Bad Blood was first held as the
18th In Your Housepay-per-view (PPV) event in October 1997;
In Your House was a series of monthly PPV shows first produced by the then-
World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE) from May 1995 to February 1999. The In Your House branding was retired following February 1999's
St. Valentine's Day Massacre: In Your House event, as the company moved to install permanent names for each of its monthly PPVs.[1] After six years and after the promotion had been renamed to World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) in early 2002,[2] WWE announced the return of Bad Blood as its own PPV event to be held in
June 2003 and it was made exclusive to wrestlers of the
Raw brand,[3] a storyline subdivision called the
brand extension in which the promotion divided its roster into two separate brands, Raw and
SmackDown!, where wrestlers were exclusively assigned to perform.[4] The
2004 Bad Blood would be the final Bad Blood event, as it was doubly replaced by
One Night Stand and
Vengeance the following year.[5][6] After 13 years, Bad Blood was to be revived in July 2017,[7] but these plans were scrapped in favor of an event titled
Great Balls of Fire.[8]
On July 6, 2024, WWE uploaded a
YouTube video featuring
Undisputed WWE ChampionCody Rhodes and American record producer
Metro Boomin, where they officially announced the return of Bad Blood after 20 years. It was scheduled for the
State Farm Arena in
Atlanta, Georgia on Saturday, October 5, 2024, the 27-year anniversary of the first Bad Blood.[9] It will feature wrestlers from the Raw and SmackDown brand divisions and in addition to airing on traditional PPV worldwide, it will be the first Bad Blood to air on WWE's
livestreaming platforms,
Peacock in the United States and the
WWE Network in most international markets, the latter of which was the company's first streaming platform that launched in 2014.[10] Tickets went on sale on July 19 via
Ticketmaster.[9]
Storylines
The event will include matches that result from scripted storylines. Results are predetermined by WWE's writers on the Raw and SmackDown brands,[11][12] while storylines are produced on WWE's weekly television shows, Monday Night Raw and Friday Night SmackDown.[13]
References
^Cawthon, Graham (2013). The History of Professional Wrestling. Vol. 2: WWF 1990–1999. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform.
ASINB00RWUNSRS.