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He acknowledges WWE received complaints from viewers after a now infamous scene featuring a wrestler simulating sex with a corpse in a casket was shown in 2002. It's a favorite for Linda McMahon's critics. "If you knew the story line behind it, what have you, you might even consider that black humor, you know, dark humor, which is what it was designed to be," Vince McMahon said. "The question is, is taste
-- whether or not things like that are in good taste." "Guess what? We never did it again," he added. That doesn't satisfy Hansen. "There is no context in which sex with corpses and abusing and degrading women can be considered acceptable, and there's no circumstance where marketing this content to kids can be considered anything other than irresponsible
-- that's what Connecticut voters will have to consider when they choose their next U.S. senator," Hansen said. WWE countered in its statement that it markets to all ages; 77 percent of its viewers are 18 and older. Each week, 16 million people watch WWE programming. The company also says that its critics are focusing on "minutes of footage of questionable taste from the tens of thousands of hours of programming."
Treatment of wrestlers and steroid usage is another criticism. WWE acknowledges five wrestlers under contract have died over the years, under various circumstances. As with the WWE programming, Vince McMahon said how drugs and wrestlers' health have been addressed have also changed, such as prohibiting the use of drugs other than for legal, medical purposes, and concussion management. "When you look at our wellness program now, it's extraordinary, compared to anything else that's out there. It certainly blows away anything, if there is anything else, in entertainment," Vince McMahon said. "That's what we evolved to," he said. "I think I can be criticized, the company can be criticized at any time for any thing, with hindsight being 20-20."
[Associated
Press;
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