With the news of Linda McMahon inducting The Ultimate Warrior into the WWE Hall of Fame may come as a surprise, it's not that unusual as Warrior was very close with the McMahon family during his run as WWF Champion, which is one of the reasons why his falling out with the company got so bitter at the time.
Before CM Punk walked out of the company, he had been discussed internally as Warrior's inductor. At one point there was also strong speculation that Hulk Hogan would be inducting Warrior.
CREDIT / SOURCE - LOP
Yahoo.com published a brief article noting that former WWE chief executive Linda McMahon won her GOP Senate primary on Tuesday night after spending almost ten times as much as her opponent and $61 million over the course of two campaigns to try to win the seat for U.S. Senator from Connecticut. When McMahon campaigned in 2010, she broke Connecticut state records for out-of-pocket spending by splurging $50 million of her own money—and still lost. This time around, McMahon spent over $11 million to defeat former Representative Christopher Shays by a three to one margin, who had spent approximately $1.2 million.
After WWE unceremoniously terminated A.W.'s contract Friday for what a company spokesman said was due to his continued use of offensive and inappropriate comments on live television and on social media after uttering a rape joke on the July 30 episode of Raw, the All World Promotions chief posted a barrage of vitriolic messages on Twitter blistering his former employer for what he perceives are double standards.
WWE "set the record straight" via WWE.com Tuesday regarding its programming and storylines following a negative blog post by Colin McEnroe of the Hartford Courant concerning the mentally challenged character Eugene, who appeared for the organization from 2004 to 2007 and once in 2009. Darien Times writer Joshua Fisher stated in an editorial last week blistering Linda McMahon's United States Senate campaign that her job creation method included making fun of retarded men, which led McEnroe to describe the former character in an editorial.