10 Lamest WWE Pay Per View Concepts Ever

By Justin Henry /

5. December To Dismember (2006)

Forget for one second that December to Dismember is the worst pay-per-view in WWE history that wasn't the 1995 King of the Ring, and that it marked the entombing of the ECW brand as anything worth getting remotely excited for. Instead, see it for what it was: the point where WWE realized that split-brand pay-per-views had gone too far. Beginning in 2003, Raw got four exclusive shows, as did Smackdown. A year later, the calendar stretched to fourteen total PPVs, with Raw and Smackdown now each with five, supplementing the time-tested 'big four'. After ECW One Night Stand helped spin off the ECW brand, they too got their own exclusive event, with a roster so thin that it was transparent. After it drew a paltry 90,000 buys, pay-per-views once more featured full squads.