Insight with Chris Van Vliet - Shawn Michaels: Legendary Matches, Classic Feuds, NXT, Favorite Opponents, Mr. WrestleMania
Episode Date: September 18, 2025Grab a CVV Micro Brawler! - https://cvvmerch.comShawn Michaels (@ShawnMichaels) is a retired professional wrestler, 2-time WWE Hall of Famer, and the Senior Vice President of Talent Development, Cre...ative at NXT. He sits down with Chris Van Vliet in Las Vegas, NV to discuss the transition from wrestler to running NXT, what looks for in a young Superstar, the 2 defining eras of his in-ring career, his epic matches with the likes of The Undertaker, Ric Flair and Kurt Angle, whether he views himself as the greatest wrestler of all time, his thoughts on his return match at Crown Jewel, his mindset to become Mr. WrestleMania and more!Quote I'm thinking about: “If you really want to do something, you’ll find a way. If you don’t, you’ll find an excuse.” — Jim RohnPlease support our sponsors! PURE PLANK: The future of core fitness! Use the code CVV to save 10% on Pure Plank designed by Adam Copeland & Christian: https://gopureplank.com/?ref=tibcloux SUPERPOWER: Go to https://Superpower.com and use code CVV to get $50 Off your annual Superpower subscription. Live up to your 100-Year potential. #superpowerpod SEAT GEEK: Use my code for 10% off your next SeatGeek order*: https://seatgeek.onelink.me/RrnK/CVV2025 Sponsored by SeatGeek. *Restrictions apply. Max $20 discount PRIZEPICKS: Download the app today and use code INSIGHT to get $50 instantly after you play your first $5 lineup! TIMELINE: Go to https://timeline.com/insightto get 20% off your order of Mitopure! VUORI: Get 20% off your first purchase! Get yourself some of the most comfortable and versatile clothing on the planet at https://vuori.com/cvv ROCKET MONEY: Join Rocket Money today and reach your financial goals faster: https://rocketmoney.com/cvv MIRACLE MADE: Upgrade your sleep with Miracle Made! Go to https://trymiracle.com/CVV and use the code CVV to claim your FREE 3 PIECE TOWEL SET and SAVE over 40% OFF ZOCDOC: Instantly book a top-rated doctor today at https://zocdoc.com/insightFAST GROWING TREES: Get 15% off with code INSIGHT at https://fastgrowingtrees.com BONCHARGE: Use the code CVV to save 15% off your infrared sauna blanket at https://boncharge.com/cvv BLUECHEW: Get your first month of BlueChew for free with the code CVV at https://bluechew.com For more information about Chris and INSIGHT go to: https://podcast.chrisvanvliet.com If you have ever enjoyed any of these episodes, could I ask you to please consider leaving a short review on Apple Podcast or Spotify? 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Ladies and gentlemen, Chris Van Fleet.
Ah, yes, welcome back to another one here on Inside.
I'm CVV, Chris Van Fleet.
Thank you for hitting play on this episode.
And thank you for helping to make Insight,
the number one wrestling podcast on the planet.
Hit some sweet chin music on that follow button on Apple Podcasts or Spotify or wherever
it is that you like to listen to podcasts.
that way you won't miss out on any new interviews every Tuesday and Thursday and
Ask CVV every Friday.
What a big one we have today.
The Heartbreak Kid himself, Sean Michaels, is on the show.
And when you talk about the all-time greats, HBK is absolutely on that list.
We covered a ton during this interview.
We talked a lot about his career and the mindset that he had to be one of the best ever.
and we also talk about what he's doing now in NXT.
And he just has this amazing mind when it comes to wrestling.
And I feel so grateful that I was able to pick his brain a little bit,
extract some of that information.
And here's some of these amazing stories.
So I hope you enjoy this as much as I did.
Please snap a screenshot and tag us.
He's at Sean Michaels.
I'm at Chris Van Vleet.
And ladies and gentlemen, please welcome the one.
the only Sean Michaels.
You've had a lot of big wigs on, so.
Yeah, I'm honored to be a part of it.
I'm honored to have you on.
So thank you for making this happen.
Yeah, you bet.
Not a problem.
What a career you've had.
It's absolutely amazing.
And what you're doing now,
I feel like you're like really sinking your teeth into this.
Where did this conversation even begin for what you're doing now in NXT?
Well, I guess it depends on how far you want to go back.
I'll say this.
And again, I always, I don't, to be perfectly honest, way back in 1998, obviously,
when I left wrestling and thought I was kind of done, you know, my wife and I talked about,
again, I had the Sean Michael's Wrestling Academy, which I started.
And of course, I can remember not long after that, you know,
obviously my life changing a great deal off of the positive.
and begin thinking about, you know, the giving back process of all of that and being able to maybe one day have this facility.
Anyway, so you fast forward all these years later and, you know, it's not the way that I thought it would go, but sure enough, it ends up here I am.
again, in this, you know, wrestling environment and is in a way obviously giving back and,
I don't know, and giving back in the thing that I'm, I don't know, that at least comes natural to me.
So anyway, but so that's part of it.
That's, I guess, more of the spiritual side.
But honestly, I can remember when Hunter talked about NXT and, you know, just asking me to come by.
one time. And, you know, I had been to a couple events while I was retired. And, but I was in Texas
at the time. And again, thought it was fantastic. We went on a vacation to Florida, taking the family
out there. And they just happened to, you know, be doing a television show and Hunter was in town
and then come, you know, and wanted me to come down and see the performance center and be, you know,
just come in and see what I think. And when I walked through those doors,
that feeling just sort of came back.
And because I sort of, again, when I retired, just exited and wasn't around that environment anymore.
So when I came back in, it was just something that clearly was noticeable because when I went back to, again, the home we were renting and just, again, we rented a house for the, you know, for the week to go on vacation and stuff.
And I came back and my wife said, obviously it went well.
And I said, yeah, it did.
What do you mean?
And she said, I can just see the look.
And so we just got into this big conversation about, again, that conversation that I told you about in 1990.
And again, by that time it was 1999 when she and I first met and talking about that stuff.
But, and that's kind of the first time she revealed to me in all of my retirement.
She said that, well, I was surprised that you walked away when you did.
And how you just completely left it.
She said, I just, I always figured you'd go back and you'd do something with them.
But when you said you were done, you were actually really done.
And nobody was more surprised than I was.
And so we just, again, had a very, you know, awesome conversation.
my wife and I are, you know, we've lived our whole lives like that.
So our relationship started doing things that we feel, both feel and, you know,
have this unbelievable impulse and what we call it, you know, it's a calling in our lives.
And in a matter of probably three hours in this conversation,
we had made the decision to go back to Texas,
um,
pack up in three weeks and move our entire lives.
Florida. And that's what we did. And you've been there almost 10 years now, right? Yes. And I've been
there almost a decade now, yeah. Every single NXT superstar that I sit across from or anyone that
spent time in NXT, they all credit you for getting better. Not everybody who's great in the ring is
able to be a great teacher. How are you able to be a great teacher? So I'll say this. I don't know if I,
I don't know if I am a great teacher. That was probably the most chapter.
challenging thing about it when I came in first as a coach.
But I was very upfront with everybody.
This is kind of my, you know, it's one thing to, I don't know, to teach the basics and then
share your experiences.
So I think what helped me, I don't know, teach was being able to connect.
with these people on such a personal level, a relationship level.
And I don't know, I was kind of in their minds freshly out.
I was still relevant.
And I think that's one of the things that makes the difference.
I can, you know, there are times now as the years go on, we always, you know,
or at least I joke about it.
And because I joke about it because it's true.
I've been there now for 10 years.
The athletes now, they're so.
used to seeing me. I no longer walk on water. Now I'm just the guy that kind of yells at the
television and every now and then like, you know, again, gets in their face or tries to tell them
this or that. I'm the boss here and there and it's not quite the same. The things that I say
may not always carry the weight that it once did at the beginning from a coaching level, but it is
something that most of them, once they go up to the main roster and now they experience some of
those things that I was talking about, that's when it connects.
Now, so now a lot of the teaching isn't right there in the moment.
It's a couple months or a year down the road.
And then they walked back in the Performance Center and said, ABC, indeed, this happened.
And that's exactly what you talked about.
Are you telling me there might be people that are coming up through the system that
have never seen a Sean Michael's match?
Yeah, exactly.
That's absolutely.
Some of it.
Well, look, and look, some of them now with some of our athletes.
Yeah, I think there are a lot that may not even know who I am or what I did.
Well, that's silly.
Well, look, I think they probably, I don't know.
That would, that's, that is a guess on my part.
Everybody.
We've had some, certainly when they come to try out.
At bare minimum, they know your theme song.
Yeah, for sure.
Well, that's, yeah, who else?
I'm very thankful that at Lee, yeah, the theme song always works.
I connects with everybody.
You're not their boy toy.
Still one of the greatest, yeah, still one of the greatest songs ever, if you ask me.
and something that we were talking about the other day.
I'm one of the few guys that's never changed his theme song, and I never will.
It's so good.
Yeah, and at 60, it's hilarious to me that we're still doing it.
But that's the thing.
I feel like HBK, that character, even at 60, you can get away with it, which is, I don't know,
that's one of the things I'm most proud of because, again, nobody takes me, you know,
or that character that's seriously now.
And that was part of, you know, who he was.
My favorite line from your theme song will always be hands off the merchandise.
Well, again, I give Jimmy Hart so much credit for that.
When it first came out, I can remember hearing it and thinking like, oh, geez, when you, when you go singles and you pitch yourself as a single star, you kind of see yourself.
Everybody sees himself more as the action hero guy.
Kevin Ash always describes it as the guy that's flying the helicopter with a cigar in his mouth.
And, you know, the M-16 in his hand and the girl under his arm, you know, doing everything cool.
Yeah.
And my character obviously was not really close to any of that.
But then as I began to, you know, I got with Sherry and then began to embrace it and then just be able to find out who this.
was and the boy toy stuff that was in the song was so helpful in that and and helping me find
out, you know, who it would be and who HBK would eventually become. And so Jimmy Hart and,
and that song deserve so much credit for everything that I accomplished because it was,
it was the tool that I used to find that character. Do you remember the day being in the
studio actually singing those lyrics? I do. Um, uh, and I,
I just remember bits and pieces of it and just talking with Jimmy and telling him, I really,
I don't have a good voice.
My voice is so deep.
And I can't, I don't know, I can't get high pitches.
And even the, you know, the screaming at the beginning.
Is that you?
No, God no.
Okay.
No, for heaven's sake.
But it was just, I just, I don't even have really levels when it comes to singing.
And so, I don't know.
I was just very, and I was self-conscious anyway.
but, and he just, he was great.
He just said, don't worry about it.
We'll make you sound great, baby.
And so, and, you know, I think they did whatever it is they do.
And they don't have, obviously quite, they didn't have at that time, all the wonderful bells and whistles they have now.
So, but yeah, they did it, they did a great job.
And it was just such a, it was sort of icing on the cake when it goes from Sherry singing it to me singing it.
I don't know.
Again, just that whole process.
It's so ludicrous.
All of it. And I think that's what makes it, you know, so special.
Did you look at the lyrics and go, I'm not your point, toy?
It was just, that's what I'm saying. It was just so ludicrous. And it wasn't, it wasn't even,
like I said, I just, I can't express it enough. It was just not really where I saw
myself going. And, and I don't know. It was, I felt I could be more of who I maybe was
later on when I was 35, 36, again, with a little bit of grit.
And with, again, with the cooler-looking cowboy hat,
but it was, again, a little bit more of grit and toughness to him.
But that was, at that time, that just wasn't something I think I was going to pull off.
And I don't know, it was just so unique and different.
Because once I heard that song, that's when I began to then think about,
okay, I'm going to do this.
Who are two people that I can think of that I can connect with on that level that are this type of showman?
And it was it was Freddie Mercury and Elvis.
And those were the two people that I began to focus on.
And I don't know.
And that's what really got me to the point to where I could be comfortable out there.
Because I can't dance a lick.
I can't sing.
Even though I was playing this character, I had no game, as the kids say.
Really, when it came to girls and stuff like that, it was very shy.
All of that character is 100% based on a bunch of BS that I've never actually really had.
And in fact, a person that I, that majority of my life in one hand to kind of wish you were,
but I was never able to really pull that off in real life.
And so it just gave me a, I don't know, this place to be able to jump into.
to be this person that was, I don't know,
so unbelievably obnoxious and cool it into himself
that, I don't know,
and comfortable in his own skin
because I wasn't at that time.
Nobody had ring gear like you in the 90s.
Was that all just part of like these influences
that you were talking about?
It was.
That and Randy Savage,
I can remember, you know,
talking to macho man one time.
And Randy, again, it was just more about,
as I was going singles,
was more about kind of,
asking him about his, you know, his gear and the person that made his gear.
And Mott's was very, very sheltered in that.
He had his person and there was no way he was coming off that information,
but he just mentioned that he just had to, you know,
he wanted to have something new and fresh all the time.
It was still based around, again, the cowboy hat and his boots and stuff like that.
But he had a different look all the time.
and that's something that I took forward with me because I could see people doing,
you could have the one consistent sort of character-based look that you wanted.
But again, I just felt at that time I was not somebody.
I had to make sure I had everything.
I did not feel at that time if I had any hole in my game,
that was going to give them a reason not to use me or not to go with me.
So I didn't have the luxury of not checking every box possible because I was already somebody that wasn't really, I'm not one that they're looking to kind of go with.
You have all of this knowledge from decades of doing what you did in the ring.
And now what you're doing in NXT, how are you able to distill this down to people in the simplest way?
Like, where does that begin?
Well, it's me meeting them where they're at.
And I will say that's something that, and I apologize for probably not answering your question the last time, but on the coaching aspect, I try to meet them where they're at.
One of my biggest challenges, I recognize that now I do the unbelievable gift that I was given to be able to do this stuff.
So much of it came natural to me.
So much of it I didn't have to try to find or to do.
I also had the luxury of breaking in at a time when there were so many awesome guys in the territory days that were there for me when I was young to pass down all this knowledge.
And they did it to me early.
And I started working early to apply or listen to everything that they were saying.
But it's more about meeting them where they're at and finding out what's the best way I can convey what it is.
I'm looking to get across to them.
And a lot of it, I have to be careful of not going too far down the road.
They're not going to understand a lot of things like psychology.
Also, for instance, we just found out recently, again, we're out doing live events now.
But now not just the Florida loop because we've done those for, you know,
for as long as, you know, I can remember.
But now we're back out doing live events in different cities and different towns.
This is some of our town's first time ever.
getting out of the state of Florida with the exception of PLEs, which again, are their own sort of
aspect and live events. So we always talk about this. There's TV, there's live events, there's
PLEs. They're all kind of different. And all those performances have to be different.
And this feel and so many things that we say that they haven't had the opportunity to really
experience because we're in the performance center on a regular basis. And that audience is an audience
that is sort of they're playing their part on television and doing their role,
which they do in a great way more often than not.
But so the reception that they get in a, I don't know, Charleston, you know,
or an Augusta, Georgia and another place, they're all three different.
And this last time on the road, they all experienced that.
And it was something that threw them all off.
And they didn't really understand it because so many of the things that they do all the time didn't work.
And so those are aspects that once they experience that, I can now begin to, you know, associate with them on a level that we haven't been able to do it before.
This episode is brought to you by timeline.
Have you tried all the health trends, but you're still feeling tired, foggy, or off your game?
You are not alone, my friend.
It's time to go deeper.
We're talking way deeper because true health starts in your cells.
Timeline has the first ever longevity gummies powered by Mitopure.
A delicious, easy way to put more energy into your day.
These are the only clinically proven urolithine gummies for strength, endurance, and healthy aging from the inside out.
I recently turned 42, and I think a lot about what life will look like in my 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, 80s, I want to live into my hundreds.
And I understand that our body makes less and less energy as we get older.
But these really help to recharge the batteries.
I take them every single day, and I love how these gummies taste.
If you want to stay strong and energized now as you age,
then you have to try mitochondure gummies.
My friends at Timeline are offering 20% off just for you because you're listening right now.
Head to Timeline.com slash insight to get started.
That's timeline.com slash.
insight for 20% on.
Your cells will thank you.
Men, the only thing worse than losing your hair is waiting forever for it to grow back.
That's why you need Hymns.
You can start seeing your hair grow back in as little as three to six months.
Hymns provides you with convenient and quality access to a range of hair loss treatments that work all from the comfort of your couch.
Choose from personalized chewable, oral, spray and serum treatments to find what works best for you.
The process is simple and 100% online so there's no uncomfortable doctor visits.
You answer a few questions and a medical provider will determine if treatment is right for you.
If prescribed, your treatment is sent directly to you in discrete packaging for free.
HIMS has hundreds of thousands of trusted subscribers and they can help you get your confidence back to
with visibly thicker and fuller hair.
Start your free online visit today at Hymns.com slash insight.
That's H-I-M-S.com slash insight for your personalized hair loss treatment options.
Hymns.com slash insight.
Results vary based on studies of topical and oral monoxide and fanasteride.
Prescription product require an online consultation with a health care provider
who will determine if a prescription is appropriate.
Restrictions apply.
See website for full details and important safety information.
So much of pro wrestling is teachable, but then there's a whole other aspect that
it's just intangibles.
So what are some of the intangibles that someone either they have it or they don't?
It's not teachable.
I think when we talk about feel, those are things that and timing.
Timing and feel are probably, in my opinion, the two most important things in this business.
you can get by with so much more if you have those two aspects.
You can be a little short in athleticism.
You can be a little short in psychology.
You can be a little short in, I don't know,
overall knowledge of the game, so to speak,
if you have timing and a real feel.
Because those are things that, I don't know,
and I guess charisma plays a part in that,
but if you have timing and feel,
I feel like the charisma and all the other is going to sort of match that timing and feel.
That makes sense.
I know sometimes when I talk about this, I know I don't always make sense to a lot of people,
but I guess that's the level that I feel like I'm.
I think what's fascinating about it is like some of this stuff must come so easy to you
that it's probably difficult for you to articulate it because natural for you,
but you're trying to find the words to say it.
and maybe it's not the easiest thing to do.
Well, and then again,
and that goes back to where I,
that's where I was challenged as a coach.
Sure.
Because so much of it was natural.
And so when I was able,
and I don't get,
this is the biggest thing,
I don't get the opportunity now in this role
to do what I did with the talent before when I was coaching,
which is sit there and watch a match
and be able to tell them,
okay, now we've watched it.
I'm going to give you a couple,
uh,
thoughts and tips and advice.
Now I want us to go back and watch it again, but now we're going to watch it with our eyes closed.
And I just want you to listen to the crowd.
And because, again, we always talk about listening to them and feel.
And I know very well they say they understand, but I know that they don't.
Because unless you sit there and you close your eyes and you just do nothing but listen to the crowd, you know,
That's when you can begin to feel them going up.
You can feel having them and not having them.
And that doesn't mean they have to be making a lot of noise.
They can be making no noise, but you can still feel a buzz in the building.
And that means you have them.
And they have to physically feel those things.
And while they're out there in the moment, they just can't manage to do it, I don't think.
And so that's one of the sort of things that were, you know, whatever drills that we,
that I went through when I was coaching that I had this time to do that helped the light go on
for, for many of them.
And so, and I don't know how many people, again, that takes a long time and, you know,
to try to convey to people and try to get them to feel it and understand that.
And I don't know how many opportunities they get at that.
How long did it take you to learn that scope?
Well, look, it's something you never stop learning.
I think you just get better at it as you go.
I will say this.
I felt like I was pretty darn good at this stuff at about, again, I'm going to say two and a half years,
but not at a high level, if that makes sense.
I had everything that I needed.
Yeah.
At a very good understanding of it all at two and a half years, I think.
And then it was just really, again, getting better on all of those aspects of it.
And then you get to the point where you say you're good.
Oh, now I've really got a handle on this.
Then five years later, you say to yourself, I thought I did then, but now I do.
Then the third time you do it, you realize, okay, there's no end to this.
I'm just going to be able to get better at this.
And every time I think I know something, I recognize there's more to learn.
And the aspect of never, you never stop learning in this is the reality.
Did you have an inkling two and a half years in?
If I keep working at this and if I keep improving and getting better, I could be one of the greatest of all time.
No.
No.
That was, again, that's something that, you know, again, you'll regurgitate out of your mouth.
But it wasn't for me until I think 1995 that I felt like I had a real chance to be a main event type of individual.
It wasn't until 1995.
And I guess, I don't know, that was at a decade in.
So we're talking right after WrestleMania 10?
Honestly, that was the first time.
That was the first time that I really felt like.
Holy, I can do this stuff.
And there's a landscape now in the WWE that I can see the possibility of that happening.
How much of this was just raw talent and how much of it was just you working at it and putting the time in?
So, as I mentioned, I knew that I had a gift.
But the one thing, again, for all of my faults, for which,
which there were many, as we know.
There was never a time when I didn't work at it.
And that also came natural and easy for me.
So I think it's a combination of the two.
I've always, especially when it comes to this line of work,
I was always a hard worker.
Who instilled that in you?
I don't know.
I think probably my dad,
obviously. But again, I just, I really wanted to be good at it. And then once you have that
realization that, look how I could really be good. And then it's able to get bigger than that.
It's very easy to just, then you just, again, I go back to, I was driven already on the road,
you know, again, to getting to 1995.
And at 1995, when I really felt there was a real possibility,
it was really easy to just go and really, you know, work at it.
And none of it was hard.
None of it felt like it was laborious to me.
I enjoyed it.
So those are the things.
And again, like I said, that came from my father,
which was him telling me if you can make a living at some,
something you enjoy, you'll be so much better than so many of the people out there. I didn't know,
however, that if, you know, you could actually really love what you do and that drives you to,
again, to be, I don't know, at least overly passionate about it and, you know, and gives you the
ability, if you have that mindset. And I think that's what, more than anything, again, you've probably
read the whatever the book,
greatness or at least no of it.
But that's something that I think it's just either in you or it isn't.
A lot of people aspire to it.
But it's, again, it's something that,
because again,
I don't know that I'm great at my job now by any stretch.
But I still apply that same aspect.
I still have to recognize that other people aren't like that.
Taking a day off is absolutely.
natural to them and something they believe that they should do, which again, they should.
I've just, there's, I'll take days off, but there's never a time when this isn't going.
And it's always about this job and aspects of it and getting better and growing.
We, you know, we have success in NICC.
Everything's going well.
none of it's good enough for me.
And what would good enough look like?
I have absolutely no idea.
I'll say this.
For me,
NXT has been something that has,
and I mean this in a good way,
but I don't know that it's been an actual revenue driver for the WWW.
It's been an investment and a solid one and a great one.
I would love for it to be able to be both.
I think if I could,
if there was any goal that I would want to,
is that NXT is not over,
not only providing the future of the WW,
but it's also something that makes the WWE a profit.
I don't know if it's ever done that.
I would have to think with this new deal with the CW,
that's where it shifted over to being profitable.
I'd have to think that.
I think that it is or it's pretty close,
but those are aspects that,
I don't know.
I couldn't honestly say because that's a bunch of numbers.
And that would probably be a Nick and Hunter answer.
But even then, and then we're talking, again, then it's because there's kind of two worlds of,
okay, now it's even if we achieve that, it's going to move on to something else.
And then it's why I want to be, you know, I have this idea from numbers and stuff like that
that I would like to get to, whether it's television, whether it's live events, whether it's
PLEs, and it being a real official third brand. And I know that it certainly is in many aspects,
but I want it to be a third brand like the NCAA. Again, that something is an extremely
successful, you know, aspect of the WWE.
You seem to speak about this with the same passion that you speak about with your
in-ring career.
Like the same passion is there.
It's like you were able to transfer what you had there and like that focus over here.
Not everybody has a career after wrestling that looks like that.
Yeah.
Well, again, and that goes all the way back to.
Hunter inviting me to come the first time.
And again, one of those things that
it's funny because the two people in the world
that know me the best are my wife and Hunter.
And yes, I get the jokes that everybody
throws between the two of us.
But he just said, I just needed you to come in
and stick your foot in, and I figured the rest would take care of itself.
And my wife says, no, he did the slow boil to you.
You know what I mean? He put you in the pot.
And then before you knew it, you know,
you were in there boiling.
And she said, and that's what, that's what, that's what, you know, that's who you are.
And so, and it is.
And, and that's what I, I, this is, I was built to be doing this.
I have, again, we all are given gifts and purposes in our lives.
I 100% truly believe that I've found mine.
And I do.
I does like that.
I, you know, I love it.
And I'm fortunate.
And again, I know one of them sitting over there, but, you know, our head writer,
and Matt Bloom are two people that they go about their jobs the same way. So I have like-minded
people that, again, we live it all the time and we don't really take days off. Yes, we have lots
of people around us that aren't always the same. But if I just have a couple like-minded people around me
and I know that I work for guys that are like-minded, I know Hunter's the same way. I know Nick is the
same way. And that's what makes it so fun. That's what makes it a blast. We're all like-minded
in that respect. And I don't know. And it's, and it's an awesome thing. I get to wear a suit.
I kind of like look classy. I don't look like the trailer park trash that I really am.
And so, but I get to do a job that I really, really dig. And it makes the lives of a lot of
young people, I don't know, so much better. And that's, it's just so, it's just so it's just,
It's just got so many rewarding aspects to it.
And yes, I guess some of them can be self-absorbed at the same time, I guess.
But I don't know.
There's just so many upsides to it.
I can't see, I don't know, that much downside.
And so who wouldn't want to be a part of something like that?
Well, look at this wrestling epicenter that has now been created in Orlando.
Because it's not just the PC.
It's not just NXT.
It's also evolve in LFG and all the NIL talent,
and the collegiate athletes that are coming through there.
TNA has a lot of stuff going on there.
Something has changed in Orlando over the last 10-ish years.
And when people think about pro wrestling, Orlando's the place.
Yeah, well, and again, that is the brainchild of Triple H.
And it was just, it was a fantastic idea.
And look, there are times I can kick myself for not jumping in on the,
ground floor, but I think I needed my time away and I needed my time away with my family
and just kind of a rest from the wrestling business. But what he built and what he began there
was something that was, I don't know, I guess in some respect, people go, I just not like
some kind of crazy, genius idea. But more than anything,
else, it's the culture. It's the environment there that he instilled in that place. And to be
perfectly honest, one, as everybody knows, this was not my goal to be in this role, but it was just
to continue to help, you know, grow the performance center and continue to build on that culture
because it was so unbelievably positive. That was the thing that was really, you know, sort of the
the nail in the coffin for me, which was who doesn't want to be around this very positive atmosphere
and this positive atmosphere that's going to hopefully one day resonate in the WWE and be a culture
that's very different than the one that we all grew up in. And again, that's not to say it was
unbelievably horrific because we're all living incredibly blessed lives, but it was very different
and it was harder and it was rougher. And it wasn't as, I don't. I don't. I don't.
no, compassionate and understanding, it wasn't where it needed to be. And the W.W.E. has come to such a place
in, I don't know, the American, I don't, you know, we are, again, I guess, sure, we're not the NFL
yet, I guess. But it's in the cultural zeitcast. It is, you know, it is a part of, you know, of who we are.
It's been a part of, I don't run across anybody that doesn't have.
have an experience with the WW at some point in their life.
And that's really, really cool to be a part of something like that.
How many kids have said suck it because of you?
Yeah.
Yes, and ruining and, yeah, screwing up a generation.
I get to take credit for some of that, my own included.
But so anyway, yeah, there's, so it was hard not to want to be a part of that.
And more importantly, though, but it's to continue to build on that culture, continue to
give back to the business in a real positive way.
something, again, so when it comes to, again, evolve where we're reaching out now to the
independent wrestlers that are out there. We know how tough that scene can be. And we at least want to,
the ones that we see real promising, we at least want to help and at least let them know like,
hey, we see you. And there's an interest that you can continue to build on, you know, we don't
have the money right now to be able to get you in on a full-time basis, but we can help you continue to
build and learn on your craft, knowing that we've got an eye on you. And when that time comes,
you know, you can make that jump to being in Orlando on a full-time basis. LFG, which is something
that, again, I don't know, you know, with that, it's certainly it's a, it's a little bit of
a glimpse at what it is we do there in the performance center, but it's an hour show and it
doesn't have the ability to be as thorough as we are there, you know, in Orlando. And
And of course, NXT and I don't know, in the crossover with AAA and TNA, as you mentioned,
we just want to make, yes, the WWE is the global juggernaut that it is, and we always want
that to be the case.
I guess I'm not going to at least try to sit here and BS everybody about that.
We are absolutely number one, and we want to stay that way.
And we also want to become, again, more ingrained, I don't know, in that same.
culture that we're talking about from an American, and not just from an American standpoint,
but a global standpoint. But we also want to grow this industry as a whole. And if it's a
partnership with AAA or with TNA and reaching out to some of these independent people,
we're going to do that. And that's something that's unlike what the WW has done in the past.
And so I'm honored to be a part of that. And again, to try to help a number of people, you know,
do the same stuff that I got to do, but be able to do it on a global level.
It's clearly what everybody wants when everything's said and done.
The United States Soccer Federation present the U.S. Soccer Podcast.
My name is David Goss, and I'm joined by my co-host, Megan Clemenberg.
And now we're giving people an inside look at the World Cup.
Times ticking.
I think you can feel the intensity.
All the guys are wanting to really stake their claim, and they want to be on that World Cup roster.
There's no doubt about it.
Hosting the World Cup on the home soil.
comes with its pressures, but we're just really excited just as the people are.
The U.S. Soccer podcast, presented by Henko.
Follow and listen on your favorite platform.
When I look at your career in the ring, it reminds me a little bit of Kobe Bryant.
He had a Hall of Fame career is eight.
Hall of Fame careers 24.
You had a Hall of Fame career up to 1998, a Hall of Fame career from 2002 on.
How do you look at those two different eras of HBK?
Well, sure.
before and after.
One, from a personal standpoint,
obviously we see that we know the difference
and we know whatever it is you want to call it
for the back injury, after the back injury,
you know, before saved after saved,
whichever way, troublemaker, much easier to deal with.
Honor to have had both
and both serve their purposes, certainly in my life.
I always tell people, of course,
I would love to go back and to have had the opportunity to do the first part different.
However, I don't know, I'd be lying, I guess, if I didn't say that I don't know where I'd be at today if I didn't go through that.
And I don't know that I'd, I don't know how, I don't know how successful I'd have become had I not been that way.
I was just so, yes, a lot of it people look at as very negative,
but I didn't think I had any other chance if I didn't push that way.
Probably overly paranoid, I don't know, whatever you should want to call it.
I just didn't think I had the luxury of what everybody else did.
And I don't know that that's fair, so don't get me wrong.
I'm not trying to justify.
Do you mean like anything that I didn't?
Because you weren't as big?
Sure.
I think, sure, everything stems from that.
Everything stems from an insecurity within myself about who I was.
None of it had to do with the ability.
Because look, a lot of times in this job, especially when you're young, you say, I'm good enough.
We make applications to this line of work like you do in footwork.
or basketball.
If I can do A, B, C, and D, I ought to be the highest paid.
I ought to be able to do this.
I'd be able to do that.
Our job isn't like that because it's not what those are.
And it was very hard to get that through my incredibly thick skull at that time in my life.
I think on paper I was better than 99.9% of the people that were in the rest of
ring.
That's irrelevant.
You know, it's not totally irrelevant and know it, not like it doesn't mean anything,
but it, you know, again, whatever it is you want to say, again, like there are a lot of
people that get a kick out of saying, you didn't draw money, he didn't do this, he didn't do
that.
I can't argue with that.
Didn't you main event five WrestleMania?
I did.
And, but I can also, you can also say I made more money after I came.
back and drew more money after.
I don't know.
And again, like I said, there's all sorts of caveats.
And that's one of those things again in that book.
You know, greatness is very kind of, you know, the times, you know, fads, trends, different
times.
Who's the best basketball player of all time?
Is it LeBron James or is it Michael Jordan?
You ask somebody, if I ask somebody that's under 30, they're going to tell me it's LeBron
James.
You ask me and I'm going to tell you that it is Michael Jordan.
Jordan and nobody will ever convince me, you know, differently. But it's, it's never going to get
proven and get, and same with mine. It's never going to get proven. And I can probably tell you,
I don't know how much now Michael Jordan or LeBron James cares about that. I know Sean Michaels doesn't.
I'm honored to be in the conversation. Who cares after that? But if you'd have asked me that at 28,
the answer would be totally different.
It would mean a lot to me.
And that was the biggest difference again.
It's just,
and it was,
it was more about,
you know,
perspective and getting my priorities straight
and understanding that there were,
there are things that are bigger
than this line of work.
And how can I be great at all of them?
And,
or at least have the mindset of being great at all of them,
but doing them in a way
that I can also be proud of doing them.
And I think that was,
the biggest part of the change. Do you think when you look at somebody else's career as a whole,
that there's anybody who's objectively better than you were? Yeah, well, look, I don't, I don't know.
I guess I would say that I, I know that I thoroughly love being in there with so many of them.
I think, because ours is kind of a joint aspect. And so I don't know. I had great chemistry
with so many people,
but I think I had great matches with Angle.
I had great matches with Hunter,
had great matches with Taker,
had great matches with Jericho.
Heck, I had great matches with Jeff Jarrett,
numerous other people.
And I'm sure I'm forgetting some people.
What about Brett?
Yeah, I had great matches with Brett.
But again, I don't know.
I just, I can't express it enough in that
none of those things are really relevant.
I think I was great at what I did,
and I think other people were great
what they did as well. They're just different in so many ways. And again, it's, you know,
greatness is more a mindset, I think, than anything else. And I don't, if you, if you have that
for your goal, I think it's incredibly productive and I think it's incredibly positive. But if it's
something that, you know, you, I don't know, you base every aspect of your being around it,
certainly for me at one time, it wasn't a healthy thing for me to do.
do until I was able to do it in a way that I began to apply it to every aspect of my life,
whether I achieved it or not.
I think everybody knows you've got to turn it up for WrestleMania, but nobody put it into
another gear like you.
You're Mr. WrestleMania for a reason.
How were you able to flip it into that gear in a way that nobody else was able to?
I would imagine it's probably because that was the one.
On all of them, I gave a lot of thought to, insight to work on.
This WrestleMania aspect bordered on probably a pretty close, dangerous obsession.
It was something that even, again, when I got myself together, I always comment that, yeah, my family knew that about three days away, I would just go into this other place, this other mind space.
and they always wondered like, why do you bring us?
Why do you bring us when come Friday night, you just tune out?
And I had to explain to them, it's just your presence.
I just need, I like having you there.
I don't have to be talking and engaging with you, but having you there, I can feel you, and that makes a difference.
and but because there of times and I've never sort of called anybody out because I there's so many
people that whether you know they go on a podcast oh we just called it out there oh we just did
this we just set it up here oh we just kind of did this we would not we would not know it might
have been for them not for me I went over every little thing went over every possible scenario
and over every aspect of could happen might happen if it does happen.
For every match or just WrestleMania?
Everything.
Well, yes, especially for WrestleMania.
And that's what I'm saying.
That was the difference between WrestleMania and the other ones was the amount that I would do that.
You sort of go TV, PLE, and then WrestleMania.
And there are just different levels that I would have of application of
again, bordering on obsession.
And WrestleMania was clearly something that I was weeks in advance going through, thinking about.
And again, I've told the story with Rick where, again, it was, you know, many days out.
That might have been a week out and waking up in the middle of the night and just having this, you know, whatever you want to call it,
flow of consciousness about the end of the match.
And this, again, what it ended up being.
And I was writing it down and coming to the end and again, the little, it's like, it's,
it's stuff that sounds like it's a movie scene and the little tear drops on the paper.
And I'm like, oh my goodness.
And I see that.
And I think to myself like, oh, I don't know if this is great or if it's, I'm the biggest
wuss in the world.
You know, who thinks about pro wrestling like that?
But the easy answer was I do.
I do.
And I don't know.
And I did when I was a kid.
And then as a grown man, I was at a place in my life to where I was able to sit back and see this picture.
And I was able to talk to my buddy in high school who, again, was another.
person and he's just sharing with me like, gosh, would you have ever imagined when you and I were
sitting there at my parents' house watching Rick Flair on championship wrestling, I'm the next
boy, that you'd now be having his last match at WrestleMania. And those types of things and being
able to put that in perspective. And so all those thoughts in my head and trying to go to sleep
and then all of a sudden this comes of it. And again, it turns out to be a love story.
And how can you not be romantic about pro wrestling?
Well, that's, it is.
And that's, that's what it was trying to prove.
And thank goodness again, there was a movie, you know, that you can, you know, same thing about baseball.
But for me, it was pro wrestling.
And it was my hope that it wasn't just mine.
And thankfully, again, it did.
Thankfully, it moved Rick and it moved Michael Hayes enough for them to go like, you know,
let's.
But it's also the production there.
Like the camera cuts to you.
the exact moment.
I'm sorry, I love you.
Wide shot, sweet chin music.
And him, and him, but, but it,
but it was real that day.
And it was real that week for Rick.
Because he was, there was,
he was, he was,
weeping the entire time and almost the entire match.
But especially at that part,
he knew it was the end.
You know, he knew it was the end of the match.
And, and, and I know people, again,
they'll even say, oh, you're going to wrestle again.
Not at that moment.
Not at that moment.
Everybody was so invested in that because for that moment in time to us, it was real.
And that's what's the difference between, again, you know, you go back to all the way to maybe to your first question.
And that is about the teaching and the coaching.
Those are some of the things.
I don't know.
Only the talent of today or the talent of tomorrow that when they come up, I don't know how many of those things will be real for them.
I don't know how many of them will have this love affair with what we do like we did.
I say my generation or that I do.
But that's not, again, that's not for me to decide.
I still teach or convey or coach, run, whatever word it is to describes what it is I do.
I still do it with that aspect in mind.
And I still have moments.
I was fortunate to have one just the other day.
with Trick Williams to where we we meet on a very human level.
And I'm able to step outside of the boss and all that.
And it's just, you know, Michael Hickenbottom talking with, you know,
metric belton and about things that are bigger than this business.
And hoping that that will move him in a way that helps him in his career.
So I don't know.
Again, as with everything, I do it.
with every ounce of my being in the best way that I know how.
And that match that night with the age, just like with Taker.
We're the ones that, you know, all of, you know, all of your heart,
you know, the fullness of your heart was into it.
And it's hard not to, not, you know, it's just hard for it not to go well.
I'm glad you brought that up because I don't know if anybody had a better three-year
WrestleMania run 24, 25, 26.
Rick Flair, Undertaker, Undertaker.
Three amazing matches.
Which one of those meant the most to you?
I always, so I guess the political answers,
they all mean a lot for different reasons.
But if I'm to be objective,
I think it's 25, the one in Houston,
because that's the one that everybody talks about.
That's the one that gave me the ability to say, I think I'm ready to walk away.
It's time.
That was the one that felt so good to me that I could look across the, again, the car to my wife and go,
that might be the one I needed to end it on.
And she, you're like, seriously?
And I said, yeah, I just felt complete after that one.
knowing full well there probably has to be another one but that was when I knew it was time to start
I don't know I don't think about it talk about it and be good with it I mean that and and
and that's the I didn't know it at the time but that's the biggest aspect of it that's why
that match is special in a different way I knew not only that it was I was coming
to the end, but there was such peace with it. And no matter how it was going to happen,
that peace was going to continue. Because that's the part that's hard for everybody. I've watched
so many people. And I think that's what I'm most thankful for. It wasn't difficult for me,
and it never has been. How'd you know it was time to say goodbye? I don't know. Again, just that
match was just, I don't know, it was, maybe it was the culmination of,
that match with Rick and then it's going on to the,
and at that time I didn't know it was going to be Taker again, of course.
I don't know.
I just, I felt whole after that.
There was just, there didn't feel like there was anything left to do.
What more do you do except more of the same?
And again, I guess that's fine.
But then you're doing it for so many other reasons.
And none of those have been why I've ever done this.
even in my worst when I was complaining and bitching about money or spots or places and titles and anything.
It was still never really about the financial side of it.
It was more about the work of art I was doing.
Again, I don't know that I conceptually knew that at the time,
but as I got older, it was just more about, I don't know, knowing what this,
finished picture look like.
And at the end of that match, I felt so comfortable with where it was.
I felt like the only thing left really was to, I don't know, sign your name on it.
That's why that again, that's why again, it drives everybody nuts.
That's why that last one, whatever in Saudi doesn't, doesn't do anything, doesn't have an
effect on me one way shape or form.
Do you still consider that match at Crown Jewel, your last match?
Or is it the one with Undertaker or 20?
Yeah, it's that one with Undertaker because that, again, the other one, the other
one, I don't know, it was a tag match, it was DX.
And I don't, and I, I feel kind of bad because I don't mean it in a, in a negative way.
But that was just sort of like, I don't know, it was like kiss going out and not even with, you know,
the original members or whatever, and playing a, playing a concert at the Trubidor or something.
And it's like, oh, I thought they, but they're not really retired.
And I know KISS has never retired.
But, you know, I don't know, that just felt like a, I don't know, like a special separate
one-off, you know, HPK and Mr.
WrestleMania, the showstop or whatever, that was what ended with Taker at WrestleMania.
And then, and because I still came back and refreed the match between, you know, Hunter and
and Taker.
And again, and we'll always play a role in the WWE.
I don't know.
I mean, what account if I went into the Rumble.
this year or something.
Don't get me wrong.
Are you going to?
Oh, heavens.
No.
Probably should have said that.
I was just using that as an example.
Here we go.
But no, it was just, I don't consider that.
I don't know.
I don't consider those a match.
You know, a single performance by me, by HBK, by that guy.
That's not who that was.
That was a dude hanging out with his buddies.
I don't know.
And having a match, that's, I don't know.
And so one was the artist.
The other one was a dude, like I said, hanging out to go with his buddies.
There's a promo that I've always wanted to ask you about.
And now you're in front of me so I can ask you about it.
It's right before Survivor Series in 1989.
It's the Rockers.
And it's a promo with Ultimate Warrior and Jim the Anvil Nineheart.
And Warrior is wrapping you guys up with tape.
Do you remember this?
Vaguely.
Vigely.
I've seen it.
Again, I see it on a little meaning and stuff like that.
Warriors, like almost suffocating himself.
You're trying your best to, like, be able to breathe through this.
What's going through your mind as this is happening?
Well, that was this at a time when, again, there was just no, again, there was no creative team.
There was no writing.
There was no anything.
And that was just Jim being Jim.
You just didn't know what he was going to do on a promo.
And same with Ann Bull, arguably same with us.
I mean, Marty and I might have sat there and went up there like, hey, we,
We'll say to say that.
And there might have been any quick powwow between all of us.
But, you know, Jim's obviously the top guy here.
And he goes off and doing what he's doing.
And you just are along for the ride.
So, yeah, no, that's one of those ones where I don't know.
That's probably a one take shot.
We're done.
And that's that.
And even if it isn't good, Jim's gone.
And so that's that.
I'm done.
And we're like, okay, there you go.
So they'll get.
just a very different time from a company standpoint.
I've had the opportunity to talk to Shelton Benjamin about that incredible match you guys had on
Raw. And in my opinion, the greatest sweet chin music of all time. Walk me through how you guys
were able to set that up and make that so memorable. Well, before we went out there,
certainly wasn't something we were going to make this memorable. I just, you know, we just knew
that Shelton was a hell of an athlete.
He could do anything under the sun.
We obviously were doing everything we could to have a good match.
And that was something that I'm trying to remember.
And I can't say for sure it was Michael Hayes,
but it was something that, and it's a finish that certainly I've thought about before,
but it's such a timing issue.
And but it came up, and then it's a finish.
of course, where we had it set, which was almost all the way across the ring, and you've got to get a long way.
And of course, so it's, it's in a court, you're with Shelton, so there's a part of you that knows he can do it, but you're into the match.
So many, there's so many possibilities for things to go wrong.
We have athletes up and down our PC, but after they've been in a 15-minute match, you don't know that by the time they go through.
15 minutes or 10 minutes,
whether they're going to be able to do at the end of the match,
what they say they can do at the beginning.
But I can just remember,
I do remember Shelton saying, like, again,
asking him, like, can you get up and, you know,
can you, again, you do the springboard stuff?
Can you get all the way over there?
No, yeah, I can get over there.
I mean, it was, of course,
and of course, in your mind you're going, well, of course,
not saying you're not the athlete that can't get over there,
but it's just, you know, at that point in time,
and you feel like, you know, you know, oh, yeah.
Like, I mean, I could, you know, if you could have said,
I could do that, I don't know, with no sleep and half awake,
that would have been what he said, because he could,
because Shelton is just, he really is an amazing athlete.
And he certainly, and it was even so good then.
but then it's
but then it's all about the timing
and it's me getting the foot up there
and all you can do is go out there and do it
and hope that all that timing is right
and that was one of those moments
where everything comes together
and what's great is that it was also on top
of a really fantastic match
you can have a finish like that
and it's still going to look spectacular
but if the buildup to it
has not been over
glorious. It'll still get a reaction, but it doesn't quite mean as much. And it was such a
good match to where people didn't know who was going to win and then being able to pull it off
out of the blue like that, out of something and kind of stealing it, if you will, or a lucky
last shot was just a perfect ending to it. And I will always say this about Shelton. He was a guy
that was so good
with such natural ability
I can remember saying to him after the match
I said hey
just to throw this out there
but this is what I've learned over the years
is that you can have a great match
and that's always awesome
when it puts you on the map
and not to imply that you're not already on the map
you certainly are but I have found
that how you follow that up
is sometimes almost as important as, again,
what it is you do in that match and how it ends.
And I don't, again, I don't know if you ever remembered that,
but it's one of those things where I was trying to suggest that, like,
hey, you might want to see if you can lean on them to get them to maybe do something
about that or do something more with that or have somebody,
you know, get you into another story off of that.
And I don't think that ever happened.
And that's one of those things that I always felt like, I don't know if, again, and that's, I certainly, it's not for me to say because I don't know if Shelton did or didn't have the opportunity to do that.
But I was always very proud of that match.
And it's one that everybody remembers.
I don't think I see more finishes repeated more than I do that one.
And he just did such a great job on that, the timing of it.
He sold it like a million bucks.
And again, I'll say that that finish was fantastic,
but I was really proud of the match that we had on top of it because that kid could go.
One more moment I want to ask you about is take me into the rafters before your zip line entrance at WrestleMania 12.
What's going on there?
What's going through your head?
So that's just, again, more honestly than not, you're so focused on the match.
one of the things I will say I tell everybody to the story because I always I always have to have a last minute
P-break before I go out yeah and nine times out of ten again this was before again the world was
like we have it now but there were times I would be in guerrilla and would have to turn around and just
go in the trash can right there because I would just always have kind of a nervous one right before I went out
I had the same thing there.
And so up at the top of the, you know, there's all the insulin or not the, you know, the, what do they call it, the stuff that you, like insulation?
Insulation, yeah, the insulation up there on the top.
So I had it there.
So before I got strapped in, I had to go a little bit.
So I had a small urine break up there on the top of the Anaheim pond.
and then pulled my drawers up and then strapped in and went.
And honestly, it was the most focus that I had to try to have,
which was not going down to just like this,
thinking of the match and thinking about everything that we were doing,
trying to have some type of excitement,
charisma, emotion going down.
And also being present in that?
Yeah, that's exactly.
And trying to let go of everything that's,
got to happen in the next hour.
That to me was the most challenging aspect of that.
And again, even though I wasn't the praying man that I was, you know, many, many years later,
I do remember also just, you know, please don't let anything happen.
But I was over the whole thing, let all this go well.
And of course, you know, not everything under the sun goes well, but more often than,
and not. I'm thankful that that was such a, I don't know, a unique entrance and something that is,
I'll say this. I don't know if I would, if I would be included in so many of the WrestleMania
moments or the openings of the shows or cold opens and stuff like that that that I'm a part of,
had it not been for that entrance. So I'm thankful for it for many different reasons because it was
something that not a lot of people have done. And it's something that people remember and obviously
proud of that. 30 years later, we're still talking about it. Thank you for such a great conversation.
And congratulations on everything that you did in the ring. And also congratulations on everything
you're doing now with NXT and the PC and everything around that. And I'll end this interview
asking you the question I ask everybody because gratitude is such a huge part of my life, Sean.
wake up every day I say how loud three things I'm grateful for.
I do it before I go to bed.
I would much rather focus on the things I have than the things I don't have.
What are three things in your life that you're grateful for right now?
I am unbelievably grateful for my wife and children.
I don't know if that counts as one or two.
And look, because it's them and I am.
I'm thankful, again, for my wife that she brought, you know,
my faith into my life and, you know, those children into my life, which was, for me, that is the
linchpin for everything in my life. And I am. I'm very thankful for this business. I don't know where
I have no idea where I would fit in in the rest of, you know, in the rest of the world,
have no idea. And it is, it's those three things. It is, it is my faith, you know, it is my Lord
and Savior Jesus Christ. It is my wife and children. And it is, it is my wife and children. And it is,
It really is this business and this place because it's, I don't know, it's the WWE that's put up with me.
I guess in some forms the wrestling business has, but I think the wrestling business,
because of my, you know, at least my talent and when I was able to build would have put up with me no matter what
and given me the means to make a living.
But honestly, this place, the WWE, and I know that sounds like just a corporate chill job,
But they have put up with me for, as you say, almost 40 years.
And look, I've been more positive now than I ever was on the negative.
I don't know, always been there, always supported.
And this is a hard business.
It is a business.
It needs to be.
It should be.
It's supposed to be.
But no matter, and I'll, again, no matter who.
who's in charge. This business has still been very compassionate and understanding and patient with me.
And so I am. I'm thankful for that. And I mean, those are the three because I don't do anything else.
I have no other gift. I suppose I haven't. I've yet to find out what they are. So I am. I am thankful for those three things.
that I, in any of stuff like this, I'm thankful for that career that I was allowed to have that I get to talk about.
But it's all built on, it is all built on this job.
And they're also intertwined with one another that I don't have one without the other.
And again, in my faith, this is three-cord strand.
You know what I mean, I suppose me, my wife and I and the Lord.
And it's the same way in our life.
It's them.
It's this business and it's him.
And that is a three-court strain that has been so unbelievably strong in my life that I have found that if I have that, I don't know that I need much else.
Well, I think I can say on behalf of fans everywhere, thank you.
Thank you for being one of the greatest of all time.
Thank you for all of the memories and the incredible matches.
And thank you for this today.
My pleasure and I apologize if I was a very long window.
No, you're the best.
Thank you.
There we go.
on the show.
Thank you so much for checking out this episode
and for listening all the way to the end.
And I just love how passionate he is
about what he's doing now in NXT,
like just as passionate as he was
about what he did in the ring.
And I feel like this needs to be part one
of many parts
because there are so many things
that we can cover in all of the other interviews
that we do in the future.
But man, I love this and I hope that you did as well.
Snap a screenshot.
and tag us. He's at Sean Michaels. I'm at Chris Vanfleet, and we'll leave you with this quote from
Jim Rohn. If you really want to do something, you'll find a way. If you don't, you'll find an excuse.
Be great and be grateful, my friend. We will see you on the next one for some more insight. Tomorrow,
it's Ask CBV 101. If you got a question for AskCTVV, leave it in the comments on Spotify.
send it in on social media with that hashtag
Ask CVV or shoot me an email
CVV at chris fanfleet.com.
We'll see you tomorrow to wrap up our week on Friday.
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 than 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 should be?
Follow and listen on your favorite platform.
You've been warned.
