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1[[quoteright:350:[[Wrestling/JohnCena https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/jhon.jpg]]]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:The WWE has a new [[TheAce ace]]...[[MemeticMutation AND HIS NAME IS JOHN CENA!]]]]
3In 2008, Wrestling/{{WWE}} found itself in familiar territory. Once again, changing times forced the company to go back to the drawing board and redesign themselves to stay relevant.
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5With the untimely demise of Wrestling/EddieGuerrero and the MurderSuicide of Wrestling/ChrisBenoit, a lot of attention was focused on the health and wellness of professional wrestlers. Additionally, WWE CEO Linda [=McMahon=] (the wife of company chairman Wrestling/VinceMcMahon) was eyeing a run for U.S. Senate and she really didn't want the company’s image to tarnish her hopes of making it. While the rough-and-tumble days of the Wrestling/AttitudeEra and the Wrestling/RuthlessAggressionEra had served WWE well, it was time for a new direction, and that new direction would be the old direction.
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7It was decided to go back to [[LighterAndSofter the kinder, gentler days]] of the [[Wrestling/WWEGoldenAgeEra Golden Age]]. The violence and vulgarity began to be scaled back, and WWE returned to the (mostly) family-friendly product it was in the 1980s. Like back then, when [[Wrestling/HulkHogan Hulkamania]] was running wild, they needed a big name star to build their Federation around.
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9And they had just the man for the job.
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11They took the former white rapper "Doctor of Thuganomics" Wrestling/JohnCena and turned him into the next heroic babyface. His "take your vitamins, say your prayers" mantras would be "Hustle, Loyalty, Respect." And crowds ate it up. At least, they did at first, but more hardcore wrestling fans got sick of his ubiquitous presence quickly. This was also a big time for players like Wrestling/RandyOrton and Wrestling/{{Batista}}, who would have multiple title reigns over the course of the era, and Wrestling/MarkHenry, whose career unexpectedly exploded into his only world title run. This would also mark the years in which several mainstays for the next decade, like Wrestling/KofiKingston, Wrestling/DolphZiggler, Wrestling/TheMiz, and Wrestling/{{Sheamus}}, would begin their careers; some on the main roster, others in the revived Wrestling/{{ECW}}; which operated largely as a trial run for younger, less established talent as well as veterans in need of a new place to go after years of [[Wrestling/WWERaw Raw]]/[[Wrestling/WWESmackdown SmackDown]] mid-card shuffling, before finally being quietly shelved in 2010.
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13Speaking of the brands, there was a decreased emphasis from 2009 on for the identities for either, as RAW and Smackdown began to showcase wrestlers from either brand on their shows without making much of a big deal of it, to the point that in 2011, there was effectively no split in place, which meant that the [[Wrestling/BigGoldBelt World Heavyweight Championship]] and WWE Championship were two major titles... without shows that made them important to exist as separate entities in the first place. This was fixed in a unification match, creating the WWE-World Heavyweight Championship.
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15That didn't mean there was nowhere for the young guns to hone their craft, however, as another major change was the overhaul of the WWE's farm system. Florida Championship Wrestling, which was where WWE hopefuls were sent to train, was rechristened as Wrestling/{{WWE NXT}}. The original NXT concept was a RealityShow, where WWE hopefuls got to train and learn under mentors in the hopes of getting a WWE contract, but was eventually retired and re-vamped into a more conventional hour-long wrestling program on the newly launched WWE Network, which immediately began receiving rave reviews due to the far more wrestling oriented programming and fantastic characters.
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17Unfortunately, there were major set-backs in the women's wrestling department. By the time the PG era had begun, fan favorites like Wrestling/TrishStratus and {{Wrestling/Lita}} had ended up retiring due to injuries or other opportunities, and the Wrestling/WWEDivaSearch had restocked the roster with less experienced models or women from non-wrestling backgrounds hired primarily for their looks. By 2009, the women's division did actually include a good mix of actual wrestlers - such as Wrestling/MickieJames, Wrestling/BethPhoenix, Wrestling/{{Melina}}, Wrestling/JillianHall, [[Wrestling/KatarinaWaters Katie Lea]], Wrestling/{{Natalya|Neidhart}} (who debuted in this era), and the return of Wrestling/GailKim after she had become a star in [[Wrestling/ImpactWrestling TNA]] - and several former [[Wrestling/WWEDivaSearch Diva Search]] contestants or model hires came into their own as wrestlers such as Wrestling/MichelleMcCool, {{Wrestling/Layla}} (who formed Team Wrestling/LayCool), Wrestling/EveTorres, Wrestling/KellyKelly, Wrestling/AliciaFox, and Wrestling/{{Maryse}}. The period looked to be promising, as the PG switch would presumably force WWE to focus less on T&A, and a second women's title was introduced for the Smackdown brand (the Divas' Championship).
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19However, WWE's booking led to match times getting shorter (by 2011, it was considered a good week on ''Raw'' if a Divas' segment got five minutes), a lack of effort into consistent storylines, ridiculous restrictions like "no punching" or "no kicking", an extreme GirlinessUpgrade, several women actually getting punished for their matches being "too good"[[note]]Melina and Michelle [=McCool=] if you're curious[[/note]] and ''Wrestling/WrestleMania'' being considered the worst time of year for the women as a result. The two women's titles were unceremoniously unified in 2010, to the dismay of most of the roster, with a second not being re-introduced until 2016 with the return of the brand extension. Gail Kim notably took to her Website/{{Twitter}} to criticize the poor treatment of the women, before quitting in the middle of 2011. A few females who would become prominent players in later years - Wrestling/AJLee, the Wrestling/BellaTwins, {{Wrestling/Naomi|Wrestler}}, and {{Wrestling/Kaitlyn}} - would debut in this era. Women's wrestling website ''Website/DivaDirt'' was established during this time too, providing an outlet for women's wrestling fans.
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21Technology also changed quite a bit from the beginning of the era all the way into the next, as it coincided with the release of Hi-Definition TV, and the groundwork for what would soon be known as the WWE Network.
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23The PG Era wasn't entirely squeaky clean, however. One of the most ruthless stables since the Attitude Era, Wrestling/TheNexus, would form out of the ashes of the NXT reality show, and would run roughshod over WWE for a while. The back-half of the era was also the genesis of Wrestling/CMPunk's main event run, which frequently made dramatic and slightly edgier twists and turns as he brought certain characters (even the normally incorruptible John Cena) to their breaking points.
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25All in all, while many preferred the edgier product of the Attitude Era, there were relatively few faults with the PG Era, and it would set the stage for the direction for WWE in the future.
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