As ‘Raw’ makes its Netflix debut and prepares for a global audience, WWE is still wrestling with the toxic legacy of its complicated founder.
He was there to celebrate his appointment to the board of TKO Holdings, the conglomerate that talent agency Endeavor had created four months earlier by merging two leagues under its umbrella, WWE and the mixed martial arts league UFC. To his left stood Ari Emanuel, the Hollywood agent, CEO of Endeavor and now TKO, too. To Johnson’s right was Vince McMahon, board chairman of TKO.
It was a big day for WWE. That morning, the organization had announced that in January 2025, one of its signature shows, Raw, will move from USA Network to Netflix, where it will air worldwide for the first time. It’s part of a larger deal that Netflix forged with the league, representing the streamer’s first ever with a live-event franchise. Netflix is paying WWE $5 billion over 10 years, dwarfing the $265 million per year NBCUniversal-owned USA paid for the previous five years.