Piers Morgan Uncensored - Is WWE's Vince McMahon's Legacy Destroyed? With Special Surprise Guest
Episode Date: October 18, 2024Vince McMahon has never been loved all around. Like a chokeslam to the mat, he is forceful, direct and lacking sensitivity. But few really know just how painful it was to work for the man that made th...e WWE what it is today. The new Netflix documentary 'Mr. McMahon' reveals a side to the wrestling tycoon that verges on criminal, and Piers Morgan is suitably intrigued. Joining Piers for an intellectual bout is ex-WWF star and Youtuber Maven Huffman, ex WWE announcer Jonathan ‘Coach’ Coachman, WWF head writer during Attitude era Vince Russo, Outkick broadcaster and ex WWE backstage interviewer Charly Arnolt. During the discussion, they’re all lulled into a false sense of security, right before Piers brings in one last surprise. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Well, now a sensational Netflix documentary has cast doubt on Vince McMahon's career and legacy.
He doesn't care.
He doesn't care about you.
He didn't care about your family.
He put all those females in a situation where they could not say no.
They probably put their own self-respect on the back burner because ultimately that's what you want to hear from the bosses of all bosses.
As soon as I came through the curtain, he was there.
And he was there to let me know just how mad he was at me.
They were looking classic WWE fashion.
It's time to introduce to the unscensored ring a surprise guest.
I called you out 30 years ago.
That's what I'm trying to tell you is if you looked at it fairly,
and this guy's delusional.
That was a good run-in, Pierce.
Fitzlaman is the dynastic powerhouse
behind the biggest sports and entertainment franchise in history.
World Wrestling Entertainment, WWE,
wants a regional patchwork of modest family entertainment
is now a global juggernaught worth $6.8 billion.
It merged with Dana White's U.S.
see a year ago. Some even credit Vince McMahon and
WWE with teaching a certain political heavyweight
about bombastic timing and how to work a baying crowd.
I'm taller than you. I'm better looking than you.
I think, I think I'm stronger than you.
And I'm here to challenge you to a match in WrestleMania.
What?
It's the battle of a billionaire.
That's right.
Well, now a sensational Netflix documentary
has cast doubt on Vince McMahon's career and legacy,
airing claims about ruthless practices,
the steroid culture,
and according to one recent lawsuit,
depraved and humiliating acts.
Many say he couldn't decipher himself
from his pontifical on-screen personality.
The question of all this, though,
is a bit like the wrestling itself.
Where is fact and where is fiction?
A question of McMahon himself.
struggles to answer.
The lines of reality
are very blurred in our business.
The individual
loses all sense of who
they really are.
My name is not
Vince. My name is
Mr. McMahon.
Well, to debate the ultimate showman's ultimate
legacy, we've invited some of McMahon's biggest
supporters and biggest critics
into the uncensored arena.
Marvin Hoffman is a former
former WW star and now YouTuber,
Jonathan Coach Coachman was a WW announcer
and is now an elite sports analyst
and hosted behind the turnbuckle.
Vince Russo was the head writer
during the infamous attitude era of WWE.
Charlie Allnot, an ex-WBactstage interviewer
and now host of Outkick the morning on Outkick.com.
So welcome to all of you, a very high-powered panel
for what's a very high-powered saga in many ways.
Jonathan, you work very closely with Vince McMahon
for a long period of time.
How accurate is this new series has come out about him?
Well, I think it's fairly accurate, peers.
And thank you very much for having us.
So it's great to see all the other guys and ladies that I worked with.
I think it's accurate, but I think also that when you're talking to people like us who've been inside,
I spent a total of 13 years in the WWE.
And also my character on camera was Vince's assistant.
And I think that though the term softball came to mind.
I know Vince was very upset that it was a hit piece.
I didn't find that at all.
I think it was fairly accurate when you talk about the time we spent on the road,
the things he made us do.
And I think the overriding sentiment peers that came out of that was the fact that none of us,
at least not with me, did I ever feel like I could say no?
And I only said no one time in my entire 13 years with Vince.
And when I look back on it now, that's one of the things I regret the most.
But as far as accuracy, I think it was accurate,
but I certainly don't think they went far enough as far as far as all the things.
things that he made a lot of us do.
Okay, so what is the real Vince McMahon like?
For those who don't know him, you know, in the documentary, you can see hardworking, very
committed, passionate, very successful business brain at work.
You can also see a ruthless, egotistical, depraved monster who will pretty much screw anyone,
including his own family to get what he wants.
So from your perspective, Jonathan, where's the truth?
I think there's a little bit of both.
I saw Vince McMahon that I would do with him when we're shooting skits.
We're shooting a lot of things that he was a very nice man.
And he would do things very quietly to take care of a lot of guys that were getting older that couldn't make a living on their own.
And you can't walk into a bank after you've been a W.W. Superstar and asked for a job.
The other part of Vince, though, is he doesn't care.
He doesn't care about you.
He didn't care about your family.
He didn't care about there was one time, Pierce, that I was home on Christmas Eve.
And I got a call to fly back to Connecticut from Kansas because Vince wanted to shoot a skit to be.
in the show on Monday so then he could spend time with his family. And though you talk about the
regrets, that's the events that that I think I remember the most is as long as it was good for him
and good for the company, he didn't care about the fact that if we were with our parents or with our
kids or with our families. And I think you'll get that sentiment across the board. So I think it's
somewhere in the middle. But certainly as I look back, a guy that I used to respect and I used to was
incredibly loyal for, I would never be that guy today for him, no chance.
Interesting. Vince, I mean, you were one of the writers, obviously, you helped blur that line between fact and fiction. My sons were very into WWE for a few years, and I took them to a few of the events, and it was incredible entertainment. But I did have to explain to them that, you realize this is not real. But then to a degree, it was real, and that people were being thrown around, they were entertaining. They were entertaining. They was highly choreographed. They were all well trained, and everyone was earning good money. What seems to have unraveled since is that behind,
the sort of family entertainment vibe that it was generating
was a lot of stuff that was certainly not conducive with family entertainment.
What's your perspective on it?
Well, you know, peers, I will tell you,
one thing really bothered me when I left and to backup coach,
you know, I was the head writer during the attitude era.
We were very successful during that time.
The reason I left Vince was because I was looking to relocate my family
because I was putting in so many hours.
My wife was raising my kids by herself.
And Vince McMahon looked me in the eye and said,
Vince, I don't see what the problem is.
You make enough money now, hire a nanny to raise your kids.
Those were his exact words.
I was on the phone with WCW the next day
because I was no longer going to work for a man like that.
He showed me its true colors.
But when I was writing the attitude error,
and what the attitude there was all about,
Pierre's was blue collar versus white collar.
That's what it was all about. Stone Cold Steve Austin, Vince McMahon.
Austin was telling McMahon every single thing a blue collar worker would want to tell his boss.
Well, when I left, all of a sudden there was a shift.
And that shift was all of a sudden Vince is on camera with all these beautiful women making out with them,
kissing them, groping them. They're groping him.
Now, Peters, you got to understand something, and everybody here will understand this.
As a writer, I could have never written any of our female characters in that position
because they couldn't have said no.
They would have had to say yes, because it was with Vince McMahon, and they would have thought,
if they didn't do this, they were going to be fired.
So when I saw this type of behavior after I left, it never said.
sat well with me. Now, I don't know if that came from Vince or the writers, but like I said,
he put all those females in a situation where they could not say no because they may have
felt like their job was on the line. Okay, well, Charlie, you are the female of this panel.
What's your view of Vince McMahon? Who is the real Vince? So from my perspective, I didn't always
get such a clear look at who Vince McMahon was. I didn't have to be in the writer's meetings,
like a lot of people did. I basically would show up to work, be given a script, say,
this is what you're doing. And I would generally communicate with other people on the writing
staff and my bosses, which mainly included Michael Cole. He was the main one. If I had an issue,
I would talk to him rather than directly talking to Vince. But what I will say is that even in my
position where I wasn't interacting with Vince on a regular basis, I think like everybody else,
I always aspired to get validation from Vince McMahon. Because when you did cross pass with him
in the back of, you know, the arena or in the hallway,
if he would say something to you, it would mean something,
even a simple hello, because Vince, a lot of times,
wouldn't even address you.
And if he would address you,
it means he either found you were doing something correctly
or he liked how you were going about things.
And especially when you got a good job.
That was like, oh, my goodness, Vince just told me good job.
What did I just do that I need to now replicate each time moving forward?
So I would say there was a lot of pressure there.
Even though I didn't talk to him a lot,
when he did speak to me, it definitely resonated.
And I'm not sure that's a good thing or a bad thing.
But I definitely think that's what happened with a lot of the people in the company.
And especially these people that were put in situations that were maybe more uncomfortable than others,
if they were getting this validation from Vince in those situations,
they probably put their own self-respect on the back burner
because ultimately that's what you want to hear from the bosses of all bosses at WW.
I mean, it was a very sort of high-tosterone environment, wasn't it?
very macho.
In your time there,
did you feel that it was all consensual
in terms of the way women were treated?
Later, of course, it emerged
that Vince McMahon paid off
a number of women millions of dollars
to settle lawsuits.
Did that surprise you?
Or was he the kind of character
where actually that was not that surprising?
What I've always said
is if you do not have a thick skin,
you do not belong working in the WWE.
I do find that to be the case in a lot of areas in television.
I think as a woman, you must have thick skin.
Were there many instances where I probably could have gone to HR over something small
or even something that probably had a little bit more oomph to it?
Yes.
Was I the person to do that?
No.
Now, I'm not saying that I was mistreated in any sort of way.
But there were definitely things that went on at WWE that if an outsider were to get a glimper,
on the inside, they would say, what is going on here? How are people working in these specific
conditions? But it's just one of those things that you kind of went with. You were working with the
WWE. I'm interviewing men who were wearing nothing but like tiny little speedos on. So it's kind of
like the job that you sign up for. Okay, Marvin, you were sacked by Vince McMahon. He obviously
had a ruthless street like many successful business people. What's your view of him?
Well, Vince, I echo everyone's sentiment so far.
And just like Coachman said, he said no to Vince one time in 13 years.
I never knew saying no was an option.
When Vince said something, it was pretty much law.
I got under his, I got on his bad side one time.
And it was right before we were getting ready to go on an extended break.
And an extended break for wrestlers might be an additional two or three days at home.
But it was right before one of these breaks.
I had an average match.
Wasn't a stinker.
Wasn't a horrible match, but just wasn't great.
And as soon as I came through the curtain, he was there.
And he was there to let me know just how mad he was at me.
And he told me during your time off, you need to decide if this is the place you want to be.
Now, there's that side events, but there's also the side events where after a three-year battle with cancer, the night my mom passed, I didn't get a call from his second.
I didn't get a call from his wife.
I got a call from Vince telling me exactly how just how sorry he was for my loss.
So it's good and bad with the man.
What do you think the general view, Maven, is of this?
I mean, when I watch the documentary series, depending who you're listening to,
a lot of the bigger stars talk quite fondly of him.
And yet we know there's been a slew of scandals around it.
we know he's effectively being pushed off the scene for now anyway,
no longer has the family ownership but he had, etc.
Is it right that he's being depicted as a kind of villain now,
or do you think that's been overplayed?
Well, I'll answer your first question, obviously, first.
The stars who have a fond view of Vince,
Vince is a very transactional individual.
If you're making him money,
if you're making him money,
and a lot of these stars,
making him millions. He loves you. And you talked about, you know, me, me getting let go by Vince.
And I, I agree. When you see Vince backstage, he'll ignore you. If you mean nothing to him or
nothing to his show, he'll pass you by and won't give you the time a day. But Vince made his bed.
And he's unfortunately now lying in it. I know that there's probably more to come. And like most people,
I'm simply sitting back waiting for whatever is going to unearth itself.
Well, you guys obviously were all on the inside.
I guess that the person who could be best described as Vince McMahon's nemesis
was the New York Post journalist Phil Mushnik,
who's been running a slew of exposés about bad practices at WWE.
I want to give a little clip of an example of what I'm talking about.
I don't know why as Vendetta.
They really didn't want to look.
They didn't want to know.
I guess me, I don't know why.
Because he's a dirtbag.
Vince is guilty of aiding and abetting the Ringboy scandal.
At best, he's guilty of rank neglect.
This was the biggest guy in cable TV.
Nobody wanted to look a little deeper.
Why isn't these things page one?
Millions of kids worship these guys, and they're dropping dead.
Where's the news?
Again, McMahon seemed to escape that.
Jonathan, what's your view of Mr. Mushnick and all his exposés?
Well, I think when you write for the New York Post,
and I came in long after a lot of the things he was just talking about that in the documentary,
but when you write for the New York Post and your entire job
is to write negatively about somebody, he knew that running negatively about...
Well, hang on, hang on, hang on.
I write for the New York Post, and that's not my directive.
I'm a columnist in your post.
No one tells me to be negative.
I can write what I like.
So I would take issue with that.
In the 90s, okay, well, I'll say back in the 90s, when he's writing about that, I'll say specific to this.
I apologize to you, Pierce.
But he started writing about this, and these are things that people will resonate with that they'll lash onto.
And I will tell you this, that in my entire 13 years of being the WWE, I never saw Phil Mushneck even try to come backstage to see
what the atmosphere was like.
I never saw him ask to have a sit down with any of us.
And I think that sometimes when you're a journalist,
especially and you're trying to sell newspapers,
and you're trying to sell your column,
and you know that people need to read it for you to keep that,
I think that's where Phil has always fallen on.
And he's the one guy,
because I love a good back and forth.
I love a good and a bad,
and I would never sit up here and completely defend vets.
But I will say that Mr. Mushnick, in particular,
because we used to talk about him all the time
because it seemed like every other article
that he would write was something about Vince,
something about the WWE,
and there are a lot of good things
that I got out of the WWE.
I have two beautiful children
that without the WWE,
I wouldn't have today.
I had the talent that I have,
the way that I do my job I got
by learning into WWE.
So every article,
I don't remember anything
that Phil ever wrote
that had one positive thing
to say about the WWE or Vince.
And if you're that kind of a rider,
I don't have a lot of respect for it.
Vince, would you agree with that about Phil Mushnik?
I have to jump in here because I've got a personal story.
And I guarantee you, Mr. Mushnik,
does not remember this.
I never forgot this.
In 1991, when the steroid trial was going down
and Vince McMahon was facing jail time,
after, you know, he was found innocent of all charges,
Vince and the WWE had a steroid symposium where they were going to change policies.
And the media was invited, including Phil Mushnick.
I went to that steroid symposium because I was media at the time.
I recorded the entire symposium.
Phil Mushnick, who made a living out of burying Vince McMahon, was invited, did not attend.
not only did he not attend he wrote a story in the new york post the following day filled with untruths
how do i remember that because i got on the phone with phil muslin it and i said bro you're and i was
not working for the wwe i was a journalist i said bro you are full of crap i have every word that was
said on this tape recorder he didn't say some of the things that you said so again at
As a journalist, I asked the question, what kind of a journalist are you if you're not going to go to a symposium you're invited to?
And then you're going to report on it with false information.
From that point on, Phil Mushanick had zero credibility with me.
Okay. And Charlie, your views of Phil Mushnick?
Well, I was not a part of W.E.
When Phil Mushnick was really doing most of his dirty work.
But what I will say is just by garnering a lot of knowledge.
throughout the course of the documentary.
It seems like he was the type of guy.
He definitely had it out for Vince.
He would throw whatever he could at the wall,
see what stuck, because ultimately there were going
to be certain things that stuck.
I'm sure there were certain people who would side
with a guy like Phil and say, yes, I can back up your story.
But then there's other people who would have the complete opposite
to say.
So Phil just seems kind of like one of those dirty journalists
who no matter what, his goal was to bring down Vince McMahon.
And I believe that, yeah, Vince, he,
definitely played the bad guy well. He said in the documentary, we all heard, there's nothing
I wouldn't do for this business. I regret nothing in my life. So when you say things like that,
it makes Phil's job a whole lot easier. But judging by what Phil said, I mean, there were definitely
upside to Vince McMahon, and I think a lot of people have explained it well. I do think that ultimately
it was about Vince and his bottom line, but there are lots of stories about Vince really taking care
of his people. And I also got to know that side of Vince as well. Not,
personally necessarily. I wasn't ever looking for personal favors from Vince, but from people that I was close within the WWE, I heard those things.
Okay. Mavin, any thoughts yourself about Phil Mushnick? Yeah, I think Mr. Mushnick had Vince in his journalistic crosshairs. I think he found an easy, easily attainable target, someone he could go after, someone who was big enough, large enough, ran a large enough company, a worldwide company. So he knew whenever he was.
wrote anything, it was going to garner attention. And I'm not saying everything he wrote about
Vince was incorrect. Hell, it probably wasn't. A lot of the stuff he wrote was accurate. But
there's a lot of things that you just don't see on the day-to-day operations when you're
working with someone, you know, on 365 days a year. And I just don't think Mr. Mushnick was ever
looking for anything good out of Vince. He was only looking for the bad.
Well, look, in classic WWE fashion,
it's time to introduce to the uncensored ring a surprise guest
because flying in off the top rope,
hopefully not with a steel chair,
is the New York Post legendary columnist
and Vince McMahon nemesis,
Phil Muschnik, who's been listening to all of that.
Phil, welcome.
Cool.
Thank you.
You've been called a few things.
I've called a few things there by your fellow panelists, Phil.
Do you want to respond?
Well, the first thing I'd ask,
The first thing I'd ask, peers, is can any of your panelists name one thing?
One thing I wrote about McMahon, the WWF, exposing a pedophile ring on McMahon's watch?
Somebody who was a discused?
I got two kids.
How about the kids who were sexually abused who didn't have parents?
And they were all in McMahon's purview.
Phil, Phil.
We just said a lot of words.
They'd see these same.
there. I'm going to stop you right there. A lot of what you said is true. Nobody, nobody, nobody
saying that. Did I stop you? Surprise. You brought my kids. You're a sellout. You're a sellout.
What we said about you is a sellout. A sellout. See, and Pierre, is this what I'm talking about? I've never,
I've never met this man. I've never met this man. And he said I have no moral fiber. He doesn't
know me. I read his stuff. He wanted proof. Coach, he wanted proof. I just
How come?
I called you out.
I called you out 30 years ago.
When you made it up, you made stuff up, Bill, 30 years ago, bro.
Keep shouting because you're a fraud.
You're going to sit there and say we haven't.
Because maybe you're senile, bro.
No, we talked a lot.
We talked a lot.
We talked a lot.
You reported on stuff that was never sent out.
Bro.
I'll call you whatever.
I'll call you a liar then.
How about that, bro?
I'll call you a liar.
You reported.
Knock yourself out.
Never said.
I recorded the...
You have no credibility.
You used to be...
You used to be again.
You was never said.
Yeah, what?
What, bro?
I was one.
I used to be one.
What did I used to be, bro?
Are you going to let me speak?
Go ahead.
Tell me what I used to speak.
Go ahead.
What I used to be, did you once...
I won't...
Did you want a newsletter?
That Phil's a pro wrestling.
Did you run once...
And weren't you very, very anti-McMan, right?
I got the copies that were a lie.
Yes, you're fair.
Show us the copies right now, Phil.
Show us the copies right now.
Anti-McMan, my butt, bro.
I was fair.
I was a fair.
That's why I went to the symposium to hear his side of the story
because guys like you were burying him.
So I was, there's got to be another side to the story.
That's why I went and you didn't go.
because you didn't want to hear the other side of the story
because you had to sell newspapers, bro.
You're the fraud.
I mean, I can't have a...
Okay, let me jump in as a good referee.
Good referee would.
I just woke up one morning
and I was covering mainstream sports
and I decided to fabricate all these fantasies
about the WWF.
I didn't even watch it.
I could see where it was.
going, the steroids and the prurian content, I could see it was getting really ugly and really
vicious and just sexually, sexually inappropriate for anybody. And I just decided I'll make some stuff up.
Or did I get calls from ringboys? What, you, peers, can you give me a second? I'll tell you how
My inclusion began.
I read the New York Times two paragraphs.
Hulk Hogan was going to be dismissed from the Dr. Zohorian drug trial, Vince's, the wrestling doctor,
because it might be injurious to his public image and career.
I'm saying, what kind of, but his career is built on take your vitamins, say your prayers,
and suddenly he's exploding on drugs.
You can see it.
It was obvious, except maybe to Rousseau,
that he was on steroids.
Let me ask you, Phil.
Let me ask you, Phil.
And then the letters came.
They had never read anything like that in the mainstream media,
and they all read, you don't know the half of it.
So I didn't decide to, like, throw away my,
my career. No, no, Phil, if you want my opinion, I think you're an excellent reporter who's been doing
excellent reporting. I guess the question is, as the panelist said before they knew you were coming on,
whether you had a vendetta against Vince McMahon. He called you once on Monday Night Raw,
a self-righteous, egotistical, miserable son of a bitch. So there clearly was no love lost on
his part either. But what is your genuine view? But you don't think I don't know that's of work?
Of course. My question,
But that's a work.
Of course.
My question for you is...
This is what he does.
No, of course, of course.
It's the kind of Trump-style trash talk.
But in terms of your perception of Vince McMahon,
it's quite hard to work out from the documentary
and from everything I've read and gleaned,
where the villain begins and ends
and where the showman who sort of blurs a line between fact and fiction begins and ends.
How bad a person, in your opinion, is Vince McMahon?
My empirical knowledge,
My knowledge based on research, based on interviews, and interviews with really good people.
I've met some wonderful people.
Bruno San Martino was one of the most noble people I've met because he told the truth.
But based on what I know of Vince McMahon, he's the closest thing to the fictional character, Hannibal Lecter, I've ever met.
Wow.
I think he's that sick.
Really?
I think he's a sociopath.
Yes.
Absolutely.
What do you do when you make jokes on the air as the future governor of Minnesota did, Jesse Ventura,
about all the pedophiles that were being indulged, transported,
and all the kids that would show up from city to city.
They had no parental restraints.
They were coming from foster homes.
They were easy pickings.
They were easy prey.
And it happened on McMahon's watch.
And it happened on everyone's watch.
And you, Vince Rousseau, who used to kiss his, who used to be anti-McMan,
then you started kissing his ass because he got paid.
And you're like, everybody else.
I'm not going to sit there and lie without me talking over you.
You're a liar.
Who's Dr. M.D. Pasquale?
I was never pro-McMan ever.
I reported the truth and the facts.
You did not go to the steroid symposium because you had a right character.
They didn't want to hear a side of it.
Did you go, Phil?
Did you ever go?
You had a lunch date, bro?
Why didn't you go, Phil?
Who's Dr. Marrow de Pascuali?
Who's Dr. Maro di Pasquale?
That was the person he had present at the Steroid Symposium.
Yeah.
Right.
And what was his, what was his specialty?
What was his specialty?
I guess he was a con man, Phil.
I guess he was, I guess he was an actor.
His specialty, he was from Canada, his specialty was how to teach athletes to beat steroid tests.
So that was his specialty.
Why didn't you go to the symposium and say that?
Why didn't you go to the symposium and say that?
Because I was way ahead of you.
Okay, let me bring in, okay, hang on, please, hang on, let me bring in Maven.
He wants to say something, I think.
That was a good run in, Pierce.
And in fact, I did know Mr. Mushnick was going to be on here.
The only question I would have for him, and I'm not going to impugn, you know, his life work,
the only question I would have for him is, have you ever met Vince?
Have you ever sat down with him?
Have you ever traveled with him on the road?
We've spoken on the phone number.
I'll never say, I'll never say everything Vince has done has landed, and I'll never say he didn't have bad ideas.
He certainly did.
And some of the things he did was, you know, was just plain out evil.
But to say he's sadistic, I mean, I've heard any of it, though.
Why has any of it plain?
I've heard not.
Why was it plain?
If he was plain out evil on occasion, how could, how, why are you telling me that, oh, I got him all wrong?
Well, here's what I do know.
Phil, everything you're talking about, maybe, and I'll jump in real quick, everything you're
talking about, Phil, happened before four of us were there in 30 years ago.
And that what we're trying to give an equal,
and we're admitting,
always admitting that everything he did was not good.
But you haven't brought up one thing that happened after 19,
after 1999.
After 1999.
Well, okay.
Okay, but here's an interesting point.
I wasn't covering.
Let me ask you, Phil.
Are you the same coachman?
Well, Phil, let me just jump in a moment, Phil.
Phil was one of the first journalists to expose the widespread use of steroids in WW.
Vince McMahon was acquitted in 1994
for distributing steroids
and won a conspiracy to distribute steroids.
He addressed Phil Mushnick directly afterwards.
We've got that clip.
I was constantly amazed at the utter lack of ethics
of some of the good guys involved in my case,
all of whom had demonstrable ties to Mr. Phil Mushnick.
I watched the good guys lie to the media,
lie to the judge, lie to the jury.
I watched the good guys get caught
because they tried to pressure my alleged co-conspirator
into changing his prior sworn testimony.
I watched as the good guys were forced to admit
that they had destroyed evidence.
And I saw the ultimate impact of the truth
when the jury acquitted me
and the World Wrestling Federation
without us even,
having to put on a defense or call even one witness.
Phil, I mean, there was obviously no doubt that a lot of them were on steroids, right?
So were you surprised when McMahon was acquitted?
Why do you think that happened?
And do you give him any credit for what he did afterwards in cleaning it up?
I firmly, peers, I believe that he was prosecuted in the wrong jurisdiction.
Had he been prosecuted in the Stanford, Connecticut,
where all the drugs from Doctors of Horan were delivered to McMahon who admitted to using
steroids, but he said he did him legally.
Now, if he did him legally, go down to the corner pharmacist and get your steroids.
Don't get him from a guy who's doing four years in prison in a federal prison.
It's exactly what I did.
Mr. Mushnick, that's exactly what I did.
I have openly, openly on my channel admitted steroid use during my time in the WWE.
And no one from the WWE made me do it.
I did it all on my own.
And I did exactly what you said.
I got a doctor's note.
I got blood work done.
And I did it as safely as I possibly could,
knowing, knowing full well what the ramifications later in life might be.
Under what premise?
What was your premise?
What was the premise for getting these steroids?
Under the premise that I wanted to,
under the premise that I was in the big boys,
the league with the big boys.
and I needed to look the part.
It was completely 100% my decision.
Vince or no one told me to.
I know, but there was a, was there not the presumption within the industry that if you wanted to get anywhere,
you had to be roided out.
The old expression was, let me die big.
No.
So why did you take them?
I could name plenty of guys I worked with that didn't.
If you didn't need the steroids.
If you didn't need the steroids.
Why didn't you take the steroids if it wasn't a requisite? Vanity. Vanity. Vanity. Because I wanted to look.
I wanted to look. Your knowledge of what of what goes on in that industry. It wasn't just because I wanted to.
Let me bring in Jonathan. Let me bring in Jonathan. Let me bring in Jonathan. Let's let Jonathan
let Jonathan speak. Industrial surgery. Jonathan. Phil, you've got to move you've got to move past
1995 Phil. And we can have an honest conversation. I started in 1990.
Phil, please.
Who is it?
Not one time.
Not one time.
Not one time.
Not one conversation.
And of this panel, other than Vince, I was physically next to Vince more than anybody during that time from 1999 through 2008.
Through my character work on the show.
And also, because I hosted a lot of press conferences, we were on his jet together.
We were flying all over the place.
And not one time, Phil, not once.
Have I ever heard a conversation about steroid use or you need to use steroids?
And I'm not saying that guys didn't.
They openly like Mavin just said, but it's not something you're set around.
I mean, you're not blind.
You're not blind.
But, Bill, I'm telling you, it's not talked about it.
And you just said, is it well known that you've got to do it?
No, it was not.
And that's what I'm trying to tell you is if you looked at it fairly, instead of always looking at the negative,
you would understand that guys had their own brains.
And if they chose to use it, that's what they did.
that the negative.
Nobody ever made it.
No,
after 1999.
How many of McMahon's wrestlers?
Phil?
Oh my God, Phil.
How many of McMahon's wrestlers?
How many of McMahon's wrestlers
didn't make it the 50 years old?
How many died of drugs?
Too many.
Yeah, too many.
What do you mean?
This is irrelevant?
Okay.
I didn't indulge.
I didn't indulge too many.
I didn't suffer too many.
You did.
Oh my God.
I sat next to Vince McMahon in a room who worked for McMahon.
I sat next to Vince McMahon in a room writing TV one-on-one with the man.
Hundreds, hundreds of days I spent.
Never once did Vince McMahon say, oh, we're not going to push so-and-so because of his body
and he's not on steroids.
This guy's delusiness.
This is what I said at the beginning of the show.
Everything out of his mouth is negative about Vince.
I spent hundreds of hours with the man.
Never one time did he say.
Never once.
Never once.
He's going to get a push because, bro.
Okay.
Let me just hang on.
I don't all talk with each other, please.
I want to just jump in.
Hang on, please.
Hang on.
I want to talk to Charlie.
He's been very quiet and respectful.
Hang on, Phil.
I want to talk to.
One of the things Charlie has come out of all this, of course,
is the link between Donald Trump, the former president,
the guy who might be president again in the next three weeks.
I want to show a clip between Trump and McMahon,
because Trump was a regular attendee at WWV.
Take a look.
Charlie, when you look at Vince McMahon and look at Trump,
do you see a lot of parallels between them character-wise?
They often blur fact and fiction, that they're very bombastic,
they're showmen.
They believe everything's transactional,
Do you think they were kindred souls?
Yeah, I say yes, but I also say that in a positive sense,
because I think there is a lot of showmanship involved with both of them.
I think they are both what you would consider to be the ultimate types of businessmen, right?
They know what sells, they know how to entertain, they know how to engage.
And I think they also recognize talent and other people that then they're able to uplift those
around them to also be larger than life.
So yeah, I think there's a lot of similarities.
And I think that Trump probably, when you look at him now
and how he addresses people and how he runs his rallies,
I probably think he did pick up a couple of those skills
from Vince McMahon in the WWE.
And I definitely don't see that as a bad thing.
So, yeah, Donald Trump got a new fan base
from being in the WWE as well.
Right.
Phil, I think you'd actually try to warn Trump off McMahon, didn't you?
On two occasions, I called Donald,
who I've known for years.
He even tried to get me fired back in 1988 when I was writing about boxing and his negative inclusion in exploiting the boxes to promote Trump.
Thank you, Mr. Trump. Come to my casino. And he wasn't a sportsman. I referred to him as sportsman Trump. He would introduce the celebrities at ringside and ignore the former world champions who were there. And I thought that was horrible. But I called him and I said,
Donald, I have four, he had just run the Miss Universe contest,
and he got rid of the winner because she was on alcohol and drugs.
And he played this nobles oblige man,
and he was going to take care of that.
He was going to clean up that pageant.
I said, Donald, I said, I have four boxes that I will, I'll deliver them to you.
I'll get a truck.
I'll deliver them to you.
With all the FedEx records of the six.
steroids and the opioids delivered to McMahon, the wrestlers, Hulk Hogan, but from Zahorian.
And this was, and I will give him to you, you don't want to be involved in this.
You don't forget about the, what did he say?
What did he say?
He knows he's the smartest man on earth.
No, don't you worry about it.
I'm going to give the money to charity.
I said, how much are you need of the charity?
Oh, about a million dollars.
And I said, well, I hope to see the ceremony
where you present that big styrofoam check for a million dollars
because if you were going to have a million dollars to charity,
we'd all know it.
And Phil, just where are we now with this?
This documentary's come out.
Everyone's been talking about it, watching it, debating it, and so on.
Vince McMahon, since the merger of WWE with USC,
well, he's now a minority shareholder,
or the family's lost control.
He's worth billions.
We don't know.
People, I was going to ask you, you're plugged in here.
What is the reality of his control over it still?
I'm not plugged in.
I'm not plugged in.
I never, peers, I'm not plugged in.
I never wanted to be plugged in.
And I'd love to be unplugged.
But I got it.
I made my journalistic bed here.
And it's followed me.
And I'm proud of what I've done.
proud. For another
newspaper, not a tablet, I would have
won a Pulitzer for this. Right.
My question,
my question really was, where are we
now with Vince Vermont? Is he done
with WWE? Or do you think he'll make
some people believe a big comeback and take
control again? I don't think he
has to
wear a title on a piece of
stationary. I think he'll always
be, if not
omnipresent, certainly present.
people like that don't go away.
You can't.
Also, why would he come back?
Because WWE is doing so well without him.
They're breaking attendance records.
They're selling record numbers of merch.
They are building up stars like they've never before.
So why would, yeah?
Why wouldn't he come back?
You tell me, you're a female.
No, I said, why would?
I have two daughters.
No, I have two grandkids.
He is, why would they?
Why would they?
No, you tell me.
tell me why would you asking why wouldn't they bring him back?
He has been abusive toward women.
No, no, Phil, I think you misheard of Phil.
I said why would they bring him back?
Phil, I think you miss heard what Charlie said.
She was saying, why would he go back?
It's doing very well without him, is what she said.
Because it's his lifeblood.
It makes his heart pump if he has a heart.
But it's not up to him anymore.
Right.
So Charlie, what's your view of where we are in terms of,
How do we know that?
But Charlie, how do we know that?
How do we know it's not up to him anymore?
It wasn't up to him last time he left.
Just because I think you see the direction.
Well, but I think you see the direction that the company's going in.
They're bringing in people that never before really had any business in their wrestling industry.
I mean, you have Tony Kahn, a former entertainment agent who's now running the show over on the WWE side.
You have UFC swooping and buying WWW.
I mean, TKO Group owns both of them.
I mean, they're clearly going in a different direction where they're,
very much geared towards entertainment. They're all about bringing in celebrities. It's so much
different than it used to be. I personally am partial to the WWE of the older days. But, you know,
I like to do with their adult, educated lives. That's their business. Okay, let me bring in.
I don't think the, okay, I've got to wrap it up, guys. I want to just get a quick reaction from
the three we've not heard from on this. Jonathan, is Vince McMahon done now with WWE in a
controlling way. Do you think that's it?
Well, he's done now. There's no way they're going to bring him back.
There's way too much money involved. They got the biggest deal in the history of the company,
$5 billion with Netflix was going to be around. And that's kind of what I wanted this
conversation to be is to move it forward because I think as it's gone in TKO, when they bought it,
part of the reason they looked at it and said, what do we need to get rid of?
And we're not here to defend vents. None of us are here to defend vests.
What we're here to defend is that there are good parts of the business.
There are good people that are in this business. And when you do a wide swiping, a just
everything is negative. It's very, very short-sighted, especially when you look at the last 25 years.
And you see these really good people like Charlie and Vince, Maven, sitting on here, we've had really good lives.
We've all moved on from the WWE. I've been at ESPN. I've been at PGA Tour. And I'm doing a lot of really good things just like they are.
So when I get called a sellout or there's this blanket thing here is that it's just all negative, that's when I have a problem with it.
Vince is done. Vince is not coming back. And we're all cool with that. And he doesn't need to come back because they fixed a lot of
the things that were issues during all of our times of the WWA.
Maven, do you agree with that?
100%.
Vince is definitely done.
I think the world's moved on.
It's a different time and it's a different generation than the one that Vince, you know,
knew.
And I think there's just that we're in a place in society where people just aren't going to
stand for even allegations and allegations that are backed with fact.
WWE's moving on, like Charlie said,
they're setting attendance records, the stocks,
the stock is up, and they are creating new stars,
and they're doing it without the man that started at all.
And like Coachman said, we've all moved on.
I don't even watch the product anymore.
I haven't watched wrestling, and I don't know how long,
with no plans to.
Right.
Vince Russo, finally, to you,
do you feel that WWE's moved to a better place?
Is it basically a cleaner, better, less,
scandalous version of what it was under Vince McMahon?
Well, Ari Emanuel would have to be the stupidest businessman on the face of the planet
to still have any association with Vince McMahon.
And obviously, looking at his success and the success of his company, he's not.
So with Maven and coach, 1,000% Vince has nothing to do with the WWE today.
Guys, what a fascinating debate.
I've learned a lot.
It's been a heated, passionate debate.
on all sides. I appreciate you
duking it out together in
true WWE fashion. Also, can I just say
something real quick? Yes, Charlie, quickly.
I think I said
Tony Kahn was over at
WWE. Now, I meant Nick Kahn, the former
entertainment agent, not
Tony Kahn who actually runs the
opposing AEW,
not Tony. Your
clarification is noted and will
be included. Thank you all very much for your time.
I appreciate it. Thank you,
Pierce.
