Insight with Chris Van Vliet - Eugene On His "Special" Character, The Rock, Kurt Angle, Being An NXT Trainer (Interview from December 2020)
Episode Date: November 29, 2023Nick "Eugene" Dinsmore (@ugenedinsmore) is a professional wrestler known for his time in WWE. He joins Chris Van Vliet from his home in Sioux Falls, South Dakota in this interview from December 2020 t...o talk about how he created the Eugene character with Rip Rogers, why Eugene was so popular, did he think it was controversial or inspirational, his interactions with The Rock, Kurt Angle, Hulk Hogan, Vince McMahon and others, his time in rehab, being a trainer for NXT, his wrestling promotion called Midwest All Pro Wrestling and more! Quote I'm thinking about: Without commitment you cannot have depth in anything whether it is a relationship, business or hobby. - Neil Strauss Sponsors: FITBOD: Get 25% off when you use the code INSIGHT at http://fitbod.me/INSIGHT ZBIOTICS: Get 15% off with the code CVV and have a better morning after you drink at http://zbiotics.com/cvv MYBOOKIE: Bet on WWE! Get up to $200 cash bonus when you use the code CVV and sign up at http://mybookie.ag BLUECHEW: Use the code CVV to get your first month of BlueChew for FREE at http://bluechew.com GHOSTBED: Get 40% of your purchase with the code CVV at http://ghostbed.com/cvv MIRACLE MADE: Upgrade your sleep with Miracle Made! Go to http://TryMiracle.com/CVV and use the code CVV to claim your FREE 3 PIECE TOWEL SET and SAVE over 40% OFF PLUNGE: Get $150 off your Plunge with the coupon code CVV150 at http://plunge.com BONCHARGE: Go to http://boncharge.com/CVV and use coupon code CVV to save 25% For more information about Chris and INSIGHT go to: https://podcast.chrisvanvliet.com If you enjoyed this episode, could I ask you to please consider leaving a short review on Apple Podcast/iTunes? It takes less than a minute and makes a huge difference in helping to spread the word about the show and also to convince some hard-to-get guests. Follow CVV on social media: Instagram: instagram.com/ChrisVanVliet Twitter: twitter.com/ChrisVanVliet Facebook: facebook.com/ChrisVanVliet YouTube: youtube.com/ChrisVanVliet TikTok: tiktok.com/@Chris.VanVliet Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All systems are go.
Ladies and gentlemen, Chris Van Blele.
Welcome back to another one on Insights.
I'm CBV, Chris Van Fleet.
Good to see you.
Thanks for being here.
And thank you for making Insight,
one of the top wrestling podcasts on the planet.
It's because of people like you that come back each and every episode.
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But if that's you, could I ask for this one favor?
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It helps the show so much.
And it's more than I could possibly explain in this intro.
But basically as the show keeps getting bigger, the guests keep getting bigger.
Like the guests that I just lined up, we're going to be recording tomorrow in Los Angeles.
And let's just say he is the best in the best in the first.
world at what he does.
It was a very dramatic pause there, but you know what I did there.
Nick Dinsmore is such a fascinating guy.
I loved this conversation.
I think a lot of people might not know about his wrestling pedigree before he signed with
WWE.
He was a legend in OVW, tag team partners with Rob Conway.
And man, there's a name that we haven't heard in a long time.
I'd love to have Rob Conway on the show.
That'd be great.
Nick also held the OVW Heavyweight.
championship a record 10 times.
He spent some time in WCW.
Before, of course, debuting in WWE as Eric Bischoff's special nephew, working with people
like William Regal, The Rock, Cranagle, Hulk H, and the rest, of course, is history.
This episode first aired in December of 2020, which is episode number 147.
So 400 episodes ago, pretty much.
I know there's a lot of people that just recently started to listen to the show in the last few months.
So here you go.
A dip into the archives, if you will.
And one of my favorite conversations since the podcast started in June of 2019.
If you enjoy this, please let us know.
I want to do a new interview with Eugene, like probably sometime in 2024.
He lives in South Dakota.
So I'm going to fly there, sit down with him and do it right.
But if you love this, take a screenshot, tag him so he sees the love.
So he feels the love.
And then we'll be able to do another one, you know, well, he's already in for another one.
But you know what I mean.
Let's get the wheels turning here.
He's at Eugene Dinsmore on Twitter.
It's the letter you than G.E.N.E Dinsmore.
So Eugene Dinsmore.
I'm at Chris Van Fleet.
Here we go.
Enjoy this conversation with Nick Dinsmore, aka Eugene.
There he is.
Nick Eugene Dinsmore.
You got like a whole like wrestling man cave behind you here.
Yeah, like right there is when I did that WrestleMania commercial.
And then that was like Cape.
used to wear, and then that was my teddy bear.
But I've also got these, too.
You know what the best part
about having your own action figure is?
You get to play with yourself in public.
I like that you held up Doink the Clown
because I don't know if everybody knows this.
I don't know if everybody knows that you were Doank the Clown.
Not all the time.
I think Doinct the Clown should be inducted
into the W.W.E. Hall of Fame.
It's a timeless character that has always been over.
The minute he came out, instantly recognizable,
smiles on faces.
And if that's what the WWE is all about,
then Doink the Clown should be in the W.W.
Hall of Fame.
And every guy that played Doink the Clown on TV
that is still remaining alive should be allowed to get a...
How many times were you Doank the Clown, Nick?
Two times.
On a...
I did it on a pay-per-view,
and then the next Monday night,
or the next Tuesday, I think I did Smackdown.
And this was before you were officially under contract...
Yeah, this was before I was in...
Maybe 2000...
three.
So this was kind of like one step above, you know, being an extra, basically.
Yeah, they knew who I was.
I've been in developmental for quite some time.
And I've done a conquista door.
And I've been in extra work.
And I did some stuff.
But they had JBL's Barroom Brawl.
And that's when they brought out the Easter Bunny and Dointhe Clown.
And then they brought out the Brooklyn Brawler.
And Brooklyn Brawler beat up Doin'C the Clown.
I'm so excited to have you on the show because
You just have such a fascinating story.
So I really appreciate you carving this time out of your day to do this.
Absolutely.
And congratulations to you.
Your wrestling company, Midwest All-Pro Wrestling just turned five years old.
So congrats to you on that.
Yeah, I was a coach at the Performance Center in 2015.
I knew I always went to run my own wrestling company.
Ever since I started at OVW and kind of saw what Danny Davis did there
and what the business model was,
I thought, you know, I think I could do this, something I'm passionate about, something I enjoy.
So 2015, my wife and I came to Siouxville, South Dakota, where she is from, and we started Midwest All-Pro Wrestling.
And you were telling me this off-camera, you're the only independent wrestling promotion in the entire state of South Dakota.
Yeah, when we were thinking of moving here, I said, there's got to be some independent wrestling company there.
She's like, I don't think there is. And we got here and there was nothing.
The closest one is about three hours south in Omaha.
I've heard some rumors of people running various shows,
but nothing really month to month, week-to-week, storyline-driven.
I'm also training stars, so I've trained, I have 25 right now,
but some I've trained before, so I've trained more than 25.
Some quit.
Some couldn't make it.
Some moved on with life.
But I got a good crew of about 25 or 30 guys now,
and we're trying to carve out a little territory.
Isn't that always the case with wrestling school?
You know, you start off with a whole bunch
and then it just kind of gets whittled down
as the weeks and months go by.
I had my first event in November 2015,
and from that, I got my first two students.
So our following event was in February, 2016.
Shannon Bazler came,
wrestled on the show before she was signed,
and I had Carlito come in,
but then my first two students had their first match on that event.
And so all their friends and family came,
and we did a big, I ripped off the Desire video.
Like I told you, I loved it.
You know, the whole Creed song and tailored it for them.
And from that, I got six students.
So it just kept multiplying and multiplying.
And I've had some guys looking for now for almost five years.
So these guys have wrestled monthly, weekly, in the ring, working out, getting better.
When someone walks to the doors of your wrestling school, what are you hoping that they have?
What kind of skills are you hoping that they have?
Well, the thing is, is I'm a business.
So I want to find out what his goal is.
And then I want to help him try to achieve his goal.
If his goal is to wrestle for the WWE to get a tryout,
there's a certain road that we have to take.
And, you know, realities might need to be faced.
But regardless, there's, you know,
there's an expectation when you walk into a tryout of what you need to be.
If you just want to have a wrestling match and play wrestling and, you know,
I just want to, like what I did, I said, I just want to try it.
I just want to experience it.
I didn't want to live the rest of my life,
wishing that I'd, you know, tried it when I was 19 years old.
So I just went and did it.
And I didn't think anything of it and just,
I got a little better and things came around.
Then all of a sudden, I went to USWA.
So that was pretty cool.
So I kept wrestling and then I did some WCW work.
That's pretty cool.
And then I got signed by WWE.
And I was just sitting around.
I never even expected to get called up to TV.
When Rob Conway and I were signed,
we were more like practice dummies to work with the WV talent.
And after spending so much time helping train those talent, they finally came to me about
I told a story a couple of times.
I complained.
I never complained.
I was always on time, smile, whatever you need, working extra hours, you know.
But I complained.
I told Doug Bash, my friend, I said, I think I'm going to quit and try to go Japan.
So Doug told, I think, Dima Lincoln, Dean told Johnny Ace, next day I know I'm sitting in a meeting
with Vince McMahon and Stephanie McMahon.
Okay.
So six months, eight months prior,
Rip Rogers gave me the idea for what became Eugene.
What about a character that can't put a square peg in a square hole,
can't tie his shoes, can't, you know, do this,
but can't socialize.
But the minute that he, you know, he gets into wrestling,
he does it flawlessly, does it perfectly.
Knows all the history, knows all the trivia.
Sitting in the meeting with Vince, Vince goes,
I want to get back to character-based wrestling.
And I just blurted that out.
He was, great, we'll start on Monday.
Wow.
So then I have to figure out, you know, who is Eugene?
Because I was just, it was just an idea that Rip sent to me that I put no, what they would say.
No character study, no finding out what the archetype of the character is and all the things like that.
It was just a blur out.
So I just went out there and just started having fun.
My first matches Eugene was against Lance Cade and wouldn't on TV.
People never heard of me.
Lance ended up shaking my hand and then clothes on me and beat me.
But Eugene had made the people laugh and they dared him.
And at the end of the match, I got beat and they chanted my name.
Never been on TV.
Wow.
So obviously fans are very familiar with Eugene.
But who was Nick Dinsmore, the wrestler, before Eugene came around?
Like I said, when I grew up in the Louisville area,
and that's where Nightmare Danny Davis settled.
And he started Ohio Valley Wrestling in the Louisville, Kentucky area.
When I was 18, I said, well, I think I was.
I'm just going to try this.
So I started training.
Like I said, I just kind of continued on.
And then when Danny Davis and WWE formed a partnership to train WD's developmental talent,
I then kind of got hired along as part of the crew.
I was making, I know I was making the lowest of all the guys there.
But again, I was just happy to be there.
I didn't care because I was doing it for free before.
I was paying to do it before, you know.
And now I was sitting, I'm making a little bit every week.
I'm like, this is great.
But that whole time, as I was wrestling, I was just Nick Dinsmore.
I was from Louisville, Kentucky.
The pride of Louisville, Kentucky.
Mr. Wrestling.
Cornett was the one that was the matchmaker, the booker, the creative,
and he said, you know, you can wrestle.
So let's just call you Mr. Wrestling.
And it was just something that because I had Jimmy every week on TV
preaching my name and putting me over and writing me in very good spots,
I was the top guy.
baby face, heel, and all the main event matches,
but I was Mr. Wrestling Nick Dinsmore.
So you certainly owe a lot of what you accomplished early on in your career to Jim
Cornett.
Absolutely, to Danny Davis, to Rip Rogers, and to Jim Cornett.
Because Danny was like the first one to train me in the ring.
Rip was the one that I was in the ring with.
He was probably 42 at the time.
He just kind of phased out of WCW,
and he was in the ring with me every night and just puppeting those people.
Back then, he was to act like a heel.
He'd take faith us in the dressing room,
and he'd act like a heel.
And he just got to the ring,
and we had nothing planned.
Because when all the students were to us
had one another, we'd plan our matches out,
and he wouldn't talk to us.
And just get out there,
and it looked like he was beating a heck out of everybody,
but he was the fucking most awesome, most gentle.
And he's the one that taught me how to work,
how to listen to the crowd,
how to slow down,
and just, he was the one in the ring.
But then Cornett was the one that wrote me as a star.
It got me over in Louisville.
He wrote a
I progressed going to a series of
WWE talent that they would bring down
that the heel manager was bringing down
to get Nick Dinsmore
and brought down Al Snow
I get to work with Al Snow.
Benoit came down and got to work with Benoit.
Brian Christopher was the only one that beat me though.
That conversation you were referring to
with Vince and Steph,
that's when you were still in OVW.
You were basically, you were kind of
kind of like seeing if they've
call your block. You were saying, look, I'm going to go somewhere else, hoping that maybe the squeaky
wheel would get the grease. Exactly. I tell it to all my guys. I'm like, you know, the squeaky
wheel gets the oil. You have to ask for it. You know, you can't be rude or you can't do it incorrectly,
but I was just going to, hey, I'm going to see what my options are just to see what happens,
you know, because there was also a lot of things actually in Japan that were going on that were enticeful,
you know, other than, you know, I love wrestling in Louisville, but I've been wrestling there for
eight years by the time that I think I got called up.
Wow.
Eight year overnight success, Eugene was.
Did you have a plan when you started going to wrestling school at 18 years old?
Did you, you know, if wrestling didn't work out, did you know what you were going to fall back on to?
I was still in college.
Okay.
In a branch of Indiana in southern Indiana.
And I graduated with the communications degree.
Hey, me too.
I have never once used it, but I just did it.
I mean, my mother wanted me to do it, so I did it.
It was the college I went to, it was a commuter college.
So it was really just, I'm still living home just going to school.
So it was very feasible.
But yeah, I got a college degree, never used it.
I was just, I've just been in wrestling.
I just went to it.
I was drawn to it.
And you're still in wrestling.
That's right.
Now I'm promoting it.
Yeah.
I'm putting it out there.
It's like one of those things.
Once you get into it, you can't get out, right?
Like the mafia.
It's just like the mafia.
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When you had those original conversations with Rip Rogers,
when he came up with this idea for the character,
What was your initial reaction to it?
By that time, I'd gotten a no rip very well.
And he saw me as an assistant coach, but he was also like a mentor.
And he would just try to give me ideas every now.
And what about this kind of, you know, something that you could pitch to creative
because back then we wouldn't see the creative team twice a year maybe.
We would see an agent every week.
But then they would send like a creative guy down.
It was still in the infancy of a different stage of whatever they could.
called Developmental Now.
And so, you know, Rip would just give me ideas.
And when he gave me that one, the creative team, no, no, no, the producers came down
for the first week.
It was either Arn or Fitt or Dean or some of those guys, I think it was fit or Arn, I told the idea
of Eugene.
And he's like, I don't think we can't do that stuff anymore.
You know, that's kind of like hokey 80s shit, you know, they won't do that.
Okay.
So the writers came down, I pitched it to them.
Like, no, we don't go in that direction.
We don't do that kind of thing.
That is something that we would do.
Okay.
And for some reason, when I was in that meeting with Vince,
I still blurted it out because that's all I had.
It was the only idea I had is,
you know what Mr. Wrestling's been doing,
and you haven't wanted it,
so this is the only other thing I got,
and they went for it.
I don't think that they thought it would succeed.
I think they thought it would fail,
because the first match I had against Lance K
was the non-televised event.
I came back through the curtain,
Hunter, Stephanie, an arm on their feet.
applause.
They said, you know,
you gave yourself to the character.
You, I always forget the exact words that he used.
You went 100%.
You weren't out there playing something in wrestling.
You went for it.
And they were really impressed.
And then when I got on TV, I'd been wrestling for eight years.
So I've made plenty of mistakes.
And I'd learned enough that, like, when I was there,
they gave me a little bit and I did well.
They gave me a little bit and I did better.
But plus, you know, I feel like since I worked with RIP
and RIP taught me how to work the crowd,
it was easy to do.
And when they bid on it,
I could puppet master it.
Sometimes that's one of the more,
I feel like one of the more difficult aspects
of live performing wrestling is,
is to really capture that crowd
and guys try to do it
and I think they know how to do it,
and sometimes they don't.
When you had those original conversations
about the character,
did it have a name?
Did Eugene have a name?
No, no.
Actually, I went to the office
and they had me shave
and I did like some pre-tapes.
You know, my name is Eugene.
I'm coming.
And they never ended up.
up using them. Then they said, no, no, girl, girl the beard back. It looks better. It looks
scruffy. And then they just debuted me. But they put me as Bischoff's nephew, which put me in a
great spot already, gave me some credibility while I still wanted to dig at him. The special
kid is Bishaw's family. And then when they put me in Regal, and Regal was just coming back
from, I believe he had had some parasite getting his heart from India. He wrestled in India.
And that's some really bad things of time off.
It was just coming back.
And Regan and I just hit it off, you know, personally, but also, you know, in wrestling.
He would leave me somewhere, do something, come me to do something.
And when I did it, he would let me have the moment and he would get his little,
get himself over when, you know, when he could.
But he was awesome to be able to work with him.
So where did the basis start?
Like, okay, the character gets approved.
Then when do you, where do you start doing your research?
who starts to inspire this character?
So I would watch some of the fans that came to OVW,
some of them younger kids.
And I remember I tried to think of myself,
you know, when I was a kid,
how did I feel like I reacted when, you know,
those pictures of me when I'm five,
and I'm just, like, clapping at a birthday party.
I'm like, you know, I'm so excited
or somebody really gets angry at you and makes you scared
or something embarrasses you.
It might be something.
And I just tried to, because up to that point,
I remember Jim Rossett said, you're wrestled good, but you got the malinkgo disease.
You got no facials, we can't do anything with that.
Okay, so then I turned it all the way up and just, and I tried to make the biggest ones I could.
It got to a point where I was almost just like, okay, I can do the wrestling.
I can do it an hour broadway and never do the same hole twice, no sweat professional,
but you want me to just be a goofball, so I just turned it up as high as I could
and made every facial and everything trying to pop the guys in the locker room or the people that were there.
Do you think that this character would still be able to work
in the political climate that we have right now in 2020?
One thing I know about WWE is that they can almost always make anything work.
You know what I mean?
They can put it out there in a light that the people will go, okay,
and now I understand why.
You know, when Eugene first started,
I didn't have my first match until two or three weeks on TV.
And those first two or three weeks,
some people
and I heard
like radio stations
or news outlets or something
were what is the movie
going to do with this character?
What are they going to do?
They didn't know.
But the minute I won
my first match,
then they know that it's
an underdog story
of a boy with a dream
wanting to be a wrestler
and he's fulfilling that dream.
I think that people from the outside
looking in before you wrestle a match
could be worried that maybe
you were making fun of people
that might be special news.
Yeah. I thought about that going in, but I just, the time, it was my opportunity, so I was going to either sink or swim on it.
But I've gotten so much positive affirmation afterwards. So many people, my brother has special needs, and he told me that he knows that he can do anything because Eugene did it.
And I had more times than I've ever been, you know, you're making fun of people. No, you are giving them a voice. Oh my God, there's somebody like me. That's what I want to be.
That's what WWE should be. There should be a representation.
of every type person that there is around the world.
So I can connect.
Did you think, you know, before going on TV with Eugene,
did you think it'd be controversial?
At that point, I was starting to get into the machine
and it starts going.
And, you know, then weeks start going by.
And really, it's just a surreal time that you jump on the train
and it just starts taking off.
And you really don't have time to sit back and reflect
and then see how people react and say,
oh, maybe I shouldn't do that or something.
It was like, let's go.
and we're going with it.
Yeah.
When you look at some of the actors
that have played
special needs characters
in movies,
who do you think's done
a really great job at that?
I don't know if it's a great job,
but the Johnny Knoxville's movie
was funny.
Yeah.
We entered the Special Olympics,
you know,
that was pretty funny.
But the comparison was,
was Rain Man.
That was like, you know,
we want you to be the Rain Man
of wrestling.
Because in my head,
Ray Man just looked like a dude,
but he had a mind
that could do anything.
Yeah.
And that's what Eugene was supposed to be because there was a layer of the character that never really got exposed.
But that was he was supposed to have all the trivia.
If there was ever a trivia question put out there, that he'd answer in 1962, you know,
and they'd have all the answers.
And it's part of the character that I think never really got developed, but that was in the idea.
I guess what comes to mind for me is Tropic Thunder.
And I'm sure you know where I'm going with this with Ben Stiller's character, Simple Jack.
And he says, like, you never go all the way with it.
you say that there's some truth to that?
I don't know. I don't know because I had to go all the way with it, you know,
because I had to immerse myself in the character.
And if you've seen the Jim Carrey Netflix where he talks about being Andy Kaufman,
and he said when they wanted him to do the REM video, he couldn't do it because it had gone.
It was the time in his life that he just something opened up.
That's what happened for me.
And now I can raise my voice and be goofy and do comedy wrestling.
But that, whoever Eugene was, that was an opening in my life,
a time of magic that was just like right there.
And it was surreal.
But it's, I don't have it now.
You know, like, back up.
Were you Eugene all the time on camera and off camera?
Absolutely, yeah.
Really?
I would travel with William Regal and Tujeri.
So it was like Barna Bailey's circus.
Tegeri and Regal had their jolts back and forth.
And then throw Eugene in the mix.
And I would drive and I'd come in the park.
and I'd have swerving, and I'd jump out and to do it,
act like he's selling, and Regal come out like he said,
and the heart attack.
And I'd say, I just, I just got my permit, my permit.
And I'd run in the building real quick and all the fans.
So you could, I mean, right now, could you just turn Eugene on like that?
That's like I said, man, it was a time then, you know, I, I can remember it.
But sometimes I don't have that focus, I guess.
Do you still wrestle as Eugene now?
As Midwest All-Pro owner, I have to be somewhat more of a stern character,
but everyone knows that I'm former DoDovie superstar Eugene.
When I get in the ring, they chant Eugene.
But it's a little evolved.
My intellectual property of Eugene characters been signed away.
So this is a new different kind of character.
He's sometimes called Eugene.
Yeah, U-Dash-Gene, yes, yes.
But I've never been complained about it.
I think there's a real lesson to be learned here, though.
You were eight years in developmental, eight years in OVW,
trying to find your way.
And then you saw your opening.
You saw this door that was slightly ajar.
You jammed your foot into this door and made that door open wide up for you.
I think that there's a real lesson there to be learned
that you should take the opportunities that come to you,
even if maybe they don't look like how you thought they'd look.
Well, I looked at the product at the time.
The brands were split.
They had Hurricane, and I believe Rosie was with him on SmackDown,
but they didn't have a kid's character.
They didn't have a comedy, a selling, you know, I'm always, you know,
everybody wanted to be the NWO or Austin at that point.
Everybody wanted to be cool and strong and too big and be on the attack,
and I wanted to do comedy and be sympathetic.
You know, that's the role that they didn't have.
So it played right.
It played perfectly.
And then the fact that Brian Gerwitz,
he was the one that wrote it, the writer, was phenomenal.
Like he goes, I can write for that and just started,
and that was it, boom, boom, boom.
He actually wrote a movie for Eugene.
Really?
Yeah.
Where's the movie?
They put Big Show in it.
Oh, wow.
I don't know that Knucklehead is the exact script that he wrote for Eugene,
but I think some of it is very similar,
and the story is very similar.
So when you guys,
the okay from Vince to go forward with this character.
It sounds like you had like less than a week to actually figure out the nuts and
bolts of this.
Yeah, yeah, like I said, the only time I did it was in St. Louis, with Lance, and then we just
went live on TV.
But then when you, you know, I watched your debut recently and you nailed it.
I mean, the Eugene that we saw in your debut really wasn't that different from the Eugene
we saw years after that.
Like you had.
I had the flu too.
You'd honed that character so perfectly.
Yeah, I don't know.
It just happened.
I just went into it.
I was like, I just got to become whatever this childlike character is going to be.
You know, I have to have the emotion in my head that was it.
You know, like, like naive emotion.
And you caught on with fans so quickly.
What was the, like, what were some of the initial reactions that you had from fans
where you really thought, okay, what I'm doing here is really working?
Like I said, the first match that fans are chair for me.
Yeah.
But when they put me in the room with the rock, that elevated me.
like, oh my God.
It was like, then people knew who I was.
And then fans really got endeared to me because I was the Rock's friend.
They liked Eugene and he was funny and he was building.
But that was like, you know, they just put it over the top.
It went from a slow build to, oh, my God, you're a top guy now.
You're made.
Yeah.
What were the steps to take to get there?
Like, you seem to have a pretty fast rise.
I mean, but it was a character that was different.
Yeah.
Brian to write for it.
Yeah.
So they just started featuring it.
And then I had, you know, a lot of guys that start now don't have, excuse me,
a lot of guys that start now don't have the eight years experience that I had.
Because I had eight years of very good experience, you know, very good training.
And whenever I was given an opportunity, I would usually nail it.
Because they would limit the amount that I could do thinking that the green guy is going to mess it up.
And I would just nail it.
So then they just commit a little more and a little more.
And I'd been a top guy in Louisville for six years, so I know how to wrestle like a top guy.
So the fact that they put me right in there with Triple H.
Yeah.
And guys like Kurt Angle,
wanted to wrestle with Eugene.
Wow.
And he beat Kurt Angle.
He had a storyline written for it where he was going to do something
and his teeth were going to get,
because this is before he put in the mouthpiece,
to lead to the mouthpiece.
He's got something where he busted his teeth
and he had to have his mouth wired shut.
And then they knew that the Olympic champion
and then Eugene was going to show up at the airport
and they're waiting for him, the two limo drivers.
And Eugene comes out after he wants,
in the medal with the gold medal.
That must be the Olympic champion,
puts him in the limbo and takes off,
and Angle comes out with his mouth wired
and bumps his toe or something,
and starts screaming,
like, you can't.
And so they put the head,
and put him in the bus,
and boom, he's out.
And it was all this funny stuff
that was really good,
but at the time,
they wanted to build Kurt as a killer
to work with Sina.
So they limited the amount of comedy
and made him pretty mean and vicious.
What was it like working with the rock,
both in the ring and behind the scenes?
So, like, I showed up that day, that Monday.
We were in San Diego, and Silvan Grunier comes up to me,
one half of Long Resistance and goes,
they're going to bring the rock in to be with you tonight.
I was like, no, they're not.
No, that's ridiculous.
No, that's not going to happen.
You're rid of me.
But I wouldn't believe it.
So as a day, kind of gone on, they came and said,
yeah, he might show up.
I figured, well, he won't.
It's not going to happen.
And it got right to it, and he showed up.
And then we had the one segment,
but I had, I think, seven segments, or maybe four.
And I was running around doing different things,
and I would go back because he was working with Brian
on the stuff that we were talking about.
And I had the one line, you know, whatever, Triple Age,
who's your favorite wrestler?
And I missed it every time.
Every time in practice, we run through it.
And my guy, I'm just every time I'm flubbing it in the ring,
live on TV, I had no idea where we were again,
and I would have flubbed it.
And he just walked around as the people are chanting.
He just walks by him and goes,
here's your line, kid, and then says it,
and let it right to me and fed it to me.
I mean, just put it, spoon fed it to me.
And it's like, that made me.
That 15 seconds.
Wow.
Who would you say is the best person
that you stepped into the ring with?
I mean, Triple H is called the ring general,
you know, and he's given the, he made his way
because he's really good.
He's really good in the ring.
I mean, he was, it reminded me of the way
that I used to work with Rip,
because Rick could puppet those people
and work slow and be mean and have those people, you know, suspend that disbelief and bite in and get hot
and Triple H can work the same way at slow pace and then feed somebody for a comeback. It's very similar.
I mean, you were also in the ring with Hogan. I mean, we mentioned Kurt Angle. You beat Kurt Angle.
I was in the ring with St. I helped work out with him. I was in the ring with Hulk Hogan at WrestleMania 21 to have my WrestleMania moment.
It's tough to say what's the best of them all.
Did you ever think that Eugene could be, I mean, you were a tag team champion,
but did you ever think Eugene could be a singles champion?
I don't know.
I didn't know.
I mean, the thing is that Eugene didn't need it.
Yeah.
You know, I mean, I could have been.
They could have written some story.
But, you know, Eugene to me was the character, much like a George Steele or a bushwhackers
that wrestle for three or four months and then come off and come back.
And, oh, my gosh, hey, they're back.
And just a little rotating comedy, a Santino type role.
Do you think you could come back again now, like maybe a surprise appearance of the Royal Rumble?
My lawyers told me that I cannot confirm or deny that I'm currently in contract negotiations to come back for a limited number of dates.
I think what's really interesting is it took you a while to find the Eugene character and hone it in and, you know, and it looked the way that it did on TV.
Was it hard on the flip side to find Nick again?
No, because that's just, I mean, that was, but actually, they're both very natural.
Eugene is a sense of, like I said, that raw, naive, youthful innocence.
Yeah.
No, just trying to hone in on that and what was right and what's right and what's wrong in the purest sense.
And then I feel like I'm pretty much the same way, although I have to sometimes come out of that
that little bubble of camelot where it's magical.
So there, you know, a lot of you,
Gene is really just who you are?
For me, I feel like if someone is going to do a gimmick in wrestling,
I'm not going to say actors,
because I don't know the process they would go through,
but it has to be some part of you that you can really immerse yourself in.
The guy that, like I could say,
you're going to be a fireman and you're going to be a bank robber,
but if these people don't know how to do these characters,
it's not going to be, it's not going to work.
But if you know everything about snakes,
if you're a snake hand, learn a snake breeder,
that might be the guy to put the snake with, you know?
Yeah. Except in that example, Jake, the snake, I think, didn't like snakes at all to begin with.
Regal's the one that should have brought out a snake after a while.
Is that right?
Because he's got, in his house, he's got a big herpid querying with all these snakes.
And he had some in Colorado.
We wrestled in Colorado.
We went to the snake farm because they were breeding them.
And I'm holding, I'm freaking out.
And he's like, he's like loving it.
He's the one should have come running the snake.
Wow.
What did I think of that before?
What would you say is the best advice that you got in your wrestling career?
I don't know.
I mean, because it was like an education.
It wasn't like one piece of advice.
It was like slowly to help us learn,
he would do something that we knew we were going to mess up.
And then he would blow off the handle and get mad and come back.
And he'd pull me aside.
Sometimes we wouldn't pull other guys aside.
He pulled me aside and say,
this is what you did wrong.
You should have done this.
You should have done this.
Do you know why?
okay. And then the fact that I could generally only make a mistake once, I could learn it,
was then, you know, I just kept getting better and kept getting better.
It was something I felt. I don't know.
With how over Eugene was and it was just such a lovable character.
Did you think that there was ever any reason that you would be released from WWE?
I mean, I don't know.
I wasn't thinking about it.
But I guess because at one point I lived in Louisville.
I moved to Phoenix for a couple years as I was Eugene,
and then I was phasing back into a coaching job at OBW,
so I'd move back to Louisville.
So, yeah, I was intending on moving into the coaching side of it,
which I did that eventually at the Performance Center.
So I think I've had maybe 12 to 14 total years working for them.
Wow.
You were a trainer at NXT, right, in the Performance Center for a year.
When they moved from FCW to Orlando to the Performance Center,
I was in the first group.
I was one of the coaches, and I was coached for maybe a year and a half.
Why didn't that end up lasting longer?
I don't know.
I just know that I probably wasn't putting out my best performance
because I was in an environment where I was uncomfortable.
And I was uncomfortable because, I mean, these were people that I looked up to
that I was in there with.
Terry Taylor, there was dusty roads, there was triple age sitting next to me,
and I would get nervous sometimes.
And I might just be quiet and assess the situation,
but I'm not really putting out a lot.
And I feel like in that environment, you've got to be on and going.
And I would kind of sit back and I would make, I knew what was going on.
And I was aware.
I was just, my mouth shut.
My ears were open.
Right.
And that might not have been the situation for it.
I love the coaching aspect of it.
Didn't necessarily care for the producer.
aspect of it. But it's a great education to see the tools that these guys are given now
and what they're expecting of WWE superstars today, you know, the fact that I got to teach that
and coach that and I still got the manuals and all that. So I know what they're looking for.
I feel like I do. But it's an ever-changing process. So this was 2014, 2015. Who were some of
the talent that you were in there with? So Ron Stroman,
started in my class. Chad Gable started in my class. I worked with Charlotte. I worked with
Sasha Banks. Right before I got released is when Finn Baller and Kevin, Kevin Owens were hired,
and they were sent to the Performance Center. And like the first month that somebody comes
to the Performance Center, they generally don't let them participate in, well, when I was there,
When I went we did, they didn't let him go in ring.
The first month was get yourself settled, find out what's going on,
and then we'll get you in there.
And so Kevin Owens is sitting ring side because he's just watching the class.
I sit down next to him, talking to him.
And he said, like, I think the first time he ever wrestled was for Jacques Groucho.
I think is what he said.
But he kind of, he acted like somebody else really helped train him.
But I think he's, for some reason, the first show was Jack Rizzo.
So a couple days ago by, come back, I said,
they got a character for you.
They're going to bring you in as the new Mountie.
And he was starting to cry.
I mean, you can't let him do that.
I can't do that.
I think, no, it would be great.
It's going to be awesome.
You're going to, you're going to, the red thing.
They might even bring Jacques in for you.
It's going to be great.
And he was beginning to panic.
Nages to say it didn't happen.
I mean, what do you do in those situations where you're pitched a character that maybe
you don't believe in or maybe you don't want to do?
You do it.
Yeah.
You went wholehearted.
You know, how can you do it?
can I make the best of what I'm given?
You can always say, I'm not going to do that.
You have that option, but unless you've got a really good reason, that generally is,
okay, who can do it?
I can.
I'm overprepared.
Right.
So it's a matter of, yeah, it's a matter of who's willing to step up at that time.
There was a story about a particular WrestleMania where there was a match, we need to cut a match,
and we need you guys to go four minutes.
I can have a match in four minutes.
Okay, who can?
I can.
Okay, go.
Wow.
That was it.
One guy was in and one guy was out.
This reminds me a little bit of this story.
I just had Chava Guerrero on,
and he was telling me the story of how Kerwin White was pitched to him.
And he's like, I didn't really want to do it,
but I wanted to be on TV.
And I knew that this character would be on TV.
So it's like, I'm going to take it,
I'm going to do it.
I'm going to do the best that I can with it.
You've got to admit yourself wholeheartedly
and just accept the character and make it for what it is.
Which is exactly what you did with you, Jane.
Yay.
There's a little bit of Eugene right there.
Yeah.
There's definitely still some Eugene and you for sure.
Yeah.
What you're going to do, brother?
So now that you know what WWE is looking for,
when you're training your own students now,
how does it affect the training that you have?
Well, like I said,
there's been several guys that have come to me and says,
you know, I want to get a tryout.
So, okay, I try to prepare them to be.
most ready for that situation.
I feel like sometimes the trial process is made to make people feel uncomfortable to see
how you react to that stress.
So sometimes you can't replicate the environment, but we can try to replicate the cardio level
at what you need to be.
So that's, I've heard that that's one of the biggest things about the tryouts is the cardio.
It's intense.
And you're probably not even wrestling for the first several days, are you?
I think some of them, even the guys aren't even trained.
So they don't wrestle at all.
Like some of the trials, I don't know for sure again.
I'm not there currently.
Yeah, yeah.
They had some tryouts for guys that had wrestled,
and they had some tryouts for people that had not wrestled at all.
Yeah.
Wow.
So there's a lot of running and exercises and trying to do roles.
And you get some of these big guys that aren't, you know,
haven't perfected how to do a role.
And you're trying to hustle and through it,
it becomes painful.
agitating and
yeah
with the
current situation
going on
right now in the
world what does
Midwest
All-Pro look
like with
COVID
well
South Dakota
I think
I believe
we only have
I could be wrong
400
480,000 people
in the state
Sioux Falls
has 172,000
people
in the city area
so there's not
a lot of
people although
we are now a
hot spot
they have not
yet shut
anything down
even when
the shutdown
We had to stop wrestling.
All the lives of bands had to stop.
But as it slowly picked back up, our Republican state has been fairly open.
So although it has hindered attendance,
necessarily only for about three months hindered putting on shows and training.
I counted the other day.
I've been to a lot of different states,
and I counted the other day.
I've been to 33 states.
And the Dakotas are not included there.
Well, this is a rushmore state.
Well, this is the thing.
So if I made a trip to South Dakota,
what do I need to see when I'm there?
So I'll probably come in a July
and you come out to see them out Rushmore.
You know, if you want to go to Sturgis,
there's always Wall Drug,
which is like promoted for miles and miles.
Come to Wall Drug.
But then, of course,
you'd have to come to Sioux Falls,
the best little city in America.
And you'd have to come to a Midwest
All for Wrestling show.
And we have generally,
July show is probably one of our bigger shows,
usually outdoors in the sun.
All right, this is it.
Next July.
I'll be there.
I'll book it.
Okay.
Speaking of Mount Rushmore, I get asked this question a lot,
and I'm curious to hear what your Mount Rushmore for wrestling is.
We've done this before, right?
Okay.
Here we go.
I feel like you have to put Vince on there.
Ooh.
And that throws everything off because everybody thinks through the four guys,
but you've got to put Vince on there.
You can't not put Vince on there.
I feel you've got to put Hogan on there.
Yeah.
And then it's like, for me, it's Rock Austin Sina.
Oh, wow.
I mean, like Rock Austin Sina for getting over and drawing attendance.
And, you know, if we're in a business to make money, those guys have drawn the money.
Wow, that's a great point.
Yeah.
I always leave the Rock as number, and Rock's my favorite wrestler of all time.
I always have him as number five.
He's the honorable mention because I argue that Rock has become a bigger star since wrestling.
Rock only wrestled for like seven years or something like that.
He's become a bigger star since wrestling.
and then I replaced that spot with The Undertaker.
Always difficult decision.
I mean, that's the thing.
It's never to be a bigger construction,
so we can actually start adding heads like Donald Trump to do.
I have heard that the actual Mount Rushmore is smaller than you would think it is.
Yeah, it's built into them.
It's beautiful, but it's not as big as you would think.
I've heard on some historical reenactments that,
The whole sculpture was bigger, but they got kind of started,
and I don't know if they ran out of funding or the guy died or they just switched.
I mean, it's not Rushmore.
It's like Grand Canyon.
You look at it, you're like, wow, this is amazing.
And then you go, what's the Grand Canyon?
That's like the Chevy Chase scene, right?
You're like, well, there are.
Well, the badlands.
Also, the badlands are there around the Sturgis and Deadwood.
You have to go to Deadwood.
It's almost like country western Las Vegas.
It's phenomenal there.
Um, that's definitely a place to go.
Well, I look forward to going there in 2021.
I will be, I will be heading in.
I've been many places, you know, I've been to 21 countries.
I've been to all 50 states.
I've been to Kalamazoo, Kathmandu, Timbuk, 2, Rancho, Cucamonga, and Lake Tiddy Cockon.
And I've learned two things, two things.
Number one is, you play with yourself in public sometimes.
I don't know the rest of the dose going to be.
And number two, the best little city in America is Sue Falls.
Yeah.
Stop pro!
Definitely didn't think we'd be getting a promo for Sioux Falls.
This is fantastic.
Somebody's got to do it, right?
I love it.
I was hoping we would get more publicity when our truth said Sioux Falls City.
Oh.
They weren't even in the area, I believe, but people do confuse Sioux City, Iowa, and
Sioux Falls, South Dakota.
Do you think your WWE career might have looked different if you hadn't had some of the issues
that you had behind the scenes?
Well, absolutely, absolutely.
You know, right at the beginning of the wellness program, I failed the test, and it got me fired pretty much right away.
Like now, before when I was on the road, it was three fires, but, you know, they had sent me to rehab when I came back and I don't know, it was a difficult road.
It was a different time, but then when I got rehired in 2009, I probably wasn't in the shape that I should have been in.
and so when I came back, it was like, ah, we'll pass.
Do you think when you got rehired in 2009,
the way you were booked was maybe sort of like a punishment
for what you had done before?
I wasn't booked.
It was just it.
I mean, they hired me, and I showed up.
And I said, oh, well, Vince didn't like the way Eugene looked, so it was out.
And that was it?
Yep.
Wow.
Well, then they put me on, they called me, they called me and said,
We want you to come to Canada.
So I had to go to the rest of the Calgary kid who was Ms.
And then like Eugene had been on TV in whatever three years, two years,
just bring you back for a contract on the pole match that he loses.
That was it.
Wow.
When you were sent to rehab, were you ready to go or did you just kind of go
because you know it's what you had to do to save your job?
It's a tough decision.
Looking back now, I don't know if I should have went or because I had learned that,
You know, many people have a ton of problems, and I had a problem, and some people are sicker than others.
But it was just financially.
I ended up, you know, quitting all that much later, going to a different doctor in Louisville,
who helped me through taking Suboxin, which was a godsend.
And I came off a bit much easier than trying to go there, and then it hurt me financially, absolutely.
because you weren't with WWE?
Well, even when I was, I wasn't making the money.
And then when I came back on TV,
they would bring me to TV.
And it was a long time before they really kind of got me going again.
And I never really picked up.
So what, I mean, what actually happens when you go to rehab?
Is it like cold turkey?
Like, you're done?
You can't do this anymore?
For people who are the worst addicts,
the basic prescription is, you know, don't do drugs.
Don't drink.
Don't gamble.
If it's whatever that vice is,
whatever emotionally that we have inside of us,
that the symptom is coming out as me being obsessed on something,
people who do hoarding in their houses,
people that do hoarding,
it's the same kind of obsession of, you know,
and it's just out of control.
They say it's a disease.
Some people say it's a choice,
but it's a difficult thing that people live with.
I mean, I'll still have a glass of wine today,
but back then we were also wrestling really hard,
and I'd had a knee surgery.
I had torn patella.
I was trying to come back from that.
So I was heavy, you know, to taking the opiates and the pain pills to cover the pain.
And that's when they put me in an angle with Kurt Angle.
So I'm trying to keep up with him on one leg after surgery.
So I probably didn't allow myself long enough to heal.
And it just kind of, I was trying to mask it by taking whatever it is that I took, you know,
just the opiates that they were prescribing.
This was also in the pre-education on opiates era.
Well, this was back in the people that are now filing lawsuits against those companies
for the doctors pushing them, which at the time, I mean, that was the answer.
You're here, take this.
Yeah.
Little did you know, you're trying to keep up with Kurt Engel, who was doing the exact same stuff.
If you watch our match at SummerSlam, you can tell that I'm not 100% because he's like
shoot me across the ring and I can't even run.
I couldn't keep up with him, but I couldn't run at all.
But crazy that you're trying to keep up.
up with Kurt Angle in the ring, who's, you know, one of the greatest wrestlers of all time,
you probably weren't even aware that he also was addicted at the same time.
I think everybody in the back was aware of what was going on, because it was always one locker room.
Nobody really dug into anybody's business, but the guys that kind of were familiar would end up
paling around every now and then or whatnot.
I'm sure there's some people that were very quiet about whatever they did or didn't do, but
because we were a crew
that we were together all the time
for a long time
and we just got to know each other
and you seem to be in a much better place
now in spite of all this
well I mean and like
I don't know that I was in a bad place then
I was just having to do what I had to do
to keep following the dream
in my opinion
yeah
yeah
then it was a idiot passed away
and then
The scene was, see what happened was, we were in England, I believe we were in Manchester at the hotel.
I'd taken some sleeping medicine, got my, the food sent up to me, so I had the tray, and I'm going to set the tray outside the door, and the door shuts on me, and I left my key in there.
I'm in my boxer shorts.
So I have to go down to the front desk.
Well, the bar was right there, and everybody was in the bar.
All the fans, all the agents,
Triple H is in the bar,
and I'm halfway to it and just collapsed, and that was it.
So they put me out a luggage cart,
taking out an ambulance.
And after that, then it was like, okay,
you have to go talk to the,
you have to have a vacation.
Wow.
But then shortly after that is when they started the wellness policy.
Right.
It's a much better thing,
but it's also education.
We know that opiates can lead to a certain end.
but also education on now we have to train our bodies differently.
We can't try to be a bodybuilder and wrestle.
We have to try to work out to be durable
and to take the amount of shock that the body's going to have to take,
which is what they do at the performance center.
They train very differently than back then when I was coming up
because everybody wanted to be a bodybuilder.
Yeah.
That's not necessarily the best way to train.
Right.
I feel like if you weren't in your boxers,
this situation would have been very different.
What do you do, man?
You know, makes for a good story.
It's a hell of a story.
And then so the wellness policy was mostly because of what happened with Chris Benoit, right?
No, no, Chris was still alive.
Eddie.
Eddie passed away.
Right.
And then I got the issue in England.
And then shortly after they started it.
Yeah.
but I mean it's it's been taken care of now.
It made the locker room better because I mean,
and it's not like there was a huge problem there,
but as many people learned,
opiates started to take effect on everybody in society.
And it just,
it was just a pandemic that we're in now,
you know,
that we've created.
Right.
It's unfortunate because it was at a time when doctors would push that
and it was okay,
it was okay, you get from the doctor
and then you start to figure out, you know,
the stuff.
Yeah.
It might be a little bit more dangerous
than we're giving it the liberty of.
Right. How much wrestling do you watch now?
I probably watch wrestling every day, but I'll watch old wrestling because I want to watch
to see what the guys that I liked back then did in certain matches or I watch, you know,
I want to work this week in training on being a vicious heel. So I'll watch Arne Anderson or Fit
Finley, a lot of that. I want to work on being a baby face. So I'll watch Brad Armstrong,
non-stop, which is awesome. You know, I've got a guy that,
he's going to wear a Japanese mask.
So I'm going to watch Great Muda
and guys like that to just kind of get a sense of things
that we might better draw upon.
The best ideas are stolen.
History doesn't repeat itself, but it rhymes,
I think, is the phrase I've heard.
This might be difficult to answer,
but if you had a go-to match that you were going to put on,
what's that match for you?
Well, you have the main event of WrestleMania.
I don't know.
I don't care who it's against.
Well, I'll ask my students when they come in.
I'll ask them, what's the greatest match of all time?
Everybody gives all their different answers.
And then I usually come back with what has drawn the most money.
If we're a business that's trying to make money,
we're going to find the greatest by the matches that have drawn the most money or the most people.
So you could say, you know, the most people in a building, most people, you know,
in an open arena, most people on pay-per-view, most people in attendance, most money, biggest
You know, biggest pay-per-view game.
There's a couple different factors, but there's been guys in history that have said that
Claire and Antonio Onoki drew 250,000 people in North Korea.
I don't know.
So what's the biggest draw then?
Is it Rock Hogan?
I think it was, if I'm not wrong, Triple H and Roman Rains in Dallas.
Oh, right.
Yeah, AT&T and Tate Stadium,
WrestleMania 32.
I could be wrong,
I think that,
that,
so we're going to,
one of those categories,
and one of those categories,
it exceeded everything else.
But Roxena also might have drawn the most people,
maybe before that,
or maybe they drew the most money.
I don't know all the facts.
Right.
I just know that if we're trying to make money,
if we're trying to draw people,
that's how we've got to define what we're looking for.
We've got to find our goal as,
as business part of professional wrestling.
The artist,
the performance part,
is something completely different.
Yeah, I guess at the end of the day, it's a business.
And you are looking at this definitely from a business standpoint.
It is.
But if people are going to be drawn on the performance,
you also have to be a good performer.
I liken live pro wrestling to being like a stand-up comedian.
If you go out there and you start doing your bit and people aren't laughing,
you have to be good enough in the room to find out what these people want to hear,
what they want to laugh at, and then be able to tell those jokes.
You have to be able to switch gears
because if you keep going with your material,
it's...
Yeah.
So what do you...
I mean,
what kind of advice would you have now
for people who are wrestling in arenas
where there are literally zero people in there
and there's no reaction to feed off of?
Well, I think it's a little bit different time now
because the pay structure for WB guys,
it might be a little bit different
with the network and less pay-per-views
and wrestling in front of no people.
If those guys are content with what they're making,
then go for it.
If you want to...
be that pro wrestling superstar that we all grew up watching,
the business is very different now.
You can still do it, but sometimes it's not as lucrative.
Yeah, it's definitely a different business
from the one that you grew up in, isn't it?
I mean, from when I watched it as a kid to when I got into wrestling,
to now it's a multi-billion-dollar media company
that tours the world and sells merchandise.
Well, that's on one side of things.
That's the WWE side of things.
But then you've got this whole other side of,
Impact Wrestling Ring of Honor or AEW New Japan that is not the multi-billion dollar media company.
Absolutely.
Like I said, like those places where people can make themselves stars, they can make whatever they want,
they're sometimes given a lot more leeway.
And I'm not going to say, I'm not going to say anyone else is probably not having fun.
Those guys are probably having fun.
Those guys are loving it because you can tell them the performance.
If you're out there and you're having a good time and whatever it is on your face and you're
into it, the people are going to be into it.
Yeah.
Guys, the people that are uncomfortable in the ring,
sometimes it comes out more times than not.
But those guys usually look like they're having a good time.
So the fans have a good time.
But you look like you're always having a good time
whenever we see you in the ring.
That's how you can do, right?
That's what it's all about.
Yeah.
I always say it's important to be grateful.
And in fact, I say, be great, be grateful.
And I want to end this interview.
I end every interview by asking you,
what are three things that you're grateful for?
in your life right now?
Oh, I'd have to say my health, although as I'm getting older, it feels like it's getting
limited, but definitely for my health, for my wife, and for the family around me that supports
me for Sioux Falls, absolutely for Sue Falls, because they've accepted this dream that I have
of running a pro wrestling territory.
They've taken a sin wholeheartedly, and, you know, just the life in which I've lived,
I'm thankful for that because it's been an incredible journey.
I don't regret anything.
Yeah.
Where can people find out more info about Midwest AllPro?
Midwest AllPro.
Midwest AllPro.com is a website.
At Midwest AllPro is our Twitter.
We got the Facebook.
We got the Instagram.
We have the YouTube channel, which I love YouTube.
So I run the Midwest All Pro YouTube channel,
and I run the Nick Densmore YouTube channel,
which I've got a lot of Nick Densmore matches.
And then Eugene is at U-G-E-E-S-E.
Densmore, D-I-N-S-M-O-R-E for the Twitter.
I do have an Instagram, but I don't use Instagram.
I got to a point where I'm out.
You're like, I've just listed off 10 other things.
I don't need to add one other thing to that.
When Instagram started, I was over social media.
You know what I mean?
And I think a lot of people grab Twitter and really like it,
and it's very successful, but I'm like, I just, I can't do another one.
I'll do Midwest All-Pro Facebook.
I do Midwest All-Pro Twitter.
my Twitter. I have a Facebook,
but I don't post a whole lot, but I don't want to do another one.
Nick, I want to say thank you for,
this has been a great conversation.
And I want to acknowledge you for taking a character and running with it.
Not everybody would have been able to do with that.
And not only did you run with it,
you made it a super successful character.
So I want to acknowledge you for that.
Well, thank you. I appreciate it.
It's been an incredible journey.
It was a magical time.
It has allotted me to keep performing wrestling
for a living, so I'm thankful for that.
Well, I'm thankful for this conversation.
So again, Eugene, Nick Dismore.
Thank you so much.
Thank you.
All right.
There we go.
Fascinating guy.
Fascinating story.
Hope you enjoyed this from that episode that aired in December of 2020, man.
The world was a lot different in December of 2020.
I don't just mean with pro wrestling.
Just the world in general, very different.
hope you enjoyed this conversation. I'm looking forward to sitting down with Nick in person and doing
this sometime, hopefully in the next few months here. The thing I love about Eugene is he's an example
like Hurricane. When you fully commit to the character and you are the character, rather
than just playing the character, people start to get invested in you. They see how authentic it is.
And that's why this worked. And that's why it worked so well. If you enjoyed this, tag us on social
media with a screenshot of this episode. He's at Eugene Dinsmore. That's the letter U, G-E-N-E-Dinsmore.
Eugene Dinsmore. I'm at Chris Van Fleet, and here's a quote from Neil Strauss. Because we're
talking about commitment here and committing to the character. I love this quote from
Neil Strauss. Fantastic author. Without commitment, you cannot have depth in anything,
whether it is a relationship, business, or hobby. Be great. Be grateful. We will see you on the next one
for some more insight.
It's an Ask CVV episode.
We're going to get deep into everything that's going on right now.
CM Punk's return.
Randy Yorton is back.
What happens at the Royal Rumble?
We will see you tomorrow for some more insight.
Jim Rome takes on sports.
Why?
Because I have a job to do.
With rapid fire takes.
So I don't want to hear from you lava pigs on this notion today.
No idea what you're talking about.
You're complaining more.
then you like to breathe air.
It's like you get up in the morning only to complain and cry and moan on social media
about things that you don't even understand.
He's the spitfire of sports smack.
Take advantage of it, but get up in here.
The Jim Rome Show podcast.
What's your beef?
Follow and listen on your favorite platform.
You've been warned.
