Arn Anderson Shoot Interview Page 2
The
Four Horsemen- Jim Crockett had an interview where Ole, Arn,
Flair, and Tully Blanchard, who had all teamed together in various
combinations before, were promoting three different matches (he thinks they were
Tully vs. Dusty, Ric vs. Magnum, and Ole and Arn vs. the Road Warriors). It
dawned on him during the interview that they were like the Four Horsemen of the
Apocalypse, so he used it to build up the matches. As soon as the interview
ended, Tony Schivone came around and told them they had something special
there, so they took off from there.
Ego problems within the
Horsemen? There were always personal ego problems outside the business, but
never during a match. They were always trying to outdo each other in the ring
and steal the show if they were in different matches, but there was no real
tension, ESPECIALLY if they were all in a match together like Wargames.
Teaming with Ole-
"Greatest single learning experience I've ever had" because Ole and Gene
Anderson were some of the best tag wrestlers ever. Unfortunately, a lot of
the principles they used have been lost in time because tag wrestling has
degenerated over the years.
Was it hard being heels
because they were so over? It was easy in the ring but was hard to do anything
outside of it because they were loved. It was when renegades were just starting
to be cool all around, and they were supposedly one of the first heel groups to
get over like that. "It wasn't a low-class redneck thing, we carried out
everything in style."
Working with Ronnie
Garvin- "I wished I'd have just found a building to jump off..."
Ronnie Garvin and Buzz Sawyer were two guys who could beat the shit out
of you. Garvin could stretch you with just his legs. However, Garvin didn't have
any problems with taking it in return.
Working with Dusty Rhodes-
Most charismatic guy he's ever wrestled. He could bring fans into the arena and
then perform well. You saw Dusty's charisma in the matches, not his substandard
body. Dusty loved working with Tully because he could make Dusty look great.
Nikita Koloff-
They didn't get along at first. Nikita was smart enough to know what he wanted
from the business, worked hard, then walked out of the business instead of
hobbling out. He respects him for that. The main bone he had to pick with Nikita
was that he'd be rough on some of the underneath guys.
Was he disappointed he
didn't get to work with Flair then? No, because he loved working alongside him
as his partner back then. Since Flair was responsible for getting him into that
position, he didn't complain.
Rock and Roll
Express- The matches he and Ole had
against them were the most fun he ever had. "Ricky Morton was the
most over guy ever back then with the girls that I'd ever seen." If you
started pounding on him, people would start jumping the rails to get you.
Working with the Road
Warriors in Mid-Atlantic- They were more polished, and having Ellering work with
them did wonders. Road Warrior Hawk was a bit volatile, though, which
could be scary in the ring sometimes.
Did Vince McMahon
ever contact him? He was sent messages through wrestlers, but never anything
official.
What was the locker room
vibe for the UWF purchase/invasion- It was a huge misuse of resources. With
their TBS show, they could have just gone into Watts' territory and run him out
of business instead of buying out his money-losing territory. He attributes the
UWF purchase directly to Crockett's financial troubles, which caused him to sell
out to Ted Turner in 1988. Going out west to run shows and flying
everyone all over the place didn't help. Instead of running them separately or
using the good talent that the UWF had when they bought them, Crockett instead
used them to put over his guys for the most part. (Sting was the only UWF
guy brought in who wasn't completely jobbed that I know of.)
Jim Crockett as a
promoter- Don't know him well. He didn't let a lot of people close to him
emotionally.
Ole leaving the Horsemen-
The other Horsemen figured that things were going to get worse eventually, and
Ole deciding to go home was the first sign of trouble. Lex Luger was
cosmetically a great fit but wasn't the right choice to replace Ole. Nothing's
ever as good as the original anyway... the nWo, the Horsemen, the Midnight
Express, etc.
Lex Luger- He had a great
attitude back then, wanting to learn and willing to listen. Very business-savvy.
One of the best self promoters ever. Lex parlayed his look into being a
multi-millionaire. Nothing negative to say about him.
Did people complain about
Dusty's booking? Of course. If you aren't wrestling the guy you want to wrestle
or in the town you want to wrestle in, you were pissed. Being a booker is a
"thankless, pain-in-the-ass job."
Bunkhouse Stampede
matches- Fun but brutal . A lot of people weren't paying attention because there
were 25 other people in the match, so there were broken ankles, blown out knees,
stitches, and so forth. The first mass deal like that of its time.
Working with Barry
Windham- Barry's a phenomenon. He could party all night then come in and
work an hour or 90 minutes and never have to go to the gym. "All-around
cowboy and sweetheart of a guy." "If Barry had 5 grand, keys to a
Porche, and a woman, he was content." That was why he never put as much
effort as he should have into the business. It would have been a shortcoming but
things worked out for him... Barry married a VERY wealthy woman who Arn claims
owns half of south Georgia. Wrestling Barry was a dream.
Did he prefer working
singles matches or tags? Tags.
Memories of the first
Crockett Cup- He thinks he and Tully didn't do well and were put out early by
the Fantastics but doesn't remember for sure. Great concept, great promotion,
but going into a building like the Superdome was a mistake because they could
have filled up a smaller building instead of filling about 1/4 of the Superdome.
"If you've got 50 people not making any noise, bumps hurt 10 times as
much."
Wargames - He was the
first guy in the first Wargames match and doesn't think that match was ever
topped by subsequent ones. It was a draining match because he was in there about
35 minutes and was taking bumps left and right. The only Wargames to even come
close to the first one was the one at Wrestle War 92.
Were
there any plans to break up the Horsemen around that time (mid-1987)? No.
Lugar getting kicked out
of the Horsemen- There was a Bunkhouse Stampede battle royal in which JJ
Dillon was supposed to win but Luger said "Screw that" and won it
himself. They decided to bounce Lugar out of the Horsemen and bring Barry
Windham in to take his place. From a wrestling standpoint, it was the best unit
in Horsemen history.
Working with Luger every
night- His knowledge wasn't where it was supposed to be but he overcame it with
just sheer power. He was in tremendous cardio shape, too, so he didn't get blown
up.
Were the Horsemen tight
outside of the ring? Yes... it was just like their promo where they said they do
everything together except share a room.
Do you keep in contact
with Tully? He ran into him by pure accident when he went out to eat the week
before. They haven't kept in touch and have had past disagreements, but figures
they'll talk again in the future.
Midnight Express- He was
really close to Bobby Eaton, about as close as he is to Flair. They'd travel
together a lot. He says that the original version with Dennis Condrey,
rather than the one with Stan Lane, was the best tag team they ever
faced.
How did their negotiations
with Vince McMahon come about? "There were some incidents in the front
office" dealing with the Turner sale and Crockett's finances. They were
really hot and were working with the Midnight Express. Crockett had made
promises contract-wise which didn't come true, so they put out feelers to Vince.
When they got a positive response from Vince, when they had a bad experience on
TV in Houston (which he refuses to go into) and Crockett didn't handle it
properly, they started making plans to jump.
How did Vince handle it?
Vince sent them first-class tickets, had a limo take them to his house, and sat
around his pool to put a deal together. That night, they flew back to
Philadelphia, gave their notice to Crockett and Dusty, and lost the tag titles
to the Midnight Express. (This situation has become a bit infamous over the
years considering how hot the feud was and how hyped it was on TV for it to end
at a house show with no notice.) Ric Flair was so shocked that he called them up
the next day when they didn't show up, asked them what was up, and cried when he
realized they really were leaving.
He claims that the locker
room was probably split over them leaving, because some loved working with them
and drawing money against them while others wanted their spot. He says it was
the end of the boom times for Crockett because the Horsemen carried the NWA to
that point, which is debatable considering how the Dusty finishes involving the
Horsemen helped kill off towns. He then goes on to justify it by saying that the
Horsemen were typically in the top three matches for years, which is mostly true
(it depends if the Midnight Express and the Rock and Roll Express were facing
stiffs like the Russians that night).
Vince McMahon- Most
intelligent, smoothest, most articulate man he's ever met. He made you feel like
you were walking on air. In the 14 months he was there, they treated him better
than he'd ever been treated. The only reason he left was that he had a three
year old son and was working 24 days a month, with none of those dates being
near his home in Charlotte, and he couldn't take it anymore.
Difference in the locker
rooms- The politics were completely different. There are stringent locker room
rules, some are said and some are unsaid. There are cardinal rules you just
don't break. He says the typical case with WWF guys is that they stay around
until Vince McMahon has to run them off. People who have the lucrative runs with
Hogan pulling down $500,000 a year tend to be WWF 4 Life. They tried to keep
shady stuff out of the locker room because the grind was so bad that the locker
room had to be a sanctuary and had to be very positive.
Why were they paired with Bobby
Heenan? They were scared that Vince was going to change around their
gimmick, but were relieved when Vince assigned Bobby as their manager and only
changed their name instead of their gimmick. At that time, Heenan was only
managing top guys like Andre the Giant, Haku, and Rick Rude. They didn't
need him to do the talking, but they weren't going to turn down a guy as good as
that.
What was Hulk Hogan
like? He was all business. He never saw Terry Bollea... just Hulk Hogan. He
pretty much stayed in his own locker room. He was nice and polite, but mostly
stayed to himself.
Did they see potential in
the Rockers? They were better than the Rock and Roll Express from a
workrate perspective. "Shawn Michaels could do anything" while Marty
Janetty was just great.
Demolition-
Barry Darsow (Smash) is one of his best friends. Demolition whacked Tully around
a bit because his reputation as an asshole preceded him, but he did just fine
against them.
Different demands in
ringwork between the WWF and WCW- The ring was harder for one. There were a lot
of 30-minute draws. At the level they were at (upper-midcard), they had to work
hard to stand out because guys like Curt Hennig and Bret Hart were
very impressive in the ring and were at about their level. You'd have to go out
and do your best against guys like the Bushwhackers, as well as against
great teams like the Rockers.
Working big shows in the
WWF vs. WCW- The WWF is as different as night and day to WCW. Everything down to
the lighting grid and the video quality were difference.
Working with Strike
Force- They only worked with them at Wrestlemania 5, but it was still great
because Tito Santana and Rick Martel are good workers. They
weren't happy with how short the match was, though.
Dealing with the exposure
in the WWF vs. WCW- After spending a year in the WWF, they were bigger stars
than they ever were in WCW even though they'd been on top in WCW. It was all due
to Vince's choice timeslots for his syndicated shows and being in so many great
markets.
Hart Foundation-
They worked with them a lot. Bret was a great wrestler. Jim "The
Anvil" Neidhart was similar to Road Warrior Animal.
Ultimate Warrior-
Kept to himself, quiet, intense. Vince had decided to make him a star even
though he wasn't going to be a great wrestler and it worked.
What were their final days
in the WWF like after giving notice? Vince told them they'd make more than the
last year, but they weren't given a total and they were already about $50,000
behind what they'd made in the previous year. Around this time, they cracked and
decided they had to go back to the Carolinas. They told Vince about their
situation and asked him to either catch them up on the $50,000 they were behind
on or give them a release. They knew he was seriously considering what they'd
said because he skipped his daily visit to the gym in order to think about it.
(Vince's schedule at that time was like clockwork, in that he'd handle business
in the morning and go to the gym in the afternoon and he rarely put off his
workouts). He waited until the next TV taping a few weeks later to give them a
decision, which was that if they wanted to go they could give 90 days notice,
which they took him up on. He didn't mistreat them at that point in time, going
as far as to put them on the Saturday Night's Main Event, which was a large
payday because they got paid by NBC and the WWF. They actually made more money
on the way out than they had been making, but their minds were made up.
What was the WCW
management like when they returned? Totally corporate. Jim Herd didn't
know crap about wrestling and was only a casual fan instead of a die-hard one.
He says that the actual day-to-day operations can be performed by any executive
coming in from another company, but that only someone who knew a lot about
wrestling could make the right decisions about who to sign and for how much.
What was the locker room
like? "Inmates running the asylum." (That's what EVERYONE says about
WCW on these shoots.) He says that a certain core of guys ran things but at
least they knew more than Jim Herd, who he calls an idiot. He says it's worse
than it is today (with today being late 2000 or early 2001).
Working with Flair against
Buzz Sawyer and The Great Muta- "It was like a bar fight every
night." He doesn't know if Buzz doesn't like him or didn't like everyone,
but he was a badass and could do some serious damage. Muta was great, though. He
didn't enjoy the matches because he was cast in the wrong role (a face) for one
thing.
The Horsemen turning on
Sting- They were supposed to turn the company around by building up Sting to
take over from Flair, but Sting blew his knee out and was out for six months.
His series with the Steiners-
He's wrestled them about 1000 times with 5 different partners and only remembers
beating them once (with Bobby Eaton in 1992). "I don't think I can beat Rick
Steiner's 8-year old kid. Something in the genetics."
Sid Vicious
as a Horseman- They recruited him because they needed a power guy and had
success with Lex Luger in that role in the past. He was so intimidating that it
worked for a while. Front office problems sent Sid to the WWF, though.
Ole Anderson leaving WCW-
They weren't paying him much and the business was starting to change so that his
ideas weren't meshing well with the young guys. He eventually said "Screw
it" and decided to retire.
Working against Doom
(Ron Simmons and Butch Reed)- Reed was hilarious, like The Cat
(Ernest Miller), but was also a badass. Ron Simmons "is in a
league of his own" and calls him a Steiner. The Steiners used to play ribs
on people for just the fun of it. Arn asked Simmons once why the Steiners never
taped him to a chair and Simmons just responded with a look that seemed to say
"You're messing with me, right?" Simmons never went to the gym often
in the late 80's / early 90's but could still bench 500 pounds when he went.
"He's a genetic freak." Current WWE referee Teddy Long was a
great addition to their team, although Woman (Nancy Sullivan, now
married to Chris Benoit) was better to look at.
Matches with Bobby Eaton-
It's hard to tell how good he is until you're in the ring with him. He isn't a
muscled guy but he's great wrestler and it was a learning experience.
Ric Flair leaving for the
WWF right before Great American Bash 91- The reaction in the locker room was
similar to when he and Tully left in 1988, in that a lot of people were sad
Flair left because they drew against him while others wanted his spot on top.
Unfortunately, the balance of power shifted to Vince at that time. He wishes
that Flair had come in with them in 1988, which had been discussed, although it
never came about. "If Ric had come with us, we'd still be there." He
was glad to see him go to the WWF because Vince would treat him right, but it
was a few years too late to have the impact he should have had. (According to
some sources, Flair was supposed to be interviewed by Brother Love at
Summerslam 88, but Jim Duggan got that spot since Flair didn't make the jump.)
Being in the Dangerous
Alliance and his relationship with Paul Heyman outside the ring- Paul E.
was a b'ser, but if you cut through all that he was a good guy. He sometimes
wished something was some way so hard that he believed that it was that way. The
Alliance was VERY talented, including himself, Paul E, Madusa, Steve
Austin, Bobby Eaton, Larry Zbyzsko, and Rick Rude. He said that WCW wasn't
capable of promoting such a group at the time. Promoting their product was
ALWAYS WCW's shortcoming.
Memories of tagging with
Eaton against Ricky Steamboat and Dustin Rhodes- Around the 56
minute mark of a match in the Omni, Dustin just lost it and started
hallucinating and screaming. He figures that it was because Dustin was so blown
up. "It was one of the strangest things I've ever encountered." Dustin
didn't even remember it when asked about it the next day.
Ricky Steamboat- Probably
the best babyface in the history of the business. Was a gentleman and everything
about him was perfect for his role.
Locker room response to
Bill Watts' arrival- It was one of impending dread. When they found out what he
WAS doing, they were scared. Since Watts made his money off cutting costs (and
salaries) instead of drawing more people, he pissed off a LOT of people quickly.
Arn took his salary cut personally, but is thankful he was bright enough to talk
himself into a program with Bill's son Eric and to sit at home and get paid for
six months. What pissed him off most was that Watts told him that his team with
Eaton was the best in WCW, but that "you've been here too long."
Were the boys upset about Eric
Watts' push? "It was worse than Dustin Rhodes' push because at least
Dustin was a good performer and was humble. Eric wasn't." They don't blame
Eric for it, though, because Bill put him in that position.
Working for Smokey
Mountain Wrestling for a few shows- They weren't doing anything with him, so Gary
Juster booked him with Smokey Mountain right before he was going to come
back to WCW. He puts over Jim Cornette for treating him right and says it
was a lot of fun.
Reforming the Horsemen at
Slamboree 93- He wasn't particularly happy that they reformed the Horsemen again
because it gets more watered down every time they do it, but the fans were
making the Horsemen sign as soon as Flair came back. Tully was VERY close to
coming back, but that his salary demands and the number of days he wanted to
work each month was WAY out of line compared to what the rest of them were
getting, so we ended up with Paul Roma instead.
Working with Flair against
the Hollywood Blondes (Steve Austin and Brian Pillman)- They
belonged together. He puts over Austin heavily and says he saw something in him
back then. He suggested that the office just let him be what he is (which is the
basis for Stone Cold Steve Austin), but they never did anything with it.
Pillman's "Loose Cannon" gimmick was one of the best performances of
all time "and I'm not sure that all of that was really an act."
Wrestling Cactus Jack
(Mick Foley)- "I don't remember working with him. I regret that I never
did."
Kip Frey
as a boss- "He was tremendous to work for... in fact, we had a nice deal
lined up right before he was fired, so I wish he'd stayed."
Working with Paul Orndorff
and Steven Regal (now William Regal in the WWE)- He was a big
Orndorff fan and enjoyed working with him because their styles are similar.
Regal was years ahead of his time and made him look foolish in the ring with
that English style.
Working matches in New
Japan against Steve Austin- It was the first day over after the flight, so jet
lag screwed up what should have been a great match.
Initial impressions of Eric
Bischoff as a boss- He seemed good when he started because he had vision and
foresaw overtaking Vince. He didn't think they could do it, but was happy that
they were trying a new direction for the company.
Hogan coming into the
company- Guys who knew a lot about the business were happy he came in because it
meant 5000 more asses in seats each night.
His brief run with ECW- It
came about because WCW booked him and Bobby Eaton out to them and put them on
opposite sides of a tag match with Terry Funk and Sabu. "It
was horrible to watch" because Terry and Sabu were taking care of
themselves instead of putting on a great match. (Sabu and Funk brawled all over
the building and pretty much set a mark that they couldn't reach, so he put a
headlock on Bobby and the place went silent)
How was Paul E different
from the Dangerous Alliance days to the ECW booker days- He caught him before he
bought out Tod Gordon, so it was great.
Joining Robert Fuller's
stable and working against Terry Funk and Dustin Rhodes- "Working with
Terry outside of ECW is great." He says that Bunkhouse Buck (Jimmy
Golden) was a great wrestle who happened to be cast in a one-dimensional role.
"The cowboy thing has been done to death", so they should have had a
new gimmick.
Honkytonk Man
in WCW- HTM didn't like what was laid out for him (jobbing to Johnny B. Badd
at Starrcade 94), so he went home and Arn was put in his slot. His one regret in
the business is that he was seen as an upper-midcard guy because "they
never needed me until they needed me until they needed me, and then it was to
fill ANY void and be taken for granted." He wants to be remembered not for
the best performance in wrestling history but, rather, that he never had a
crappy one.
Jobbing to Renegade-
He didn't have a problem with it, but everyone else had a problem with it but
the office guys who put it together. "It was another Van Hammer or PN
News situation. The guy was very nice but was put out there way before he
should have been and it cost him his life."
Did the atmosphere change
a lot when Hogan came in? No, because Hogan didn't have as much of an effect in
the locker room as much as the front office due to his creative control. Being
able to take care of himself has kept Hogan on top for years, which is good for
him but it means that he's scrapped booking plans that affect everyone else.
Wrestling Ric Flair in
late 1995- It was the only time he ever puked before a match (Fall Brawl 95). He
never wanted to wrestle him because it was his best friend and that he doesn't
think anyone ever bought it. The one good thing is that he got to see up close
how good Flair was. It was a personal victory for him not to get booed out of
the building in the middle of Flair Country (Asheville, NC).
Memories of Brian Pillman
around the Bookerman incident at Superbrawl 6- He didn't know what was going on
at the time and very few people did. He didn't mind that Pillman and Sullivan
were working him because he just wanted something to succeed at that time. (Pillman
ended his "respect" match against Kevin Sullivan early by
saying "I respect you BOOKERMAN!" on the mic. Arn and Flair came out
to brawl with Sullivan to fill the remainder of the time alloted to the match.)
Working with Vader-
"Oh, God... He almost killed Ric and I both in a handicap match in
Daytona." It was hard to do anything to him because he was 450 pounds and
very wide.
What did they think about
Nitro going head-to-head with RAW- He didn't see the sense in it because they
thought it would split the audience instead of increasing it. It hurt the
business in the long run, though, because Nitro was better than the Pay Per
Views. He said the match list for the average Nitro looked like a list of dream
matches in a wrestling magazine.
Steve "Mongo"
McMichael- He loves him to death but knew
he was going to be limited as a wrestler. He said if Mongo had no money in the
bank that he'd have had the enthusiasm to learn the business.
Injuring his arm- It's a
direct result of his neck injury. The first time he got injured was when Marty
Janetty put him in a victory roll in a Madison Square Garden match. He cracked a
vertebrae but had to work that night in Boston, too. Thankfully, it was a tag
match so Tully covered for him a bit. When he wrestles the Steiners in the 90's,
his right arm went out on him after a powerslam and it was never the same. Right
before Halloween Havoc 97, his neck was really bothering him as his neck was
REALLY screwed up at that point. The night before the PPV, he started lifting
weights and couldn't close his hand anymore because a bone chip had shifted and
cut off control to his hand. He wrestled Lugar on that PPV even without use of
his left hand and worked another two months on a limited schedule. In January,
his hand kept getting worse and both it and his arm started to atrophy. The
doctor told him to stop, but he kept going. Eventually, he had trouble lacing up
his boots, Bischoff noticed it and asked him about it and, when he found out
about his hand, sent him to the doctor. Eventually, he was split open and all
the bone chips were removed but it ended his in-ring career.
How did you feel about it?
"I wanted to die. I've never felt anything like that and I've torn my groin
muscle before." He was on Percocets, Valium, and a morphine drip and he
still was feeling everything. Eventually, it got tolerable. He started back in
the gym after that and was fine until a guy slapped him on the back and asked
him how he was doing, which caused his whole system to shut down again. It
dawned on him then that he was about to retire.
The retirement speech-
"The realist thing I'd ever done. If I'd been looking at Ric's face, I
wouldn't have been able to go through with it." It was hard on him trying
to figure out how he was going to provide for a wife, a newborn, and an 11-year
old kid. The company treated him right and he was already somewhat of a road
agent anyway, so it worked out. He's 80% pain free now, but there's no
protection left in his back.
Kevin Nash
and Scott Hall coming over to WCW- He wasn't sure what to think because
they knew it was two of Vince's top guys, but no one thought it would be nearly
as successful as it was. The whole picture changed when they jumped.
The Curt Hennig feud- When
Curt accepted the Horsemen position then jumped to the nWo, it died for a while.
Eventually, a bunch of backstage arguments involving Mongo, Chris Benoit, and Dean
Malenko brought the Horsemen unit back. He thinks that no version of the
Horsemen after the Windham group were ever treated right, though. If it helped
guys move up the card, he's happy for them but it did nothing for him and Flair.
How's life now? Fine. He's
happy with where he is.
Helping Goldberg with
promos and other things- "I wrote Bill's promos for him." Sometimes it
was easier for someone who knows his character to write for him than him to
write his own stuff. Eventually, Bischoff came to him to coach Goldberg on his
matches. He thinks that Goldberg being a quality guy makes him feel that much
better about helping him.
Was it hard dealing with
guys that had high guaranteed contracts? Sometimes. He's still one of the guys
even though he works in the office, so he can see the wrestler's perspective. He
thinks that making the wrestler feel good about what they're doing makes things
go much better than telling them what they're going to do. He's just a
messenger. He also cleans up what's given to him, and he thinks he does a good
job of it.
Did Flair's problems with
Bischoff strain his relationship with Bischoff? Yes, because Flair is always his
friend and he's very close to him. He thought that WCW's attempt to fire Flair
in 1998 was bad for the business because Flair's willing to give them what they
ask and is always a very entertaining segment. "Flair's a 14-time world
champion and I think he's only won those 14 matches."
The mental hospital angle
with Flair- Flair wasn't happy with it, but did the best he could with it.
Was David Flair
ready for the push they gave him? Yes, because it was only supposed to be a
one-time deal on Pay Per View, but was received so well that David was given a
contract he wasn't ready for. He suggests taking him off TV and training him for
3 years before bringing him back, although he doesn't have the necessary passion
to be a great in the business.
Best worker in the
business today- "Chris Benoit, no hesitation."
Best match he's ever had-
"Ric, in Asheville, because of the reaction", although he had some
great ones with the Rock and Roll Express.
What was Eric Bischoff's
downfall? Bringing in guys like Master P and the KISS Demon who
were leeching off of WCW's fame and not giving them anything in return. They
didn't need anybody to draw the numbers they did, but they did stupid crap like
putting Will Sasso of MAD TV on Nitro. Stuff like that cost them huge
(Money-wise and in poor fan response).
Reactions to Vince
Russo coming in- He had a whole different psychology. He was a great
storyteller. If shaving Flair's head was made into the biggest thing in WCW
history, it would have been worth it. However, Russo never got the reactions of
all the wrestlers on the situation and never had a payoff with the situation.
Russo spread himself so thin that nothing meant anything. Putting himself on TV
all the time was definitely a mistake.
Will Vince McMahon and
Bischoff work together? I don't see it happening, but they'll do it if it's
necessary. They're both motivated and intelligent, but Vince is very autonomous
while Eric had limited total autonomy. Vince runs his own company while Eric
runs someone else's company. He would work for Vince again if the deal was right
but doesn't want to be on the road 24 days a month.
The Bash 2000 business
with Hogan and Russo- "Every time I think it's real, it isn't. Everytime I
think it isn't, it's real. I won't comment either way."
What does WCW need? They
need a boss with the final say. They have a lot of guys plugging holes who
aren't responsible for it, so they're getting screwed on the situation. Until
there's a direction, they're just going to keep spinning their wheels.
Kevin Nash's booking- He
did a good job and doesn't think he pushed himself and his friends too far.
There will always be that point of view, but it's always from people who aren't
getting the benefit.
What does he think about
Vince possibly buying out WCW- It's a little of everything... Vince would bring
direction and total autonomy, but there would be no competition to watch out for
and less room for the wrestlers to bargain with Vince. The best thing for
everything is to have two thriving companies, and three is better, and there are
a lot of people whose livelihood is riding on it.
His favorite angle he was
ever involved in- Dusty in the parking lot was great, as well as he and Zbyzsko
slamming Barry Windham's hand in the car door at Halloween Havoc 91.
The most underutilized guy
in the company- Booker T. In fact, in an in-house article where he was
asked who the next three stars would be in 1999 or 2000, he said Booker, Scott
Steiner, and Chris Benoit. He also thinks that Lance Storm and Elix
Skipper can be great, but only if Skipper's style doesn't get him
permanently injured.
At what point did he say
"Wow! I've made it"- Probably when he wrestled Ronnie Garvin in a
30-minute match on Worldwide and lost with 7 seconds left. Dusty later told the
whole crew at a meeting that if he ever had to show people what wrestling should
be, he'd show that match.
Best tag partner- Bobby
Eaton from a business point of view, although Tully's the best in-ring partner.
Best rib- The Steiners
stripping Dallas Page naked in the middle of the ring during a battle
royal. Page rolled out of the ring and Oliver Humperdink gave him his
shirt to cover himself with and EVERYONE was more appalled at the shirtless
Humperdink than the naked DDP.
Where does he see the
business in 5 years? To be successful, they need to go back to basics. They need
to put some iron in the officials from the commissioner down to the refs. That
will allow heels to get heat by cheating again because they're actually breaking
rules again. They also need to cut out the chairs, wrenches, belt shots, etc.
Longer matches and less time of people walking down the hall. More of the
old-school NWA formula with one guys' entrance, another guys' entrance, a match,
an interview before or after it, and announcers' commentary about the whole
situation before they move on. "Vince is doing this right now" (must
be late 2000, when guys like Angle and Benoit were running wild). More wrestling
and less T+A.
Who taught him how to do a
promo- He wasn't properly taught. It goes back to what Orndorff told him early
in his career. "People will listen to you if you talk TO them instead of
talking AT them. Give them an example of something they see every day so they
can understand."
Is there anything he wants
to say to his fans? Yes, "The depression I've had, and that other people
have had, is a direct result of losing the fans' emotion and involvement, which
was why I would leave my house on Christmas morning to go work a show instead of
playing Santa for my kid. My success is your success."
People watching this
interview can see that Arn is a genuinely great guy and everyday person very
honest in this interview. He's very down to earth and doesn't get what Bill
Watts calls "melon head" after his years of success in the business.
While not as entertaining as Jim Cornette's 8-hour interview (the measuring
stick for shoot interviews), it makes up for it in the emotional connection that
Arn's capable of making through the videotape. This tape reflects why Arn is
known as one of the best interviews in wrestling history as well as why he's one
of the most liked wrestlers in the business.
Highest possible
recommendation.