Sex University (lost WWE webshow; 2006)

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This article has been tagged as NSFW due to its sexually explicit content.



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Sean Morley, professional wrestler who played Val Venis on WWE TV and in the lost webshow.

Status: Lost

In 2007, wrestling company WWE launched WWE Broadband on their website, a way to stream videos through WWE's website that hosted exclusive content, such as the web series Sex University (also known as Val Venis Sex University or Sex-U).[1]

Background

Professional wrestler Sean Morley played Val Venis, a sexually obsessed pornographic film actor character who had a medium-sized role in the company from 1999-2003. By 2006, however, his character had fallen by the wayside, appearing on what many would consider unimportant programming such as WWE Heat. He was given an internet show on WWE's new WWE Broadband service, possibly to remedy this situation.

Content

Information on the content of the web show is limited. The only article describing its press release mentions that it has WWE wrestlers give 'romantic tips' to the audience. The first episode starred professional wrestler Viscera[2], with Val Venis said to be the host of the show, although presumably other wrestlers appeared in other episodes. It is unknown how many episodes were made in total, although the article mentions two additional episodes to the one that has a link available which starred wrestlers Maria and Val Venis himself.

Avaliability

There is very little available information on the episodes and no screenshots or any short clips have been found as of yet. The only existing link to it is the Wayback Machine archive which cannot play the video. While it is likely WWE has access to the web series, they are extremely unlikely to release it.

Removal

The reason for removal or when exactly it was removed has never been confirmed. The last date in the archived webpage goes up to March 2008[3], likely the time when it was removed. The year (though not the month) lines up with the era that WWE decided they would focus on more family-friendly programming which may be why it was removed.

References