top Ten in six countries (United States, Canada, Mexico, Bolivia, Bahrain and Sri Lanka).

Dave Meltzer’s analysis of these numbers are now available for subscribers.

Competition & Show Notes:

  • In the U.S., the show was not up against any major sports competition with the NBA Finals concluding the night before.
  • Raw featured the semifinals of the King and Queen of the Ring tournaments which saw Cody Rhodes vs. Jey Uso and Jade Cargill vs. Roxanne Perez.

Last 10 weeks of WWE Raw on Netflix ratings/viewership:

Episode dateGlobal ViewsGlobal Hours
June 23, 20252.6 million5.2 million
June 16, 20252.7 million5.0 million
June 9, 20252.9 million6.1 million
June 2, 20252.7 million5.0 million
May 26, 20252.6 million4.8 million
May 19, 20252.7 million5.0 million
May 12, 20252.7 million5.1 million
May 5, 20252.8 million5.7 million
April 28, 20253.0 million5.8 million
April 21, 20253.6 million8.7 million
Last 10-week average:2.83 million5.64 million

TKO releases full 2024 WWE & UFC financials, Raw on Netflix ratings discussed

To no big surprise, TKO had a hugely successful 2024 thanks to its main WWE and UFC cogs, announced Wednesday and expounded upon during their quarterly investors call.

TKO saw an annual revenue of just over $2.8 billion with a net income of $6.4 million buoyed by a fourth quarter that saw revenues of $642.2 million and net income of $47.5 million.

EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, and amortization) was $1.251 billion for 2024 with the fourth quarter finishing $238.1 million. EBITA is a metric that investors use to measure profitability.

**********

Breaking the two brands out, WWE saw yearly revenues of $1.398 billion while UFC had $1.406 billion. For the fourth quarter, WWE had $298.3 million in revenue (down nearly $33 million year-over-year) while UFC beat them out at $343.9 million (up by nearly $61 million).

WWE took a hit in the fourth quarter with a revenue decrease of $32.9 million, offsetting a $61.1 million increase on the UFC side. The reason for the WWE drop was the media rights dip as the company had no home for Raw in-between USA and Netflix, taking a smaller money deal from NBCUniversal to remain on USA through the end of 2024.

WWE media rights and revenue finished at $865.5 million for the year, live events finished at $338.5 million, sponsorship was $83 million with consumer products finishing at $111.1 million.

Comparing Q4 from 2023 to 2024, media rights took the biggest hit at $156.3 million, down from 2023’s $212.2 million due to the aforementioned deal they had to take from NBCUniversal. Live events (up by roughly $11 million), sponsorship (up by more than $7 million) and consumer products (up by nearly $5 million) did not experience drops.

TKO’s low net income (down from $175.7 million in 2023) was attributed to several factors including an increase in operating expenses to $679.6 million which “reflected the inclusion of twelve months of WWE activity in reported results in 2024 as well as settlement charges of $375.0 million related to the UFC antitrust lawsuit.” This is the first full year report TKO has had after officially forming in September 2023.

Q&A

  • Of specific note on the WWE side of the fence, TKO executive Mark Shapiro said on the Q&A portion of the call that the WWE/Peacock deal is up in March 2026.
  • He also said Raw is up 13% in viewership on Netflix from USA last year and that The CW is “seeing a great uplift from NXT.”
  • WWE president Nick Khan said that “all we’ve seen from Netflix is an appetite for more WWE” and that more ancillary programming “is cooking in the pipeline.”
  • Asked about the UFC TV rights deal, Shapiro said they are still talking with ESPN and are in the exclusive negotiating window with them.
  • TKO chief financial officer Andrew Schleimer said they expect Saudi Arabia to host three WWE PLEs in 2026 and one in 2025

WOL: Bryan & Lance Storm talk fallout from WWE Raw on Netflix debut

Wrestling Observer Live with myself and special guest Lance Storm is back with tons to talk about including all sorts of discussion about the WWE Raw on Netflix debut, what worked and what didn’t work, why that was the show to shoot the Rock angle and not swerve people, Hulk Hogan, and tons more.

A fun show as always so check it out~!

Right Click Save As (sub needed) or watch with a premium sub on YouTube

WOR: WWE on Netflix debut review, Tokyo Dome fallout, The Rock

Wrestling Observer Radio with Bryan Alvarez and Dave Meltzer is back with tons to talk about including all the news from the RAW on Netflix debut, what happened, what was cut, what made sense and what didn’t, and more, plus New Japan Tokyo Dome fallout, Chris Charlton, Bronson Reed, ratings, and tons more. A fun show as always so check it out~!

Timestamps:
Start: WWE SmackDown will be going back to two hours later this year
3:23: Rey Mysterio match cut out from Raw, other changes, WWE Raw Netflix premiere recap
36:24: Kenny Omega’s post Wrestle Dynasty promo
42:29: Chris Charlton suspended from NJPW for two months, NJPW Battle in the Valley lineup
55:16: Bronson Reed injury update, Rookie of the Year clarification for the Observer Awards, Dave Meltzer’s thoughts on Wicked and pro wrestling
58:42: Ratings, NXT New Year’s Evil & AEW Dynamite lineups

Right Click Save As

WWE Raw live results: Netflix debut, CM Punk vs. Seth Rollins, Roman Reigns vs. Solo Sikoa

Date: January 6, 2025
Location: Intuit Dome in Los Angeles, California 

********** 

The Big Takeaway —

CM Punk beat Seth Rollins, Roman Reigns beat Solo Sikoa, The Rock embraced Cody Rhodes, John Cena declared for the Royal Rumble, Rhea Ripley won the women’s title, and Hulk Hogan was booed out of the building. 

Penta did not debut but seems to be debuting next week as Chad Gable’s mystery opponent. 

Raw’s Netflix debut seemed to go off without a hitch, aside from some minor production stuff.

***********

Show Recap — 

Seth Rollins, CM Punk, Judgment Day, and Rhea Ripley were shown arriving at the Intuit Dome. Michael Cole welcomed us by stating, “I am proud to say, for the first time ever, welcome to Monday Night Raw live on Netflix!”

They aired the “cold open” video you may have seen online earlier, narrated by Triple H. (I guess they wanted to use TV terminology, but this is not what a cold open is.) 

Large curtains surrounding ringside dropped to reveal Triple H standing in the middle ring. He received a large ovation, and he wanted to hear from the 17,000-plus fans in attendance because the world was watching. He welcomed us to the Netflix era, and fireworks went off. 

********

The Rock entered to a huge reaction. He high-fived some fans, embraced some executives in the front row, shook hands with Cole and Pat McAfee, and handed his People’s Championship title belt to two of his young daughters (who were with Ata Johnson). The fans chanted, “Rocky.” 

Rock said he travelled these roads when he was young with his dad, Rocky Johnson. The only way to watch “WWE” back then was to buy a ticket or watch it on Saturday morning. You can still buy a ticket, but watching it now was a totally different story. People were watching worldwide on Netflix. 

He also announced tonight was the largest arena gate in WWE. He spoke about the need for great partners and gave a shoutout to Netflix executives in a suite. 

There was someone else he wanted to acknowledge. A man whom he spilled blood with and a man who carried this company on his back for the past year. 

Rock thanked Cody Rhodes. They cut to Rhodes, who was randomly standing in the front row in a suit. (He was getting chants as the show started.) They acted friendly, and Rock jokingly told Cody to say hi to Mama Rhodes. Cody laughed. 

Rock also wanted to acknowledge his cousin, Roman Reigns. Rock called him the Original Tribal Chief. The world would be watching Reigns’ match against Solo Sikoa — and he would be watching closely, too. Rock closed with his catchphrase. 

Rock hugged Rhodes.

(This was total babyface Rock, who was also in exec mode making sure the partners were happy. It sort of felt like this was the “real” part of the show, and the rest that follows will be Raw as usual.) 

******** 

Alicia Taylor is the ring announcer. Paul Heyman did Reigns’ introduction. 

The referee wore a dark grey shirt with black striping. 

The ring canvas is dark in colour with sponsors added. (Hulk Hogan’s beer company is among them.) The ring ropes are white. 

They went to a commercial break for the first time after the ring introductions. (I have the ad-free version of Netflix in Canada, which meant I saw a video package for the upcoming match.) 

Tribal Combat: Roman Reigns (w/Paul Heyman) defeated Solo Sikoa (21:29) 

The crowd chanted, “F**k you, Solo” as the two men faced off before the match. (Cole gave a lot of background throughout the match, particularly for Sikoa, perhaps to benefit new viewers.) 

They were having a fairly even match until Sikoa gave Reigns a Spinning Solo onto the announce table. Sikoa also hit him with a monitor and chucked the steel steps at his face. 

They went to break for a second time tonight at 8:37 pm. Some viewers would get commercials here, while for others, the match continued. (About three minutes later, the feed faded to black for a second, meaning we were back from break. This continued throughout the show.) 

Sikoa repeatedly attacked with a steel chair. Sikoa tried a running hip attack with Reigns’ head wrapped in a chair, but Reigns moved and attacked with the chair. Sikoa avoided a con-chair-to and hit a low blow and a Spinning Solo for a nearfall. Sikoa grabbed a table, but Reigns hit him with a drive-by dropkick. 

Reigns set up the table in the ring, but Sikoa hit him with a kendo stick. Sikoa choked him with the kendo stick and taunted him, but Reigns hoisted him up and hit a powerbomb through the table. 

Reigns had it won, but Tama Tonga yanked the referee out to break up the cover. The crowd buzzed as Jacob Fatu appeared behind Reigns. He laid out Reigns as the crowd chanted, “Yeet.” Fatu hit a moonsault. 

Sikoa hit the Samoan Spike for a good nearfall. Referee Chad Patton tried to reason with the Bloodline, but Sikoa spiked him. 

Sami Zayn and Jimmy Uso ran out to Zayn’s music to take out Fatu and Tonga. Jimmy superkicked Sikoa, Zayn hit a Helluva Kick, and Reigns hit a spear. There was no referee, but a new one quickly ran down—only for Sikoa to kick out. 

The crowd chanted, “This is awesome,” before Zayn and Jimmy wiped out the Bloodline and fought them to the back. As Reigns fired up, Cole said, “This, ladies and gentlemen, is what World Wrestling Entertainment is all about!” 

Before Reigns could go for a spear, Kevin Owens appeared and gave him a stunner, but he still kicked out. Rhodes entered to his music (from the back) and fought Owens through the crowd. 

Reigns and Sikoa traded counters until Reigns hit a spear. Reigns fired up and hit another spear for the pinfall win. The crowd popped big. 

— The Rock walked to the ring as Reigns got to his feet. Heyman was about to present him with the Ula Fala, but Rock asked for them instead. Rock placed the Ua Fala over Reigns’ head, and they hugged. Reigns posed for the crowd as Rock stood to the side, nodding. 

********

CM Punk warmed up in the back. Cole said he was getting ready for one of the biggest matches in wrestling history. 

*******

The New Day segment 

Jackie Redmond interviewed Kofi Kington (sporting a new beard) and Xavier Woods, who requested this time. Kingston said they were supposed to have a match tonight, but they told Triple H that they didn’t really want to be there because LA didn’t deserve to see them wrestle. The crowd booed, and Woods noted they were just booing the truth. 

Woods said Los Angeles was the one who had bad taste because they elevated that trash rapper Kendrick Lamar. Kingston said they were mad because Drake won the beef. 

They went on for a bit until Redmond cut them off because they were out of time. (In fact, the screen went black immediately.) 

********

Penta’s logo appeared on the screen. 

They announced the location of Royal Rumble 2026. 

********

A few Smackdown wrestlers were shown in a suite. 

Gabriel Iglesias, Ashton Kutcher, Michael Che, and Wale were shown ringside. (Two of these three have something on Netflix to promote.)  

Rey Mysterio, LA Knight, and the War Raiders were also ringside. Rey showed off his Eddie Guerrero shirt, which got a big pop. 

******** 

John Cena segment

John Cena entered (wearing LA Dodgers colours). As Rock did earlier, Cena put over Netflix and the magnitude of tonight’s show. He thanked Netflix. 

Cena was honoured to stand in a ring wearing jorts in LA for the last time. He couldn’t think of a better place to kick off his farewell tour. He slept in his car when he worked at Gold’s Gym Venice, trained to wrestle in UPW in Orange County, and rented a place in Inglewood. It was where Prototype was born and where he won his first world title. He thanked the LA fans, and they chanted, “Thank you, Cena.” 

Cena said it was all about making moments. There was a lot of noise and headlines from experts about his final WrestleMania opponent. They threw out all kinds of names like Drew McIntyre, CM Punk, Logan Paul, Gunther, and Cody Rhodes. (Punk and Rhodes were both cheered.) People were also asking when Cena would become the record-breaking 17-time world champion. The crowd cheered that, too and chanted, “You deserve it.” 

Cena said the fans have always been honest with him, so he wanted to be honest with them. He didn’t see it happening, and it was because of his streak. It’s been 2,446 days since he’s won his last match. (That’s very untrue.) Speaking of the wrestlers in the back, Cena said, “My time is up, their time is now.” The crowd booed. He said it would take a miracle to win the title. 

With a streak like that, the only way to even get a title shot was to win the Money in the Bank briefcase, survive the Elimination Chamber… or win the Royal Rumble. The crowd cheered. Cena said he should be in the Rumble because there was no next year. The best way to say ‘thank you’ was to win the Rumble and make history at WrestleMania. 

It sounded impossible, but if you knew anything about him, it was that nothing was impossible. The only time we say “never” around here is when we say, “Never give up.” Cena ended with, “I’m not just going to the Royal Rumble, I’m going to win the Royal Rumble.” 

********

There was a Logan Paul video, and he was shown in the front row. Seth Green, Macaulay Culkin, O’Shea Jackson Jr., Danielle Fishel, Bianca Belair, Naomi, X-Pac, and Shinsuke Nakamura were also in the crowd. 

******** 

Our second match of the evening began at 9:30 pm (1.5 hours into the show).

Rhea Ripley defeated Liv Morgan (w/Dominik Mysterio & Raquel Rodriguez) to win the Women’s World Championship (11:41) 

This was originally advertised as a Last Woman Standing match, but they just had a standard match. 

Ripley wiped out Rodriguez early on with a cannonball but failed to get her hands on Dom. Ripley powerbombed Morgan onto the announce table (which didn’t break), but Morgan took over moments later after hitting a Codebreaker on the ring apron. 

Ripley made a comeback following a break and hit a Rip-tide for a nearfall. Ripley couldn’t believe Morgan kicked out. Dom slid a chair into the ring, and as the ref yelled at him, Ripley knocked Rodriguez off the apron. The distraction allowed Morgan to hit an Oblivion onto the chair for a nearfall. Morgan followed with three amigos and a frog splash for two. 

Morgan went for another Oblivion, but Ripley just caught her in mid-air and slammed her. Ripley hit consecutive Rip-tides for the pinfall win. Ripley is the new champion. 

— Dom tried to attack Ripley from behind, but she caught him. He then acted like he wanted to embrace her. She faked hugging him but kicked him in the nuts instead. She gave him a Rip-tide. 

(This was good, but the title change and the Rip-tide on Dom would’ve gotten bigger reactions if they had done this months ago.) 

— As Ripley left up the aisle, Undertaker entered to his Kid Rock theme. He drove around ringside on his motorcycle and posed with Ripley. 

********

Cathy Kelley tried interviewing Adam Pearce after he met with Bayley, but they were interrupted by Chad Gable and American Made. Gable said he single-handedly destroyed Alpha Academy, and he planned on winning a singles title in 2025. 

Gable wanted to dispel any rumours that he couldn’t beat luchadors and wanted a match against the best luchador in the world next week. Pearce said he would make a phone call. 

********

Redmond interviewed The Miz. He feigned excitement over Cena entering the Rumble. He was interrupted by a pissed-off Karrion Kross (with Scarlett). Kross wanted to know if he was with them in facing the Wyatt Sicks. Miz said no. Kross ran down Miz’s accomplishments and tricked him (like Bugs Bunny) into agreeing to fight the Wyatts. 

********

There was cell phone footage of Rock walking to the back after his segment. He embraced Jimmy Uso, Roman Reigns and Triple H. He continued to the back and embraced Rhodes. 

Rock also plugged tomorrow’s NXT and said, “See you there.” 

(Rock took a swig from a tequila bottle, his brand, before driving off.) 

********

They showed us Bill Simmons, Netflix execs, Vanessa Hudgens, Michelle McCool, Lyra Valkyria, Iyo Sky, and Dakota Kai in the crowd.  

Travis Scott was shown in the crowd as “FE!N” played in the arena. He appeared to take a hit of something (McAfee tried to tell us it was sage.) The crowd cheered, and they cheered even louder when Jey Uso entered. Scott accompanied Jey down to ringside. 

Drew McIntyre entered for our third match of the evening at 10:07 pm. 

Jey Uso defeated Drew McIntyre (10:16) 

Jey hit a suicide dive before McIntyre entered the ring. Jey went for another one, but, of course, McIntyre caught him and hit him with a suplex. The match began when they entered the ring. 

McIntyre was in control until Jey hit a sit-out powerbomb out of the corner. Jey followed with strikes, a running hip attack, and a flying crossbody for two, but McIntyre responded with a neckbreaker. McIntyre went for a Claymore, but Jey hit a superkick. McIntyre came back with a spinebuster for two and a sit-out powerbomb for two. 

They traded counters until McIntyre hit a Future Shock DDT for two. McIntyre went for the Claymore, but Jey countered again, this time with a spear for two. Jey hit a superkick, but McIntyre hit a Claymore Kick for a nearfall. 

McIntyre went for another Claymore, but Jey simply collapsed before he could. McIntyre decided the best thing to do was wait in the corner again for Jey to get up again. McIntyre went for the kick, but Jey dropped down and applied a crucifix pin for the win. 

This was an ordinary match, and a quiet crowd didn’t help. 

********

There was a Gunther video. 

Kelley tried interviewing Gabriel Iglesias, but they were interrupted by New Day. Iglesias said he liked them better when they had cereal. Kelley said they were out of time as Woods was about to respond, but the segment continued when Alpha Academy arrived. Iglesias left with them. Kelley assured New Day that they really were out of time. 

********

Heyman asked Reigns when they should give him the acknowledgement celebration he deserved. Reigns said January 27th. (Raw in Atlanta.) They entered a room with the WWE 2K25 logo posted on the door. 

********

Redmond interviewed Ripley and Damian Priest. Ripley said Morgan took everything from her. She cut an ordinary promo and said Mami was back on top. 

Priest was dying to be done with Judgment Day, and his beef with Finn Bálor would come to an end next week. Priest announced the match would be a street fight. Priest told everyone to rise for the new women’s champ. 

*******

Seth Rollins was shown getting ready. 

Richard Gadd, Tiffany Haddish, Stephen Amell, Bron Breakker, Tiffany Stratton (who got a big pop) and Nikki Bella were shown in the crowd. Stephanie McMahon was also shown later. 

*******

Hulk Hogan entered with Jimmy Hart, and the crowd booed him out of the building. 

Hogan began with his usual catchphrase, and the crowd booed as if he had just turned his back on Big E. He tried to put over the fans, and they kept booing. He tried to put over his beer, and they kept booing. He tried to put over Netflix, and they kept booing. He ripped his shirt (to reveal a Netflix Gets Raw shirt) and posed as Jimmy Hart waved the American flag, and they kept booing. 

This was incredible. 

********

Next week on Raw in San Jose: 

  • Dakota Kai vs. Lyra Valkyria for the new Women’s IC title 
  • Sheamus vs. Ludwig Kaiser 
  • Damian Priest vs. Finn Bálor in a street fight 
  • Chad Gable vs. TBA 

******** 

The main event began at 10:43 pm. I think Seth’s music played for 8 straight minutes. 

Punk seemed to be wearing the “XXX” sweater he could be seen wearing in the infamous AEW All In backstage footage.

CM Punk defeated Seth Rollins (18:57) 

They brawled into the crowd as the fans chanted for Punk. This was followed by duelling chants that were louder for Punk. 

Rollins went for the stomp when they entered the ring, but Punk ducked it and set up for GTS. Rollins slipped out of that and hammered away at Punk with elbows. Rollins repeatedly drove his boot into Punk’s face in the corner, and the referee had to back him off. Rollins argued with the ref until Punk booted him. Punk hit a neckbreaker off the top, which led to a break. 

Rollins took over and dismissively smacked Punk. Punk responded with running knees in the corner, clotheslines, and a swinging neckbreaker. Punk also hit a neckbreaker over the top rope and a dive. Rollins rolled through Punk’s flying crossbody attempt and hit a GTS, but Punk fell out of the ring. Rollins taunted Punk and told him, “I built all of this.” 

As they re-entered the ring, Punk hit Rollins with a curb stomp for two. Rollins ducked a GTS and hit another GTS of his own for a nearfall. Rollins went for a stomp, but Punk rolled out of the ring. Rollins taunted him for running away, just like he did ten years ago. 

They fought on the announce table, which led to Rollins hitting a Pedigree. Rollins sold his knee on the landing. Rollins hit another Pedigree in the ring for a nearfall.

They exchanged strikes until Rollins hit a buckle bomb and curb stomp, but Punk got his foot on the rope. The crowd chanted, “This is awesome,” as we approached 11:00 pm. (The following “Fight forever” chants were not as loud.) 

Rollins hit a superplex and tried to transition into a falcon arrow, but Punk countered and nailed a GTS. Rollins stumbled into the ropes and fell back onto Punk’s shoulders. Punk hoisted him up and hit another GTS for the pinfall win. The crowd was happy. 

The executive producers tag showing Paul Levesque and Lee Fitting aired on the screen as the show ended, shortly after 11:00 pm.

*********** 

(I had no issues with the Netflix stream during the show. There were some minor production mistakes during the show like the announcers randomly going quiet or maybe missing their cues and the camera/director showing the wrong celebrity or wrestler in the crowd, but that’s all stuff that will be sorted out. This was sort of paced like a PPV with tons of time between matches, and the matches themselves relied a lot on finishers and kick-outs. Following shows won’t be paced like this…hopefully.)

WOR: Two Tokyo Domes, RAW on Netflix, MITB cash-in, more

Wrestling Observer Radio with Bryan Alvarez and Dave Meltzer is back with tons to talk about including two nights of the Tokyo Dome, fallout from the shows, the AEW/New Japan relationship, Takeshita signing with New Japan, Collision, Smackdown, the first RAW on Netflix Monday night, a preview of the show, and tons more. A packed show as always so check it out~!

Timestamps:
Start: Thoughts on Kenny Omega’s return, both Tokyo Dome events, Chris Charlton reaction
23:26: Konosuke Takeshita signs with NJPW along with AEW and DDT, more from Takaaki Kidani interview
28:32: Latest on WWE Raw’s Netflix premiere, Hulk Hogan promoting Saturday Night’s Main Event, Royal Rumble 2026 taking place in Saudi Arabia
42:06: Ratings
51:20: Cain Velazquez/GFL
55:18: WWE SmackDown recap
1:05:00: AEW Collision recap

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