Jim Cornette Experience - Episode 592: Hogan
Episode Date: July 28, 2025This week on the Experience, Jim talks about the life & career of Hulk Hogan! Plus Jim talks about his recent road trip, Jack Pfefer, Top Dolla flying again, TNA attendance, Savage vs. Lawler, rat...ings, and more! Also, Jim reviews AEW Dynamite! Thanks to our episode sponsor: SHOPIFY: Sign up for your $1 per month trial and start selling today at shopify.com/jce CORNBREAD HEMP: Save 30% on your first order and free shipping on orders over $75! Go to cornbreadhemp.com/jce and use code JCE at checkout. BRUNT: Get $10 Off @BRUNT with code JCE at https://bruntworkwear.com/JCE! Follow Jim and Brian on Twitter: @TheJimCornette @GreatBrianLast Join Jim Cornette's College Of Wrestling Knowledge on Patreon to access the archives & more! https://www.patreon.com/Cornette Subscribe to the Official Jim Cornette channel on YouTube! http://www.youtube.com/c/OfficialJimCornette Visit Jim's official site at www.JimCornette.com for merch, live dates, commentaries and more! You can listen to Brian on the 6:05 Superpodcast at 605pod.com or wherever you find your favorite podcasts!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Like the midnight and the rock and roll.
He's in a fight for wrestling soul using a racket and some mind control.
He's in Kornet.
The keys to the future.
Help by our net.
To do the show that we were going to do today,
but we're going to do the show that we need to do.
A variety of things.
We're going to talk about everybody from Jack Pfeffer to Hulk Hogan.
And joining me in all of this,
Hawaiian Brian the podcasting lion, the king of the Arcadian Vanguard podcast network,
Mr. Co-host to you, if Jack Feffer did a podcast, he'd be the co-host.
Be great, Brian Last, everybody.
Aloha, Jim, a pleasure to be here once again.
Brother, for a big episode, everyone's been waiting to hear about your travels,
and of course there's wrestling that aired, but yesterday as we are recording, big news happened,
so I knew today would be a very interesting show.
well and and you know we can't do anything else but lead with this because of the the magnitude of the
situation which you know had been rumored for some time and had been shot down but yesterday as
we sit here and talk Hulk Hogan passed away they said cardiac arrest he was at his home
he was 71 years old and and I know all
lot of people were instantly tweeting at a day why aren't you talking about this it's been
not even 24 hours i don't believe since the news came out and when i heard about it a few hours later
i had a face full of novacane from sitting in a dentist chair so we have tried to
regroup and think about this as best we can so we don't need to be the newsbreakers we are
commentators and we'll try to analyze things a little bit for the good and the bad but
you know, it surprised me the level of vehemence for the people who had had the negative
opinion of Hulk Hogan.
I figured it would be like, you know, well, when the big star dies or celebrity a sports
figure, even if he was controversial, everybody, you know, kind of goes with it.
But this is it just social media?
Brian, or for the people who loved him or were fans,
they were broken up and for the people who didn't, they weren't.
Is it just Twitter?
I haven't talked to anybody personally about it, but what the fuck?
I don't think it's just Twitter.
I think Twitter certainly magnifies everything a whole lot more,
but it's a complicated legacy.
There's the legacy in the life of Hulk Hogan, the character.
And then there's Terry Bolet.
the person who played the character of Hulk Ogan.
And, you know, it's certainly a legacy that's taken a lot of hits.
A lot of them self-induced over the last score, over the last 20 years.
But a lot of the reaction I saw, and I know a lot of what I was feeling,
because, you know, we've had a lot of fun on this show
talking about, laughing about the various stories that he would concoct
or the things that he would say in these interviews.
and of course there's the infamous tape of him having sex with Bubba the Love Spunge's wife
and then the declarations that he made about himself being a racist afterwards.
You know, there's all these things and there's also at the same time this guy that for a lot
of people was the entry to pro wrestling.
You know, I became a big fan in 89.
and I already knew who a lot of the guys were
because of Hulk Hogan's rock and wrestling when I was six
because of the figures that got to the stores when I was five.
I had a Hulk Hogan and Andre the Giant Action figure
before I ever saw them, before I really knew too much about them.
And I think for a lot of people, especially my generation, my age group,
Hulk Hogan was not only the biggest star of a generation
and the face of WWF, but he may be the actual reason you first became aware of wrestlers or wrestling.
And I think for a lot of people, the people who still get chills thinking about the Andre the Giant Body slam at WrestleMania 3 and 87,
the people who still remember the big Saturday night's main events and all the big moments,
even the WrestleMania match with the Rock.
What a special series of moments that was.
It's a tough thing to weigh all of those positive memories and experiences with the conduct,
the words.
You know, again, and it wasn't just the bubble thing.
The meltdown.
Yeah, I mean, remember, you know, when his son Nick got into that accident and forgive me
for not knowing all the details, the person riding with him was a vegetable pretty much from
that point forward.
Yeah.
There was a big issue.
Then there was a tape of like Hulk Hogan going to the prison and.
you know, basically, you know, making themselves the victims, not the victim.
So, I mean, there's a lot of things like that, but, but again, you know, it's hard, you know,
there aren't a lot of, he wasn't a murderer like OJ, so you can't really say, like, you know,
look at when OJ died, but it's hard.
I think a lot of the mainstream stuff I've seen is kind of focused on, I don't want to necessarily
say the positives, but the realities of his, the magnitude of his star, but everyone does address
the scandals. I mean, he brought down Gawker
with that lawsuit that Peter Thiel funded. So it's not like
he wasn't always in the middle of stuff, but it's a complicated legacy
to kind of way. He learned very well in the
wrestling business, the old
fashioned wrestling business of how to
promote himself, make himself bigger, make himself
more important in the days when you couldn't just readily
poo-poo a bullshit story and didn't realize he had done so much mainstream publicity
where the host or the interviewer or the people involved had almost no knowledge of the
inside of the business or even the business in general that he could just say shit and he got
used to that and then it got it came back to bite him as far as the
the stories that we've made fun of and etc and the books
that he wrote that easily, you know, disprovable,
but to the kid that was a fan in those days
and then didn't know anything about wrestling for 20 years,
he buys Hulk Hogan's book and he buys the whole thing.
But there's also a third segment.
You talked about the people who, you know,
who loved him and were introduced to wrestling,
the fans and or the, you know, people on the other side,
as controversial as he was and as many people as he,
he had been involved in at least somewhat double-crossing or, you know,
creative controlling or maneuvering or whatever, you saw from a lot of people in the business.
He did.
They loved him.
There were people that loved him in the business as well as people who were like, you know,
Jesse Ventura.
Yeah, I'll give you a great example because I thought about this.
Scott Dickinson, one of the real nice guys out there, former WCW referee,
at a lot of places, but most famously WCW.
Years ago, I forget what you and I were talking about,
but we were probably laughing about Winnihogan's things,
and he got in touch, and he told me a story,
and I was shocked to hear it.
I don't know if his shots were it,
but I was really pleasantly surprised.
I don't know what.
He said that when Brian Hildebrand,
referee Mark Curtis and WCW got sick,
when they found out, I guess, maybe the first time,
or whenever it was,
when they found out that the cancer was really bad,
somehow word got to Hogan.
And he said that they were surprised when all of a sudden
Hogan approached Brian Hildebrand.
It said, is there anything I could do?
And I think he even did try to get him in with some doctors or something.
That's a story that we didn't hear from Hulk Hogan.
So it's not like it's a tale that he just made up.
It's something I'm hearing from a friend of Brian Hildebrands.
Well, you know, that's the thing that I always said about the stories
that he was telling is that his real ones were good enough.
he was the big mega sensation in a wrestling business.
And there's so many, you know, ways you could have told those stories
and not been completely full of shit, you know,
and Metallica couldn't have, didn't need to be involved or whatever,
because the real stuff he had something to work with.
But that's why, you know, very complicated.
And I know I've even had people on Twitter the last day,
I say, oh, I can't wait to hear Cornett and last roast Hogan now that he's gone.
I'm like, have we ever been personally mad at each other?
You and I and him?
We laughed at the bullshit, but he was a big deal in a wrestling business.
Now, I wasn't a fan of him being a big deal in a wrestling business while he was a big deal in a wrestling business.
because I was on the other side.
And it's no secret.
I was not a fan of the Vince Jr.'s
WWF ideas for the 80s
with the Kitty program and et cetera
because we were in the NWA and that was wrestling.
And, you know, so it was not my cup of tea.
I was on the southern side while they were on the northern side.
But the thing actually, I don't think people realize, and we've said, I've said it before,
that I have, that I would say that I have probably been in, I'm trying to figure out how to phrase this properly.
I've been in the same room with Hulk Hogan in my life like eight fucking times, maybe.
So I had no positive or negative personal interaction with him ever.
I think five or six of those were when I was the photographer in Memphis and he was here in 1979.
I took the pictures.
Then once was at the Napdi convention, the National Association of Television Program executives
in New Orleans, I believe, in 1991.
and we passed greetings as he was at a booth and I was at a booth.
And that may be the last time ever.
So the point is, I'm not going to crow about it.
I finally got what was coming to him.
Because I barely ever met the fucking guy.
But we were, you were a fan as a kid.
I was not a fan as a kid because I'm older.
I was a kid before he was in a business and a fan.
You know what I'm saying.
Yeah.
But we have always acknowledged the magnitude of the money that he drew.
And the fact that, remember I said, when we were talking about Flair, I said,
we were talking about the number one box office attraction of the year every year in the 90, or in the 80s.
I said, well, it would have been Flair, but it hadn't been for Hogg.
It would have been flaring, it hadn't been for a home.
You know, like seven years in a row or whatever.
And I don't know between,
there's differences between being the biggest boxoff's attraction
and the biggest mainstream star.
And sometimes you might be able to be both at the same time.
But as in terms of biggest boxoff's traction of wrestling,
besides nobody's ever going to top Jim Landoz
because that was a completely different generation
and everything was different.
But since then, who would have been,
for a short period of time,
Austin and Rock drew more money,
but a much shorter period of time.
Locally, Bruno was obviously the biggest thing ever,
but we're talking about someone who on a national stage
you know, with some ebb and flow at a certain point in the early 90s,
but for 20 years was the biggest drawing card and the most recognizable pro wrestler in the world.
Well, and even Gorgeous George, while he at one point, the name Gorgeous George,
then the image of the blonde guy, Gorgeous George, because of the early network TV,
more people may have known who he was at a period of time in this country,
but he didn't draw the money
and it didn't last nearly as long.
And I mean,
don't let anybody say,
Cordad said Gorgeous George didn't draw money,
but he flopped in New York.
But I'm talking about
Gorgeous George more became a celebrity
because Bob Hope
and everybody on television
was also talking about him.
And it was in Hollywood
where they all saw him
and it was all over TV in Los Angeles
as we've talked about.
And it was the early.
days of TV. There were only a few channels and wrestling was one of the most watch things
on American TV at that time. So as far as at the gate and take Landoz, and Landoz was a bigger
mainstream star because people had to read the fucking newspaper every day. There was no
television or whatever, but take him out of it and, you know, it's got to be Hogan. And Bill
Longson was a big draw in the 40s when everybody else was in the Army.
So that's why I think for a lot of people,
it's been kind of sad.
The ones that really liked him and were fans
or probably even the guys that liked him,
his friends into business,
probably at some point,
were rolling their eyes at all the things he was getting into.
You know, it's ended up like it has where there's memes of,
Hogan walking through the pearly gates and there's God and he's black.
And it is like, what, Jesus, that's harsh for a guy who never actually
fucking went to jail for fucking anybody up or anything.
It's the fact that he said on the tape that, you know, we're all racist or I'm a racist
to a point.
Whatever he said, it was a declaration that he never walked back completely.
I mean, when he made the big apology to the WW.
locker room and again, a lot of wrestlers.
Well, he didn't. It wasn't an apology.
It was a warning. Don't get caught saying stupid shit.
Be careful on social media was like his message.
Don't let him know what you really think.
So, I mean, that's where, you know, people really lose it for Hogan.
There are a lot of fans out there who really, really grew to dislike him because they
grew up feeling the opposite way.
And then all of a sudden there's a secret video of him.
Throw in the N-word around saying things about his daughter, dating a African-American,
and then declaring himself a racist while cheating on his wife or whatever it was with the guy's
wife who was filming.
I mean, the whole thing was so...
Well, come on now, be fair, with what we've learned about his wife afterwards, wouldn't you've
been trying to fucking find another goddamn country to live in or something?
Well, the point is, it was all out there.
And Hogan, I don't know how big things would have been...
Let me rephrase that in English, ladies and gentlemen.
I don't know if an apology, a genuine heartfelt one would have changed everyone's opinion,
but it would have gone a long way, especially amongst people in the wrestling business.
You know, because that's the other thing you started seeing was a lot of, like, let's say,
the contemporary WW wrestlers, AEW, remember AEW banned Linda Hogan?
And it wasn't like the people there weren't thinking, Hogan, Hulk Hogan, too.
You know, they got to a point where the modern generation of wrestlers
was offended by him, was offended by him being around.
Well, that's why I mentioned I would have to think that a lot of the guys
from his generation that were friends and liked him were rolling their eyes and like,
please, the hoaxster, give us something to work with, you know, every once in a while
and don't get in some of these deals.
But you, you know, you mentioned the 80s before in Rick Flair.
To me, it's like, that's, those are the leaders,
of that generation and we just lost one.
And again, they've all had a fall
from grace in one form or another, but
when you look at Hogan, Flare, and Vince,
like to me, those are the three monumental figures.
Jesus Christ,
now that you just said that,
I'm sorry, but now that
you've just said that
and we see, 40 years ago,
if you had said, well,
here's what's going to happen to these three,
they'd have fucking put you in a rubber room
and it's happened.
Yeah.
Now, you brought up before, you know, you've only been in a room with Hogan a few times,
I'm guessing the first time you were was maybe the most impactful.
Did you take his very first promo photos?
I wouldn't, no, I can't, I took the very first ones and probably the only ones that were
taken into Memphis territory.
But now, here's the thing.
They broke him in in Florida, everybody knows.
We're not going to, I'm sure you can find another podcast to give you chapter and verse,
but we're trying to make this somewhat first person.
accounts.
They broke him in in Florida and in 78 and he worked under a mass down there.
So I don't technically know if he'd had any pictures taken of him bareface because he was
the super destroyer or whatever, right?
Yeah.
So then they booked him in Alabama.
Louis Tillett was the booker at that point in time.
And was it continental?
Not yet. It wasn't even continental yet. It was still southeast.
It was south eastern and it was just when they had opened up the Alabama end because it was a noxian.
And then Ron Fuller opened up the second part of the territory.
And so it used to be the old Gulf Coast territory and the fields and et cetera.
But nevertheless, because it was next door to Florida.
So they booked him over there. And about six weeks later is when Jared booked him up here.
Well, and see, here's the thing.
At that point in time, in April, May of 1979, Robert Fuller was still booking Memphis for Jared.
And he used a lot of the Knoxville crew because it was the other end of the state.
But since Knoxville was affiliated with Continental, they heard about this big blonde guy they had down there in Penscola and said, well, let's bring him up because Lawler was doing a deal in Mongol.
Stomper was the Southern heavyweight champion.
Lawler was working with him.
Gorgeous George Jr. was a Stomper's manager.
And so Lawler brings in a mystery wrestler into the Mid-South Coliseum to face the
Mongolian Stomper for the title.
And it turns out to be Terry Boulder, Terry the Hulk Boulder.
And then the next week was a tag team match with Lawler and Hulk again.
against Stomper and Gorgeous George Jr.
And they brought him to Louisville, I believe, at the same time for a week or two.
And then he went back down to Continental.
But I had gotten a couple pictures of him then as the Lawler tag team.
And then he came back about six weeks later.
That's when they brought him in with, well, at that time he was Eddie Boulder
because they were supposed to the Boulder brothers.
But it was Dizzy Hogan, Ed Leslie, et cetera, et cetera,
Brutus Beefcake.
And then they were here
for a couple months and I got some more
photos there. So most of the
pictures that I've seen actually
posed stuff rather than in the ring
in Knoxville,
southeastern or continental
or southeastern down in Alabama
is my stud. The blue background
especially, I think there's a red
background, but those are
stuff that I did. What do you remember about
him at that point? Obviously you're just a
photographer and absolutely nothing i'm the photographer he's he's a big
fucking new guy that is photogenic as fuck so i say hey let's get some pictures and he does
the poses and this is literally on the way to the ring because that's the way i set my shit
up so i could catch the guys they're they're upstairs getting warmed up hey let's get some
pictures ding ding ding ding off they go so i didn't have anything to pass the day
with him about, right? And he's brand new, doesn't know anybody. So he's got, the photographer is
taking some pictures of him. And boom, and that was that. So you had seen already superstar Billy Graham
and you had seen Austin Idol, two guys who directly influenced Hulk Hogan, Billy Graham influenced
everyone, but he stole so much from Austin Idol. He's admitted it too from when they worked together
in Atlanta. Yeah, yeah. He stole so much from Austin Idol. But you had seen them already. And the fans of
Memphis had. Well, now hold on. I hadn't seen Graham yet. Graham came in at the end of
79, but obviously, you know, we were cognizant of Graham, but go ahead. But you'd seen Rocky John.
You had seen guys with good physiques there before. How did the fans take to Hogan, just in terms of
the look? Because beyond the eventual promo ability, which wasn't there at all yet, beyond the eventual
charisma, which may have been barely there yet.
It was the look. It was, forget about the shaved belly hair and everything going on.
The mushroom cloud.
Forget about that even. Just the muscles, the look, the beginning of the steroid era for wrestling
where it went from occasionally some guys did it to just about everyone's going to be doing it.
How did he stand out in 79 amongst those fans?
well and and also you remember the the video that they did where Michael St. John
from Nashville did the voiceover of the camera shoots the wrestling boots and then
there's the I can't do the voiceover from memory from 50 years ago but he stands 6 foot
7 he weighs 325 pounds whatever and the camera pans up and he's he's in bodybuilding
pose lighting, right, where it's black behind him and the spotlight's on him.
And the camera goes all the way up and he hits the fucking Hulk poses and everything.
The Hulk is coming.
And that was enough to get people's attention.
And when they brought him in as Lawler's partner, okay, look at the fuck that was the, you know,
reaction from the people.
And they put those matches in the main event and they got over with the people that were
there.
but as you will recall, that was a period of time,
whereas I mentioned Robert Fuller was booking,
and I got to be,
Memphis, I didn't know at the time how far down Memphis was,
but I knew Louisville was feeling puny.
And so it wasn't like that he made a tremendous difference
the first couple weeks he was there when he was Lawler's partner,
but the match, he got over and the matches got over,
they worked around shortcomings,
and, you know, he got the fucking,
the bear hug, the super
southern squeeze
on the Mongolian stomper
and he's selling it people going crazy, right?
And then when they come back,
here was the problem.
The problem is
they came back
when Robert Fuller had taken all the
Knoxville guys that we've talked about this
Pete Austin.
Well, yeah. Well, hold on now.
The whole problem.
There was other problems.
But Fuller had taken all the guys back to Knoxville when the guys left to go with the Pafos,
run opposition, Garvin, Rup, and et cetera.
The whole thing had shifted.
Now Jarrett's got to rebuild the territory.
So he shoots the Tupelo concession stand brawl angle and he puts Wayne Ferris and Larry Latham as the blonde bombers on top.
Later, the honky talk man and Moondog spot.
My old partner, Danny Davis, was their manager, Sergeant Danny Davis.
And that was the program with Lawler and Dundee.
He had Tommy and Eddie Gilbert against Buddy and Ken Wayne.
And Ron Bass came in,
Allah Ron Bass,
who was a very talented guy,
but never been a big draw in the Tennessee territory
since the days of Ron and Don Bass
with their manager,
Maul Bass in the early 70s.
And that's who the Hoke was,
the Terry the Huck Boulder,
was going to work with and with his brother Eddie who was worse than he was who could not work
and could not talk. Hogan was starting to worry he was trying to do the let me tell you something
jack thing you know he was trying that at that point but he wasn't confident with it but he could
carry it off but between the hair that beefcake had which was just preposterous remember that
long bleached blonde it just oh god he got heat from the from the guys in the audience
and they they couldn't work and then they had and then you mentioned pete austin who's this kid
i don't know where the fuck he went from there maybe home but he was like six three and
two hundred and sixty or seventy pounds and they paired him up with ron bass against these guys
and so Hulk won the Southern title from Ron Bass at one point, I think.
But I remember that the problem was they were trying to,
Jared was trying to make the people take them as main eventers
by booking them in the main event.
And back in those days, the main event went on last.
And the classic example of how that it didn't work
was the night that the WFIA convention,
the fans convention was in town in July of 79, right?
That's the night they got to see the future of wrestling
in two different ways.
Maybe they didn't realize it,
the theme music for the Freebirds,
and then Hulk Hogan.
Yes, but what stole the show
was the past of wrestling.
Because the Freebirds worked with Loller and Dundee,
and they did what they did,
and people were happy with it, right?
and the entrance was cool, you know, no doubt of me and Brian Hilda Brown,
kneeled down at ringside together watching that.
And the last match was Terry and Eddie Boulder.
The Hulk, they usually wrote The Hulk and Eddie Boulder because that was cooler.
But against Ron Bass and Pete Austin with Danny Davis, no, I'm sorry, he wasn't their manager yet.
But Ron Bass and Pete Austin in a tag team match.
and the match in the middle
was Wayne Ferris, Larry Latham, and Danny Davis
in a three-on-two handicap match
against Jackie and Ruff House Fargo.
Jackie Fargo hadn't been in Memphis in two years,
it'd been four for Ruff House.
And they tore the fucking house down literally.
The tables were turned over.
Fargo was kicking the legs off that oak table
to fucking bash him over the heads with.
they fucking roughhouse went crazy and after that here comes terry and eddie boulder
against ron bass and p.
also the people kind of there was trickling in the aisles of like let's beat the traffic
and i mean it had drawn there was 7000 people there that night which was up from what
fuller had been doing month six weeks beforehand but they all came to see the fargoes
It's the same thing
when Zulu was on top
with, was it the Stomper?
Yes, yes.
You said four years earlier.
Was it four years earlier
when that happened?
Yes.
That was 1975.
They sold out three weeks in a row,
but he wanted to put the,
Jared's philosophy was put the Southern heavyweight title match on last.
So Stomper and Zulu had three straight sellouts with the Fargoes underneath.
All three Fargoes that time, Jackie Donne and Roughout.
Jackie Donne and Roughouts is what I'm trying to say.
Nut House, yeah.
sometimes known as Nudhouse.
So, I mean, that's Memphis,
and he goes from there to Georgia,
becomes Sterling Golden.
No one's surprised to hear
that he was a favorite of Jim Barnett's.
And...
And now, wait a minute, remember at that time,
and oh, and let's, but let's back up a second
because when he was working
in the Alabama end of Southeastern,
when he was first coming up for Jared,
that's when they did the angle with him
and Andre the first time.
The arm wrestling, where they turned a table over to blah, blah, blah.
And because they had dates on Andre in southeastern.
So not only by the time that Hogan went to work in Atlanta for Barnett in late 79, early 80,
that's when Barnett was annexing Knoxville.
Ron Fuller said, well, fuck, these guys have fucked up my whole time.
territory. And so they started using the Georgia talent. So Hogan and Andre had some matches,
not only in Alabama when he first got started, a handful, a couple, whatever, but they sold
out Dothan one night, which was unheard of. But also he worked, they worked with each other in
Knoxville before they'd even worked with each other in Atlanta or then later on.
in the Superdome and, you know, the big shows around the country, Shea Stadium.
Yeah, that's what's crazy. If you look at the show you just talked about in Memphis,
the summer of 79, one year later, Hogan and Andre, do the Superdome for J.Y.D.
versus Michael Hayes as an attraction brought in by Watts.
And then the Shea Stadium show, which, I mean, it's really incredible, you know,
one year after that Memphis show, how many big crowds, not just Hogan, but the Hogan
Andre Package was in front of.
Well, and see, think about this, you know, by 1981,
he's already had, you know, the run in New York
or is in the middle of his run in New York.
And as a matter of fact, I, again, so I'm in 1981.
I was in Memphis when he came in the one shot to work with Lawler,
when Jimmy Hart was bringing in all of Lawler's old nemesis and nemesis to face him,
and he came and did that one shot.
They would always show that footage and because Lawler didn't pin him, they would never show the finish.
Yes.
And a DQ was flat at that point, but then Lawler got a hold of Jimmy Hart and people went crazy and blah, blah, blah.
But nevertheless, in those two years, he had gotten confidence because he was a smart guy,
especially when it came to what was getting him over, what was best for him.
He picked that up quick because he worked with all those top.
guys in that first two years was exposed to all he was he was partners with jerry lawler
they have to learn something even for you know three weeks you work with harley i think in
79 didn't he well but but he's then he's in the ring with with andre and he's working for
jerry jared who he you know always kind of acknowledged it was a big help to him but he's working
in atlanta around jim barnett even if they're
They did name him Sterling Golden.
And then Vince Senior,
and in the ring with, you know, the talent up there.
So he was able to pick up,
he was never going to be flare as far as a in-ring performer,
but for a guy that size that looked like that,
he was able to pick things up quickly on how to either be a heel
or later on how to be a baby face.
And, I mean, hulking up if he'd have been wearing a strap,
he'd have been a loller dropping his strap.
Yeah, see, there's always been debate about where Hogan picked up certain things.
Like, it's obvious that Hulkomania was because of his exposure to Idol mania
when Austin Idol was doing that in Georgia.
The superstar Billy Graham-style promo is calling everyone brother, this and that.
You can kind of see that.
The hulking up, you've heard people say was Lawler.
You've heard some people say it was the crusher.
Well, it could have been any baby face because, see, that's,
the thing. It's not like Lawler invented that concept either. All baby faces, pretty much in the last
50, 70 years, TV era of whatever of wrestling, they had some movement or action reaction
that would indicate to the fans, they've had all they can stands and they can't stands no more
and something might be about to happen. That's a very wide description.
but again
you know
this is where and it's some dusty too
when he was a baby face in Florida
yeah I was gonna say dusty we'd start wagging that finger right
and he Hogan's watching that and he's partners with a guy
that fucking gets pickled and fucking
straightens up and turns away and but of course he didn't do
anything like Lawler did in my opinion but the same
principle but all of that that was osmosis in those two years
and then he goes to Japan
and he's in
a different situation there
but he commands huge money
because look at the fuck that
over there he's a giant
American. Well, you know, part of the story
started happening
in Japan.
I mean, the biggest example is certainly
Minneapolis, the AWA, the fans turned
them. The fans started accepting
him and again, he stood out in that era
when you first started really seeing the physiques.
Kerry Von Erick wasn't as physically imposing an 81 as he would be in 84.
It was just the beginning of that era.
And Hogan went everywhere the first time as a heel.
And the fan started really liking him.
And he kind of, you know, again, it's an era changing.
And obviously the movie, and we'll get to that in a little bit, was a big deal.
But Vince brings him in, Vince Sr., gives him the name Hogan.
Eventually the Hulk thing would cause a problem at Marvel Comics.
because they own the rights to the Hulk.
And they would remember back then he was the incredible Hulk Hogan
once he started getting going.
Yes, yes.
Later he became immortal, but he was incredible.
Well, literally, they weren't legally allowed to call him
the Incredible Hulk Hogan, and Marvel Comics got a percentage
of all sorts of things throughout the Hulkomania era.
It's pretty incredible.
But he goes up there.
Do you remember who was the president of the Hulk Hogan fan club?
Oh, my God.
It wasn't it?
Mike
Yes
Help me
Mike O'Hara
Mike O'Hara
Mike O'Hara was
Sorry, Mike
He told me that he was on 605 once
And he had a problem a few years later
Because he was doing this fan club
And he says he was one of the people
That right after the 79 WFIA convention
Brought photos of Hulk Hogan
To the office
You know, a lot of people have said
That they had, you know, submitted photos of Hogan
And recommended him
He says he did it
And he was interviewing Hogan's parents
You know, it was a real fan club
of WWE, sent him legal notices to shut it down, and he just kept responding.
Ask Cole Hogan.
Ask Hogan.
He knows who I am and what I'm doing.
Yeah.
Well, as a matter of fact, Mike O'Hara, he's in the picture of all of us from that convention
when we were wearing our wrestling t-shirts that's been Twitter-fied here lately.
But yes, he was at the Memphis show that night and the TV that weekend when he took some of the pictures,
same as I did.
mine were still earlier because I caught him on the first run,
but that was summer of,
summer of 79, as Brian Adams would say.
And they bring him in and they give him Fred Blassie as a manager.
And, you know, a couple different looks.
He had the leotard for a while.
He had the chest hair for a while.
He wore blue.
I mean, they were really...
He wore blue.
No, I mean, they were trying to figure out who and what...
Was it blue velvet?
The rumor always was, I don't know how true it was,
that Vince McMahon Sr. wanted him to dye his hair red.
I think that's a whole...
No, no, no.
no, no. You've heard that, right? You heard Hogan say that? Yeah, well, yes, and no, no, no. Um, no, and it's not even,
they've, I think, I don't know where the idea was that Vince Sr. specifically wanting, wanted him to,
be an Irish heel or Irish person or whatever has come from. If that was Hulk, I'll say, if somebody's
corroborated it, then I'll,
I'll back off on this.
But he had already been using Hulk,
but I guarantee you,
Vince Sr. as well as Vince Jr.
wouldn't have liked Hulk Boulder, Terry the Hulk Boulder,
sterling, golden, blah.
They like alliteration.
Hulk, Hulk, Hulk, Hulk, Hogan,
because Hogan's a good fucking name.
But he wasn't going to be carrying a shaleli
with red hair or whatever the fuck.
And also look at the way, again,
that he was dressing.
he was trying different colors and he had the old heel cape that he had
there wasn't like a long batman cape is like a short fucking
audrey hepburn cape or whatever none of that screamed irish did it
it was just it was an alliterative name that looked good on the marquee and here's the
hulk hogan and you can hear him as a heel i can see
Vince Senior acting it out
or Vince Jr. acting it out
if he was envisioning the name
is a heel name
and his name's Hulk Hogan
and he's huge.
So I think that was probably
the depth of that.
They did not know they were naming
the future all-time
biggest fucking draw they ever had
right then. See?
I'm sorry. I don't mean to get upset.
But it's just when everybody tries to
all this deep meaning into these things.
Well, Hogan's up there. He's as Freddie Blassie.
They do the program with him and Andre.
Hogan never gets any matches with Backlin, the champion, at the garden,
gets some matches in other locations,
which are big deals, but it wasn't the garden.
It is something there in terms of the way they're protecting him.
Eventually he leaves, does jobs on the way out,
and then he goes to film Rocky 3,
and that's really not just for Hulk Hogan,
but in a lot of ways for the wrestling industry,
that's one of the biggest things that ever happened.
Well, yeah, because, and obviously,
I saw Rocky 3 in theaters when it first came out,
not just because there was a wrestler in it,
but because you went to see all the goddamn Rocky movies
at that point in time.
But that opened up the door to every talk show
because he was just so visually impressive.
And it came off like, it was, you know,
one of the highlight scenes of the movie
and what everybody was talking about.
And then he looks so good,
not only when he does the talk shows or the publicity,
but by now, this is what, you know,
four years around all these people
kind of contributing to telling him how to fucking get over,
and he's smart, as I said,
and he's learned it now, he can go in bullshit to Maine.
Oh, yes.
And that was publicity that most wrestlers didn't get in those days
because even if they were drawn in the same kind of crowds,
they didn't look like that and they didn't have that visibility
from being in a movie that would lead to those doors.
And then, to be honest, well, yeah, a lot of them wouldn't have been able to, you know,
capitalize on it.
they wouldn't have had the
bullshit
and once that movie came out
it was impossible
for him to be a heel
because it was such a big deal
and it may have been
and you know for some people
was one of the highlights of the movie
and he was a heel in the movie
but he just blew up
but remember
then
Vern Gagne when he brought him in
he was a heel
and his manager
was luscious Johnny Valiant
that's right
and the people shit on Johnny Valiant.
I was in the business by that point,
and Bok Winkle,
as a matter of what was coming down to Memphis in 83.
I'm pretty sure that,
but because I'd always been a big fan of the Valiant brothers,
but it just,
it didn't work.
And people were cheering him anyway,
but they were ignoring Johnny Valiant,
and I'm sure the baby faces were like,
you know, what the fuck?
Don't book me with this fucking guy.
you bury me. I don't know what to fucking do.
When I was younger and I would see footage of Johnny Valiant as a manager, like throughout
the 80s, that was one of those moments where I would say one day I'll be an adult and these
promos will make sense. And they still make no sense. I have no idea what he's saying,
why he's saying it, or what it's about. See, here's the thing. Just as a side note here,
and then we'll move on. The Valiant Brothers worked because Jimmy was the Valiant Brothers.
and Johnny played off Jimmy.
And Johnny was just saying a lot of those
incomprehensible things in between Jimmy taking breaths.
And remember how the chain gang,
remember Don Fargo when they were the Dillinger and Frank?
Frank Dillinger, when they did those promos in Indianapolis,
it kind of worked as long as Jimmy was there.
But when Johnny was talking on his own,
he was just still doing the shit that he used to do
in between,
that was talking to you for real.
When it was Johnny and Jerry, you're like,
oh, I hope Lou Albano speaks up here.
Yes, and someone needs to stop this.
But nevertheless, back to...
82?
Back to 82.
So now Hogan's making a tremendous amount of money
to begin with, 82, 83.
He's in the AW way.
He's in goddamn Japan,
the high-profile matches,
the stuff with Inoki.
and he's probably already one of the highest paid guys
because they're selling out in Minneapolis.
And it was the biggest business they ever did
in AWA history, 82, 83,
all on the back of,
I shouldn't say all,
but a lot of it on the back of Hulk Hogan.
It really was a package in a lot of ways.
But Hogan was the one who really boosted things.
He started, you know,
I don't know when he started making $10,000 a week in Japan,
you know, in 83.
But think about how much money that is.
He was making that much money.
money in 83 and then flying
the Minnesota where they already had a light
schedule. I mean, he was really
living the life at that point.
Yeah, that's why Bach Winkle
stayed in Minnesota for 15
year, well, 20 years, whatever it was,
because they only worked 15 days a month
and they were mostly big towns.
And around this period of time, he had started dating
Linda, the future Linda Hogan. She was from
Southern California, but I believe she moved with
him to Minneapolis after
he proposed her or whatever it was.
So, I mean, everything is kind of
coming together, the AWA is obviously feeling like everything's great.
And right around this same period of time, Vince McMahon Jr., a lot of people didn't realize he was already in charge, he'd already bought the company, starts making his moves.
And, you know, we've talked about it a lot in the past.
The options, who's going to be the guy to go national with? You need a guy.
Is it going to be backland? No way.
Snooka? Snooka had just killed his girlfriend, and before that had beat her up and beat up a bunch of dogs and cops in a hotel.
probably a disqualifier right there.
Probably a disqualifier. Vince has said himself recently in his documentary,
and years ago he told Brian Solomon in an interview he conducted in like 2003 or
four, whatever it was, it was Dusty. If it wasn't going to be Hogan,
it wouldn't have been Kerry Von Erick. Couldn't have get Kerry Von Erick, to be honest with you.
It was going to be Dusty. Dusty also had a lot of options on the table.
He would go book for Jim Crockett a year later. He was already a total.
touring attraction outside of the Florida
territory.
But Hogan, if you look
at the way the decade would
proceed and the things
that would happen and the look,
Hogan was certainly the right guy
for Vince McMahon Jr.
at that time. Oh, yeah.
And he knew it. And
while working for the AWA is when he
sent Steve Taylor to make his move.
Well, and
the photographer was going to...
Yeah, yeah. I was outside of that.
Well, it might have been Steve Taylor the plumber.
Steve Taylor may have done some plumbing before he became a photographer.
But here's the thing.
It was always going to be somebody first and foremost that could talk with Vince Jr.
Because I know somebody's going to, oh, Jesus Christ, Dusty Rose didn't look anything like Hulk.
Well, Vince has said that in the interviews that you've mentioned, but also it's common sense that Vince
went for the charismatic, for the package of charisma.
Kendis got, Dusty Rhodes was at that time one of the top,
certainly two or three or four box office attractions.
I don't know who was bopping around right at that point in time.
But he could talk, even though he looked nothing like Hulk.
But you know that Hulk being able to talk not as well as Dusty at that.
point and probably ever, you know,
any kind of consistent basis.
But the look was more of what Vince was
even at that point in time,
Vince was fancying himself somewhat of a
physical fitness freak.
And so that was because we wanted superstar Billy Graham,
but Billy Graham was too old and had broken down.
So, but that was the thing is,
if there hadn't been a Hogan,
there wasn't really a lot of other choices for a charismatic guy
that could talk people in unless you were going for Dusty.
Maybe at that point, Austin Idol would have said,
excuse me, I'm terribly sorry, but I'm over here.
This money smells nice.
And I've got the gym membership.
But anyway, but it's in a remarkable series of events
that happened at the end of 83.
right before Starcade, which Hogan was originally supposed to be on, or at least he was billed as being on, he was in the program.
He was in the program, I've got it.
Right before that, Vince and Hogan already have their deal.
Hogan's going to Japan.
Still was billed for a bunch of shows with the AWA throughout Christmas and into early 84.
Vince has a dinner, apparently him and his wife and Harley race and his wife.
I don't actually, I don't know if Harley's wife was there.
It was at least Vince and Linda with Harley, which leads to a situation.
I have a feeling if Harley's wife at the time was there, she would have a double-leg
Vince.
Well, apparently Vince McMahon in the bathroom after Harley Race turned him down.
He wanted Harley Race to jump to the WWF with the NWA title and lose to the WWF
champion, whoever it may be.
Harley refused, didn't want to hurt the NWA, possibly even more, didn't want to hurt Rick Flair.
But he also owned a piece of the Kansas City office.
Vince McMahon allegedly tried to take him down in the bathroom.
Well, hold on because it would not only have been hardly, you know, just double crossing one person or one company or whatever.
As the champion, he'd known all these people for so many years.
His word had always been good.
He had a piece of one company while he was the entire alliances champion.
So he looked at Vince and they were in the bathroom.
as you said, he says, see that mirror?
He said, I got to look at that face every morning when I get up in the mirror
and turned him down that way, just no.
And as he's walking out, he says, and, you know, truthfully,
I don't see Harley being much of a fucking fabricator.
Said that Vince tried to double leg him.
If I can take him, daddy's what the fuck are you doing?
And that didn't end, you know, it ended quickly.
and but Vince's feelings were spurned.
Because he wanted to kill the NWA.
That was his chance to kill the NWA
and he had already made his move to kill the AWA.
He had Hogan.
Verenganya didn't know.
Vern Gagne ends up getting a telegram from Hogan.
I'm not coming back while he's in Japan.
Again, Christmas shows coming up.
These were big shows they had after the biggest year they ever had.
You can say in a sense,
Hulk Hogan was the first person to really take Vince
McMahon seriously.
Because Vince McMahon, when he hit him up and said, I'll make you a million, you'll be the first
wrestler to make a million dollars a year.
I'm going to merchandise the hell out of you.
Hogan could have said, well, this guy has not done that for anyone ever.
Can he really do it for me?
This was the announcer.
This was Vince's son when I was there.
Well, but hold on now.
Because phrase it a different way.
Hogan believed in Vince, but not the first one taking him seriously.
Harley took the offer seriously.
He just didn't want to take it.
And I think while a lot of people laughed at Vince that he was going to take over the world,
at the same point, a lot of people in the business knew that the guy that owned the largest grossing territory already in the business,
because he had New York and Boston and Philadelphia and Baltimore.
He can pay me more money probably than where I'm working now.
I will take this guy seriously.
but potentially not seriously enough to stab my business partners in the back or whatever
in some of those type of deals.
But yeah, a lot of people took Vince seriously as being able to pay them.
I don't think many of them believed he was going to take over the goddamn wrestling world
in the next 10 years or whatever,
but they knew he could pay him a wonderful amount for a short period of time.
and there were no contracts at that point in time,
so nobody was looking for,
oh, he'll bring me in, sign me up,
I'll be set for three years with a big guarantee.
That didn't exist.
But Hogan, think about this,
he knows what he's done in the Midwest.
And if you can draw 18,000 people in Minneapolis, St. Paul,
if the goddamn promoter of Madison Square Garden is pushing you hard,
where all the networks are located,
where all the fucking media comes out of
where your main event in Madison Square Garden
if you sell that son of a bitch out
then you get to be a movie star which happened
I'm not talking about getting a part in a Stallone movie
I'm talking about being the star of the movie
he knew he would have gone with Vince anyway
because that was the key to being the
better to get a chance as the top pushed guy
in Madison Square Garden than to never
appear in the garden at all
right so it wasn't i don't even think that hogan would have ever dreamed what was going to happen
it happened but he knew that that was a fucking dream spot worked well for bruno and if if vince hadn't
hadn't expanded nationally he still had and hogan could have worked god damn any number of days he
wanted to to work for crowds of five 10 000 15 20 000 a night so it wasn't like
like it was a goddamn gamble.
And it was the big change in a lot of ways that would happen to the wrestling industry
around the back of Hulk Hogan in terms of merchandising.
They had always been T-shirts, had always been magazines, programs, different things.
But on the back of Hogan, because he looked like a superhero or an action figure,
in the era of He-Man, He-Man had just come out a couple years before that.
Hogan, before they even got to the figure deal, T-shirts, bandanas, calendar,
the yellow fingers, which were kind of, you know, ubiquitous or at that era,
the yellow finger in the air for Hulk Hogan.
You know, lots of other wrestlers were in the line of LJN wrestling superstars and had T-shirts,
but it was the Hulkomania shirt was everywhere.
I knew someone years ago was a family member.
He was wearing a Hulkomania shirt.
I said, where'd you get that?
Oh, it was my girlfriends.
What?
Like, who's she?
How does she have?
It was just something in the culture.
And eventually those figures come out.
and, you know, again, he was, there were lots of stars and there were lots of people
merchandise, but he was the big one.
And it even starts before Vince, that was the other interesting thing, because of Rocky
Three.
There were Hogan puppets, there were Hogan figures, there were all these things, and then
the cartoon hits.
And it was a perfect storm of merchandising and of pop culture sensibility breaking out.
and then chokes out Richard Belser, hosts Saturday Night Live, all over MTV,
comes out to Eye of the Tiger before Survivor shut that down.
You know, all these things happening, and it was kind of, you know,
if you look at any Hogan stuff from 84 and 85, it feels right for that error.
I know I'm saying this to you and you were doing other things in 84 and 85.
Well, no, I know what you mean.
I acknowledge it.
And truthfully, that was when, for me, wrestling began its descent into entertainment madness,
but you can't deny the money that was made and the popularity.
And at that point, for a while, the rising tide did lift all the boats,
because the hotter that one got, the hotter the other would get.
and it was somewhat legitimate competition,
which happened from what,
only from 85 to 88 and 97 to 99
in that whole fucking smear.
Yeah.
And then Vince goes into Minnesota.
He has Hogan against the AWA.
AWA still remained pretty hot throughout 84 and the 85.
They had the road warriors come in.
They still had a lot of big stuff happening,
but all of a sudden, Hogan and Mean Gene are in the main event.
I mean, that was a big deal
and Hogan was the big deal
for the WWF in California.
That was when they started their California push in 83,
but they got Hogan in 84.
Well, I can tell you that,
especially in the southeast,
and Bo James had just tweeted earlier,
I saw that
in the Tri-Cities area
and the East Tennessee area,
they came in a couple shows
with Hogan sold out,
Freedom Hall and Johnson's
city. If Hogan then wasn't on the card after that, it was, you know, 500 people.
I think they did well in Louisville here when I think they, it was 85, I think, by the time they
got here. But with Hogan, they'd draw a crowd. Otherwise, nobody gave a shit. And, you know,
with the established southern territories, they couldn't really draw, same thing with Mid-South or,
you know, the Dallas territory or whatever. If Hogan was there, it was,
a success, but otherwise they weren't going to go see the non-local wrestling.
I mean, he was a name that broke out beyond wrestling fans.
You know, a casual person would know who Hulk Hogan was because of all the attention
over a few years there.
The same way like the word, Ressomania.
I used to hear, especially in the 80s, people would use that word like, oh, are they
going to have a WrestleMania?
They would say that for a house show.
You know, it was like things that were getting introduced into the culture and was
really blowing up, you know, not to...
Go too far ahead.
You brought up the movies before.
No Hodes Bard came out when I was nine in 1989.
I would just become a big wrestling fan.
I went with my neighbor to see it.
Both of our parents refused to go.
So it was the first movie I got dropped off for.
My parents and his parents both said,
we're not sitting through this movie.
And they were right.
It was the first movie in my life I saw it.
I'm like, this is bad.
I realized how Kogan was a terrible actor in that movie.
He would get better.
He was certainly better.
actually as an actor on wrestling than in movies, but that movie was atrocious, and that was the
focus of the WWF in the summer of 89.
Well, nevertheless, I mean, everybody knows, I think we can assume that everyone listening
knows what happened in the 80s and then the 90s.
Where were you when WrestleMania 3 happened?
When did you first see it?
you've asked me this before and I can't remember what answer I gave you except it's not like
I bought the pay-per-view I believe I was somewhere that day but obviously we heard about it and
the crowd and etc but I would have to think it was probably a few weeks later whenever
Norman Dooley might have sent me the VHS tape but you know that's that's the thing is we
recognized, okay, we've got all this great television.
We're selling out these other places.
And we, I'm talking about Crockett, we're selling out all these places.
We've got this great television.
We, you know, the talent roster up and down is comparable and look at the difference
in the in ring.
You know, ours is superior.
But Jesus Christ, they're getting these people on network television.
They're getting these people on a tonight show.
They're getting these people on,
they're putting them in stadiums.
It was somewhat demoralizing,
but it, you know,
we recognize that my God,
we can't compete with, you know,
they're on NBC once every Saturday,
or once a month on Saturday night.
It's like, I didn't,
I didn't realize that we were going to
get bought out by people with all of money in the world
and stood a poor little Jimmy Crockett
and then fucking it all go to shit
I thought it would go to shit while we were with Jimmy Crockett
but you know
sooner or later
it was something was going to go to shit
you know of course we bring up Andre and we talked a lot about it
and I'm sure everyone's talking about everything
or WrestleMania 3 which to me to this day
is still like the biggest event I still mark out
watching that video the entirety of that card
every bad match and all
I love that show
but then they did the thing with him and Savage
which was a pretty long build.
They become friends.
Savage becomes a baby face.
The mega powers form.
Savage wins the world title.
Hogan disappears to make his movie.
And then the big turn, or series of events that led to it,
on Saturday night's main event again,
your former protege, Big Bubba, the big boss man and Akeem,
managed by Slick against the Mega Powers.
And they have this big breakup.
It's pretty embarrassing how it happened live
where they didn't get the right.
Right, time cue and Brutus B.
That's where he's supposed to be preying over Elizabeth's near-dead carcass,
and he looks up on NBC television and says, give me a count.
Something of that nature was that?
That's right.
Count me in, brother.
But it led to what was, for a long time, the biggest pay-per-view ever.
WrestleMania 5, Atlantic City, 700-something,000 pay-per-view buys.
and he beats Randy Savage,
but it begins just a long trend
to him crushing Randy Savage.
He kicks out of the elbow
and then just immediately beats.
But that seemed to be a pattern.
And, you know, I guess you gotta kind of have to mention
a little bit of the Randy Savage Hulk Hogan
relationship, frenemy, friends at times.
It would end up being a big part of the story
from what happened with the eye at WrestleMania 9
to them working together.
you know, again in WCW, too, you know, Hogan's always said that he ran into Savage at the doctor's
office right before Randy Savage died and they made up. But it ends up becoming a pretty big relationship,
a pretty big friendship at times in the life and career of Hogan, the Randy Savage one.
Well, and that's, that was like what years, 88, 89?
88 came up, 89, they're feuding.
Okay, yeah. Even when I got there in,
93, Bruce used to hold that up to me as an example of Vince's long-term booking, how he liked to have, he liked to go a year out and then work backwards.
And we planted seeds and it was months later that all this stuff and everything.
And my thing to him was, where'd that fucking guy go? He's changing shit we did two weeks ago.
That's right. But they did, you know, plot that thing out.
carefully and it was two dynamic personalities.
We talked about Savage not long ago.
You know, even though he was smaller in stature than Hogan, he had the fucking physique,
but he had the intensity and you believe that guy is a, you know,
a nut.
And it's,
it was the very modern version of Mad Dog Vashton only being five foot six,
but really, you know,
being somebody would bite your fucking face off.
And so they bought that and sad.
He was, again, the equal, at least, of Hogan at promos, if not better.
But Vince always favored guys with the personalities that could talk and with the charisma.
And then the bodies didn't hurt in Vince's eyes because that was one of his personal interests.
To take that statement as you might want to.
You know, and it's right after this period of time, in my opinion, as someone who lived through it,
that you start to see the crinkles of the fans, some fans having changing opinions of Hogan.
The Ultimate Warrior, for me and all my friends, became way more popular than Hulk Hogan in 89,
when he was doing stuff with Zeus.
Ultimate Warrior was feuding with the Heenan family.
It was a lot better.
Then they have the match.
Warrior wins.
even as a kid it felt like this is the start of a whole new thing.
They changed the intro to superstars
where it was like a weird time travel through rocks
and there's the ultimate warrior at the end with lasers coming out of his eyes.
It was just they made it all about him.
But Hogan came right back and he did the feud with earthquake
where earthquake injured him and then they had the match at SummerSlam
where they had Rick Rood versus the ultimate warrior in a cage.
And I think the warrior took Hogan's popularity down a little bit
and then the Slaughter Hogan thing.
You know, I've said this before.
There was something there to be done.
It didn't need to involve anything with the Iraq War.
If Sergeant Slaughter, who to kids like me,
was a major baby face, not from wrestling, but from G.I. Joe.
He was all over that show, his action figures, the G.I. Joe movie.
If he had been the heel Sergeant Slaughter that he was in Mid-Atlantic wrestling
without any of the Iraqi connection or hoo-ha against Hulk Hogan as a,
the biggest star of this company 10 years ago and this, you know,
fucking nationally recognized figure versus Hulk Hogan.
It couldn't have drawn any worse than what they did, right?
Right.
See, I think they should have brought him back as a baby face because that's what everyone of that
generation knew him as at that point for the last,
six years, let's say, and have him turn on Hogan.
You know, the guy who comes out to I'm a Real American gets turned on by Sergeant Slaughter.
Who's the real American? Instead, it became the Iraq war thing, which beyond the tastelessness of it
that everyone had a problem with at the time, the war ended in two minutes. So there was no war.
But backing up also, you made an interesting point with Warrior. And because you were the
the target group at that point in time, Vince Sr. Never,
like to do baby face matches.
He did Bruno and Pedro.
I think he might have been talked into it.
72.
And it didn't draw.
It rained at Shea Stadium.
And he didn't want to do it again.
He actually refused Bruno offering to work with Andre flat out because he didn't want
to hurt either one of them because they were long-term attractions for him.
For the sake of one giant gate, he didn't want to do that.
with Vince and I think Vince thought that he could just build another superhero that would
vanquish the previous superhero and then have Hogan hang around in the Bruno
Living Legend status type of category because he didn't he didn't learn a lesson possibly of
his father but that's the point is Hogan's first
chip in popularity was when they did the big match with the other big baby face.
Even though Warrior wasn't as good wouldn't last as long,
at that point that was the peak of his popularity,
and it naturally shifted some people away from Hogan.
It just had to.
Yeah, and, you know, if you look at Hogan in 84, 85,
and then you look at Hogan in 90 or 91,
he's always been a cartoon, but he came to be more of a cartoonish version of himself,
speaking to little kids and everything, as opposed to, you know, this wacky, charismatic guy
who, you know, the fans who got into him in Minnesota wasn't just little kids, it was
everyone.
It, he was, he was more condescendingly going through the Hulk Hogan motions than actually
making the shit up for the first time as he went along.
Yeah.
So the Hulk Hogan who did record business with Paul Orndorff was a very different Hogan from
the Hulk Hogan working with Sergeant Slaughter in 91 or, you know, again,
Another chink in the armor was SummerSlam 91.
It's Slaughter and Adnan and Colonel Mustafa, the Iron Sheek,
versus the Ultimate Warrior in Hogan with Sid Justice as the referee.
Jesus Christ, there's some ring wizards in that combination there.
Poor slaughter.
Warrior gets fired by Vince.
We don't see him again until WrestleMania the next year, and they start building Sid,
and then they do the Royal Rumble in January,
the one that Rick Flair won,
maybe the greatest Royal Rumble ever.
And Hulk Hogan pulls Sid Vicious out after he's eliminated,
Sid Justice out after he's eliminated.
WWF later reddub the audio.
So the fans were cheering Hogan.
The fans started booing Hogan.
And he disappeared right after that,
after WrestleMania.
Of course, this is when the steroid scandal
and the Arsenio Hall scandal
and the Zaharian scandal
and the ringboy thing wouldn't really involve Hogan,
but a lot of bad things were happening
and getting into the newspapers.
And Hogan, right after WrestleMania,
right after the return of the Ultimate Warrior,
Hogan's gone.
But right at that point,
you started seeing more WWF fans than ever before
not cheer him,
cheer someone else,
and then when he returns a year later in 93
at the start of Raw,
he's much skinnier,
doesn't have the same appeal,
and although Brett Holt,
heart and the beginning of the new generation guys weren't really drawing. Nothing was drawing,
but they weren't really drawing. The fans, in a lot of respects, did not want another Hogan run
then. And it felt forced and it didn't really take. I know some fans loved them and thought
it was great, but it was like a completely different vibe than everything else happening in the
company. Well, he looked different also at that point. And he was trying to get
more movie roles so he wasn't, you know, for whatever reason, all the big guys feel like they
have to, even the rock, had to lose weight at one point to go to Hollywood. And this is,
and this is maybe six months a year before Thunder and Paradise started filming, too.
Yeah, but it also, it was getting old, it was getting stale, it was a little cartoony,
everything was getting stale in wrestling, but remember when Flair went, in what, 91, I was talking
before he had made the decision.
I said,
Rick Rubin will give you 10 grand a month.
Just make one show a month for us in Smoky Mountain.
I saw them at the garden, Flaring Hogan.
Well, that's the thing.
Once that he got up there and started working with Hogan,
you know, we know that that didn't pan out well.
Regardless what you think about the booking
and they didn't get a WrestleMania match, et cetera.
but what that did was actually start a little bit more chinking at Hogan.
That's right.
Because a lot of guys were Flair guys.
And they even the people not from the Carolina Territory or Crockett Strong Towns,
they might have been watching TBS in But if there was, if they'd go to Butte
if there was 4,500 that have been watching TV that thought Rick Flair was the coolest thing
they ever saw and they never got to see him,
they're cheering Flair
when he's working with Hogan, right?
Yeah, I saw them, I want to say it was November
91 at the Garden, and
it was the most amount of
fans I've seen there that weren't Hogan
fans. Not that there weren't a ton of Hogan fans.
I'm not trying to say that there weren't. There were plenty
of Hogan fans, but when Rick Flair,
with Mr. Perfect as his second,
got a false finish win over Hogan,
there were a lot of people like me, I was 11,
who jumped up out of their seats cheering.
Because it's one of those moments where you're cheering the heel technically and you're looking around.
Other people are looking at you like you've got something wrong with you.
But you realize there's a whole lot of us that we're all really happy at Rick Flare one year.
Well, and it's for people thinking, oh, bullshit now, you know, you're just taking up for Flare.
Imagine in 1991 the response if they'd have booked Hulk Hogan versus Rick Flair in the Omni for WCW.
That probably would have drawn a fucking house too.
but a lot of people would have been cheering for, you know, each guy,
because it would draw two here to four separate audiences with the way WCW had been doing.
Not a lot of people were going to the live events,
but there were still people watching on television and historically Rick Flair had been the big star.
But if you reverse the procedure and brought Hogan over,
he would have brought a bunch of people.
And even if he was the heel, he would have brought a bunch of people.
he would have brought a bunch of people with him.
That was the point is,
in a four or five year period there,
besides the fact that Hogan is somewhat distracted
and is kind of stale.
And like we said,
for all the reasons why he didn't seem like the fresh thing,
he's also worked with the warrior
and he's worked with Rick Flair
and he's worked with people that are chipping away
where they're saying, yeah, we like the other guy.
Well, yeah, and again, in 91,
that version of Hulk Hogan was really geared towards kids.
Kids weren't his only fans, but it was geared towards kids.
Rick Flair comes in as the real world champion.
His whole fucking gimmick is,
I'm going to come to your town,
and I'm going to out drink and out fuck everyone in your town.
Yeah.
He was the baby face to a lot of us.
I'm sorry, he was.
He was.
He was a lot cooler in 91, 92,
than Hogan.
They should have done a WrestleMania match.
I love Rick Flair and Randy Savage at WrestleMania 8,
but it should have been Hogan and Flair.
you know, I always wondered, because it drew for them in that time.
Was it just because Hogan wouldn't be the complete baby face?
Was it that Vince didn't believe in Rick Flair?
But for whatever reason...
Vince couldn't fully do an outsider angle and put somebody on the level.
And also he did the same thing with Vader in that he insisted on putting guys together
and house shows all over the country where the most ardent fans had seen it before
they would meet on pay-per-view.
And it was a whole different time
than we can go down that rabbit hole.
But the point being is that,
I think at that point in time,
you know, like you said,
Flair was just to some other people,
was a little fresher, especially on a national stage.
But Hogan was drooping and all that.
The point I was going to make was in any other,
in any other situation or era,
and wrestling or with other personalities,
the Booker would have just switched him heel.
But you almost couldn't do that
and or he wouldn't have done it
because what was it four years later
or three years later or whatever,
he had to be talked into it.
So it was better he went away
and people started to miss him.
But you know, he came back before people missed him too much
in 93. And again, that was only a short period of time. You came in right after that match
with Yoko Zuna, at King of the Ring, with that weird finish with the photographer and the
flesh. And that's the last time we see Hogan on TV for a while, or for WWF TV, especially.
Well, and then again, there's where he screwed Brett Hart that was supposed to be
Brett Hart's whole deal. And, I mean, we're not spreading bad stories about Hulk Hogan.
This has been publicly accepted fact that he said, no.
Brett's not going to be the champion.
I'll do this and that and with Yoko and a boom.
And then right after that, because he was doing New Japan stuff,
I think maybe he worked with Muda in 93.
I got to go back and look.
But he does an interview on New Japan TV,
and he says the WWF title is just a toy.
This is the real belt I want, the IWGP.
And then allegedly they called him on it in the office
and he denied that it ever happened.
It was on video.
The video was out there.
Probably it didn't happen because it was in Japan.
It was on one of those missing days that happened
when you travel back and forth.
Yes, that day didn't exist.
But then Thunder and Paradise
becomes his post-wrestling project,
and it gets, you know,
gets a lot of stations.
It's a syndicated show.
And while making that show,
Rick Flair,
I guess Eric Bischoff goes to Rick Flair,
and Rick Flair says he can get him to Hogan,
and Rick Flair links the two up,
and that changes the history of WCW there.
Hulk Hogan gets one of the most lucrative deals
for any wrestler ever.
and he's the biggest star to sign with WCW,
and it takes a while, the paper views recover,
but it takes the NWO angle and the heel turn to change everything.
Well, yeah, because we were laughing at first,
because with the contract that they said the fanfare,
they bought him in as the big baby face,
the savior of wrestling,
and we used to joke at that point that they,
lose money and I think they were.
We saw the numbers broken down.
They would lose money on every Hulk Hogan T-shirt they sold by the time they paid to have it made and they paid somebody to sell it.
And they fucking did whatever the fuck and then give him the cut.
It was costing them money.
And the people didn't really want to see him as the big baby face.
And it didn't really spark their business.
But as you said, you know, once that.
once at the right angle came along that he was the perfect person for,
you know, that was a different story because
in always,
Nash and Hall were always going to draw in that initial run
because the people really believed that they were
WWF guys coming to fuck with the WCW guys.
But because Hogan then turned and got all the extra attention and it clicked,
that's what kicked the whole thing off.
But it, and also they were WWF icons.
It still looked like a promotion versus promotion thing that was the,
the only thing at that point in time of people still really fucking believed was real.
You know, it becomes the hottest thing.
It changes WCW's business.
But look at one year earlier.
You know, Hogan, as corny and cartoony as he got in the end of his WWF run,
it was all the way hammed up in WCW while he's feuding with the Dungeon of Doom.
That famous segment, that's not, that famous segment where he walks in, and I remember what he says, he touches the water, it's not hot.
There are no Hokomaniacs here.
Who are you?
Who are you?
It's just, it's the most ridiculous acting.
And a lot of it was apparently Kevin Sullivan as a booker trying to get Hogan's trust.
Trust me, I'm not going to do anything to mess up your character.
let's do some interesting things.
They had to first do all that.
Of course, the Zodiac, brother Brutus,
brother Brutai would be a part of the dungeon of doom.
But, or Brutie, or whatever he was,
all this is going on, Jimmy Hart's there.
You know, a lot of people,
Hulk Hogan's comfortable with her in WCW.
Gene Oakrow and comes in in 93.
Bobby Heenan.
Randy Savage comes in after him.
They get Elizabeth back at the beginning of Nitro.
Nitro starts in the, what, September 95?
it was a very interesting period of time
and then Hogan, who allegedly did not want to turn heel,
was finally, they were trying to talk him into it, he said no,
and then he finally saw how big it was going to get or it was.
And he realized, I need to take advantage of this moment.
And he did.
See, that's the thing.
He was smart to get himself into things at the proper times.
And, you know, I can see with his,
success that he had had, him thinking, I can never be a heel again. But at the same time,
when he was seeing possibly the lack of success he was having, compared to the success he'd had,
he said, and these guys are hot and they're a little younger and they're fresher, and this could
be a thing. And then boom, and on the night, then my personality will still overshadow everybody
else. So look at me. But it worked. And again, he had a killer deal. I have here,
someone in the Culta Cornet group posted this earlier.
This is the first page of the letter of agreement from 98 between WCW and Hulk Hogan.
So again, he got there in 94.
They renewed the agreement, I think, in 96.
So this is 98.
Based on May of 98, it's at a period of time where Hulk Hogan has leverage, and WCW is rolling.
And according to this, the term would be from 98 through May 2002.
The bonus here, in consideration of Balea's performance here under, WCW shall pay Balea a bonus in the amount of $2 million to be paid within 14 days after the execution and delivery of this letter of agreement.
He will promote and appear and wrestle and perform six pay-per-views during the year, one through three, and he will be the featured wrestler at each event.
in consideration for the pay-per-view appearances,
WCW shall compensate him 15% of 100%
so 15% of what comes in
of domestic pay-per-view cable sales received by WCW
or a $675,000 guarantee payment per event.
So whichever number is better.
Whichever is greater.
WCW shall also pay him $1,350,000,
on July 1st, November 1st, and February 1st of years 1 through 3.
So again, this is just page 1.
This doesn't even go into creative control and merchandise and everything else.
It was a fantastically lucrative deal for Hulk Hogan, and it helped get the company
to the point they were at at this point in 1998.
And that was from 1998 to 2002?
Yeah.
It probably didn't work too well for him in 2000.
That's what I'm saying.
It was one thing to get to this point, and he had the best deal,
but he wasn't the only person with a great deal,
and a lot of these deals are what ended up hurting WCW to the point that it died.
Well, that was easy to sign those deals when you're making $50 million,
but when you lose $50 million, or was it $60 million, I'm sorry, in 2000,
then those dimmer the deals what try men souls.
Yeah, and the WCW run, you know, again, we've talked about it in the past, and the Goldberg match, which went from not being a match to being a dark match to Hogan seeing that it was going to draw on the Turner executives being there to becoming the biggest drawing match in WCW history on free TV.
And it was a big deal.
I mean, we just talked about Goldberg retiring.
That match is one of the reasons why Goldberg is a big deal.
And Hogan put him over because he realized it was the best thing for him to do.
you know how often do you say that about hogan
hogan realized the best thing i can do in front of all these executives
and this big house is put over goldberg
well because in the end all the executives
were patting him on the back for drawing it
when they sold most of the tickets in advance to begin with
and he wasn't even on the card
he wasn't even that
but that's the thing is that again
he knew when to put himself in the right plate
all these instances in the wrestling business,
how did he go so wrong in his own personal life
with not knowing how to put himself in the right places at the right times?
You know, again, he's still working for the WWF in the early 2000s
after his WCW, well, I guess towards the end of it.
He came in in, what, 2002.
Now, he waited to, because remember,
he had one of the contracts that even when WCW went out of,
of business was sold whatever the fuck,
Turner Broadcasting or whatever the corporate entity was,
had to pay him the rest of his contract.
That's why several of those top guys did not migrate over to WWF until 2002.
Because they were still getting paid to sit on their ass at home.
And he comes back, they bring back the NWO, Vince brings him in.
And he has that match with the Rock, which steals WrestleMania.
It's a match that everyone talks about to this day.
It's such an amazing match.
I forgot.
Somebody just retweeted.
We did a watch along of that.
That's right.
And it's,
I assume,
on the YouTube channel
where people could avail themselves of it
if they so desire.
But yeah,
where he completely again,
he outworked a rock.
I mean, psychology and,
and with knowing what to do and et cetera,
you know,
that they had to completely flip around
with the little things that,
you know, that would have been ahead of Rock at that point in time in his career.
Yeah, and he does interesting things. I mean, he ends up teaming with Edge. I think they win the tag titles. He becomes the masked Mr. America. He has a match with Vince McMahon. I mean, it was a lot of really interesting things. And then he was gone again. And around this period of time, before TNA, and that's a whole other story. I let you talk about that. But this really began the demystification of Hulk Hogan, that reality show starts. And you start seeing him,
with his family and they do a ton of media together.
I remember them on Howard Stern, you know, together.
But I think people seeing Hogan and his family
didn't make everyone a bigger,
didn't make a lot of people want to see more of them.
And then eventually,
when the scandal hits with Bubba the Love Sponge's wife,
again, that comes on the heels of seeing this guy and his family
and his wife and his son all over the place for years.
And then his son gets into the accident where that other kid gets messed up.
it was a series of bad events outside of wrestling
and then inside of wrestling
there's TNA, there's that Australia tour
with him and Flair having those matches
where they busted each other up
but you were there right before he got to TNA
well and also
none of those did any favors as you said
and the I think especially the reality show
familiarity with those people bred
some level of contempt
We're just like enough is enough of these fucking people, right?
Yeah, and in a lot of ways, Hogan became like the ultimate Florida man.
You know, you always hear these stories.
Florida man did this, Florida man did that.
He was like the king of Florida man because he was all about being based in Florida.
Anyone who was a big mucker in a Tampa Clearwater area, they knew him.
I mean, I watched a documentary not too long ago about Lou Pearlman, the guy who ended up stealing all the money from a variety of
people he managed to Backstreet Boys and in sync and I guess for a time,
Brooke Hogan, Hogan's all over that documentary.
You're not being interviewed, but just in clips from being around.
He became almost like a local celebrity there separate from being a national celebrity.
But that's the point I was going to make is you, you know, you mentioned that at the same time
the Australia tour and the guy had a lot of money, but, you know, Rick and Hogan both.
at that point, I think they were at the time where people didn't want to see them rolling around
bleeding anymore.
And enough is enough.
You guys have reached an age at some point where this must come to an end.
And it wouldn't.
It did for,
Quaker, it did for Rick.
But the, I said when we were talking about the TNA agent reports that I've been pulling out of the files and other things,
T&A stories lately that without having any idea, anything was going to go on with Hulk Hogan.
I told Terry Taylor, I said, you couldn't even wait till I hear Ferrar is coming or I would
have fucking quit when Hogan and Bischoff came in the next month anyway, right?
And then, well, why would you have quit with Hogan and Bischoff coming in?
Not again.
Well, I wasn't fond of Eric because of that previous brief interaction in WCW, but I didn't know
anything about Hulk Hogan as a person, but I knew that, no, this cause is lost.
Jeff Jarrett's gone, Dutch Mantel's gone.
They've already been burying these young guys that are hungrier, easier to work with,
more exciting, and the creative already sucks, and now it's going to be a Hogan Bischoff thing
when, I mean, truthfully and honestly, as we've seen for 25 years, that was his MO, when
comes in, all of his friends come with him. It's just at that point, all his friends was 20 years
older. And with Bischoff, the feedback that I'd always gotten on Eric Bischoff and still have to
this day from anybody who's opinion about creating or booking or promoting wrestling that I
respect is that Eric Bischoff knows a lot about sales and talking to TV people, and you would be
astonished at what Eric Bischoff doesn't know about wrestling.
So I wouldn't have wanted to, and as the product bore out, they had just got to the point,
I believe, where they were either about to or almost had or maybe even did in T&A break
even there in the fall of 2009 and it went downhill from there and has only recently resurged
15 years later.
He has a WWE satellite,
which is what it needed to be, I guess, to succeed.
But that was the whole...
Well, yeah, but it didn't need to be the satellite
of Bischoff and Hogan, Hervey fucking Enterprise.
That's the thing, yeah.
It was the whole idea that Bischoff and Hogan
were coming in to save things,
or coming in to, you know, make things big again,
and we're going to have a live show
or we'll go opposite Raw,
we'll have all these stars, and Jeff Hardy,
and the nasty boy, it didn't work,
it didn't feel right.
Well, here's at that point.
And Hogan is one of those guys that his personality was so big and his reputation was so big.
And he, he, the magnitude of him, right?
That you needed to get him out of the way to get other people over.
That if he was too old at the time to be a top in ring talent,
but he overshadowed in a lot of cases
the other guys they were trying to use.
You see what I'm saying.
And also it was just old at that point.
It was just stale.
It was done.
And they have that last image of him leaving
while dragging Dixie Carter
who's hanging onto his leg,
and then he never comes back.
He goes back to WWF.
Then the scandal breaks out.
He's gone.
They remove him from the Hall of Fame for a few years.
He comes back.
He gives that speech to the locker room.
that does not go over well because he did not apologize.
And, you know, he's kind of been an on and off presence over the last few years.
It's crazy to think the last appearance he had was when he got booed out of the building in
LA, which in a lot of ways was a tone-deaf appearance that WWU put him out there.
Yeah.
But, you know, he got booed.
And then he did an interview with Ariel Hawani where he said, of course I did.
I was Hollywood Hogan out there with everything.
No, he wasn't.
I mean, he right about it.
Jimmy R. was waving an American
fucking flag.
They're like, fuck you.
Fuck out of here.
But, and that's
between the lack of apologies
and the continuing
revelations of, well, this wasn't true.
And remember, he ripped his shirt off
and said Donald Trump was his hero.
And that caused a lot of people
start taking a piss on him.
Yeah, that was like six months or so before.
so that was in the air.
That's right.
It was in the air like one of Andre's farts.
And then, and I assume he's one of the people that his wife or one of his wives or some blonde
person that he is married has led him to God also because he's been doing the just over-the-top
religious thing, which you can't take seriously from a guy that says he used to wrestle 500
times a year because he flew backwards from Japan.
But, you know, he was over the top with that,
like he's over the top with everything else.
I think that it's just, all those things have various,
it's a cumulative thing like it was when he was wrestling other baby faces
or people that the fans liked when he's done things
that a variety of people, maybe in small numbers,
but like the who's down in Whoville, it gets louder.
cumulatively, a lot of people said, I don't like this fucking guy anymore.
Yeah, a few years ago, he got married, and the woman he married was apparently a big
to-do in Scientology, so a lot of people were thinking, like, oh, Hulk Hogan's going to become
a Scientologist, which would have been amazing because he would have broken their whole audit
system once they tried to interview him and get some real stories out of him or anything.
But, you know, she was apparently baptized with him a few years ago, so it may have gone
the other way. He may have gotten her, and...
Good Lord.
Brought her to him under the Good Lord, as you do.
just said. Oh, good Lord. But, you know, he was still doing interviews. I mean, that's one of the
reasons we would always talk about him as people would send us these interview clips where he's
saying things that are just clearly not true. But he's so committed to saying him that he could
almost convince you. And if you don't know anything, he would convince you. And random projects
and products that would pop up. Now there's the Hulk Hogan, Real American Beer commercials all over
raw and real American freestyle wrestling, once again, him and Bischoff.
That was about to launch with him as the commissioner.
And there was just articles in the paper a month ago, two months ago,
him and partners bought a building or bought a storefront across from Madison Square
Garden to open up a Holkogen bar.
That's right.
I remember we talked about that at the time.
Or him and investors are looking to buy hooters.
And, you know, we should say, because we talked about...
I've been out there looking to buy a few hooters in my time, but I didn't realize he was a
It's that frisky these days.
Oh, you mean the restaurant?
The restaurant chain.
And I believe it's also based in Florida, or at least originally.
But, you know, we talked about the Bubba the Love Sponge stories a few weeks ago when he started coming out.
I believe, again, the same market.
I believe it's still Tampa, saying that he was hearing that Hulk Hogan was on his deathbed.
Of course, they had a big falling out.
You have to say, it turns out he probably knew what he was talking about, a lot of these things.
We started hearing from people without exposing any sources.
a variety of people who seemed to, more than one person,
who seemed to be aware based on what they were saying
of certain things happening medically.
And it seemed to be a pretty grim picture.
They kept putting out positive statements.
I know Jimmy Hart the other day said that everything was fine.
He was doing karaoke with Nick the other night.
But it was clear that there were some really serious medical issues.
And, you know, they said cardiac arrest.
you know, it hits suddenly.
And again, like I said, it's a conflicted feeling for a lot of us.
It's a very complicated legacy.
It's the character.
It's the important role the character played and the things that the character was a part of.
And then it's the real person who, at times without being, seemingly without being malicious,
was an incredibly self-absorbed, self-obsessed,
Carney, for lack of a better term.
And it may have worked for him throughout his life,
but it creates this situation where an all-time legend,
again, like you said, at the very top of this,
you know, taking Jim Laundas out of the equation,
the biggest star we've ever seen in this country for professional wrestling,
but there's a lot of conflicted thoughts
when trying to evaluate and weigh what kind of guy he was.
Well, and, you know, as you said, it's the person and the gimmick,
but I think this is a case where they became the same thing.
I mean, it's not a new story in wrestling.
He spent almost 50 years convincing people that he was Hulk Hogan,
except during that lawsuit when he said,
I know, he's a completely different guy with a completely different penis size.
but he had to be Hulk Hogan.
And, you know, we've always seen you don't get to be a big star without having a big ego.
Sometimes you have a big ego, you don't get to be a big star.
But both can be trouble.
He was somewhat of a Teflon guy and that when he got in trouble in one respect,
he would be bailed out from another, you know, quarter coming in.
I think he got caught up in that and started believing his,
own shit and just felt like is that that that's who he has to be maybe in public and and in
private as i said i don't know i'm looking from the outside because that's why i can say that i
neither personally liked him or disliked him and as we've been able to have this conversation
about what we saw like everybody else so but again very few people
ever have had or ever could have the impact he had on the professional wrestling business,
you bring up The Rock and Steve Austin, Jim Lundas, Bruno San Martino, Rick Flair.
It's a very short list of the top tier in terms of star power, drawing ability.
It's a very short list.
And, you know, he's in the conversation for top three.
You could argue if he's number one or where he is.
but undoubtedly the biggest star of the last 45, 50 years in this country, if not ever, for professional wrestling.
Oh, yeah, I think you can say since the dawn of television, you know, the biggest star over the checks all the boxes.
But anyway, we don't take any pleasure in that.
we will miss taking the piss out of his stories.
Because I'm pretty sure that us taking the piss out of his bullshit stories that he told and having fun with it
never once affected any dollar that might come into his checkbook and or I don't know that he ever lost any sleep over.
Right.
So I feel that our hands are clean.
Those are some of the most fun moments in the history of the show is just us laughing.
you know, as we're discovering these things of what he said.
Sometimes we play audio, sometimes we'd read quotes.
You know, Harley Race burned the ring down and then shook his hand and asked for a job.
He just crazy, crazy stuff.
I'm hanging out with Michael Jackson and Mr. T at Wembley Stadium.
Just crazy things that don't necessarily add up.
But it was so much fun discussing any of these things, his book, all these things.
And, you know.
Or Ron Howie.
Howard. What's going to happen to Ron Howard down at the beach store?
Oh, I'm sure someone, whoever runs as a state, will have to keep these things open.
I mean, it's a valuable brand you would think going forward to say.
But I mean, is it going to be a new broom sweeps clean, a new administration,
or is Ron still going to be the ruler of the roost?
Does he have some kind of contract with the future owners of the name, image, and likeness?
You know who I actually found myself thinking about two different people when I
heard this news. One was Brooke Hogan, just because they were just a series of articles about
everything between her. Her mom had put out a video, I think, where she looked somewhat unhinged,
ranting about family issues. And Brooke Hogan put out a statement, and I felt really good for her.
It just seemed like she was in a good place and had her own family and didn't want to be involved
with her family's self-induced drama. And I thought about her just because, you know,
obviously her and her dad were very close and they had issues and I, you know, whatever reason
it made me think of her and the other person was Jimmy Hart, who, you know, so much of his
life, seemingly, his career has been the Hulk Hogan business since at least 93. I mean,
everything with him publicly is him dressed in the Hulk Hogan colors with the Hulk Hogan
megaphone at times waving the American flag, but, you know, he did a lot of things.
for Hulk Hogan and it ate up, not in a bad way, but it ate up a lot of his time. It was a lot of
of his life. And I ended up thinking about him too, just, you know, I hope he's okay. Well, yeah,
and I do too. If Jimmy is listening, and I hope to God you're not listening, Jimmy. I hope
you're out busy like you usually like to be instead of sitting around listening to us, but we hope
you're okay also. I've known Jimmy longer than Hulk has. But yeah, yeah, that's the thing.
And at the same time, Jimmy's always out doing his own stuff.
Jimmy's doing things that we never hear about or dream of, but he can't sit still from my experience with him.
But they've worked together.
Hope knew how valuable Jimmy was and how he could trust him, how he's honest, he's dependable.
He knows how to do promotion.
He's a workaholic.
And so they've been, had some type of professional relationship.
for over 30 years now.
So, you know, I do feel bad for Jimmy
because that's a, you know, a big part of his life, as you said.
The only one we don't feel bad for is Linda
because she looks nuts.
I don't know.
She looked like fucking whatever happened to baby Jane material.
Well, maybe that's reason to feel bad enough.
But Hulk Hogan, 71 years old,
the face of wrestling for a lot of fans,
for a lot of non-fans and certainly a complicated legacy
that we'll continue to discuss going forward.
But in the meantime, as they say,
thanks for the house, hoaxter.
Eric Bischoff tweeted that,
and I thought that was succinct and said it all
because that's in the old days
where you would go up to the guy in the main event,
say thank you for the house
because everybody made more money.
It was on the card because you were in the main event.
That was the meaning of that.
before all this handshake shit started.
Guys wanted to be on, in the 80s,
guys wanted to be on the Hulk Hogan shows.
WWF had three, sometimes four shows a night.
Guys really wanted to be on the shows with Hogan.
You knew you'd make more money.
You knew what else you were going to see, don't you?
On those shows in the 80s with Hogan on top, no.
The Big Boot.
Of course.
The Big Boot, baby.
And I'll tell you what, not to have a morbid transition,
but this is broadcasting and we do have sponsors.
and ladies and gentlemen, I'm proud to say that one of them has recently come back and said,
give us some more of that.
He got any more of that sponsorship, baby, because apparently our friends at Brunt,
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Ah.
The other U's not you there, but the U's out there.
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Did you adjust the softness of your boot?
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Can I trade my worker?
No, the people who, I don't know what we're talking about, ladies and gentlemen.
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All righty, well, let's bear the brunt of the heavy lifting here.
Let's do the grunt work, and before we go any further, let's see.
try to lend some insight on before all of what we've just talked about happened yesterday.
For the past week, we've been inundated with the people asking us and sharing on social media
the video that they've released from the WWV vault of an early match between Jerry Lawler and Randy Savage.
And I guess that's been about a week ago now, right?
about a week
WVALT has been releasing
a bunch of interesting things
we talked about how they put up
unedited Great American Bashes
from various years
lots of rare footage
house show matches
or dark matches
that hadn't gotten out
this one was a real surprise
because
it popped up kind of out of nowhere
apparently from the
Pafo slash ICW collection
whatever that entails
whenever WWP purchased it
but it was
a savage logger match that no one had seen before, and most people, if not everyone,
except whoever worked there, couldn't even really truly identify the building. They said it was
one building, but no one was sure. Well, and I've got some insight short of Colin Randy Hales,
but I actually didn't, you know, think it was important enough to bother him to say, hey,
were you there on March 23rd, 1985 or whatever? But here's the light that I can shed
on it and explain how this confusion started.
This was not an ICW event per se that this match was promoted on and shot at because
ICW as a thing had ceased to exist probably a year beforehand.
It was a Memphis show promoted off Memphis, you know, the Memphis crew.
I'm not saying that Angelo Pafo might not have been the local promoter.
But here's the deal.
In late 1983, as we've talked about here on the program before,
Lanny Pafo had already left and he was working preliminaries for Bill Watts and Mid-South wrestling
because he was there.
We worked with him the first couple weeks we were there in December of 83.
Mid-South had promoted that Randy Savage was going to be coming in also.
Angelo was closing down his promotion.
They couldn't make it anymore.
He was trying to find jobs for his sons, right?
Well, but between the time that they taped the announcement of Randy Savage coming to Mid-South
and the time that it would have actually happened, as we've talked about,
Bill Dundee, Watts decided to bring Dundee down as his booker in Louisiana.
Dundee wasn't obviously going to bring Savage in.
I don't think there was a lot of heat with Lanny,
but, you know,
Lanny was only a preliminary guy anyway in that environment.
So Angelo made a deal with Jerry Jarrett
for them all to come to Memphis
since Dundee was out of the way.
They could have the, you know,
because of the heat between Dundee and Savage
that everybody knows about,
that they could have the Lawler Savage matches
they'd been promoting for five years.
and do some business.
And Lanny meant more in that angle as the brother and Angelo was their manager than he did just,
you know, working underneath in Louisiana.
What happened was because ICW was on television still in a couple of different places,
Jared agreed to send the out-of-town tape of the 60-minute version of the Memphis show
that Louisville and Evansville and Lexington everywhere got to fulfill.
Phil Angelo's TV commitments.
That's how so many of those
1984
Memphis clips
still exist today
because Angelo
kept anything that would be worth anything
and a lot of that stuff
was later into the
Ron Martinez collection,
PM film and tape
and Kit Parker licensed
some of it for the wrestling gold series.
But point
being, one of the TV
that ICW and Pafo had was Harrisburg, Illinois, which I'm not sure if there's a station
in the Cape Girardo, Missouri market, or if it's served by Harrisburg.
But nevertheless, Memphis didn't run Cape Girardo, Missouri.
That had been an ICW town like Paducah, Kentucky, Cape Girardo, and the 64 corridor that
we've talked about.
Angelo Pafo had tried it with Phil Golden's All-Star
wrestling in 73, same towns, came back to them. It was close to Southern Illinois where they were
from. So Angelo was promoting there, and a point I'm making is that even though Memphis didn't
regularly go to Cape Girardo, they did go to the boot heel of Missouri because the Memphis
TV reached there. So if they got the TV market in Harrisburg, it was just a little bit farther
for the Memphis crew to go up.
And the show was in Cape Girardo, Missouri.
And Randy Hales was the ring announcer
because at the time,
Randy was not only doing the TVs
and be a general manager kind of role,
but he would have been the ring announcer
for anything in Jonesboro, Arkansas,
or anything in Missouri, et cetera, et cetera,
because that was the Memphis Inn.
So somebody had it right in that they found,
an ad for a show in Cape Girardo, Missouri in March of 1985, and that fits it.
The date that they had had at the WW vault on the tape, even though they couldn't figure out
why it was there.
And probably, since there's no commentary on it, they, Angelo might have even been running
the camera.
You know, who knows what the fuck.
They taped it.
Maybe they showed a few highlights on Memphis.
TV. But it was just a spot show match. And that ended up with the tapes that Angelo Pafo ended up,
you know, selling or disposing of to Ron Martinez. You want to hear the rest of the card?
Sure. And by the way, it was a Sunday. Where did the Memphis territory typically run on a Sunday?
Except for Jackson, Tennessee once a month when I was there nowhere. So see, it was a day off.
And Angelo probably said, hey, we draw a house here, have Randy work with Lawler.
So Sunday, March 24th, 1985, Cape Girardo, Missouri.
Speedy Tall Tree defeated Larry Williams,
and Speedy Tall Tree is one of the sons of Tom Renesto.
Tom Renesto, yeah.
Billy Travis defeated Jack Attack.
Whoever or whatever that is.
Patriots defeated Cruisers.
Good Lord.
Speedy Tall Tree.
Working double.
Beat Angelo Pafo.
There you go.
Plowboy Frasier in a handicap match
defeated Patriots.
Lanny Pafo defeated Billy Travis.
It's almost formatted like a mini-taping.
I mean, a lot of these guys are working twice.
Batons defeated J.R. Hogg in a handicap match.
And the main event, Jerry Lawler, defeated Randy Savage.
You know, maybe that Angelo was trying to keep the TV going and wanted to tape something or whatever.
And it sounds, as you said, like it was a primitive TV taping, but as we saw it was one camera in a stands.
And that wasn't even a full Memphis crew.
That was Lawler saying to fucking Frasier and Billy Travis and Speedy Tall Tree was in the territory at the time.
And maybe a couple of other guys, hey, let's go up here.
here and work our off Sunday,
Angelo's going to run fucking Cape Girardo.
And Randy, you can keep an eye on the box office,
make sure we get a fucking legitimate count type of thing.
This is a week before WrestleMania 1.
And this is, let's see, March, April, May,
three and a half months or so before Randy Savage will go to the WWF.
But there you have it.
Mystery solved.
This is a, oh, and somebody said,
and who the fuck is tuck is.
Newman. Tux Newman was Randy Savage's manager. That was Scott Walton the long time or Jeff Walton.
Scott Watson. No, you know what? You know who Scott Walton is? He's an old time local CBS,
fucking affiliate WHS television personality here. But Jeff Walton, who was the longtime publicity
agent for the Los Angeles office had, you know, because he wanted to dip his toe in the managing
world and he got booked in Memphis to come out and be a manager, Tux Newman, for, I would say,
a brief period of time. They needed a manager. This is right when Jimmy Hart left to go to the
WWF right before WrestleMania 1, and they needed someone. And Jeff had been around the wrestling
business for such a long time. He had done so much for the Los Angeles office. He had run the
Freddie Blassie fan club as a fan. And then,
got involved with the magazine end.
And Vince McMahon wanted Jeff to run
what was Victory Magazine and became WWF magazine.
Jeff was one of the first people Vince Pitt.
I think Vince brought him to Connecticut.
He put Vince in touch with Theo Erritt.
That's why there's a brief period of time
where there are Theo Erritt WWF photos
like in their magazines.
And then it didn't work out
and he ended up doing some stuff with Norm Kiteser.
And then he wanted to be a manager.
It was something he always wanted to do
bleached his hair,
became Tux Newman in Memphis,
and you have to say he was actually pretty good.
He was good.
The blonde hair was a little much to take,
knowing what he normally looked like in real life,
but he wasn't bad.
He could talk.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And probably a little Freddie Blassie influence there.
He managed,
there's also footage of him managing,
like for California Championship Wrestling in the 80s,
but it's unfortunate,
at the business change. Otherwise, maybe he would have done more as a manager because he was pretty
good. But that's the explanation of that. But Brian, let me ask you this. Can you possibly explain
to me why somebody has not told our old friend Flop Dollar to just calm down for he hurts himself
or somebody else for that matter. But so far, he's mostly trying to kill himself.
I he's he's done it remember the the dive over the top rope where he couldn't clear the top rope and did the flip and everybody shared the clip and made fun of him and et cetera now he's figured out a way that he's guaranteed to clear the top rope he's using a ladder did you see the the big bump from or the two big bumps from the T and
a, was that on pay-per-view?
Slammiversary.
The big show,
they drew 7,000 people
in Long Island. We'll talk about
that a second, but
I didn't obviously watch it
because I've been out of town and we're going to talk about that
in a minute. But the clip was all over
Twitter. He's
on the ladder and
another guy's on another ladder
and the other guy is going to push them over
the both of them over
sideways together. And the theory is,
is, ladies and gentlemen,
the theory is that as they think
they're two dynamite kids is what the theory is,
but there's ladders
braced from the ring apron to the railing
around the ring that keeps the fans back.
And each of these guys, as their ladder turns over,
they're going to fall off the ladder over the top rope
and land flat on these other ladders.
Brian, have I described that accurately?
And is it,
Is it come across as stupid as it looked?
Again, I think you did.
I only saw the one clip.
You said there's two.
I only saw the one clip of the one ladder spot, which that was all I saw.
Well, yeah, well, but that's the thing is that they were going over.
And the one guy, whoever the other guy was, he had the idea.
Because when the ladder tips over, as you get right to the tipping point, as they say,
you just kind of, you just push off, baby.
as Dusty would say, you just push off, baby.
You just kind of push off.
You're going to clear the top rope,
and you're going to land sideways or somewhat flat
or stretched out on this goddamn ladder that's laid out flat,
and hopefully that will break your fall so you don't kill yourself on the floor.
And the one guy did it.
But old flob dollar, the ladder,
and you know how big and corpulent
and fucking disconnected his body parts look.
Anyway, he's gangly and awkward,
and he's like, what, 6, 6, 6,
and he's 300 pounds or whatever the fuck he is.
And he just looks unnaturally large
for a middle-aged soccer dad.
And he thinks he's athletic,
and that's where somebody has to intervene
for his own safety.
The ladder is tipping over,
and suddenly at the tipping point,
he jumps like he's trying to bring up.
jump something,
some invisible hurdle
that he's clearing in midair
and he came down feet first
toward the ladder.
But the ladder is just rungs,
there's holes in it, so both
of his legs went through the goddamn ladder
and he crouched himself on one of the rungs,
which I think his legs
caught him somehow, so it's
It's not like he neutered himself,
but the thing bent and collapsed,
he could have broken both his legs.
His legs were stuck in the fucking ladder.
And it looked like he was jumping off a bridge
trying to commit suicide.
It was the most obvious thing, right?
Like, I'm going to jump as far as I can now.
Well, again, I don't know if he thought out the ending.
That was the clip I saw.
I haven't really seen too much TNA or Top Dala lately.
I hear he's doing big things.
Well, you'd have to, you'd have to,
they had to walk through it or at least talk about it
and somebody had to describe to him
because the other guy did it right,
if you can say there's a right way to do it.
But then apparently the match went on.
And the second clip, he's on the ladder in the ring.
And there's four other guys behind him.
and he's about halfway up the ladder.
And he does a moonsault off the ladder and misses all four fucking guys.
Somebody for his own safety needs to sit him down and say,
look, dude, Uncle Phil, you can't do this shit.
You're either going to kill yourself or you're going to land on somebody and kill them.
What? Who is telling him that he's capable of doing this shit?
You know, he's showing the business. He's showing AAA. Showing everyone. I'll do what it takes. I'll jump off any cliff.
Or try to. I'll do what it takes. I'll sacrifice any opponent's health and safety.
I mean, you're focusing on his legs. What about his dick? I mean, he just came right down on the last. That's what I was thinking. Oh, he's going to crush his balls.
But no, because he's some tall and long, gangly legs.
I think his feet hit the floor before it successfully
castrated him, but that's the thing is these legs are stuck in the ladder
at a high rate of speed.
Well, look, you got to give him credit for his consistency.
Obviously, he has found a niche.
You know, J.T. Smith and ECW got a big bump on his head from a messed up dive,
and all of a sudden you fucked up became part of his gimmick.
He was a bumbling, stumbling guy.
Maybe that's what, uh,
Well, I think we've successfully handed that gimmick off to a new generation.
Do you think Top Dollar will end up back on WWTV?
I can't see how.
Can you see how?
He's part of the stable with Trick Williams.
I guess that's a way possibly how.
Well, but that doesn't mean they have to take all of the stable.
The old swayback mule can be left by.
behind. But they drew 7,000 people in Long Island. Brian, and you're a New Yorker? What's
a matter with those people up there? That's a big deal, and they deserve credit for that. Long
Island is a tough place to draw, and for TNA to come in there and get that house, they deserve
credit, but you also need to point out that they have become a WWE satellite, where you knew
there were going to be talent from NXT or WWE. I know AJ Styles made a very brief appearance.
Well, yeah, and they had telegraphed that by finding his gear in the locker room or whatever.
Yeah.
Yeah, so I mean...
He can't be far away from his pants.
Look, TNA has more buzz going for it right now that it has at any point in a very long time.
I actually don't know when the last point they had this much buzz.
A lot of it's based around the WWE relationship.
And again, they've become a WWE satellite office.
in a way it's good
if you can get past
some of the booking and stuff
in that it gives some of these guys
another place to work on another night
so they're not just working one night a week
for NXT or whatever it is
but TNA
and WWE's relationship is a big part
of the story and
you know the rise of TNA
remember there were people
in the company
telling you they were going to die
because Scott the Moore got fired
That was like seven months ago or something
You know, Scott DeMont, oh, we'll never trust this place
This place is going to go under
They have no idea what they're doing
Well, they just drew the biggest house in company history
So something's going on with them in WWE
And, you know, a lot of it's about, you know, you know how I feel
And to be honest, I can, and I wasn't in the room
Or I wasn't in any of the conversations, I wasn't even there
But I can see where Scott DeMoy
or having not only a business, but also a personal investment in wrestling in general and in the company,
if they were bandying around this idea of, oh, we'll just, you know,
we'll be a subsidiary storage closet over here for the WW.
It will make more money, but it won't be your vision of the product or, you know, et cetera.
I can see where that may have been a sticking.
point. Maybe that was it to begin with.
That's why I'll just buy it.
If you want to fucking just turn it over,
well, no, we want to make a lot of money
from these other people with more money.
And I'm not a fan of Scott DeMor's vision. I think a lot
of other people wouldn't be fans of the actual vision.
But, you know, for all the people
who say, like, TNA is so great right now, and NXT
is so great. TNA is basically now just
another NXT. I watched a little
bit last night in the background. That's where
I saw a top Dala, where it was
like Team TNA, led by the commissioner, or
whatever he is, Santino Morella, and who's out there in his gimmick voice as the commissioner.
And it was a team that was like Moose and Eddie Edwards who, I haven't seen Eddie Edwards in a while,
but, you know, again, it was just, it was this team and then all of a sudden, Trick Williams
and Top Dol and some little guy come out. And I was like, all right, this is kind of like
NXT-ish. And then there was like a long women's tag match and I gave up. And I just said,
I've seen enough. It's exactly, there is a form.
mat of wrestling in a type of show that is everywhere.
Just like everyone copied WWE for years, they're all copying this, and the only one who's
not is Tony, and he's gone into such a complete other direction that, you know, again,
that can't be enjoyable the way I want to enjoy wrestling.
And it's frustrating to me, but credit for TNA, growing their business, getting a lot
of exposure with WWE, let's see what happens if they don't sell the WWE and they finally
say no about something.
Well, I don't think they're going to sell.
I don't think they're going to say no, but I don't think they're going to sell because as long as it's set up this way, it benefits TKO, WWE, whatever entity might be benefited from any type of antitrust or monopoly or unfair trade practices or whatever or just ganging up on people.
well, we're working with these other,
these poor, needy children over here in Canada, you know, whatever.
You know, but WW,
WWE has a whole system now.
I mean, it's really, when you think about it,
it's the two main brands, it's NXT,
it's AAA, and it's TNA.
All these different places they could send people
as they sign up everyone they can.
It'll be interesting to see what Japanese promotion now
end up buying, but they're trying to gobble up all the air right now. And we've said it for a
while with AEW. We haven't even reviewed the show yet, but we've said it for a while the idea
that they're going to run into the Anguncle problem where they're not going to be able to get
talent. WW's doing everything they can to make that the actual challenge. And they don't need,
they're going to own enough, but they don't need to own everything as long as they're the
most important thing in that entity's existence and they're making a lot of money with them,
they'll just keep them under their thumb.
But, uh,
Eric Bischoff got some attention this week.
He was on the Ariel Hawani show and I don't have the quote in front of me,
but I think it was something along the lines of TNA can surpass AEW if they just get a good
TV deal.
That's all it would take.
Do you think it's that simple or what do you think?
From what I saw from watching the one TNA show,
they would need some content they would need some content but the thing if they had a TV deal
then they would be heavily featuring at least NXT talent we just talked you know the
WWE pipeline which means that the WW would be in approval of that deal and then
they would probably be supporting it and they could probably figure out a way to outproduce and
or hot shot or whatever.
So, yeah, TNA with a TV deal would be dangerous to AEW if they let WW pretty much run it for them.
Well, we'll see what happens, but something to keep our eyes on, the rise of TNA.
You know, I used to take those trips when I was with TNA, Brian, and I would go pert near 1,700 miles round train.
trip and except for the burden that I would face actually at the shows, it wasn't that bad a trip
a lot of times. There were trials and tribulations, but sometimes it was just boom, cruising down
the highway. But I went out of town this past week, and it was not just cruising down the
highway. I had a week where I had the most fun time anywhere.
I've been in just years and years,
and the trip to and from it was the unluckiest
that I think I've ever been,
or at least in 30 years on the road just for the frequency
of what the fuck thing's going on.
And I will tell you folks now that I'm back
and nobody can come and ambush
I went with some of my oldest friends, and I mean that in a chronological fashion.
We're old, we're very old, to see the Jackfeffer collection at the University of Notre Dame.
And we'll talk about it in a minute.
And if you've listened to this show very often, then you know who Jack Feffer is.
But for the kids, we don't want you to be left out.
So you've got a minute or two.
while I tell this other story
Google Jack Pfeffer P-F-E-F-E-R
but I went to the
to the University of Notre Dame
where that collection is located
with the other members
Brian of what we now call the
Flying Toehold Club
which consists of my
oldest and best close personal
friend Bobby Fuller of the Fantastics
and Tom Burke
who I've known for
good God, I've known him for two years longer than I've known Bobby, so 47 years.
And Tom Burke's friend, Chris McMahon, who I just met, who's much younger than us,
but who was just a wonderfully helpful individual because he's a school teacher,
and he's smart and using all the modern technology.
His brother, Pat, didn't believe him when he said he was coming with me and Bobby Fulton and Tom
Burke to the Feffer Collection.
So Pat, go fuck yourself.
How about that?
What did his uncle Vince think of it?
There was no relation.
Yeah, sure.
He is no, no, he's,
he's red-haired and
nothing like the
dark and evil McMans.
He's the, the light and happy
McMahon. He's a happy peppy
McMahon. But anywho,
what?
The awkward pause after that comment.
I was clear.
clearing my throat and I was just about to jump back in, but I'll jump back in anyway.
But anywho, he said as he jumped back in, we went up there, but as I said, I was happy
while I was there. We're going to talk about that. But people wonder why I don't go out of town
and I don't take trips. So the fuck. It's like the old Rodney Dangerfield line. I got up this morning.
I opened the door. The doorknob fell off. I picked up my soon.
suitcase, the handle fell off. I'm afraid to go to the bathroom. I'm afraid to leave the house
again. I'd been planning this trip for weeks. And Brian, you know, the weather down here,
it's been the pop-up torrential downpour thunderstorms in the afternoon because of the high heat
and humidity, but there hasn't been like widespread rain coverage. And the forecast a couple
days out was the same thing. Oh, you're going to get thunderstorms downpours in the afternoon.
I'll just leave. It's 280 miles. It's like a four and a half.
hour drive. I said, I'll leave about 11 o'clock in the morning and I'll just be out of that
and I even checked the weather up South Bend was going to be cloudy and whatever.
Indianapolis, same thing, maybe pop up storms in the afternoon.
Well, Sunday morning I get up and I figure I'll just check the weather for any updates.
So this is about 8 o'clock here in Louisville, right?
I check the weather. Same thing for Louisville.
same thing for South Bend, which is where the University of Notre Dame is located,
if I haven't made that specifically abundantly clear.
And in the middle of Indianapolis, high chance of severe thunderstorms
with downpours and torrential rain at fucking noon.
What?
And I look on the national radar and there's a big blotch of goddamn storm rain coming across
the Midwest, it looks like the spaceship and Independence Day.
And it's going to, because Louisville to South Bend, as I said, 280 miles,
it's directly south to directly north, straight up.
This, and Indianapolis is right in the middle,
and this thing's coming right to cut me off from where I need to go.
I said, fuck, that looks bad.
I'm going to leave now.
So I get in a guy, wake stays up.
the weather, I got to go.
And I get all my stuff together and I get in the truck.
And I leave about 9 o'clock, right?
So I'm going to get past this rain.
And the only thing, Brian, that you go through between Louisville, Kentucky
and South Bend, Indiana is cornfields.
And nothing besides Indianapolis.
That's the one big city.
You got to go around the 465 loop.
There's all kinds of traffic and construction on it.
The ramps go all kinds of different ways.
It's 30 miles.
It's a shitty little loop.
And otherwise you're driving through the fucking cornfield.
I get almost to the Indianapolis loop.
And it starts getting a little drizzly.
And it's a little bit more drizzly.
And then I'm almost ready to get on the loop.
And that's when it kind of steady rain starts.
But it's still, it's not too bad.
into Sunday morning, so the traffic ain't horrible.
But the farther I go around this loop,
the goddamn darker the skies get.
And then I start to see the lightning coming.
And then there comes the goddamn downpour.
And it's almost pitch black.
And people are slowing down.
And you can't hardly see with the orange barrels
in the construction.
And I'm just a few miles from where I get off this thing
and get back on the highway that will take me all the way to South Bend.
And I can't get off this loop and you don't know what the fuck's going on, right?
So I figured if I just get to this exit, then when I get off the first thing I'll do,
I'll take the first place I can pull over.
And then the deluge, the people have their flashers on.
And I take this exit and immediately you can get off to the right and I take this ramp.
I can barely see anything the fucking rain is blinding.
I get down to the bottom of the ramp.
I have to go to the right in some fashion.
I do that.
And over on the side, there's a big,
I don't know, it was a business complex of some kind,
but it was closed.
It's a Sunday morning.
And there's a big empty parking lot.
I pull in the middle of that parking lot and I'm sitting there.
And the rain is just hammering down, right?
And I call Stacy and I tell her that I've pulled over.
I'm going to wait this rain out.
okay and as I'm sitting there Brian I realize I've been in the car for over two hours now
and this I'm watching it pour rain like I'm standing in a shower and I'm in the middle of an
empty parking lot with no there's this is like a there's condominiums and there's office buildings
like a nine to five type of deal there is no place in any visible direction that I could go to a
gas station or anything like that I got a
piss and that water is just coming down and I'm going to I'm looking around in the car and I've got
nothing that could be a can't I can't piss in a metal fucking soft drink can I might the tab might
cut my wee wee off or whatever right so I'm thinking if I just open the door a crack and turn
to the side while I'm in the driver's seat and pull the
leg of my shorts in the proper direction,
then I can do it without getting wet.
I can do it outside of the car, right?
Now, are you following me on this?
I mean, I'm following your story.
I don't know about what you're doing, but yes.
Well, you can see that it would be feasible.
Technically, yes.
Well, but it was for quite a while until I forgot that right as the,
as the evacuation ends of your,
your bladder or whatever the fuck it is,
your pressure on your stream.
It goes down.
It doesn't just snap off like a spigot.
So as my pressure went down, oh shit, I just pissed all over my pants.
Oh, my God.
And now I'm mad because now I'm wet, but it's not the rain.
I've pissed myself.
Now, bear in mind, I've already been freezing because remember I said a couple
weeks ago, I took Black Beauty in, spent all the money, got her serviced and everything, and I got
the AC charged up that hadn't cooled in ages. So now it was, that's the thing. I wore shorts and a
t-shirt thinking it's going to be hot weather, but it's fucking overcast and rainy, and the air
conditioning is now cold and stuck on high. So I've been shivering to death. Now I've got wet pants.
So then, finally it stops raining. You had a change, you had a change of pants with you just for
You had more than one pair of pants for your trip, correct?
Well, but I ain't going to get out in the middle of the rain
to get in the back of the goddamn truck
to get the fucking clean pants.
You see?
Yeah.
And then where am I going to change my pants in the goddamn parking lot?
In the truck.
You could do it in the truck.
Well, I chose when the rain let up into a light sprinkle
to just get the fuck out of there
with a burger towel on my lap.
So then, bear in mind,
I have gotten off the highway and turned right and immediately turned into a goddamn parking lot, right?
But I got to go to the right.
And the GPS says go to the right anyway that I got in my truck.
And I turn right and it takes me 20 minutes to get back on the highway I'm only 400 yards away from because there's some kind of goddamn traffic circle and lead it in the raw.
I don't know where the fuck.
I finally found the highway.
And I get back on and it's over.
all the way, but at least it doesn't rain.
And I get to South Bend.
Brian, have you ever been to South Bend, Indiana?
No, I haven't.
If we have listeners there, I don't mean to appear insensitive to your issues,
but you live in a fucking shithole.
Oh, wow.
Now, the University of Notre Dame is a gorgeous place.
I'm the campus.
I mean, it's beautiful in the trees and the birds and the knowledge
and the libraries and the,
I understand they play football there every once in a while.
But I came Highway 31 up through Indianapolis,
through another 100 miles of cornfield.
When I got into town,
I'm thinking there's a college there, right?
Brian, you mentioned when you knew I was going,
well, maybe there's going to be some of those cool places,
local restaurants or good food places or college town.
Maybe it's, yeah, the kind of, you see,
vintage clothing or the unique vinyl store,
comic shop, whatever, the cool college stuff, right?
If you go to South Bend, if you need to pawn something,
then I know a variety of places you could go.
I go into town, there's not even the, I mean,
Perkins, I believe, was the highest casual dining place,
highest level casual dining place I saw all the way through.
I had to go through all the way through the middle of town from south to north.
And at first it was just like, eh, the pawn shop area.
Then it became an area where most businesses appeared to be closed.
And I stopped at a light.
And there were many people on the corner.
And they didn't appear to be going anywhere.
They were just kind of there.
And this woman walks from the other side of the street across two lanes to give me the roll down the window sign.
And I'm like,
Green light, green light.
And then you go through the middle of downtown,
which is deadered and Kelsey's nuts on Sunday morning.
And then you get to the north side of it,
and you're at the college,
and that's a nice area, and that's where my hotel was.
But it was a little disheartening that my impression of South Bend
was I didn't want to get fucking carjacked.
So I'm thinking we're probably not going to go to,
far to eat dinner, right, whenever we go out. So I get to the hotel, get checked in, everything's
fine. I'm going to meet Bobby Fulton for dinner. And Stacey calls me and says, well, I'm following
the ambulance. We're taking mom to the hospital. I thought to what? She has a bit of the
hospital since last July. It's her anniversary.
I'm going to, but as I've literally have not left town for years.
And I'm like, what I just got here?
Is it everything okay?
Well, we're following it.
I'll call you back.
So I'm standing by.
And by the time she got to the hospital, she did feel better,
but she had gotten dizzy and or disoriented kind of thing.
And her blood pressure had dropped.
And they wanted to monitor her.
heart rate, which was fluctuating.
So Stace is like, no, you don't have to come back home, but, you know, she's feeling
better.
And they kept her for a couple of days, you know, to monitor all these various things, see
if they can figure out what the fuck.
And she's got a follow up coming up, but they let her out.
But their Stace was worried.
And again, not only if I had not been away from home overnight in years, but it's been.
in 11 years since Stacy spent the night in this house alone without either me or Harley Quinn or both.
So now, and now her mom's in hospital, so she's freaking out over there or over here.
I'm up there, but everybody gets into town.
I mentioned Bobby Fulton.
I mentioned Tom Burke.
I mentioned Chris McMahon.
And I'm going to meet them all.
They're staying at Tom and Chris are over at the hotel next door to us.
This is the same parking lot.
I use points.
And so I said, I've got the truck.
It's just been serviced.
I'll take us over to the library.
Monday morning, we'll get there bright and early.
Now watch out, boys, because I just had this air charged up.
It's going to freeze your balls off.
Brian, we got in the truck.
I started it.
The air conditioning is goddamn stone cold dead.
No, how is that possible?
The air conditioning that has been stuck on high for the past three or four years that I just had charged up so it was cold and high is now stone cold.
It will not blow.
Not a puff.
Oh, my God.
Not a puff.
What was the temperature?
Well, it wasn't bad in South Bend to go two miles, but I was going to have to come back to Louisville's eventually where the heat index is going to be north of 100.
So I'm already in...
Oh, man.
So then we go on tight
Tom said I know how to get there
I'm doing this from memory now
well we ended up parking in a lot
and we said
because we said where we ended up
pulled up and asked so where do we park for the library
oh you can park right in that lot let us give you a pass
oh well thank you kind lady right
and we parked in that lot and it said
They'd just walk that way, and we did walk that way.
0.9 fucking miles.
There, Tom Burke's 80 years old.
He makes us look young, right?
And we've all heard our various, except for McMahon.
He's a kid.
He deserved it.
He should have crawled.
It was a mile from the parking lot to the library.
It was a mile from the parking lot to the library.
Oh, my God.
It's a beautiful campus.
So then I'll talk about our time there later on,
but just in the instance of we're in the middle of the story of going back and forth.
We have our day there.
We come back to the hotel.
We decide to meet to go to dinner later on.
And as I'm closing up the goddamn truck, the key fob,
the thing that with the automatic locker and unlocker and panic button and pop the back
and everything, the key fob I've had for 18 years now,
breaks off my key chain and falls on the ground.
Oh, my God.
I don't know what the fuck
okay so
they're going to ask
where the best
place within the near
radius right we don't want to go back
down south in that neighborhood
none of us are in the mood to fight for our dinner
they ask at the desk
of the hotel
where's the best place we can go
eat within a few mile radius of here
you know where they sent us
two miles down the road to the
restaurant at the embassy suites
they sent you to another hotel
they sent us to another hotel
as an example of the best place to eat
around the area
and it wasn't even the goddamn
where they asked wasn't it
it wasn't like they're sending us
to another Hilton chain
they just said no this is the best place to eat around here
it was like I said Perkins was on the other side
of the guy there was a Culver's
but anyway so we go down
to the fucking embassy suites
and we have
again dinner
but I ordered
the cheese burger
that's on that with all the loaded with the
the cheese and the onion
and the fucking bacon and the whole nine yards
and everybody's food comes
and everybody's perfect and I looked at it by and
they've given me a hockey puck
that was burnt to a goddamn char-boil
broiled crisp with nothing on it
no bacon no onions
no dressing of any kind
just a lone
dead slice of cheese.
So again, as to the lady, I said, oh, I'll take care of it.
She gave it to me and comped it, but it's the idea that, again, I'm the only one that
what isn't about me?
Everything I touch is turning to disaster.
So more on this later.
The next day, we took the shuttle, because they found out that the hotel shuttle would have
taken us to the goddamn library and dropped us off at the front door.
so we did that to second day and it came and picked us up and brought us back and as I was going over
everything I had noticed on Sunday morning actually before I left but my back my gum on my back
tooth was a little touchy and I thought that maybe I'd stuck it with a tortilla chip or something
a day before whatever that kind of thing right no big deal and I'd you know for the past few days
have been occupied, but I didn't have any real discomfort.
But I noticed on Tuesday night, I said, it's getting a little touch here.
And I look in there and there's the gum next to my back tooth is swollen up like the size
of a large kernel of corn.
I'm like, what the fuck is going on here?
Now this alien is popping out inside my mouth.
So Wednesday morning, I get up early and I have to call Stace on the way to say,
can you get me a dentist appointment so they can see what the fuck's going on here.
But I've decided on Wednesday I'll leave at 6.30 in the morning because that way I can beat the heat, right?
It gets daylight. I'm an old man. I'm up anyway. So I get in a car at 630 in morning.
I check out of the hotel. Before I even get on the highway, I pull right over and I fucking going to fill up with gas.
and I get out and I open my wallet and I look and God damn,
I've left my credit card Monday night at the restaurant for that dinner.
I didn't get it out.
When I signed the check, we were talking.
I got distracted.
I left it in the folio.
And I've said,
motherfucker, this is the first credit card I've ever lost in my life in 45 years of
having credit cards.
And so I have another card.
I don't mean to say that I was destitute then.
but here's another thing that I've never done before.
So then I get the gas, I get the car, I'm driving.
Now I find out the air will blow if I'm driving 60 miles an hour down the road.
But if you stop, you're fucked.
So at least I wasn't completely miserable.
But I got home and Stace had called the dentist and got me an appointment.
And just to finish this story up,
I went to the dentist on Thursday, as I mentioned earlier in the program,
when we were hearing the news, I had a numb face.
This tooth that has not hurt me in any way that has not been sensitive to any kind of heat or cold,
got infected because there's a crown on it from many years ago.
But apparently this insidious, whatever the fuck, bacteria got underneath.
in a cavity area that's underneath the gum line and she's, oh, you'd never be able to clean
that by yourself at home. That tooth has to come out. What? It's just the gum. The tooth has
never hurt. The gum's been puffy for four days. No, it's loose. It's rotten underneath.
We got to pull that son of a bitch in the near future. Right now, here's antibiotics and we're
going to fucking irrigate your goddamn infection. So when I talk about the bad tooth,
I've had with the post and everything
I can understand that, but no,
that's just been sitting back there minding its own
business never bothered me a goddamn day.
Oh, no, it needs to go.
I'm never going to leave town again.
Oh, shit, that was notes I was about to fucking read.
You're ripping over there.
Yeah, I was ripping the fucking, that's fine.
Hold on, let me smooth this out.
So the first time you go on a trip in years and...
Six years.
You piss your pants.
Except for Bobby Eaton's,
funeral. You piss your pants, you get caught in a storm. There's no food that's any good anywhere
near your hotel. I ate hotel food four days in a row. You walk longer than you've walked maybe
in years. You walk the mile. Two miles. I'm losing a tooth. My truck is now, because now for the
next week, it's going to be 105 degrees in Louisville. I can't just drive around town, which is all I ever
drive. I can only get air when I'm going 60, so I'm going back over to see my man Tyler.
But I may, I have to do the dentist thing for, well, I'm on the antibiotics right now too,
so that the blood poisoning doesn't go to my brain. But does the key fob falling apart
and, you know, all of a sudden you need it and the air conditioning is gone? Does this change
your thoughts about possibly getting a new car? No. New truck.
Now I'm going to, God damn, I'm going to do something.
I don't know what to do about the fob.
The fob may be fucked, but I'm going to fix that air conditioning.
It's just a measly air conditioning system in an otherwise passable vehicle.
Can't you just like fix up the LaSalle and drive around and that?
It's getting to the point where it might be easier to restore the LaSalle than to restore the expedition.
You don't need a key fob for that.
But anyhow, but let's go back to the reason for my trip and the fun that I did have.
And hopefully everybody's looked up Jack Feffer by now.
But for the purposes of this discussion, a lot of the modern research, the books, Brian Solomon's books, Tim Hornbaker's books, research has been done at this Jack Feffer
collection of papers at Notre Dame because it's the single largest by, I would have met multiple
times, I don't know how many multiple times, largest collection archive of wrestling documents
inside wrestling business information from the late 20s to the mid-60s that exists anywhere
in the world and ever probably has been assembled.
it's it's in it encompasses every piece of paper every document every telegram every letter with the envelopes
every business record for the most part that I can determine I mean you can only see a small
portion of it in a month if you're an individual person but every scrap of paper record
clipping, photo, press release, poster
that came into Jack Feffer's hands
in the 40 years that he was in the wrestling business.
And I say that there's,
apparently from what they say there is a gap,
unfortunately, during the 1930 to 1933 years,
the biggest years of business in wrestling,
that they think may have,
gone into another set of hands
because the way that Feffer was able to retain all this shit
and the odd duck that he was,
the motivations for it, etc.
He had, not only was he one of the old-time wrestling promoters
that kept a hotel suite or room or whatever
in like one of the hotels in New York City,
the Piccadilly Hotel.
Yeah.
Yes, and I mean, this was the days where the hotels weren't the Hampton or the Red Roof Inn or the Super 8 or whatever.
It was the Ambassador Hotel in Houston or the, you know, international hotel in Pittsburgh or whatever.
The Algonquin's booked. I'll take the Piccadilly.
Yeah, you know, that's the thing is these were inner city, you know, downtown old-fashioned hotels like you see in the movies.
so he kept that but also he had storage places apparently around Manhattan for years and he worked out of he never had a home he worked out of hotels there were hotels in houston hotels in Nashville hotels in California and people would be telegram sending him telegrams to these locations but nevertheless so all of this
material that he had saved ended up when he was, you know, elderly and the last years of his life,
he lived with the wrestling promoter that ran Boston in the early 60s, Tony Santos, who he had
been close with, who was one of the last major market promoters that really relied exclusively on
him for talent. And he lived with him and then moved into a nursing home, Tony Sanchez.
Santos ended up with this entire five tons, apparently, of all of this material.
And it was 50 years ago, Tony Santos was not a young man.
There was no call for, you know, preserving wrestling history amongst the business at that point, and not a lot of the fans.
but Eddie Einhorn
who was the guy who ran the IWA
we've talked about that before the Chicago
White Sox owner
he was a big fan and he did
kind of like what Billy Corgan did
with the Chicago Bob Luce
you know, wrestling records or
you know what some of the other
what Triple H has done with some of the title
belts he bought
all of this stuff from Tony Santos. Brian, did I mention to you the amount or did you already know it?
You told me the amount. I didn't know the amount before. $1,500. I was 14 years old. I would have got
$1,500 together to pay for it back then. But that's like, what, $300 a ton? And I guess Einhorn then realized, well, what the fuck?
know, this is five tons of stuff, and apparently it was in boxes with no, the people at Notre
Dame try to respect the integrity. When a collection is donated to them, they try to respect the sorting
process, the integrity of what the creator, the owner, the person, but there was none here.
this was that we're going to be talking about Jack Pfeffer off of this visit alone and other people that he came in contact with for a number of weeks probably on the program because there's such an incredible wealth of history there that nobody was ever able to know publicly before but nevertheless Einhorn donates it to the University of Notre Dame the Hesburg Library there has
the, I don't want to overstate them or, you know, misrepresent,
but it's either the largest collection in the United States
or the largest collection in the world of sports papers
and sports archives from personalities in that field of all kinds,
not just wrestling.
And this is the, oh, God, damn,
the rare books and special collections department is who oversees,
all this type of thing,
but he donated it to them in like 1977.
And it all sat there
pretty much untouched for over 20 years.
And Brian, I know you and me were both wrestling nerds,
but nobody that I, as I remember,
nobody had any idea that it existed during that time period.
Is that the way you remember it?
Did you ever hear anything about it?
about it?
You know, I don't recall the first time I heard about it, but I remember my mind being blown.
It must have been, you know, sometime within 20 years ago, let's say, when I heard that
there was a collection of all this stuff at Notre Dame, it almost didn't sound real.
I don't know what else was talking about this.
How come this isn't out there?
And, you know, it's extraordinary.
And if I can ask you just one question before you jump back to it, you said there's a gap
approximately 30 to 32, 33, whatever it was,
does that mean you have documents before then?
Because that's when he's working with Jack Hurley.
Because that's Jack Curley and him and Rudy Miller in New York,
right before he goes against the office
and really changes a lot of things
in the way the media covers wrestling.
But that's my question.
Was there stuff before that point?
Yes.
And I mean, here's the thing you can ask me,
I can tell you what I saw.
I can't tell you what is there
because between Tom,
Bobby, Chris, and I, we probably went through, if we went through two or three, two
box complete boxes each, that in the two days, that'd be eight boxes, right?
There are over 250 special archival file boxes separated into categories of correspondence,
clippings and programs, photos,
every business papers, financial documents, tax returns.
I saw just in the two or three boxes,
you know, and what other people were showing me that they were looking at,
stuff from the mid to late 20s through 1967.
So, I mean, there is a finding aid,
which we'll get into later on that they've,
set up because this is part of the story is nobody knew it was there nobody knew this
fucking thing a whole thing existed but the previous curator of the department the head of the
special collections department there George Rugg in the late 90s started trying to put some
order to it and started doing their their cataloging system that they do with you know
the other collections.
And they created over the years what they called a finding aid
where it's online now that you can look up names
or they're broken down into different categories.
But it took him.
He started in the late 90s and he just retired, I think, like, very recently,
like in the last year or two, I believe.
And over the past several years, he had really pressed the pedal to it.
it to try to get it finished before he retired.
It took almost 30 years for people.
And bless them, they were, they're very smart people and their archivists and their librarians.
And they, but they had no idea of the wrestling business from 100 years ago when they went into it, right?
And the current curator is a fellow named Greg Bond.
And he was the one who hosted us and great guy.
And he said, you know, the same thing.
He said, this is all, you know, fascinating when we hear so much about it,
but we didn't have a wrestling background going into this.
So it was difficult for us, and we learned something every time that somebody comes in
that, you know, is researching this.
But that's the thing is it's still, there's still some things that haven't been scanned
and, you know, the oversized posters and giant photographs.
he's got lithographs from 80 years ago or whatever of wrestlers but it's an and you can't here's a I guess we should say it right now before we go any further we got a big audience and I'm telling you how great it is and now I'm going to say don't fucking go don't try this is not a roadside tourist attraction it's not a fan fest it's not a flea market this is the goddamn
University of Notre Dame.
And that's why it sounded so bizarre
that they would have a
massive collection of pro wrestling stuff
from Jack Pfeffer, right?
Because this, but I've told you the story
of how it got here, but you can't just
show up, knock on these people's door
and say, show me some cool wrestling shit.
They'll probably call the goddamn campus police on you.
And I saw a few of those, too.
Tom Burke has been there before.
I mean, he's recognized name and research and wrestling,
and he knew the previous curator.
And that's how he was able to register us.
But this is a deal where you have to tell them that you're coming
and what you're wanting to research,
because there were other people doing research
for books in other fields in the next room while we were sitting there.
So this is a thing that goes on.
they got to know you're coming
you've got to tell them what you're looking for
and pick it up from their finding aid ahead of time
so they can pull it for you if possible
because you can't go in the room where it's actually all stored
they bring you a box at a time at your request
you have to register and show your ID
you have to check your bag in a fucking locker
and only keep
either you know your telephone
or your goddamn
pad or
laptop or whatever. No ink
pens. You have to
wash your hands before you open a box
and handle anything. They give you
foam mats to put the stuff out
on. There's cameras
everywhere. They keep an eye on your
ass and you're only allowed to take one
file out of one box at a time
with a marker to put
the place in so it goes right back
in the same place.
So this is not like...
That's the way it should be.
Well, I'm just
saying and again you know you're on you're not only on candid camera but you've given them a copy of your
ID when you've come in and i mean this is not a like i'm saying i don't mean to i don't want this
this to be ruined by anybody going hey show me the goddamn shit of the fucking angel but this is a
serious deal. And the problem is that I see is that even Tom Burke, Bobby, and I, the three of us,
combined age 200 years. And out of that, 170 years have been following wrestling combined,
right? We were still trying to figure out from what we were looking at. Well, who was he talking
about there? Because they all used nicknames. Or was this the time?
period where so and so, I'm afraid in 10 years or so, there's still going to be smart people
like Brian Solomon and, as I said, Hornbaker and all these people doing research,
but the people that have been in the business that kind of were really familiar or could
figure out and piece together the wording and the phrasing and the nicknames and who was talking
about what may be gone.
So I'm really anxious.
I'm already sold myself on going again.
Not anytime soon, though,
but it's the most amazing thing I've ever seen
that he was able to not only collect this stuff
and retain it all those years,
but that it end up through fair means and foul
and after, you know, 30 years of, you know, obscurity,
it's actually in a place now where they're preserving it
for the future generations that are able to crack the code
and figure out what everything means.
Because the thing, it's all paperwork too,
Fever.
It's obviously not his letters, for the most part.
I saw his tax returns,
and there's things in his handwriting that, you know,
he would, the guy was so compulsive, Brian,
that he would, imagine just a blank.
standard size piece of white paper, right?
There would be figures.
A down a column, 20 figures, and then the next column, 20 figures,
the next column, 20 figures, next column 20 figures, a dollar 20, 75 cents, 60 cents, a dollar 40.
He recorded the cost of his telephone calls and his telegrams.
But there's just pages and pages of these worksheets.
Just, and he kept all that shit.
but every letter that any promoter ever wrote to him and every clipping and press release that any of his wrestlers sent in after he got him booked in a place here's how they're using me here's how I'm doing and every telegram that was it's just it's incredible I have droned on do you have any questions before we move on I got a couple of things I'll hit you with no and obviously this will be an ongoing series of segments for a long time
time here on the show. So for those you who love wrestling history, the drive-thru and the
experience in the midst of all the contemporary stuff we talk about is going to be loaded
to the tits with Class of Yustlin.
One question before you get to this, and obviously you know what I'm into. I'm fascinated
by all this. You know, I have a pretty large collection and even some original
pepper stuff, but I can only imagine how much, I mean, fun's the only word I could think of, just
the idea of sitting there and going through it.
The only question I have for you right now is,
what does it make you think about your collection?
Does it change what you think a possible future could be?
I don't know, that's the only thing I would throw at you.
Well, everyone now, how do you mean that now? Tell me that again?
Like, would Notre Dame have the Jim Cornette collection next to the Jack Fuffer collection?
Well, I'm not, I don't think it would be for the rare books and special.
collections division because I mean I have some files of insider paperwork from the modern era but
even my collection of wrestling memorabilia is still mostly stuff that was sold publicly or that's
you know was distributed to the public or whatever this is there's plenty of that here too
I mean rare programs of people I didn't even know ran cities in the United States at this
point in time there's programs from that I've never seen before but this is all insider paperwork
and business at the highest level involving every major promoter and wrestler in the business
at some time or another and the the size and scope of it your files my files everybody tootsies files
whoever the fuck no shove them up your ass it's just not only of the bulk but of the
uniqueness, the rarity, and the honesty.
Because he's got these other promoters that are his friends,
Willie Gilsenberg, in the same letter he's talking about how the business is going
and he's knocking other promoters.
Oh, my wife, whatever name was, Mabel says hello, sends her regards.
I saw the letter where Stu Hart informed Jack Pfeffer that he wanted Fephy,
he and Helen wanted Feffer to be Ross's godfather.
I wonder if Ross has that because Ross is a historian of the,
he's the historian of the family.
Well, he don't have the letter that Stu wrote to Jack about it.
I wonder if he's aware of it, I guess, is the thing.
Wow, that's something.
I'm sure they told him, but, um,
but you know, that is so when they're,
they're sharing their personal opinions of what the other promoters are doing
and for as many people as hated Pfeffer,
there were also people that were loyal to him
almost to the Willie Gilsenberg was right in the early 60s.
And Gilsenberg, for those of you,
70s WWWF fans,
he's the president of the WWWF,
but he was Vince Sr's partner for years.
He went back with boxing and wrestling to the 30s.
He knew everybody.
And I think it was,
it was a Gilsenberg letter where I want to say it was his where he was talking about Joe
Malkowitz in San Francisco saying I guess poor old Joe will never get his territory sorted out
and it was the next year Ray Shire came in and put him or Roy Shire came in and put him out
of business.
Yeah, I think we did it on Guess the program.
I have here from Newark, the 30th anniversary program for Willie Gilsenberg and Babe
Coleman.
Yeah.
Boxing and wrestling promoters.
So that's 62.
So that puts it at 32 when Willie Gilsenberg would have started.
Yeah.
But nevertheless, this is one of a kind.
None of the other promoters that even wrote each other,
and that's all they did was write each other letters and telegrams at that point in time,
except for phone calls were the really, you know, important shit.
But nobody else kept anything like this besides FF.
I guess that's the other remarkable thing,
the idea that, according to what you said before,
in the 70s, in the early 70s maybe,
but definitely the 60s, maybe the 50s,
that he would have had storage units
or all around Manhattan
for something this size.
That's kind of crazy too.
I guess I don't really think of storage units as an old thing.
And we say storage units,
because I asked Tom Burke about this.
And as I mentioned, Tom's older than me.
And he's researching for a friend of his
it's writing a book on Fever.
We say storage units as we use the terminology now,
but he has some way of storing things around Manhattan.
Let's put it that way.
I mean, obviously it's true because here this shit is.
But here's a thing, because he never had a home
and lived in hotels and was always on the road
trying to book either when he was a promoter,
an actual partner in the office,
or then when he had pieces of talent,
was trying to book them to promoters, he would write off $6 a day for meals,
365 days a year off his income tax because he considered himself,
he was always traveling for business.
Every hotel, every telegram, every telephone call, these were his expenses.
His entire life was a business expense.
Yeah, and I know at some point, maybe 25 years ago, 20 years ago, 20 years,
ago some
pepper stuff ended up on eBay,
I believe it was sold by a nephew
or someone who was in the family.
No, I think, and there's another,
there was a separate collection also
that somebody in the Santos family had it.
Oh, interesting.
I believe, and I'm willing to be corrected.
But somebody in the Santos family
had had it possibly, and that's what was sold,
and there could be something else out
there, this is, there's no guarantee that Notre Dame, well, it's guaranteed Notre Dame's not all of it.
There's some stuff missing. It can't be a lot. Wow. But there's other stuff out there, but this is,
and, you know, again, we've gone long today and with what's happened. And I took a lot of
pictures. Hotchkis is going to be taking the chip from my camera and transferring this over because
I took pictures of documents because I took pages and pages of notes, but I couldn't write that much.
that fast. And so I felt like a spy in World War II. Oh, let me shoot this paper. But I wanted to just
give you some random factoid, can I? And then we're going to do some, some longer form stuff,
because I have the Fargo's letters gave me such financial records and such insight into
not only their relationship, but the way Feffer handled all of his talent at that time,
that we can, I'm going to be able to go back and look at some old cards in the various
Tennessee towns, see what guys were making, see when business was up and down,
extrapolate some these things, but let me, let me hit you with one thing here, Brian, last.
Do you know how much nature boy Buddy Rogers earned as NWA World Champion in February
1962. February 62. I do not know.
Now, see, there weren't any stadium shows. It was wintertime, right? Remember they'd done
him and O'Connor in Kamisky Park the previous year. This is just a random month in
1962. And of course, this was when Vince Sr. and the New York bunch was monopolizing
him, but still. But Chicago, New York, Fred Kohler and Vince McMahon and Tutsmont had a
a wannabe gold dust trio thing happening
and Buddy Rogers was the centerpiece.
And he was in Chicago and New York.
February 1962,
$17,000.
Do you know what $17,000 equals
in today's money 63 years later?
No.
$181,574.
Wow.
That is,
the standard of living
that he was accustomed to at that point
in time in comparison to what
everybody else was doing.
And
that wasn't even the other athletes were doing.
Yeah. I mean, oh yeah, well, not. That's why
that's why Ernie Ladd quit football and why
McDaniel quit football and et cetera. But this was
another level than that.
And
the reason why I know this is because
Gilsenberg, who again was partners with the guy that was paying Rogers,
said, buddy, gross, because, you know,
Pfeffer had given, and now we know more than ever,
Pfeffer gave Rogers the gimmick.
Pfeffer was deducting capes, costumes, and sequins off his income tax, too.
And then they had a major falling in.
Some of us, you and I both have those four, the giant papers that Pfeffer
put out saying that Buddy Rogers was a fake.
Yes, but that falling out, it occurred in the early 50s,
and then that's why Pfeffer saw a tag team version of Buddy Rogers
and the Fargoes, more on that in the future.
But Gilsenberg had given, you know, Buddy the,
or given Feffer the info, yeah, buddy gross $17,000 in February.
I guess he'd do.
And another letter said, well, Buddy settled the law.
suit with Miller and Gotch. Now the boys can go their separate ways. But he's such a great
worker. It's too bad. He can't get along with the real wrestlers. That's interesting. Yeah.
Sean Michaels. And that can, but then you back up 10 years. In 1950,
Pfeffer had these, and these records are again, his handwriting on these blank pieces of hotel
stationery, wrote on the back sides of them.
But he had probably 20 or 30 wrestlers that he was booking out to promoters all over
the place, Buddy Rogers and his handpicked opponent Billy Darnell, probably the most popular.
And he gave Christmas bonuses to all the wrestlers he was booking out.
And so he had them, he wrote handwritten receipts received from, you know, a Jack Feffer
from Buddy Rogers or whatever the fuck
for Christmas bonus.
He gave Rogers a Christmas bonus of $1,500.
That's almost 20 grand.
Wow.
But guess how much money
that Jack Feffer declared
an income on his
$1949 income taxes?
Before deductions or after deductions?
Well, either way.
I got both.
I don't know. I actually am very curious about this.
Okay, well, I can tell you that his expenses were $26,000
because we talked about the train and the telegrams and the telephone
and the capes, costumes, and sequins and meals on the road
and all these legitimate expenses in his business, yet his life was that.
There was never a day off or a non-business expense, right?
so he took $26,000 off for expenses and declared $35,000.
He had grossed $61,000, $7,000 from Cliff Maupin, the Toledo promoter,
apparently for supplying him with all of his talent because they were close,
and $54,825 in booking fees from tax.
where he would get them booked and they would send him a portion of their money.
How much is that today?
And Rogers, hold on.
Rogers led the list with $10,882 that he sent Feffer.
Now think about this.
Was he given Feffer 10%?
That means he grossed $100,000 in 1950.
Was he, 20% would have been a little heavy for Rogers' stature.
There would have been a blow up before that.
but even then that would have been $50,000.
The point is,
Feffer grossed in 1949
the equivalent of $813,000 in today's money
by booking these guys out to all these promoters
that either liked him or that he had sway over
because of dirt on them or could badger them or blackmail them.
and then the talent turned around and got these great spots.
He made Rogers a ton of money.
He had the Fargoes in Madison Square Garden at the same time
they were working the Tennessee territory.
He could work magic for the people that he liked
and that he believed in and that he wanted to push.
Where did his money go?
If Feffer was making that kind of money,
that's just one year in 1950.
That's another thing.
nobody knows
in this collection
there is almost no
he has a personal life
and personal interactions
with the wrestlers and the promoters
and he has a personal life
in terms of there's business paper where like
there's income tax personal papers like that
but there is no family
there is no woman there's no man
there's no personal
communication from
anyone to him or whatever.
So this was literally his life and where all that money went.
I don't know that anybody's asked yet, but it's a question that as soon as I said,
because I'm fascinated with how much money there used to be in a wrestling business.
And when I saw that, I'm like, where did it fuck did it go?
Yeah.
Of course now in the 60s and see, the thing is when we get to the Fargo's part,
which will come at a future time when I've been able to
transcribe a lot of this.
Do you remember the famous note
where he had written down
August 9, 1967,
locker room Nashville, Tennessee
meeting with Fargo, Goulos, Welch,
and Christine Jarrett,
this is where Christine Jarrett threatened to have me killed.
That was the breakup,
finally, with Jackie Fargo,
where Fargo wasn't going to send him many more money.
after all that time.
Oh, I never realized that's what it was over.
That's interesting.
Wow.
But at the, because after that, all the programs from Nashville or from the Tennessee
territory, the arena programs that he's got in the file, it's written in his handwriting
after XX, after double cross.
And rats, rats, rats is written at the top of the program.
And the black cat.
The black cat.
I've got a few of those, yeah.
You know where he got the black cat from?
Was it some magazine?
a perfume ad in a magazine.
And did he just have copies, nonstop copies made?
He must, no, all the ones I saw were originals.
He must have bought like a hundred copies of this fucking magazine,
or it ran every month for years or whatever.
But anyway, that's the thing.
Again, you know, Fephyr was making on this,
in this bizarre life that he led,
where he would take, usually he never flew,
he would take trains from one territory to the other,
and then he would ride around for periods of time
with the wrestlers that he was booking
and then go to the next place.
And every morning when the Fargoes would go pick him up,
when they were on the road with him,
Bobby Fulton, because Bobby Fulton got close to Jackie Fargo,
they lived together in North Carolina,
not together, but near each other in North Carolina.
Fever would have letters spread out all over the,
hotel room floor look at what i've done i've written all the letters all night he stayed in contact
with everybody and and was pushing his talent but you know almost a million dollars for this little
odd man to do this fucking weird nomadish existence for all those years and be responsible not only for
some of the biggest attractions and biggest money-making, you know,
gimmicks in the business.
And then toward the end of his life with all of the rip-off gimmicks and the,
you know, the bullshit fake talent killed some of the major markets.
But he was always influential, always important in some respect.
Yeah.
And in terms of documentation, a lot of the issues that broke out in wrestling
40s, 50s, 60s, he was in the middle of it.
Even if he didn't start it, he got pulled into it
because he had talent. So this is
really promising for the future of this show to hear more about this.
This is great stuff. Some of these guys swore by him also.
And anyway, and we're going to get into a lot of New York
history, too, that you're going to have to help me with on this New York
geography because it looks like to me they were running a show
every night of the week in New York City somewhere.
That may be so.
You know, I was going to ask you, I remember seeing documents, and maybe from Hornbaker.
I may have them somewhere, actually, now that I think about it, but it was NWA members
like chewing out Sam Mushnick over the idea he would even talk to Feffer, let alone consider
allowing him near the, was it Eddie Quint?
I forget who it was now.
It's driving me crazy, but one of the promoters, like, sent Mushnick a letter lambasting him
for having anything to do with Jack Feffer.
Yes, and meanwhile, Muchnick was cordial to Feffer.
because much Nick was a path of least resistance guy and why stir this nut up and you know he has
he'll come talking to newspapers exactly why why this guy off he's going to come talk to the newspapers
say my wrestlers are fake and then bring in the most extraordinary gimmicks i've ever seen in this town
who kill the town yeah well and that was when he said to christine gerrit and nick and roy and
fargo in the and they were in the girls locker room also he made note of that in the girls
locker room in Nashville because he was,
Christine had always told me he was trying to get his girls booked.
Well, he already had the girls booked,
but I think that's when he and Fargo had the blow up.
We'll cover it more later,
but that was the thing is that was kind of his last lifeline.
Yeah, that was after Akron, Ohio.
That was after Tony Santhos is pretty much done.
Yeah, and I couldn't,
but when I opened up the file and I saw that,
because I've seen photocopies,
other researchers have made.
But when I saw that in person, I'm like,
oh, it's the greatest thing I've ever seen.
And one more thing, and then we'll move on.
I had a piece of paper here somewhere.
Oh, it took me a while,
but I figured out that every time that Willie Gilsenberg
would write Jack Pfeffer,
he wouldn't call Jim Barnett by his name.
He calls him the wizard.
Barnett was the wizard.
I find that so interesting just because, you know,
Willie Gilsberg, obviously based out in Newark, Northeast promoter.
Chicago.
No, think, remember Chicago?
Barnett was out of Chicago pretty early on.
And then...
They all got together at that point.
Apparently, I mean, they were spending holidays at each other's houses in these letters.
So that's what, there was a lot more...
The Wizard.
Not only were there a lot more wrestling promoters in the 40s and 50s than there were in the
60s and 70s, but they stayed in touch with each other.
They all knew what the fucking scuttle butt was.
Is there anything from Barnett to Feffer?
You know, I'm thinking I don't know anything about them having a relationship or any deal with each other.
See, that's a thing there may very well be, but you can literally search any name in the wrestling
business between the 30s and the 60s, and there's something.
even if I opened up a goddamn Roy Welch file.
I said, Roy Welch, 1941.
I'm like, oh, my God, what could that be?
And it was a letter from him asking if he could get the Swedish angel booked.
In 41, wow.
But in Nashville, right?
But point being, then there was other stuff with the Goulos Welch office later on when he got with the Fargoes.
but there's something with anybody's name on it that was into wrestling business.
So you just have to just keep looking until you can't look anymore.
You know, Brian, what we should do after we do all this research into Jackfeffer
is it gives you stress and it gives you anxiety trying to figure all this out.
You need to calm your brain down.
You need to unwind and maybe look for a natural way.
to relieve all the aches and discomfort of sitting there pouring over all of these old files.
I mean, alone, my finger from turning pages was sore as it could be.
Our friends at cornbread hemp have got us fixed up.
We've talked about the seltzers in the past here recently that Stacy's a big fan of,
but you know what that I took with me on my trip so I could try to sleep through all the misery,
all the unlucky things that were going on to me,
the CBD gummies,
because our friends at cornbread hemp here in Louisville, Kentucky, by the way,
they are determined to make the CBD gummies
that are formulated to work with your body and not against it.
Because I'm not as young as I,
you know, you're not as young as you used to be either, Brian.
That's a statement I can make factually.
you're not as young as you were last week.
The clock is ticking.
You got you got to have peace of mind.
Your physical and mental wellness.
I got pizza mind.
I said peace of mind, not pizza mind.
Forget it.
And besides, it's the wrong kind of pizza.
You know what you ought to do?
You ought to have one of those plain old ordinary pizzas you have with just cheese and dough.
You ought to have it with the cornbread hemp CBD gummies on the top of it.
it. Oh. That would solve a variety of
can you see a problem with that? I could see a delicious problem with that.
Well, the CBD gummies from cornbread hemp folks
is not something you're just going to pick up on a side of the road at some
apple stand. They're made to help you feel better, whether it's stress,
discomfort, or just needing relaxation because they only use
the best part of the hemp plant for the purest and most potent
CBD
formulated to help relieve
the discomfort, the stress, and the
streplessness, or the sleeplessness
that you have after the stress.
And they have third party lab
tested all of these
items, and they are USDA
organic. So they've got
at least one organ
has ground up into all of these
CBD gummies.
So I wonder if it's a liver or a kidney.
What organ...
I don't think.
it's like that.
Well, they're organic.
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All righty, folks, we've made ourselves happy today.
I hope everybody's enjoyed the discussion, but we got to talk about just a little bit of the modern wrestling.
I caught a few of the highlights of AEW's effort on Wednesday night, July 23rd.
and we'll bring you up to date on that real quick
and then more good stuff next week.
But having said that, what in the world?
They're at the Aragon Ballroom in Chicago.
They got a very not only exuberant and passionate audience,
but a forgiving one,
but their first match on TV,
Adam Page, the new world champion,
against Wheeler, the stooge of the boer horseman.
and they're showing a video during the match that started in a brawl on the floor
where apparently all of Moxley's guys beat Colt Cabana up and got blood on him on Saturday
night's collision.
I didn't know he was still there.
But they have a big fight on the floor.
It's the new world champion against the stooge of the group.
And they're not treating him like Dominic Mysterio.
They're treating him like fucking Dominic Deneut.
in Australia in 67.
And finally,
Paige wins
and then gets a logging chain,
wraps it around his fist,
and punches
Wheeler in quotation marks,
and misses him
with this giant chain that you can't work with,
and anybody could tell him he can't work with it,
and then he mounted him and hit him
about five more times
that was obviously fake also.
but Wheeler got juice anyway.
And then he wrapped the chain around Wheeler's neck and started to throw him over the top but decided
not to do it.
And then he left him, the end.
The new world champion has all he can handle beating up the stooge with a chain and then
has mercy on him.
Am I thinking that maybe his title reign is not starting off to be as dominant as one might
think it would be?
You know, there's a weird schism there between people who watch it and think kind of like what you just said, and the same way I thought, and people who think like, oh, this is such a great new kind of world title reign.
He comes out, he does the promo, saying everything's for the fans, and he loves the fan.
Just the promo last week, and then this match with Yuda, and then the forgiveness.
It's working for the AEW fans that like Adam Page, but to a lot of other fans.
fans, it just makes them seem like a weak, you know, a weak baby face, a weak baby face just
waited for the right moment to be exposed. Well, let's move on to what I thought was, I don't know
if it was the highlight of the program, but it, it involved much of the top talent and it,
it should be the highlight of the program, but I'm, they have another, they have two more
tournaments, don't they, going on, Eliminator matches for the World Tag Tag.
title shot and then there's eliminators for one of the women's titles that some of the women
hold. So this tournament thing for the tag team title was FTR against Hong Kong Foui and
Kevin Knight. And you know, there's something tonight if they could get him away from the
little douchebag, but he looks silly standing next to the guy. But he's got two teams, Tony does,
that could be taken seriously in a wrestling situation.
And occasionally one of those pops up on this program.
FTR and the Hurt Syndicate.
And he's determined to put both of those teams in with these two dipsheds
until he kills both of them off.
And so now we got to see FTR go almost 20 minutes with children.
and they're trying, I know they're trying to have a match with these guys,
but they're going beyond them, they're in over their head.
The first big move of the match, FTR went for the shatter machine on spitball,
and Knight was supposed to come in and break it up and he forgot to.
So they cash boosted spitball up in the air and then they all froze.
There's spitball up in the air and he just standing there.
Dax goes to hit him or punch him or something,
and he's like, come in here, dip shit.
So FTR put themselves in the right place for these guys
and waited for them to do their stunts,
but it's not being productive.
It went through two breaks.
Did you see the part where Fooey did the moon salt off the top rope to the floor
and missed boat went right over the top of both of them
and they all fell anyway?
I did see that.
Yes.
It's good that he can backflip like that and land on his feet,
but isn't he supposed to hit the guys that he's supposed to be diving on?
It should look like that at least, yes.
There should be some suggestion of that.
So finally, Dax beat Kevin Knight by holding Stokely's crutch for leverage.
So they didn't even beat spitball.
So then they go to do the promo, FTR and Stokely,
and they're booing over Stokely.
Stokely's mad, he's got the crutch because he got speared by Edge.
Edge belongs in prison.
He's screaming over the people, and then they play Edge's music.
And Edge comes out on the stage, but he's not allowed to attack FTR.
Brian, if Stokely can go to Tony Con and get Tony Conn to agree that if Edge attacks FTR,
then he'll fire edge,
then if you were another wrestler on the roster,
wouldn't you be going to Tony Kahn saying,
well, how about nobody can attack me either?
Yeah, this is the Andrade Sammy Gavara thing.
You'll get fired if you hit him.
All right, I'm going to punch him by in the mouth.
It doesn't make too much sense
why the heel manager would convince
the commissioner, the owner, the general manager,
whatever it may be for this.
Like there's no reasoning for this stipulation all of a sudden.
Well, and also it's like the intercontinental title or the, what is the goddamn time?
Now I've made fun of it so much.
The unified continental, whatever the fuck.
Some of the rules for one of those titles is that nobody can interfere.
And as I've said before, well, if you can make it that way once, then the fans know you could make it that way anytime you want.
So then that means every time that somebody interferes, it's a promoter's fault.
But I digress.
Edge comes out and he's not mad at these people at all.
He's being very blasé about this.
He said, well, I may not be able to attack you,
but I made a deal with somebody to do what I can't do.
And then they play the hurt syndicate music.
So now the baby face has made a deal with other.
heels to fight the heels that he's not allowed to fight.
This shit is gibberish.
Then the Hertz syndicate hits and fights FTR and they got security and they're all over
the floor.
And the Hertz leave FTR down.
So in the ring, Edge tries to spear Stokely, but Stokely shoves the security guard in front
of him and the camera missed it anyway.
they had to replay it.
But Edge speared the secure,
why was Edge trying to spear Stokely?
Because wouldn't that count?
I guess it doesn't count.
Wouldn't that be the main goddamn thing?
I guess he can't hit FTR,
but he could beat up the manager
who arranged for that arrangement.
Like he did last week.
It's right.
Stokely forgot to include himself.
You know, when the...
So I'm just sorry, go ahead.
I was just going to say at this point,
we're 40 minutes into the show and then they're going to come back and do another thing,
but go ahead.
No, the segment, and this segment had been going on for seemingly 40 minutes.
If you go to the beginning of the tag team match, when the hurt syndicate came out,
my first thought was, oh, I guess I was wrong.
They're baby faces.
Yeah.
Like, okay, I guess that's what it is.
How many other way is that just that they're not heels, they're not faces,
they're in a sense bounty hunters.
you hire them, whether you're a heel or a baby face,
and they'll beat up whoever you want beating up.
And they left the heels laying.
But is that a standard baby face move for Edge to say,
well, I'll just pay these other heels to fucking...
Well, he's getting a lot of money.
No, I mean, it was a whole interesting series of events.
I have to say, it was my favorite thing on the episode
because I was intrigued by just the way everything was transpired.
It's now multiple times this has happened where a match or a promo doesn't end.
It just kind of goes into the next thing.
And before you know what, you're like, oh, there's all new people out here.
What's happening?
Yeah, you've lost your thread to the start of the thing.
Wait a minute.
Nobody was out here when this whole thing began.
Why are they even having this Eliminator tournament if they could just get a match with them right now?
What do you need the tournament for?
Okay, FTR won the match.
Just give them the match.
They have to go beat another team to get to the match.
The heels have to overcome all these obstacles.
Yes.
To get to the baby faces.
Every good heel has to have a mountain to climb to triumph over a no good baby face.
Rats, rats, double crossers.
So then they did another thing which we'll get back to.
But to get back to this thread, they were now in the back of the arena.
And Renee Moxley-Mawkesley-good is talking to the Hurt's syndicate.
and MJF comes in.
He's like, what the, what the fuck?
It took me months to getting this crew.
And now we're just boys with edge.
Apparently they didn't consult him.
And MVP's, I mean, it was business.
And MJF is, well, how about helping me with my world title and the page and where were you?
And da, da, da, da, da.
And Lashley grabs MJF and slams him up against the locker.
It says, I want you out of the Hurt Syndicate.
And I was, God damn it.
That was quick.
Exactly.
Now, the only good thing they had going on the TV for weeks was M.JF trying to get in this thing.
And now we go, okay, we got this big super group.
It's the cream of AEW heels, no pun intended, supergroup.
And we'll see what goes on with this and they're trying to help each other.
And then eventually they'll be ill feelings.
it's been what a fucking month.
He gets in the group.
There's no baby face teams worth the hurts working with.
And there's been nothing with them trying to help MJF.
And now they're already jacking him up against the locker
and potentially switching baby face because the only team they've got to work with
is also heels with a manager.
So are they blowing the.
MJF deal off already
And if not, what does this say?
If the idea is to not blow it off yet
and we're already teasing this kind of dissension
weeks after we kind of got past this kind of dissension,
what does that tell you?
There's a lot of dissension.
I think almost too much dissension.
Ashley went from not wanting him in the group
but playing around with the thumbs up, thumbs down thing,
to accepting him.
They all seem to be getting along great
and then all of a sudden
this on this episode.
Yeah. You've gone too far. You've come in and interrupted my interview.
How much did you pay? If it's just business, I'd like to know how much it cost. Is there paperwork?
Well, only if Jack Feffer was involved. Otherwise, I think this has all been done on a verbal,
a verbal deal. But I'm beginning to think that MJF, Brian, may have made a poor business decision.
Maybe he got into business, if they're all about the business,
he got into the wrong kind of business with the wrong kind of business people.
Maybe, maybe just maybe he could have taken his brand.
Him as an individual, the brand of MJF, and had a dream.
You know, when we were young, we used to have such dreams.
When we were young, it seemed that life was so magical and logical and lyrical.
you could dream about being an astronaut or a president or a princess.
But then you get older and your dreams change because as they're smashed on the rocks of reality,
you know, you just got to make money.
You just got to stick your hand in the other son of a bitch's pocket and take everything he's got.
It's a dog-eat-dog world.
You don't want to be wearing the milk bone underwear.
No.
You want to be fair.
You got to go out there and you got to take care of yourself, Brian.
Well, we got to take care of our fellow man.
We should also take care of our fellow man and society.
And, of course, a great way to do that is good advice.
And maybe that's where you were going.
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And every time a zombie gets his brains,
you hear, to-ching.
Speaking of a zombie, but he hadn't found his brains yet,
Osprey was out there.
Did you hear about this now?
I watched this live, and, you know,
it's one of those things when you're watching a promo, you're like,
oh, no, here comes the announcement.
And I guess that was obviously the thing they wanted people to feel
before they didn't really get the announcement.
Well, but we, I don't know what is legitimate,
what's not with these people in the area of admitting injuries or whatever,
because his story is, and Tony Chivani actually stayed in the ring and held the microphone.
That was nice of him to be an announcer for once.
But Osprey cut the promo.
with a very solemn update that he he's had neck issues,
it's been bothering him for 10 months now,
and he's hidden it.
He hadn't told the doctors,
and he know he should tell the doctors,
he should tell the referees.
And he's got two herniated discs,
but he hopes to be back for forbidden door in a month.
It's treatable.
He's going to get the right therapy.
Now, you can easily believe that one of these guys,
would have herniated deaths,
and you can easily believe,
because some of them have done it,
that they would hide that condition
so they could keep on doing their dream job.
And the old days, it was because if they know I'm hurt,
I won't get paid.
Now it's just, oh, but we can't, you know,
disappoint anyone.
But at the same time,
is there something there and they're making it sound more serious
because forbidden door is coming up
and they want to, why would they want anybody to wonder
whether he was going to be there or not?
Wouldn't they want everybody to know if they had the chance to
that Osprey was going to be there for sure?
So there has to be something to this,
but who knows what the severity is?
But when the promo started, the way it was going
and you could hear in the crowd,
you hear like a noticeable groan when he talks,
when he mentions his neck.
As soon as he says my neck,
yeah, everyone.
And you expected the announcement.
I have to have surgery.
I'm going to be out.
It happens to a lot of guys in this generation.
It just happened to Kevin Owens after, you know, 20 years plus of that style.
Osprey's younger.
And Osprey's been wrestling a pretty high-flying body defying.
I mean, just moving your body constantly in landing in ways that you're not supposed to at speeds.
Moving your body in directions in which you should not be going.
You know, it's a spectacular style, but you would think if there was anyone,
if there was a style that would lead to a body breaking down relatively young, it's that style.
And we've seen Omega who, he may be heard again out of the O'Kada match.
You know, he could work a few matches a year, but even that's getting to be a tough thing
because of the style he established.
and it's not one that lends itself to longevity.
But, you know, it could always happen.
But when Osprey went to his neck, it sounded believable.
Everyone believed it.
Yeah.
Everyone said, you know.
It's not, again, this is, you know, it's good pro wrestling in that, you know, it could be, it's plausible.
This could be a believable story.
But then it's bad pro wrestling and that, yeah, we believe it because this guy's in a fucking car wreck every week.
But at least Tony didn't put the world title on him.
Because now he'd, you know, be out for some description.
It's not like he has to go home and spend time with his wife.
They just hired his wife.
Now is he going to be home in England and his wife is over here wrestling?
Yeah, she ran out to silence later on the show.
Well, no, you misunderstand.
It's just people were cheering in sign language.
You're right.
understand.
Yeah.
Anyway, after all of that,
blah, blah with the Hertz in the back and everything,
they had Tony Starr,
Tony, Tony Starm.
Tony Starrm and Billy Storks.
That should be it.
Tony Storm and Billy Starks had a match.
Billy Starks is the gangly young
teenage prodigy from Louisville, Kentucky here.
I worry about her.
She sticks her tongue out all the time,
and sooner or later, she's going to bite it off.
Tony Storm won, but here came Athena.
Brian, how many times did she try to hit Tony Storm,
and how many times did she actually land the blow?
Did you, I kept count, did you like to guess?
I figured you may have a count, I won't guess.
Well, Athena came in with the contract case, right,
that metal clipboard or whatever that they've got their version of the money of the bank in.
and she takes the big swing
and Tony Storm put her hands up
and she basically blocked it.
And so she missed her with the big swing
that Tony Storm took a bump for anyway.
Then she got Storm in front of the stairs
and she ran her head into the steps three times
and that looked okay.
It wasn't anything to write home about,
but it wasn't bad.
And then as Tony Storm is sitting there
in front of the steps selling,
Athena runs toward her and in effect she was trying to make the people believe,
apparently that she was running her pussy face first into Tony Storm's face,
I guess pussy first.
You know what I mean?
The pussy in the face spot.
And it was going to be bam like she'd crush her in between the pussy and the stairs.
But she clearly went over her head and just ran her own thighs into the stairs.
and Tony Storm's head was in between her, her taint area.
It missed is what I'm trying to say.
How can you miss somebody sitting there in front of you with your own pussy?
Have you ever missed anybody with your pussy?
You know, this is a problem.
I have not encountered just yet.
But the day is young.
She ought to have a scope on it or something.
What do you think about how far they're pushing,
how far they're pushing all the Tony Storm
pussy stuff.
Well, there's
pussy for and pussy against.
She bit
somebody's pussy. Now somebody's hitting her
in a face with pussy.
And then Alex Windsor came out
and didn't touch anybody's
pussy, but she made a save.
As old
what you call it, Athena was going to cash
in. Or
who was going to cash? Somebody was going to cash in.
All right. Let's cash out.
Did you enjoy
swerve Strickland versus
Chichichia.
You know,
I'm not a
Hachichero fan.
I know they just signed them
and they really like them.
And I think a lot of it's just
the kind of
generic working on a show down the street
kind of look.
I don't know.
Maybe I'm being unfair to him
as a wrestler,
but he looks so cheap
that it just,
it makes me not
want to watch him
have a long competitive match.
with the top contender.
And then only lose by disqualification.
Because they have the match
and Swerve wins by disqualification
when Archer comes out, knocks him off the top rope.
They beat up Swerve
and then here Bandito and Brody King come out
and make the save and they have a sloppy fight off
between the two heels and the two baby faces.
As Swerve gets up,
Okada comes in and wax him in the back,
with a chair.
And I've never
seen anybody do it, but he can.
Okada makes hitting somebody over the fucking
back with a chair boring.
And then
he goes to do
something else, but swerve gets right up
and levels Okada
and puts the chair on his neck
and backs all the way up across the ring
to milk going to run at him and kick him.
And Okada just pulled the chair
off his head and rolled out.
Yep.
Well, it was smart, but it was flat.
Smart and flat.
And now swerve, I guess, is the one that has to try to get something out of this lazy bastard.
Well, he's a champion.
He's the unified champion, so it gives swerve something to go after, and we'll see what happens.
Couldn't beat Hachichichero.
I guess Hachichichero, in a way, deserves another match.
You shouldn't just go to Swerb versus O'Kada.
Maybe Hachichichichero deserves a shot at Okina.
What about a three-way?
All right, well, so they're playing the MJF card again.
They think, oh, God, the whole show's gone to shit.
Let's get MJF back out there to see if the ratings will bump up a bit.
But he does the promo in the ring where he doesn't need Lashley to get the title back.
He's going to beat Adam Page without even having to execute his contract and blah, blah, blah.
and in Mark Briscoe's music plays.
And so they're continuing this with him and Mark,
and I'm not opposed to it,
but there was a lot of time given to this
to get very little result out of it.
Mark was mad because MJF stole the casino gauntlet from him,
and he wanted a one-on-one match next week,
and MGF said, no.
And then he told Mark off because he was,
he's a loser and it was it was dragging even though i like both these guys at this point in the
show and mjf is verbally destroying brisco and briscoes even though he's on the ramp he's got
to stand out there and listen why don't he just come out there and just beat him up at this point
would you wait that long when he said all those horrible things and then finally when mjf said
well, at least the fans did respect your brother, Jay, and not you.
Then Mark hits the ring and MJF runs off.
So it's nice they were there, but it's nothing that, did they do the same thing last week?
Or was it the week before?
Yeah, I'm not sure.
And obviously, Briscoe would be doing other things before the end of the night.
Well, yeah, because this was another one of those segments that goes into anything, but go ahead.
The MJF thing got me thinking.
if he actually wins a title match,
if he gets a title match against Adam Page,
and he loses,
can he cash in right after his own match?
Well, that would be an interesting way of doing it, wouldn't it?
Right?
I mean, you lost, but you know the other guy
I already got the shit kicked out of him.
You're prepared for this, win or lose.
Then you get a second match right afterwards.
Are you allowed to get it?
That actually would be a neat little out
to give a baby-faced champion
that deserved an out, not Paige,
but somebody good.
But yeah, the baby face wins.
But after the match, he gets whacked in the head with the fucking contract case,
the guy cashes in and fucking beats him there.
That'd be some heat in a legitimate wrestling company.
What do you think?
Anyway.
You ask me, what do you think about the way they're using Mark Briscoe here with the MJF stuff?
Well, as I said, I like the idea of Mark and MJF having matches.
And I like them, the idea of having duels.
promos, but this just, it was the same kind of stuff they did the other day, and it just leaves
Mark standing there in a lot of cases.
And I, you know, normally I would say Mark needs to prove in a couple of instances that he's
smarter than MJF.
He needs to outsmart MJF and come out on the, not in a way where he beats the fuck out of
MGF, but where he embarrasses him and outsmarts him and pisses him.
and pisses him off, that type of thing.
So then MJF could get heavy heat.
But MJF is in this title thing,
and he's with the Hurt Syndicate,
and all these angles are so split up
that it's not really the time for Mark Briscoe,
the way he's been presented to fucking be outsmart in MJF.
It's cluttered is what it is.
I believe there's no clear direction for everybody.
They're all over the fucking place.
And speaking of all over the place,
Mark was still out there,
because he had a match with Claudia.
And again,
not exactly a marquee main event,
but they went 13 minutes so they could get to 10 o'clock at night.
And then when they got an overrun,
one minute after 10, Mark wins with a small package.
Okay, great, but then Marina Schaefer comes in
and is the one to clip Mark Briscoe's leg and stop him.
And then here's the bunch of them.
Dick the boozers on the microphone droning.
Wheeler comes out.
They're going to get heat on Brisco.
Page comes out to the ring all alone with his microphone in his hand
and gets in the ring and all these people that have gang jumped everybody.
He just let him stand there and fucking tell Moxley off.
And he tells Moxley, I can beat you again and I can handle the pressure.
And he had some more fake,
flowery verbiage that he thinks up that makes himself sound fake.
And then he says next week, it's you versus me for the title.
And since I'm the champion, now we're going to play by my rules.
Everybody is banned from ringside.
And I'm going to tell you right now, since I know what your answer is, it's yes.
And then he walked off.
and Tony Con within 10 seconds made it official
and three seconds after that they had a complicated graphic up on a screen
airing the match and stipulations.
Okay, then how come they don't just have every match where everybody's banned?
And then they wouldn't have been able to do the last nine months of Dick the Boozer
and the Boer Horseman.
But people wouldn't be screwed over time after time.
Now they're going to do it on TV.
Well, a big man event next week.
The rematch from All In Texas,
Adam Page versus John Moxley,
no Wheeler Yuda, no Marina, no Claudio.
It'd be very interesting to see what happens,
but that was AEW Dynamite.
Yes, it was, and the only other thing we need to know
is did anybody watch this thing, and how many?
Well, it's starting to become a very familiar story.
AEW Dynamite on TBS, Wednesday, July, 23.
3rd, 8 to 10.05 p.m.
On average, watched by 608,000 viewers.
Oh, so they're back up over six.
That's what, 15 or 20 ahead of last week?
It is 3% up from last week, which was 588,
although it is the lowest number in the key demo since April.
So the overall number was up?
You think the all night, they just opened that all night wah-wah here down,
I think it's on Preston Highway.
That may have taken some of that demographic.
You guys got Wawa in Kentucky?
I thought that was just like a,
at first I thought it was just a Pennsylvania,
South Jersey thing,
but now they're up here in North Jersey
and they're kind of spreading.
No, it was on the news.
There were people standing in line
in this weather and this shitty weather
for the fucking convenience store to open.
And it was packed and jammed
and they had news reports on it.
We got a Wawa.
I've been to Wawa.
Wawa, ain't that fucking
Gaga, is it?
Dennis Caraluzzo introduced me to Wawa.
I'd never heard of it before.
He's like, we're going to Wawa.
I'm like, we're going to Wawa. I'm like, what is that?
I thought it was like an amusement park.
I didn't know what the fuck it was.
Yeah, I mean, it's...
We're going to get a sandwich.
Yeah, it's a convenience store that has sandwiches and donuts.
What the fuck?
People are easily goddamn pleased these days, but go ahead.
Again, Wawa obviously had a big effect on this overall number,
600 and...
600 and $608,000 this week.
Let's go to the quarterly hour breakdown.
These were compiled by Russellnom.
Quarter 1, 8 to 8.15 p.m., Adam Page and MJF's backstage angle.
They had a promo where they talked to each other.
Or as it's called by WrestleMania and Engel.
Page versus Wheeler Yuda.
Billy Starks and Athena's backstage promo.
I don't know if you saw that, but that wasn't very promising.
I managed to skip that.
And the start of FTR versus JetSpeed, 669,000 viewers.
Ouch, okay, that is the worst start that I can remember in recent memory.
So the good thing about that is they don't have far to fall.
They should be fairly consistent.
And that is the high point in the key demo, since that's part of the story this week,
18 to 49-year-old men, 236,000.
Quarter 2, 815 to 8.30 p.m.
the continuation of jet speed versus FTR, picture and picture twice,
578,000 viewers, 177 in the key demo.
Good God, okay, that's really bad, and they lost, what is that,
89,000, but they have to come back up at some point to make their average now.
This is going to be one of those type of shows.
Well, we go to quarter 3, 830 to 845 p.m.
The continuation at JetSpeed versus FTR.
The postmatch with Stokely Hathaway.
Cope.
And the Hurt Syndicate.
Nick Wayne and the Patriarchy's backstage promo.
An ad break.
And then John Moxley and Marina Shafir's very theatrical
multi-camera promo.
617,000 viewers.
So they did manage to fluctuate
$29,000.
You know what?
I got to look at other weeks,
but the appearance of cope,
I think, is something that has helped them.
It doesn't give him a giant boost,
a giant jump, but even though he's not...
But it's like something is going on here.
Let's come back and see what's happening.
Quarter four, 845 to 9 p.m.
The Will Osprey live promo,
an angle with Swerve Strickland
or I guess Will Osprey greeting,
swerving him, or whatever the hell that was.
Julia Hart and Sky Blue and Tecla video
Willow Nightingale backstage promo
an ad break.
God, I'm glad I missed all this stuff.
The Hurt Syndicate backstage angle
and the start of Tony Storm
versus Billy Starks.
578,000 viewers.
Right back where we started from.
They actually went back to the exact number of quarter two.
Well, we go to the big nine o'clock hour, quarter five, nine of the hour, baby.
Top of the hour to you.
Nine to nine, 15 p.m., the continuation of Tony Storm versus Billy Starks,
and the postmatch with Athena and Alex Windsor, and an ad break, 597,000 viewers.
So they picked up
19,000 at the top of the hour.
At this point, beggars can't be choosers,
but they've had more quarters under 600 than they've had over.
Apparently other people thought the way I did.
We got a quarter six, 915 to 9.30 p.m.
The Don Callis Ramp promo
and Hetchacero versus Swarev Strickland
with picture and picture,
573,000 viewers.
Ooh, that's the low point so far.
That will be the low point for the night,
also the low point in the key demo, 169,000,
so Hetchichiro versus Swerve wasn't doing it for the fans.
We've got a quarter 7, 930 to 945 p.m.
The post-match of the previous match with the Don Callis family,
Bandito and Brody King,
ricochet and the Gates of Agonies backstage promo,
an ad break, and the MJF Mark Briscoe live promo, 631,000 viewers.
Good Lord. So the MJF card must have worked because do you see anything else in there
that would have attracted any major amount of viewership?
No. Obviously that match lost a ton of viewers. I don't think the post match really gained a lot,
but let's see what the rest of the show tells us. We've got a quarter of
8. I remind you, we have an overrun. Quarter 8, 945 to 10 p.m. Mark Briscoe versus
Claudio Castignoli with picture and picture. 621,000 viewers. Five minute overrun it says here.
I think it said eight minutes before, but five minute overrun. It was five. It was five.
The continuation of Briscoe versus Claudio in the postmatch with Adam Page and the death
riders, 609,000 viewers.
Oh, good Lord.
They bring out the big guns and lose viewers in that.
But the 631 and 621 finish for this show is amazing.
They should at least thank their lucky stars on that one.
That they got people back after what clearly made people leave is the interesting thing.
The MJF segment into Brisco versus Claudio,
but Briscoe versus Claudio was kind of a continuation of the MJF segment.
It never ended.
So at least they kept them.
Yeah.
That's AWD dynamite for July 23rd, 2025.
That certainly is.
And this is the show that we have done for a long time today,
but there was a lot going on and we'll be back,
obviously with the drive-through at a few days and next week on the experience.
And for the next several weeks,
we'll be talking about some unheard of knowledge that has been unearthed in Notre Dame
about wrestling in its past.
And until then, for Brian, I'm Jim.
Thank you.
We love you.
Bye-bye.
