in

WWE Crosses Million Mark for WrestleMania 27 Buyrate

Though WWE has yet to publicly release the WrestleMania 27 buyrate figure, it confirmed to Variety that the tally for this year’s show will cross the one million mark for the first time since 2008.

A notable component of the increase, the Variety story notes, was a significant in the domestic pay-per-view game. Without even finalizing the count, estimates already have the domestic increase at 30%, as compared with a 15% uptick for international orders. Domestic buys are typically more-lucrative for WWE and also reflect on popularity within the global company’s home base.

The timing of the story, of course, is interesting. It is clear a final figure is not yet available, suggesting WWE might have wanted to get the word of early success out to counter Friday’s selling of the company’s stock. WWE’s stock, which closed yesterday at $11.43/share, had dropped to as low as $9.99/share on news that it was cutting its famously-high quarterly dividend.

WWE had made the million mark its goal ahead of this year’s show, enlisting Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson as a host to pull back old fans (and those who look at him as a star from his Hollywood work) and Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi for a match to generate media attention. “Stone Cold” Steve Austin appeared as a guest referee, although he was not promoted to the extent of the other two.

Written by Brian Cantor

Brian Cantor is the editor-in-chief for Headline Planet. He has been a leading reporter in the music, movie, television and sporting spaces since 2002.

Brian's reporting has been cited by major websites like BuzzFeed, Billboard, the New Yorker and The Fader -- and shared by celebrities like Taylor Swift, Justin Bieber and Nicki Minaj.

Contact Brian at brian.cantor[at]headlineplanet.com.

Comments

Leave a Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Loading…

“The Office” Says Goodbye to Steve Carell, Confirms Will Ferrell is Not Replacement

NBC’s “The Office” Ratings See Little Boost for Steve Carell’s Farewell