When WWE switched to a TV-PG-rated television product in the summer of 2008, there was an outcry from longtime fans. The company had reached its greatest levels of success during the Attitude Era, a period where they routinely pushed the envelope in terms of sex, violence, language, and overall adult content. Many of the fans who had come of age during the Attitude Era were now full-fledged adults, and had no desire to see WWE regress to what they considered a childish product. Were these fears justified? Yes and no. In truth, there's nothing inherently bad about a PG product. Wrestling doesn't need to be raunchy to build heated feuds between competitors, and -- in theory -- get fans to pay their money to see them fight. Plus, WWE's always suffered from some creativity issues -- even during the days of TV-14, for every great foul-mouthed promo we got from Steve Austin, there was an idiotic miscarriage angle or something of the like. PG could be a step up from the lowbrow nonsense that had held WWE back in the public's eyes. The problem was that WWE's lack of creativity didn't stop when TV-14 did. Head-shakingly ill-conceived angles and storylines still played out, only now they were even more insulting to discerning viewers' intelligences -- perhaps, with an audience imagined to be largely children, WWE felt that they didn't need to incorporate as much logic into their booking as they had previously. In any case, the trash may be sanitized, but it's still trash. Here are the worst of the worst, the 10 dumbest storylines of the PG era.