The show was originally introduced on the USA Network on August 2, 1998, in the United States. The one-hour show would be broadcast on Sunday nights, being taped earlier in the week after Raw. It was the second primary program of the WWF's weekly television show line-up, serving as a supplement to the
Monday Night Raw program.
Heat would feature a format similar to that of
Monday Night Raw, in that continuing feuds from the previous week would progress during the show, and the following day's
Monday Night Raw would be heavily promoted. On nights when the WWF was holding a
pay-per-view event, a special edition of
Heat was generally broadcast from the event's venue as a pre-show, featuring previews and preliminary matches. In August 1999, after the premiere of
SmackDown!,
Heat briefly became a complete weekly summary show, featuring occasional interviews and music videos. After only a few weeks following the format change,
Heat began airing exclusive matches again. The debut of
SmackDown! also led to
Heat being taped before
SmackDown!, with matches for WWF syndication programs like
Jakked/Metal being taped before
Raw broadcasts. Occasionally, special editions of
Heat were heavily promoted; during the halftime period of
Super Bowl XXXIII in 1999,
Heat aired a special half-hour edition dubbed
Halftime Heat. These specials ended following the show's move to
MTV in 2000. When
Heat started airing on MTV in late 2000, it was broadcast live from
WWF New York. WWF personalities and performers would appear at the restaurant as special guests while
Michael Cole and
Tazz provided commentary to matches. In April 2002, the show returned to its original filming schedule, again before
Raw. Eventually, the live from WWF New York format was retired. When the
brand extension was implemented,
Heat largely became a B-show for the
Raw brand, focused on mid-card talent (sister channel
TNN picked up
Velocity to serve a similar purpose for
SmackDown). In May 2002, the show was renamed
WWE Sunday Night Heat due to the rebranding of the WWF.
Heat and
Velocity were not picked up by the USA Network when WWE moved its programming back there in October 2005, leaving Americans no way to watch WWE weekend shows on television. To solve this problem, WWE decided to
stream the shows on their website exclusively for the U.S. audience, with new editions posted every Friday afternoon. Additionally, prior to every PPV event, WWE would continue to air a live bonus 30-minute
Heat pre-show on the PPV channel.
Backlash 2006 would be the final PPV event to feature a live
Heat pre-show before that particular version of
Heat was discontinued.
Sunday Night Heat was soon renamed to
WWE Heat, as it no longer aired on Sundays.
Heat was still shown internationally to fulfill international programming commitments. When WWE went
high definition in January 2008,
Heat began using the same
HD set as
Raw,
SmackDown, and
ECW. After 10 years of programming and 513 episodes, the final episode of
WWE Heat was uploaded to WWE.com on May 30, 2008. It was the most watched episode of
Heat since it debuted on WWE.com. The show was replaced internationally with a new show featuring classic matches, called
WWE Vintage Collection. At
the 2019 Royal Rumble it was announced that WWE would be bringing back
Halftime Heat featuring superstars from
NXT during the
Super Bowl LIII halftime show. == Broadcast ==