WCW Monday Nitro 1999 Arena 3d model
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WCW Monday Nitro 1999 Arena

WCW Monday Nitro 1999 Arena

by 3DWarehouse
Last crawled date: 1 year, 10 months ago
A Stage Set Contains a huge WCW Logo with Half C Written on Ramp and Half C is at Stage at enterance gate. Credits goes to 5hAwnMichael for Stage and Gary M. for Ring Area taken from 1998 set as commentator table added there nearby Barricades. Trusses I've removed by drawing faces over the original and removing original then gave it bare textures, Rest are still same and entirely a Conversion from others. WWF name dispute: In 1994, Titan Sports had entered into an agreement with the World Wide Fund for Nature (also trademarked WWF), an environmental organization, regarding Titan's use of the 'WWF' acronym, which both organizations had been using since at least March 1979. Under the agreement, Titan had agreed to cease using the written acronym 'WWF' in connection with its wrestling promotion, and to minimize (though not eliminate) spoken uses of 'WWF' on its broadcasts, particularly in scripted comments. In exchange, the environmental group (and its national affiliates) agreed to drop any pending litigation against Titan, and furthermore agreed not to challenge Titan's use of the full 'World Wrestling Federation' name or the promotion's then-current logo. In 2000, the World Wide Fund for Nature sued World Wrestling Federation Entertainment Inc. in the United Kingdom, alleging various violations of the 1994 agreement. The Court of Appeal agreed that the promotion company had violated the 1994 agreement, particularly in regards to merchandising. The last televised event to market the WWF logo was the UK-based pay-per-view Insurrextion 2002. On May 5, 2002, the company launched its 'Get The F Out' marketing campaign and changed all references on its website from 'WWF' to 'WWE', while switching the URL from WWF.com to WWE.com. The next day, a press release announced the official name change from World Wrestling Federation Entertainment, Inc. to World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc., or WWE, and the change was publicized later that day during a telecast of Raw, which was broadcast from the Hartford Civic Center in Hartford, Connecticut. Following the name change, the use of the WWF 'scratch' logo became prohibited on all WWE properties. Additionally, past references to the WWF trademark and initials in 'specified circumstances' became censored. Despite the litigation, WWE was still permitted use of the original WWF logo, which was used from 1979 through 1994 and had been explicitly exempted under the 1994 agreement, as well as the similar 'New WWF Generation' logo, which was used from 1994 through 1998. Furthermore, the company could still make use of the full 'World Wrestling Federation' and 'World Wrestling Federation Entertainment' names without consequence. In 2003, WWE won a limited decision to continue marketing certain classic video games from THQ and Jakks Pacific that contained the WWF 'scratch' logo. However, the packaging on those games had all WWF references replaced with WWE. Starting with the 1,000th episode of Raw in July 2012, the WWF 'scratch' logo is no longer censored in archival footage due to WWE reaching a new settlement with the World Wide Fund for Nature. In addition, the WWF initials are no longer censored when spoken or when written in plain text in archival footage. Since then, full-length matches and other segments featuring the WWF initials and 'scratch' logo have been added to the WWE website and the WWE Classics on Demand service. This also includes WWE Home Video releases since October 2012, starting with the re-release of Brock Lesnar: Here Comes The Pain. Although the WWF initials and logo are no longer censored in archival footage, WWE cannot use the WWF initials or logo in any new, original footage, packaging, or advertising. However, this arena has no WWF logos as WCW has done various shows under WWF acronym before WWF changes to WWE. #WCW #World #Championship #Wrestling #Monday #Nitro

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