Mr. McMahon (2024) s01e04 Episode Script
Attitude
1
We greet you from ringside
for another great main event.
Whoo! Here we go!
Believe me, Dr. Jerry Graham
is not the favorite citizen in this arena.
We all have favorites as kids.
My favorite was a performer
by the name of Dr. Jerry Graham.
He wasn't a doctor, obviously.
Big guy, bleached blond hair,
and he would light a cigar
with a hundred-dollar bill.
I have never known a guy
that could make as many enemies
as Dr. Jerry Graham.
He was a heel,
in the parlance of our business.
Maybe that's one reason why I liked him,
I don't know.
'Cause I never liked the good guys.
I wanted to be like him so badly,
I convinced my stepmother
to dye my hair blond,
and I learned to strut just like he did.
"Yeah."
"He doesn't walk. You know, he struts."
So, he sort of
took me under his wing.
"You want to take a ride, kid?"
Boy, did I ever.
He had this 1959 convertible.
I'm riding shotgun.
He's honking the horn
going through intersections
regardless if the light was green or red,
and it's like, "This is grand."
"Man, I wanna live my life like this."
He was just so flamboyant.
So aggressive.
And the hubris and, you know,
the color and all of that,
it was like,
"Yeah, that's who I want to be."
Are you kidding me?
Michaels?
Are you kidding me?
You gonna try to beat
Bret Hart with a sharpshooter? Yes, he is!
Ring the bell, ring the bell!
In Montreal, in the Survivor Series,
Bret Hart, "The Hitman,"
is counted out by Vince McMahon,
and a brawl ensues afterwards.
Unquestionably,
the most controversial bout
in the history of wrestling.
The Montreal Screwjob.
It just was so crazy surreal.
That caused such inner turmoil
within the business.
The underground world,
what is now the internet world,
got a hold
of the behind-the-scenes information,
and that was spreading like wildfire.
You're seeing
the reaction by people
of something they should have
known nothing about.
The fans knew
that Vince double-crossed Bret Hart,
which was something very unprofessional
by the rules of professional wrestling.
There's two sides to every story,
but most people
did not side with Vince on that one.
Listen, the Montreal Screwjob,
to me, as a Canadian,
like, I fucking hated Vince.
Vince goes on television
and tries to explain it.
He didn't come off very well.
Bret screwed Bret.
I have no sympathy whatsoever for Bret.
The "Bret screwed Bret" speech,
that begins a moment in time
where reality takes front seat to fantasy,
and we begin to blur the line.
And here comes
Vince McMahon to a rousing
- They're being booed.
- What?!
They're booing
McMahon out of the building!
What's going on? We'll be right back!
As a result of all this,
I have all this heat, as we call it.
I wonder
if somebody's gonna knock the bejeesus
out of Vince McMahon this week!
And so I thought, "Okay, Vince,
why not turn that into business?"
Use now you as a character.
Vince has not
endeared himself to this crowd.
I always
wanted to be a performer,
but my dad wouldn't let me
in the business, much less that.
He just thought,
"No, that's not what you want to do."
I was like,
"Yeah, that's what I want to do."
When it happened, it felt pretty natural.
If you just show a little respect
At that point in time,
Vince McMahon creates
the Mr. McMahon character,
the evil tyrant boss,
and eventually, that would change
the trajectory of the business.
Let's talk about the business
and the challenge
that you have received from WCW.
If I look at cable listings
for January in one week,
WCW is number one, number two,
number four, and number six.
You're down at number 18.
Through '97, WCW,
they were just so far ahead,
and their product was better,
so I'm just thinking
that this is just a domination,
and it's gonna be like this
for the foreseeable future.
Bret Hart!
I think once Bret Hart
made the transition and came over to WCW,
I think if you were to put the rosters
side-by-side on a piece of paper,
WCW was in a much better position
than WWE was.
I wanted to dominate and win.
If WWE went out of business
in the process,
that would've been unfortunate,
but I wouldn't have felt bad about it.
What is this?
What a piece of work this guy is.
Ho, ho!
There it is! What is it?
For years,
we were kind of stuck
in that really young demographic,
whereas WCW,
they were hitting
that 18-to-34-year-old demographic
with some really cutting-edge stuff.
You know, 83 weeks of getting
our tails kicked in the ratings,
it messes with your confidence,
it messes with your psyche,
but it also lets you know that
you gotta do something different.
I knew if we didn't change,
we'd just get left behind.
You're dealing with networks,
and you're dealing with people
in the networks
that are looking at you going,
"Hey, these guys
are beating you in the ratings,
and I see our talent on their show."
"What's going on, guys?"
You listen to the audience,
and you sort of feel it.
It's time for a change.
It was time for us to, uh,
take another step and evolve.
When I started working with Vince,
it was absolute war
between the two franchises.
It'll be me and you, McMahon, in the ring.
Vince decided that he wanted
to be known for pushing the envelope.
For being bold,
being a little crazy.
Vince came out
and did an interview about this
new way of producing WWE programming.
We in the WWE think that you,
the audience, are, quite frankly,
tired of having
your intelligence insulted.
Vince kind of teased all this
newness that was coming down the road,
and I thought, "Yeah, whatever."
"You're gonna come out
with another version of Doink the Clown
and some evil dentist,
and you're gonna
keep doing what you're doing."
I didn't know that Vince
was making the decision
to create the Attitude Era.
Was there a distinctive
moment when the Attitude Era was born?
Yeah, there was.
I think I'm cute, I know I'm sexy ♪
Well, here he comes, folks!
One night,
Vince was not at our television taping,
and Shawn Michaels
came down in bicycle shorts.
Right before he went out, he stuffed
the front of his shorts with a sock.
It was gauze. It wasn't a sock.
It was gauze that I'd wadded up
from the trainer table.
And I was just bouncing around,
gyrating, and stuff like that.
Vince's reaction
was to call me the next day
and tell me how unprofessional it was
and that he was fining me $10,000.
And I said, "Okay,
but you go back and watch it
and tell me that isn't funny."
If we're talking about "entertainment,"
it was very entertaining.
That was one of the things
that got us into the conversations of,
"You know, we need to start going there."
I felt like you can have respect
for this line of work,
but you don't have to act
like it's freaking not weird.
Suffice to say,
I weaseled my way out of the $10,000 fine.
Vince was livid,
but then three or four weeks later,
I remember Vince pointing to him,
"Shawn Michaels. That's attitude."
"That's what he is, he's got attitude."
"We need more attitude."
The Attitude Era was born.
The Attitude Era was
just this transformation that took place.
I mean, we changed
how we presented our product.
We got a little grittier.
We got a little dirtier.
We made it a little more raw.
People just go, "Oh, the Attitude Era.
Here's where it started. What it is."
It was slowly bits and pieces over time.
We are D-Generation X!
-D-Generation.
-You make your rules, we will break 'em!
D-Generation X is what we would call,
in sports entertainment, a faction.
They were an offshoot of The Kliq.
They were anti-authority,
and there's something
about anti-authority at this time
that really spoke to fans.
And whether it was part of the fiction
or completely real, you didn't know.
- This is going too far!
- And then the next thing
But you couldn't turn away.
When Shawn and I
started doing D-X
Man, most of the things
we were saying and doing,
Vince was coming back and telling us,
"Goddamn, you guys do that again,
and you're going to get fucked like"
You know, "USA's threatening
to take us off the air."
But we're like, coming in the back,
and people are going crazy.
And then there's a flip moment in time
where all of a sudden it's,
"Hey, that worked. Do that again."
A fight bra.
What is Oh my gosh!
We just finally
changed the writing
to where it wasn't
for a 12-year-old demographic.
It got into that
18-to-34-year-old-male demographic.
Once that door was opened,
I marched right through it,
because it was working.
It was all about filling up
those arenas and stadiums,
and, you know, it was like we could do
whatever we had to do to be the best.
The biggest star of the Attitude Era
by far was Stone Cold Steve Austin.
Anytime you stick your head
in the ring with Steve Austin,
bottom line is I'm gonna kick your ass.
Straight simple.
He was something
that we weren't used to seeing,
this kind of foul-mouthed, roughneck,
blue collar, Southern badass.
When I first got into
the business of professional wrestling,
I never had any designs
on being as successful as I would be,
because I didn't know how far
some ragamuffin
from Victoria, Texas, could take it.
Introducing first
Prior to WWE,
Steve Austin was a wrestler
in WCW.
But he got fired from WCW,
so he winds up in ECW,
sort of the punk rock-indy federation
in the pro wrestling world.
And walking into that federation,
man, it was an eye-opener
and a hell of a scene.
This is extreme!
This is the ECW arena!
ECW
was the necessary disruption
of the pro wrestling/sports entertainment
industry.
No rules, no regulations.
A testosterone and adrenaline-driven,
no-holds-barred,
this-can't-possibly-be-legal,
what-the-fuck-am-I-watching atmosphere.
It was a mosh pit.
ECW was a wild-ass
renegade-type promotion
that attracted a niche, uh, audience,
and it was very unusual.
I greatly appreciated the promotion
and the promoter behind it.
There ain't a mofo organization
in the world today
like ECW!
Vince always saw everyone else
as a feeder system
to the major leagues of WWE.
So I knew
we didn't have Steve for a long time,
but we were gonna make it quality time
for every moment that he was in ECW.
We achieved
a lot of success in a short time,
and finally,
Vince took, uh, serious notice of me,
and that's when I would go to WWE.
Stone Cold Steve Austin.
I love it, McMahon.
So I turned into
Stone Cold Steve Austin,
and I became this
just trash-talking SOB from south Texas.
It became very entertaining,
and people started disliking me,
and we started gaining traction.
Now, at that time,
everybody knows
that Triple H was supposed to win
that King of the Ring pay-per-view.
But then Triple H got punished
because of what happened in the Garden.
I hear a voice behind me.
It's Vince. He goes,
"Hey, Steve, you got a second?"
I'm like,
"Yeah. I guess so. You're the boss."
He says, "Wanna let you know in two weeks,
you're gonna win King of the Ring."
the King of the Ring tournament
We get to the pay-per-view,
I'm wrestling Marc Mero first.
We do a move, he kicks me in the mouth,
you know, busts my lip wide open.
I've gotta go to the hospital immediately
and get 14 stitches.
Soon as I come back from the ambulance,
Michael Hayes comes up to me and goes,
"Hey, man, you got
Jack "The Snake" Roberts in the final,
and Jake just cut
a religious promo on you."
The power above
is reaching down and lifting me up.
And immediately I thought of Austin 3:16,
because back in the day,
you'd watch football games,
they would put John 3:16 signs
in the end zone.
I go out there, work the match with Jake.
You're pathetic!
There it is!
One, two, and he got him!
Stone Cold Steve Austin
I go up to the microphone
and I just went out there
and started running Jake down.
You sit there, and you thump your Bible,
and you say your prayers,
and it didn't get you anywhere.
Talk about your Psalms,
talk about John 3:16.
Austin 3:16 says I just whipped your ass.
When Steve said that, I went,
"Oh my God.
Tell me he didn't just do that."
"That may not play too well
you know, in the Bible Belt."
Piss off.
And then I kept talking
and kept talking,
and I could hear Vince in the background
'cause he was doing commentary,
and I said,
"Oh man, I need a button on this promo."
And so just out of the blue I said,
"And that's the bottom line,
'cause Stone Cold said so."
It was brilliant.
It changed who he was
and the perception
of who he was as a character.
The next night, everywhere you looked
were Austin 3:16 signs.
Austin 3:16 took over, and it was insane.
When the Monday Night Wars started,
and we kept losing in the ratings,
for a while, we understood it
because they had a really hot show.
It was really fresh, and they had a lot
of great talent and some cool storylines,
but as we started to ramp up,
we really thought we had a better show.
We're like,
"Man, what is up with these ratings?"
"Someone's gotta be paying somebody off.
We got a better show than they do."
At that point in time,
I remember Vince was like,
"We need to do something here."
"We need a way
to get a lot of eyeballs on us
and do something in a really big way
for WrestleMania."
And that's what we did.
At this time,
I would like to introduce to you
a man who is simply
the baddest man on the planet!
Ladies and gentlemen,
"Iron" Mike Tyson!
I get a phone call.
"You're never gonna believe
what they're doing next."
I'm thinking, "Yeah, whatever."
I was so ahead of him at that point,
I was like, "Whatever." I was arrogant.
He goes, "They're bringing in Mike Tyson."
I got uncocky real fast.
The idea for bringing in
Mike Tyson came from Vince,
and Shane McMahon was heavily involved.
We wanted a big personality,
you know, someone extremely identifiable,
to be a part of WrestleMania,
and there was at that time
no one bigger than Tyson.
I believe he had gotten out of jail
about three years earlier.
Knowing Mike Tyson's
baggage during the '90s,
was it risky for WWE
to so fully invest in him?
He hadn't been arrested for rape yet,
though, when we did that.
- Right? He had?
- Yeah, he had.
You know, Mike is not perhaps
universally approved of now,
but he certainly His public image
is certainly in a better place than it was
at that point.
Wrestling at that level
is about generating heat.
Heat is what sells tickets.
Here we go!
And heat doesn't have to be positive.
Heat can be negative.
Specifically,
I would like to thank Mike Tyson
for being the media magnet that he is.
Tyson being on pay-per-view
was a big deal.
Mike would be the special guest referee
between Stone Cold Steve Austin
versus Shawn Michaels.
It's Mike Tyson, you know, like,
one of the biggest names in sports.
And by then, you had to be blind
not to see Steve Austin was takin' off.
Mike, I'll tell you this,
if you get in my face at WrestleMania,
I'll knock your damn lights out,
and you won't want to get
back in the ring ever again.
And that's the bottom line.
At that point,
I thought that WCW, while still ahead,
it's going to get very, very competitive.
It don't get no bigger than this.
This is what our business is all about.
It's about earning the opportunity
to wrestle in the main event
at a WrestleMania.
- Look out!
- Over!
Look out!
Look out, Mo! By God
In WrestleMania 14,
uh, Shawn had a real bad back,
and so that match was very forgettable.
Michaels going for another kick. Austin
He got it! The stunner!
Mike Tyson in!
Austin is the champion
The match wasn't good.
It wasn't anything to brag about.
I remember afterwards,
I looked over at Vince and he goes,
"Eh, Steve, don't worry about it.
From here forward, it starts."
I would like to congratulate,
uh, the new
World Wrestling Entertainment champion,
who has an attitude, no doubt about that.
Not one necessarily that all of us
here in the WWE necessarily appreciate.
The Mr. McMahon character,
at least in my mind, became a real thing
after the Mike Tyson storyline
played itself out.
Hey, Vince, are you
Are you turning into a bad guy?
I've always been a good guy.
Oh, but they're booing you now.
I'll always be a good guy.
Oh, okay.
The owner of WWE,
Vince McMahon, makes his way to the ring.
Quite honestly,
not the most rousing ovation.
At that point in time,
a feud with Stone Cold Steve Austin
would ignite and would start
a battle between those two
that would change
the course of the business.
Nobody, especially Vince McMahon,
tells Stone Cold Steve Austin what to do,
and that's the bottom line.
But all of that based on
blurring the lines of reality and fiction.
You got to understand the power
that a Vince McMahon has, the control
You've got the eccentric
billionaire boss Vince McMahon,
and then you've got the anti-system
Stone Cold Steve Austin,
and they were perfect for each other.
I will fire your ass!
- Good God!
- Whoa!
It was about a guy who was trying
to keep me down and control me,
and it was about me
trying to buck the system.
You stupid bastards.
You ain't got the balls
to fire Stone Cold Steve Austin.
Any other era, I'm a heel
because of what I'm doing,
the trash I'm talking.
You're pathetic.
You're completely pathetic
But I was the guy
that brought the gray area
to the business of professional wrestling,
which is usually a black-and-white
type thing as far as love and hate.
See, in my day,
there was a good guy and a bad guy.
Vince Jr. made it the bad and the worse.
There were no more good guys in wrestling.
Society at that time
had taken a rougher edge.
Society at that time had more attitude.
That forced you to create characters that
fit into that gray area in the middle.
The fans did not want to see
good guys no more.
Nobody wanna see a good guy,
even in the movies.
Look at the video games
and the wrestling business.
We cater to what is in front of us.
You tap into that.
That's big money.
So Vince said,
"Hey, give me some of that money."
We don't always set trends,
you know, we try to follow them.
And back in those days, it was Wild West.
Stone Cold Steve Austin,
who is as crude as he is mean.
He's just about
the biggest thing in wrestling,
worshiped by his fans.
He feels like smashing a beer bottle,
he does it.
Feels like throwing up his middle finger,
he does it.
Oh no!
Some part of us really loves
watching the bad guys get over.
Maybe the part of us that doesn't like
the fact that we have to behave ourselves.
You can't go around shoving people.
You can't go around insulting people.
And Stone Cold
hammering away on the boss!
People live vicariously
through those kinds of storylines
and would love
to punch their boss in the mouth.
You know, I got a chance
to literally and figuratively do that
almost every Monday night on Raw.
Oh boy, look out!
Austin downs McMahon again!
I think the fans
responded strongly
because he's such a strong character.
He's just so over-the-top.
He's larger than life.
He's easy to hate,
and he's also easy to love,
but he's very easy to hate.
Mr. McMahon, he's at the top.
So, any and everybody
that's not at the top
hates the guy at the top.
He's got
an entire collection of Corvettes.
Vince walks by with his custom suits
and his flaunting and everything.
What's to like?
He's easy to hate.
Get that mic out of my face!
It's my mic. I own that mic!
I own that camera! Cut it off!
And he became the most hated character
in the history of the business.
Asshole! Asshole!
Asshole! Asshole! Asshole! Asshole!
Mr. McMahon, of course, is a character
derived from, uh, Vince McMahon,
and is a character of someone
I could relate to when I was growing up.
Because when I was growing up,
I was, like, dirt poor.
Coming from that environment,
I don't like rich people,
because I was around some people
who thought they were better than me
because they had "more money."
So it felt like
you weren't anybody at all.
You were a nobody.
And you learn certain things.
In those days,
I could fight, and loved to fight.
If you could do that well,
now you're somebody.
I was good at fighting,
but they would say,
"You didn't fight fair!"
You cheated!"
"Yeah? I won."
What the hell's the matter with you?
And so,
with my character, Mr. McMahon,
I can play someone who intimidates,
because that was the way I grew up.
That was the way
I thought rich people were.
They'd try to intimidate you.
You're gonna get it.
I know how to be an arrogant person
that just throws his weight around
and a bully. That sort of stuff.
It's not my fault that I happen to be
a self-made billionaire!
It was easy for me
to get into that character,
because I knew
all the things that I disliked.
Some people are rich.
And you're not.
He knows
how to manipulate a crowd
as well or better
than anybody that's ever done it.
Hell, I'm a real Texan now!
I loved heat, as they call it.
When you go out
and manipulate the audience
and, you know,
they boo the hell out of you,
you really want
to get that heat and feel it.
You're not afraid of it.
It's like, go embrace it.
This is what I think of Texas.
Such a great feeling.
Vince was a master
at making people care
or making people hate him or feel emotion.
Emotions are when you sell tickets.
It's emotion.
If you mash that button
so that you get emotion from people,
they forget where they are.
They're not at a movie theater
or an arena.
They're right there looking at you.
It's one-on-one.
That's when you know you have them.
- Revel in it, Mr. McMahon.
- I remember where I was
Performing is easy.
Being yourself is the more difficult part.
And what similarities
do you share with Mr. McMahon?
The character Mr. McMahon with me?
- Yeah.
- None whatsoever.
Mr. McMahon
is an extension of Vince McMahon,
but blown way out of proportion.
The difference between
Mr. McMahon and Vince McMahon
Probably not that much.
Exactly the same person.
It's not a far stretch.
The character of Mr. McMahon
is really just Vince.
He'll tell you different.
No, Mr. McMahon is Vince.
A lot of the promos and the diatribes
that have been cut on other people,
I've had actually cut on me in real life.
"Ah, I'd never say that." I said,
"Yeah, you would. You said it to me."
Bruce claimed
that he's been on the receiving end
of the Mr. McMahon in real life.
I'm very,
very passionate about our business,
and sometimes
that passion is a bit effusive.
So, I probably can get
out of bounds a little bit.
The Mr. McMahon character
is pretty close to Vince the man,
but, obviously, highly exaggerated.
The best characters in wrestling
are guys at their core
with the volume turned up.
What you saw from me as Stone Cold
was me with the volume turned up,
same with Vince.
Much of great fiction is that funny line
between reality and storytelling.
Vince loved blurring that line
between fact and fiction.
A lot of people
have confused through the years
who my character was on television
and who I am.
It used to bug the hell out of me.
"I'm not that guy."
And then I realized,
"It doesn't matter what you want, Vince."
"It doesn't matter
how you wanna be perceived."
"It's the way you are being perceived."
Perception is reality.
You can't change
the way people think about you.
The double bird!
Pure hatred
driving Mr. McMahon!
Austin-McMahon,
that dynamic was just ridiculously good.
You could make a great argument
it's the greatest feud
in wrestling history.
The rise
of Stone Cold Steve Austin
and Stone Cold versus Mr. McMahon
is what generated
the huge amount of ratings for WWE
that essentially ended the 83 weeks
of WCW beating them in the ratings,
and, ultimately, like a tsunami,
overtook the wrestling business, period.
It was the hottest thing in the world.
I say this, knowing it'll sound
like I'm putting myself over
and being an arrogant prick,
but Vince took our formula,
decided he was going to do it,
only he was going to do it better.
And he did.
There were so many things that we did
in WCW that WWE eventually replicated.
D-X was nothing more
than a derivative of the nWo.
The Mr. McMahon character
was a derivative of evil Eric Bischoff,
was the evil boss.
Come on, Vince. You gotta admit
you ripped me off on that one.
Now, granted, you did it better.
But, come on, who did it first?
If Eric Bischoff thinks that
he played the heel character before I did
Okay. If that were the case,
he sure as hell didn't play it as well.
So, good for him.
WWE was going to win inevitably.
Vince McMahon, being the competitor he is,
the fighter that he is,
would have done whatever he had to do
to ultimately win that fight.
And I was coming up short.
I was not focused on creative.
The nWo angle was a couple years old now.
It wasn't fresh anymore.
Things that were going on in WWE
with Mr. McMahon, and Steve Austin,
and others was new, was fresh,
which caused the audience to shift over
and check out what they were doing.
Eric's big mistake was thinking,
"Because I'm ahead,
all I gotta do is go with these guys,
and I'll always be ahead."
In wrestling, everyone's got a shelf life,
and you always have to make new stars.
And Vince was trying
to make new stars because he had to.
And that's the bottom line,
'cause Stone Cold said so.
Said so!
Vince got very lucky.
Austin was an incredible,
incredible, incredible success.
And then Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson comes.
Do you smell
what The Rock is cooking?
Ladies and gentlemen
Great to welcome to the show
one of the fastest risers to the top
in the history of wrestling, The Rock.
Let's start off with your history.
When you broke in, you were packaged
as a part of a wrestling legacy
My grandfather
was High Chief Peter Maivia.
He was,
in many ways, responsible
for putting the island of Samoa
and Samoan athletes on the map.
From the isle of Samoa,
High Chief Peter Maivia!
My grandfather
wrestled for Vince McMahon Sr.,
and then in the '80s, my dad came along,
Rocky "Soul Man" Johnson,
and, along with Tony Atlas,
became the first Black tag team champions.
The Rock,
everything he do is just like his father.
Walk like his father,
dress like his father.
You didn't know better,
you'd think that was Rocky Johnson.
I remember meeting
Vince McMahon Jr. when I was 11 years old.
Looked down at me, "Good to meet you,"
gave me a firm handshake,
and looked me in the eye.
I'll never forget it.
Here we go with a newcomer
who's really made a name for himself
as of late, talking about Rocky Maivia.
When he came in,
we really promoted him
as this third-generation guy
that you're gonna love.
This guy
is gonna be phenomenal.
The first
third-generation superstar ever.
We shoved him down their throats.
Uh-oh.
You hear the chant of
- Rocky sucks!
- "Rocky sucks."
Rocky sucks!
They hated him.
A lot of our audience, I think,
thought that this person was just, like,
handed this opportunity,
and no matter how hard
Dwayne worked in the ring,
initially, people start booing him.
I'm sick of hearing about
Rocky Maivia's old man. Who cares?
Rocky sucks! Rocky sucks!
The fans hated The Rock
because WWE told us to love The Rock.
And it took The Rock turning heel
and acknowledging
that the fans were booing him
for the fans to start to love him.
We are the Nation of Domination!
The Nation of Domination
was a faction that was based on pride
in being of color
and not being held down by the man.
The newest member of
the Nation of Domination, Rocky Maivia!
I talked to Vince, and I said,
"I would just love
the opportunity to speak
on why I'm joining the Nation,"
and he said, "You got it."
I got three words.
"Die, Rocky, die."
That's the gratitude I get
from you pieces of crap.
I said, "It's not a Black or white thing.
It's a respect thing."
"It's about me kicking your ass thing."
This isn't about the color of my skin.
This is about respect.
Sometimes in our lives,
we find these moments
where there's a shift and a click,
and you go, "Man, there is
some real power behind that."
Well, Rocky Maivia's a lot of things,
but "sucks" isn't one of 'em.
And boom, just like that, within a month,
I became the hottest heel in the company.
- if you smell what The Rock is cookin'.
- what The Rock is cookin'.
I remember having a conversation
with Vince and him saying,
"I'm gonna make you WWE Champion."
Sharpshooter!
That's a sharpshooter!
Sharpshooter!
Ref's gonna ring the bell!
I said,
"You know, this is a really big deal."
I said, "I'm first WWE champion of color."
He said, "I know."
And he goes, "But I don't see that."
Vince, and I know this for sure,
he was always about,
"I don't care what color you are.
You could be black and green and purple."
"You could be a unicorn
for all I give a shit."
"As long as you are drawing money,
you will be champion."
It ain't got nothing to do with color.
It's not racism, it's business.
He don't see Black. He don't see white.
He sees only green.
For people who knew WWE
at that time, the Attitude Era,
it was a unique and special time,
because it truly was
whatever you can imagine,
we can do.
And we did.
Someone help!
Oh my gosh! Oh my God!
Oh!
- Look out!
- See what just happened!
The Attitude Era.
Man, it was a movement.
Everywhere you went, you saw Austin 3:16,
you saw DX.
- Suck it, man.
- Right!
You saw The Rock.
Everybody was in on it.
They were so popular.
Their merchandise was everywhere.
The influence was all over the culture.
We're gonna have WWE superstars
right here in the house.
Ladies and gentlemen,
The Rock!
You invited The Rock
to speak
at the Republican National Convention?
Please welcome
the one, the only, Triple H.
For a lot of us
in the Attitude Era,
we went from being like,
"Yeah, I'm a dude on TV
that people recognize occasionally,"
to, "You can't go anywhere."
It was getting out of control.
They're making way more money now
than they did then,
but as far as actual real popularity,
that was the peak.
It's the entertainment
phenomenon of the '90s.
A billion-dollar industry worldwide,
a TV-ratings smash,
a sport, of sorts,
that draws more teenage male viewers
than Monday Night Football
or World Series Baseball.
People who remember that period,
that is a very fond memory,
because wrestling really was
huge mainstream at that time.
From a pure marketability standpoint,
the product they were putting on was,
was awesome. It connected.
Um, from a moral standpoint,
morals are morals,
but it rubbed some people the wrong way.
One true thing
about professional wrestling,
millions of fans are pouring in.
But this business has serious questions,
some involving violence
and sexually explicit content.
Promoters would have you
believe that it's family entertainment.
But if you've never been to a show
or never seen one on TV, watch one.
You're in for a shock.
As performers, you're going
for whatever the biggest reaction is,
and you're seeing these things
get bigger reactions than anything else.
So you're going down that road of,
"I'm going to be edgy."
I got two words for ya.
"Suck it!" Yeah!
It was a lot of fun
and a lot of freedom,
but there's a lot of stuff online that
you can watch, where I go, like, "Oh"
"How did we ever
get away with that stuff?"
You can take your pick
of either one of these hoes.
Critics say WWE
blows away the envelope of good taste.
Perhaps no one
has been more critical of McMahon
than New York Post columnist
Phil Mushnick.
They knew that they could
get away with everything.
Not anything, everything.
And they pushed it.
They pushed that for all it was worth.
We're gonna go low,
and then we're gonna go lower,
and then we're gonna go lower.
This was maybe a standard deviation
beyond what we were doing before,
um, but it was still family-friendly.
No one got killed.
The Rock
is inside that casket!
There was, you know, no rape.
Come on out, you rapist!
No use of knives or guns
or anything like that.
Witness a recent
simulated castration scene.
So, it's still family-friendly,
maybe for more of an adult family,
not for young kids.
They were doing the double-talk.
They'd say, "We're not marketing to kids,"
when, in fact, their audience was kids.
And so some people would go,
"You've got a responsibility
to not be such a bad influence on kids."
"We're not marketing to kids anymore.
That's what we used to do."
All right, whatever.
I think it was primarily
aimed at young males.
Action figures, dolls.
These aren't being
bought by and enjoyed by adults.
These are for 8-year-olds, 10-year-olds.
Frankly, the Attitude Era,
the kids embraced it.
-Suck it!
-Suck it!
They were seeing something
maybe they weren't supposed to see.
So, the Attitude Era,
in many ways, probably attracted kids.
Would I have let my kids watch it?
Yeah, I probably would have.
It's a monster, is really what it is.
It's a nationwide monster
that's gotta be stopped.
The principal is entitled to his opinion.
I'm entitled to mine.
We wholeheartedly
would want parents and everyone
to exercise their freedom of choice.
Damn it, it is America.
Go live in your world.
Don't like us, click us off.
Don't watch us.
Look, I I was the one
certainly leading the charge in that,
"Don't tell us to raise your children.
You need to raise them yourself."
"If they're influenced by TV,
that's your fault."
Now, having a daughter, uh, I
Look, there are times
we probably could have been less
less objectionable towards our women.
It is time to stop your grinnin'
and drop your linen.
Oh my!
We continued to consistently
go over the line in terms of taste.
Uh, there were
a lot of questionable things.
You look pretty good on your knees, Chyna.
It almost looks like a natural position.
It was exploitive of women
like you wouldn't believe,
but that's what was selling,
and the audience was guys.
Teenage guys seeing women like that,
from a pure marketing standpoint,
it was, uh, very, very successful.
The Attitude Era women
weren't really considered wrestlers.
Eye candy.
That's kind of what they were at the time.
Sable was
the pioneer WWE diva, so to speak.
She knew exactly what her role was.
People know her as Sexy Sable,
but she was also
athletically contributing to the show,
which I think is overlooked,
because it wasn't normal,
it wasn't acceptable,
it wasn't what the women did.
You know, at the time, late '90s,
you had Jerry Springer.
Just when you thought
you'd seen it all, the bad get badder.
You had trainwreck television
that was happening.
Howard Stern was huge.
I wanna bang Bonnie, Jill, and Brandy.
The Attitude Era was a reflection
of what was going on in the world.
I've got to question
Society at that time
was a lot sexier,
and we were reflecting that in every way.
Some of the things
Eh
Bra-and-panty matches, I'm not sure
that, uh, that would be suggested today.
At that time,
that was what was on television.
Vince McMahon is part of his time.
The difference is
that he's in a distinctive position,
where he reinforces those tendencies,
rather than challenging or changing
or transforming them into something else.
We more or less followed
what was going on
in the entertainment business.
A lot of times, the highest quarter-hour,
the highest rating
in that segment were women.
Much higher than some of the great matches
and things of that nature.
We felt like we needed to be edgy,
'cause that's what
television was at that time.
And this is live TV,
and there ain't a damn thing
Vince can do about this.
We'd always want
to serve our audience, so we did,
and, of course, took it
maybe a little too far in some cases.
You can look back at it now
and say how crazy it was,
You can look back and say,
"God, you should have never done that,"
or, "That was so inappropriate," or, um
It was.
And, uh
Who's worse, the guy that did it
or the people that loved it? I don't know.
Welcome to the War Zone, everybody!
I'm Jim Ross.
I've been joined by James T. Gordon
here at ringside.
The owner of World Wrestling Entertainment
is on his way
Owen Hart,
I am ordering you
to appear in this ring right now.
There he is, right there.
He's coming, but are we gonna see
reporting for duty or for a fight?
After the problems I had
with Bret Hart, I met with Owen.
I said, "Do you want to stay with us,
or do you wanna leave with Bret?"
He said, "Well, I'd like to stay."
It's time for me to do what I have to do,
and that is remain right here
in World Wrestling Entertainment!
When I went to WCW and Owen stayed,
nothing was the same anymore.
He thought I was mad at him.
If anything, I had great sympathy for Owen
and felt badly that he was in
the predicament that he was in.
Owen had nothing to do
with either me or Vince,
but he was gonna pay for it,
and they kind of humiliated his character
as often as they could
for quite a while to get at me.
The hypothesis that we would do
something against Owen because Bret left
only speaks to Bret's ego.
Really, Bret?
You know, why would we do that?
We don't care about you. You left.
We're trying to make Owen a star.
What? What is this?
So they ended up
doing a storyline with him,
where they said,
"You're gonna be the Blue Blazer again,
and you're gonna be
this sort of clumsy oaf hero."
May 23rd, '99.
Can you talk about that day?
That was Owen.
Folks, let's take you now
to an interview conducted earlier tonight,
and we got big problems out here.
Blue Blazer, you got a big match tonight
We were live
in a pre-taped interview of Owen.
We were going to drop Owen down,
kind of like rappelling
from the top of the ceiling.
Owen was to fly, so to speak,
as we've done before,
from the rafters of the building.
I'm watching
the pre-tape interview,
and I hear someone say,
"Owen's in the ring."
I went, "What the hell is he doing?"
I was on a flight,
and I could feel something.
Something overcame me,
and I can remember going,
"Something bad happened. I can feel it."
Ladies and gentlemen,
when you're doing live television,
a lot of things can happen,
and sometimes they are not good.
Uh, the Blue Blazer,
as we know is Owen Hart,
was going to make a very spectacular,
superhero-like entrance from the rafters,
and something went terribly wrong here.
Thank God, for the audience,
that we were in a blackout.
So they didn't really see it. Thank God.
When the lights came up,
they saw Owen in the ring
and medical personnel were working on him.
We wondered whether or not,
"Could Owen be alive?"
Uh
Surely he could be.
Jerry Lawler back joining me here.
King, I was just reiterating to the fans
this is not a part of the show.
Uh, we're here to entertain and have fun,
but this is neither.
No. It's, uh It's
It doesn't look good at all.
Jerry Lawler came back and says,
"Bruce, I I think he's dead."
I'm like "No."
You know, I was like
"How do you even say that?"
The policeman that
was next to me, pulled me off to the side,
and Vince was there, and he let us know
they pronounced him dead.
I have the unfortunate responsibility
to let everyone know
that Owen Hart has died.
Owen Hart has tragically died
from that accident here tonight.
The decision that, uh,
basically, I had to make,
was whether or not the show goes on.
The live audience
didn't really see what happened.
Had they seen, no question,
you have to shut the show down.
He didn't announce
to the live house
'cause he just didn't think
that was the right thing to do.
Those people came to see a show.
They didn't come to see somebody die.
And, me as a businessman, it's like,
"Okay, let's continue on.
Let's continue the show."
First off, Owen Hart,
I'm praying for you, buddy.
And I am too.
Val Venis, you've been chasing
these puppies around.
Well, pal, I got news for you.
Those are my puppies,
and they always have been.
They never should have continued the show.
You know,
one of your buddies just died.
Like, literally just died in this ring,
and his blood is right there,
and we're going out there wrestling,
trying to perform for this audience
that doesn't even know it,
while we're brokenhearted.
What you do,
your business, is entertainment,
and you allowed
the entertainment to continue
with the blood of Owen Hart
still in the ring.
I'm not sure
that's not disrespectful to Owen Hart.
There were a lot
of negative comments, actually,
as to whether or not
the show should have continued.
I actually know firsthand
from the wrestlers involved
that they wheeled my dead brother past
right past all the wrestlers
and actually pushed wrestlers out the door
and said, "Go, go, go. You're on."
Naturally, Bret's gonna feel like,
you know, like a brother should.
He had every right to say
anything negative about our company.
I think if Vince McMahon had dropped
Shane McMahon from the ceiling,
uh, and he splatted on the mat,
I don't think he would've scraped him off
and set the next match up.
Had it been me, not just my son,
had it been me who was
"splatted on the mat," as Bret said,
I would want the show to go on.
So get me out of there, you know,
and let the show go on.
I'd do it with me,
and to this day, I would.
It really was very hard
for me to take at that time
because I kept thinking that maybe it was
Maybe they murdered him to get back at me.
At 10:01 a.m. this morning,
my legal counsel
filed a wrongful death lawsuit
for my husband's death.
In terms of Owen, we settled
a lawsuit basically with his wife,
and then we find out,
which we thought all along,
it wasn't our fault.
Unfortunately, the apparatus
they were using was defective,
and the manufacturer
knew it was defective,
and then we sued the manufacturer.
They investigated Vince and WWE
for a long time.
A policeman from Kansas City's,
uh, police department called me,
and he goes, "I promised you I'd call you,
and I'm calling to tell you
there's nothing criminal here."
"This was just a horrible accident."
And for me, when I heard that,
it was like, "Okay, it's an accident."
I basically, I think
in my heart of hearts, forgave Vince.
I had plenty of reasons
to have issues with Vince,
but they were on a professional level
and not a personal level.
Do you think there will be
any changes in wrestling because of this?
I certainly hope so. We're not
so dead against the wrestling business,
but we are disappointed
in the drastic turn
that wrestling's taken
in the last two years,
and it's a shame that the fans
have sort of become wild dogs
that sort of want more
and more and more all the time.
At that point,
we're all pushing the envelope.
- Look out!
- Oh my
Everybody's willing
to do whatever it takes.
No one's saying,
"I don't want to do that,"
or, "That's too dangerous."
Oh my
but at some point, enough is enough.
He's burning! Put him out!
We want to give
our fans what they want.
We're probably pushing it
as far as we can right now,
but who knows as it relates to the future?
Holy shit, holy shit, holy shit
We greet you from ringside
for another great main event.
Whoo! Here we go!
Believe me, Dr. Jerry Graham
is not the favorite citizen in this arena.
We all have favorites as kids.
My favorite was a performer
by the name of Dr. Jerry Graham.
He wasn't a doctor, obviously.
Big guy, bleached blond hair,
and he would light a cigar
with a hundred-dollar bill.
I have never known a guy
that could make as many enemies
as Dr. Jerry Graham.
He was a heel,
in the parlance of our business.
Maybe that's one reason why I liked him,
I don't know.
'Cause I never liked the good guys.
I wanted to be like him so badly,
I convinced my stepmother
to dye my hair blond,
and I learned to strut just like he did.
"Yeah."
"He doesn't walk. You know, he struts."
So, he sort of
took me under his wing.
"You want to take a ride, kid?"
Boy, did I ever.
He had this 1959 convertible.
I'm riding shotgun.
He's honking the horn
going through intersections
regardless if the light was green or red,
and it's like, "This is grand."
"Man, I wanna live my life like this."
He was just so flamboyant.
So aggressive.
And the hubris and, you know,
the color and all of that,
it was like,
"Yeah, that's who I want to be."
Are you kidding me?
Michaels?
Are you kidding me?
You gonna try to beat
Bret Hart with a sharpshooter? Yes, he is!
Ring the bell, ring the bell!
In Montreal, in the Survivor Series,
Bret Hart, "The Hitman,"
is counted out by Vince McMahon,
and a brawl ensues afterwards.
Unquestionably,
the most controversial bout
in the history of wrestling.
The Montreal Screwjob.
It just was so crazy surreal.
That caused such inner turmoil
within the business.
The underground world,
what is now the internet world,
got a hold
of the behind-the-scenes information,
and that was spreading like wildfire.
You're seeing
the reaction by people
of something they should have
known nothing about.
The fans knew
that Vince double-crossed Bret Hart,
which was something very unprofessional
by the rules of professional wrestling.
There's two sides to every story,
but most people
did not side with Vince on that one.
Listen, the Montreal Screwjob,
to me, as a Canadian,
like, I fucking hated Vince.
Vince goes on television
and tries to explain it.
He didn't come off very well.
Bret screwed Bret.
I have no sympathy whatsoever for Bret.
The "Bret screwed Bret" speech,
that begins a moment in time
where reality takes front seat to fantasy,
and we begin to blur the line.
And here comes
Vince McMahon to a rousing
- They're being booed.
- What?!
They're booing
McMahon out of the building!
What's going on? We'll be right back!
As a result of all this,
I have all this heat, as we call it.
I wonder
if somebody's gonna knock the bejeesus
out of Vince McMahon this week!
And so I thought, "Okay, Vince,
why not turn that into business?"
Use now you as a character.
Vince has not
endeared himself to this crowd.
I always
wanted to be a performer,
but my dad wouldn't let me
in the business, much less that.
He just thought,
"No, that's not what you want to do."
I was like,
"Yeah, that's what I want to do."
When it happened, it felt pretty natural.
If you just show a little respect
At that point in time,
Vince McMahon creates
the Mr. McMahon character,
the evil tyrant boss,
and eventually, that would change
the trajectory of the business.
Let's talk about the business
and the challenge
that you have received from WCW.
If I look at cable listings
for January in one week,
WCW is number one, number two,
number four, and number six.
You're down at number 18.
Through '97, WCW,
they were just so far ahead,
and their product was better,
so I'm just thinking
that this is just a domination,
and it's gonna be like this
for the foreseeable future.
Bret Hart!
I think once Bret Hart
made the transition and came over to WCW,
I think if you were to put the rosters
side-by-side on a piece of paper,
WCW was in a much better position
than WWE was.
I wanted to dominate and win.
If WWE went out of business
in the process,
that would've been unfortunate,
but I wouldn't have felt bad about it.
What is this?
What a piece of work this guy is.
Ho, ho!
There it is! What is it?
For years,
we were kind of stuck
in that really young demographic,
whereas WCW,
they were hitting
that 18-to-34-year-old demographic
with some really cutting-edge stuff.
You know, 83 weeks of getting
our tails kicked in the ratings,
it messes with your confidence,
it messes with your psyche,
but it also lets you know that
you gotta do something different.
I knew if we didn't change,
we'd just get left behind.
You're dealing with networks,
and you're dealing with people
in the networks
that are looking at you going,
"Hey, these guys
are beating you in the ratings,
and I see our talent on their show."
"What's going on, guys?"
You listen to the audience,
and you sort of feel it.
It's time for a change.
It was time for us to, uh,
take another step and evolve.
When I started working with Vince,
it was absolute war
between the two franchises.
It'll be me and you, McMahon, in the ring.
Vince decided that he wanted
to be known for pushing the envelope.
For being bold,
being a little crazy.
Vince came out
and did an interview about this
new way of producing WWE programming.
We in the WWE think that you,
the audience, are, quite frankly,
tired of having
your intelligence insulted.
Vince kind of teased all this
newness that was coming down the road,
and I thought, "Yeah, whatever."
"You're gonna come out
with another version of Doink the Clown
and some evil dentist,
and you're gonna
keep doing what you're doing."
I didn't know that Vince
was making the decision
to create the Attitude Era.
Was there a distinctive
moment when the Attitude Era was born?
Yeah, there was.
I think I'm cute, I know I'm sexy ♪
Well, here he comes, folks!
One night,
Vince was not at our television taping,
and Shawn Michaels
came down in bicycle shorts.
Right before he went out, he stuffed
the front of his shorts with a sock.
It was gauze. It wasn't a sock.
It was gauze that I'd wadded up
from the trainer table.
And I was just bouncing around,
gyrating, and stuff like that.
Vince's reaction
was to call me the next day
and tell me how unprofessional it was
and that he was fining me $10,000.
And I said, "Okay,
but you go back and watch it
and tell me that isn't funny."
If we're talking about "entertainment,"
it was very entertaining.
That was one of the things
that got us into the conversations of,
"You know, we need to start going there."
I felt like you can have respect
for this line of work,
but you don't have to act
like it's freaking not weird.
Suffice to say,
I weaseled my way out of the $10,000 fine.
Vince was livid,
but then three or four weeks later,
I remember Vince pointing to him,
"Shawn Michaels. That's attitude."
"That's what he is, he's got attitude."
"We need more attitude."
The Attitude Era was born.
The Attitude Era was
just this transformation that took place.
I mean, we changed
how we presented our product.
We got a little grittier.
We got a little dirtier.
We made it a little more raw.
People just go, "Oh, the Attitude Era.
Here's where it started. What it is."
It was slowly bits and pieces over time.
We are D-Generation X!
-D-Generation.
-You make your rules, we will break 'em!
D-Generation X is what we would call,
in sports entertainment, a faction.
They were an offshoot of The Kliq.
They were anti-authority,
and there's something
about anti-authority at this time
that really spoke to fans.
And whether it was part of the fiction
or completely real, you didn't know.
- This is going too far!
- And then the next thing
But you couldn't turn away.
When Shawn and I
started doing D-X
Man, most of the things
we were saying and doing,
Vince was coming back and telling us,
"Goddamn, you guys do that again,
and you're going to get fucked like"
You know, "USA's threatening
to take us off the air."
But we're like, coming in the back,
and people are going crazy.
And then there's a flip moment in time
where all of a sudden it's,
"Hey, that worked. Do that again."
A fight bra.
What is Oh my gosh!
We just finally
changed the writing
to where it wasn't
for a 12-year-old demographic.
It got into that
18-to-34-year-old-male demographic.
Once that door was opened,
I marched right through it,
because it was working.
It was all about filling up
those arenas and stadiums,
and, you know, it was like we could do
whatever we had to do to be the best.
The biggest star of the Attitude Era
by far was Stone Cold Steve Austin.
Anytime you stick your head
in the ring with Steve Austin,
bottom line is I'm gonna kick your ass.
Straight simple.
He was something
that we weren't used to seeing,
this kind of foul-mouthed, roughneck,
blue collar, Southern badass.
When I first got into
the business of professional wrestling,
I never had any designs
on being as successful as I would be,
because I didn't know how far
some ragamuffin
from Victoria, Texas, could take it.
Introducing first
Prior to WWE,
Steve Austin was a wrestler
in WCW.
But he got fired from WCW,
so he winds up in ECW,
sort of the punk rock-indy federation
in the pro wrestling world.
And walking into that federation,
man, it was an eye-opener
and a hell of a scene.
This is extreme!
This is the ECW arena!
ECW
was the necessary disruption
of the pro wrestling/sports entertainment
industry.
No rules, no regulations.
A testosterone and adrenaline-driven,
no-holds-barred,
this-can't-possibly-be-legal,
what-the-fuck-am-I-watching atmosphere.
It was a mosh pit.
ECW was a wild-ass
renegade-type promotion
that attracted a niche, uh, audience,
and it was very unusual.
I greatly appreciated the promotion
and the promoter behind it.
There ain't a mofo organization
in the world today
like ECW!
Vince always saw everyone else
as a feeder system
to the major leagues of WWE.
So I knew
we didn't have Steve for a long time,
but we were gonna make it quality time
for every moment that he was in ECW.
We achieved
a lot of success in a short time,
and finally,
Vince took, uh, serious notice of me,
and that's when I would go to WWE.
Stone Cold Steve Austin.
I love it, McMahon.
So I turned into
Stone Cold Steve Austin,
and I became this
just trash-talking SOB from south Texas.
It became very entertaining,
and people started disliking me,
and we started gaining traction.
Now, at that time,
everybody knows
that Triple H was supposed to win
that King of the Ring pay-per-view.
But then Triple H got punished
because of what happened in the Garden.
I hear a voice behind me.
It's Vince. He goes,
"Hey, Steve, you got a second?"
I'm like,
"Yeah. I guess so. You're the boss."
He says, "Wanna let you know in two weeks,
you're gonna win King of the Ring."
the King of the Ring tournament
We get to the pay-per-view,
I'm wrestling Marc Mero first.
We do a move, he kicks me in the mouth,
you know, busts my lip wide open.
I've gotta go to the hospital immediately
and get 14 stitches.
Soon as I come back from the ambulance,
Michael Hayes comes up to me and goes,
"Hey, man, you got
Jack "The Snake" Roberts in the final,
and Jake just cut
a religious promo on you."
The power above
is reaching down and lifting me up.
And immediately I thought of Austin 3:16,
because back in the day,
you'd watch football games,
they would put John 3:16 signs
in the end zone.
I go out there, work the match with Jake.
You're pathetic!
There it is!
One, two, and he got him!
Stone Cold Steve Austin
I go up to the microphone
and I just went out there
and started running Jake down.
You sit there, and you thump your Bible,
and you say your prayers,
and it didn't get you anywhere.
Talk about your Psalms,
talk about John 3:16.
Austin 3:16 says I just whipped your ass.
When Steve said that, I went,
"Oh my God.
Tell me he didn't just do that."
"That may not play too well
you know, in the Bible Belt."
Piss off.
And then I kept talking
and kept talking,
and I could hear Vince in the background
'cause he was doing commentary,
and I said,
"Oh man, I need a button on this promo."
And so just out of the blue I said,
"And that's the bottom line,
'cause Stone Cold said so."
It was brilliant.
It changed who he was
and the perception
of who he was as a character.
The next night, everywhere you looked
were Austin 3:16 signs.
Austin 3:16 took over, and it was insane.
When the Monday Night Wars started,
and we kept losing in the ratings,
for a while, we understood it
because they had a really hot show.
It was really fresh, and they had a lot
of great talent and some cool storylines,
but as we started to ramp up,
we really thought we had a better show.
We're like,
"Man, what is up with these ratings?"
"Someone's gotta be paying somebody off.
We got a better show than they do."
At that point in time,
I remember Vince was like,
"We need to do something here."
"We need a way
to get a lot of eyeballs on us
and do something in a really big way
for WrestleMania."
And that's what we did.
At this time,
I would like to introduce to you
a man who is simply
the baddest man on the planet!
Ladies and gentlemen,
"Iron" Mike Tyson!
I get a phone call.
"You're never gonna believe
what they're doing next."
I'm thinking, "Yeah, whatever."
I was so ahead of him at that point,
I was like, "Whatever." I was arrogant.
He goes, "They're bringing in Mike Tyson."
I got uncocky real fast.
The idea for bringing in
Mike Tyson came from Vince,
and Shane McMahon was heavily involved.
We wanted a big personality,
you know, someone extremely identifiable,
to be a part of WrestleMania,
and there was at that time
no one bigger than Tyson.
I believe he had gotten out of jail
about three years earlier.
Knowing Mike Tyson's
baggage during the '90s,
was it risky for WWE
to so fully invest in him?
He hadn't been arrested for rape yet,
though, when we did that.
- Right? He had?
- Yeah, he had.
You know, Mike is not perhaps
universally approved of now,
but he certainly His public image
is certainly in a better place than it was
at that point.
Wrestling at that level
is about generating heat.
Heat is what sells tickets.
Here we go!
And heat doesn't have to be positive.
Heat can be negative.
Specifically,
I would like to thank Mike Tyson
for being the media magnet that he is.
Tyson being on pay-per-view
was a big deal.
Mike would be the special guest referee
between Stone Cold Steve Austin
versus Shawn Michaels.
It's Mike Tyson, you know, like,
one of the biggest names in sports.
And by then, you had to be blind
not to see Steve Austin was takin' off.
Mike, I'll tell you this,
if you get in my face at WrestleMania,
I'll knock your damn lights out,
and you won't want to get
back in the ring ever again.
And that's the bottom line.
At that point,
I thought that WCW, while still ahead,
it's going to get very, very competitive.
It don't get no bigger than this.
This is what our business is all about.
It's about earning the opportunity
to wrestle in the main event
at a WrestleMania.
- Look out!
- Over!
Look out!
Look out, Mo! By God
In WrestleMania 14,
uh, Shawn had a real bad back,
and so that match was very forgettable.
Michaels going for another kick. Austin
He got it! The stunner!
Mike Tyson in!
Austin is the champion
The match wasn't good.
It wasn't anything to brag about.
I remember afterwards,
I looked over at Vince and he goes,
"Eh, Steve, don't worry about it.
From here forward, it starts."
I would like to congratulate,
uh, the new
World Wrestling Entertainment champion,
who has an attitude, no doubt about that.
Not one necessarily that all of us
here in the WWE necessarily appreciate.
The Mr. McMahon character,
at least in my mind, became a real thing
after the Mike Tyson storyline
played itself out.
Hey, Vince, are you
Are you turning into a bad guy?
I've always been a good guy.
Oh, but they're booing you now.
I'll always be a good guy.
Oh, okay.
The owner of WWE,
Vince McMahon, makes his way to the ring.
Quite honestly,
not the most rousing ovation.
At that point in time,
a feud with Stone Cold Steve Austin
would ignite and would start
a battle between those two
that would change
the course of the business.
Nobody, especially Vince McMahon,
tells Stone Cold Steve Austin what to do,
and that's the bottom line.
But all of that based on
blurring the lines of reality and fiction.
You got to understand the power
that a Vince McMahon has, the control
You've got the eccentric
billionaire boss Vince McMahon,
and then you've got the anti-system
Stone Cold Steve Austin,
and they were perfect for each other.
I will fire your ass!
- Good God!
- Whoa!
It was about a guy who was trying
to keep me down and control me,
and it was about me
trying to buck the system.
You stupid bastards.
You ain't got the balls
to fire Stone Cold Steve Austin.
Any other era, I'm a heel
because of what I'm doing,
the trash I'm talking.
You're pathetic.
You're completely pathetic
But I was the guy
that brought the gray area
to the business of professional wrestling,
which is usually a black-and-white
type thing as far as love and hate.
See, in my day,
there was a good guy and a bad guy.
Vince Jr. made it the bad and the worse.
There were no more good guys in wrestling.
Society at that time
had taken a rougher edge.
Society at that time had more attitude.
That forced you to create characters that
fit into that gray area in the middle.
The fans did not want to see
good guys no more.
Nobody wanna see a good guy,
even in the movies.
Look at the video games
and the wrestling business.
We cater to what is in front of us.
You tap into that.
That's big money.
So Vince said,
"Hey, give me some of that money."
We don't always set trends,
you know, we try to follow them.
And back in those days, it was Wild West.
Stone Cold Steve Austin,
who is as crude as he is mean.
He's just about
the biggest thing in wrestling,
worshiped by his fans.
He feels like smashing a beer bottle,
he does it.
Feels like throwing up his middle finger,
he does it.
Oh no!
Some part of us really loves
watching the bad guys get over.
Maybe the part of us that doesn't like
the fact that we have to behave ourselves.
You can't go around shoving people.
You can't go around insulting people.
And Stone Cold
hammering away on the boss!
People live vicariously
through those kinds of storylines
and would love
to punch their boss in the mouth.
You know, I got a chance
to literally and figuratively do that
almost every Monday night on Raw.
Oh boy, look out!
Austin downs McMahon again!
I think the fans
responded strongly
because he's such a strong character.
He's just so over-the-top.
He's larger than life.
He's easy to hate,
and he's also easy to love,
but he's very easy to hate.
Mr. McMahon, he's at the top.
So, any and everybody
that's not at the top
hates the guy at the top.
He's got
an entire collection of Corvettes.
Vince walks by with his custom suits
and his flaunting and everything.
What's to like?
He's easy to hate.
Get that mic out of my face!
It's my mic. I own that mic!
I own that camera! Cut it off!
And he became the most hated character
in the history of the business.
Asshole! Asshole!
Asshole! Asshole! Asshole! Asshole!
Mr. McMahon, of course, is a character
derived from, uh, Vince McMahon,
and is a character of someone
I could relate to when I was growing up.
Because when I was growing up,
I was, like, dirt poor.
Coming from that environment,
I don't like rich people,
because I was around some people
who thought they were better than me
because they had "more money."
So it felt like
you weren't anybody at all.
You were a nobody.
And you learn certain things.
In those days,
I could fight, and loved to fight.
If you could do that well,
now you're somebody.
I was good at fighting,
but they would say,
"You didn't fight fair!"
You cheated!"
"Yeah? I won."
What the hell's the matter with you?
And so,
with my character, Mr. McMahon,
I can play someone who intimidates,
because that was the way I grew up.
That was the way
I thought rich people were.
They'd try to intimidate you.
You're gonna get it.
I know how to be an arrogant person
that just throws his weight around
and a bully. That sort of stuff.
It's not my fault that I happen to be
a self-made billionaire!
It was easy for me
to get into that character,
because I knew
all the things that I disliked.
Some people are rich.
And you're not.
He knows
how to manipulate a crowd
as well or better
than anybody that's ever done it.
Hell, I'm a real Texan now!
I loved heat, as they call it.
When you go out
and manipulate the audience
and, you know,
they boo the hell out of you,
you really want
to get that heat and feel it.
You're not afraid of it.
It's like, go embrace it.
This is what I think of Texas.
Such a great feeling.
Vince was a master
at making people care
or making people hate him or feel emotion.
Emotions are when you sell tickets.
It's emotion.
If you mash that button
so that you get emotion from people,
they forget where they are.
They're not at a movie theater
or an arena.
They're right there looking at you.
It's one-on-one.
That's when you know you have them.
- Revel in it, Mr. McMahon.
- I remember where I was
Performing is easy.
Being yourself is the more difficult part.
And what similarities
do you share with Mr. McMahon?
The character Mr. McMahon with me?
- Yeah.
- None whatsoever.
Mr. McMahon
is an extension of Vince McMahon,
but blown way out of proportion.
The difference between
Mr. McMahon and Vince McMahon
Probably not that much.
Exactly the same person.
It's not a far stretch.
The character of Mr. McMahon
is really just Vince.
He'll tell you different.
No, Mr. McMahon is Vince.
A lot of the promos and the diatribes
that have been cut on other people,
I've had actually cut on me in real life.
"Ah, I'd never say that." I said,
"Yeah, you would. You said it to me."
Bruce claimed
that he's been on the receiving end
of the Mr. McMahon in real life.
I'm very,
very passionate about our business,
and sometimes
that passion is a bit effusive.
So, I probably can get
out of bounds a little bit.
The Mr. McMahon character
is pretty close to Vince the man,
but, obviously, highly exaggerated.
The best characters in wrestling
are guys at their core
with the volume turned up.
What you saw from me as Stone Cold
was me with the volume turned up,
same with Vince.
Much of great fiction is that funny line
between reality and storytelling.
Vince loved blurring that line
between fact and fiction.
A lot of people
have confused through the years
who my character was on television
and who I am.
It used to bug the hell out of me.
"I'm not that guy."
And then I realized,
"It doesn't matter what you want, Vince."
"It doesn't matter
how you wanna be perceived."
"It's the way you are being perceived."
Perception is reality.
You can't change
the way people think about you.
The double bird!
Pure hatred
driving Mr. McMahon!
Austin-McMahon,
that dynamic was just ridiculously good.
You could make a great argument
it's the greatest feud
in wrestling history.
The rise
of Stone Cold Steve Austin
and Stone Cold versus Mr. McMahon
is what generated
the huge amount of ratings for WWE
that essentially ended the 83 weeks
of WCW beating them in the ratings,
and, ultimately, like a tsunami,
overtook the wrestling business, period.
It was the hottest thing in the world.
I say this, knowing it'll sound
like I'm putting myself over
and being an arrogant prick,
but Vince took our formula,
decided he was going to do it,
only he was going to do it better.
And he did.
There were so many things that we did
in WCW that WWE eventually replicated.
D-X was nothing more
than a derivative of the nWo.
The Mr. McMahon character
was a derivative of evil Eric Bischoff,
was the evil boss.
Come on, Vince. You gotta admit
you ripped me off on that one.
Now, granted, you did it better.
But, come on, who did it first?
If Eric Bischoff thinks that
he played the heel character before I did
Okay. If that were the case,
he sure as hell didn't play it as well.
So, good for him.
WWE was going to win inevitably.
Vince McMahon, being the competitor he is,
the fighter that he is,
would have done whatever he had to do
to ultimately win that fight.
And I was coming up short.
I was not focused on creative.
The nWo angle was a couple years old now.
It wasn't fresh anymore.
Things that were going on in WWE
with Mr. McMahon, and Steve Austin,
and others was new, was fresh,
which caused the audience to shift over
and check out what they were doing.
Eric's big mistake was thinking,
"Because I'm ahead,
all I gotta do is go with these guys,
and I'll always be ahead."
In wrestling, everyone's got a shelf life,
and you always have to make new stars.
And Vince was trying
to make new stars because he had to.
And that's the bottom line,
'cause Stone Cold said so.
Said so!
Vince got very lucky.
Austin was an incredible,
incredible, incredible success.
And then Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson comes.
Do you smell
what The Rock is cooking?
Ladies and gentlemen
Great to welcome to the show
one of the fastest risers to the top
in the history of wrestling, The Rock.
Let's start off with your history.
When you broke in, you were packaged
as a part of a wrestling legacy
My grandfather
was High Chief Peter Maivia.
He was,
in many ways, responsible
for putting the island of Samoa
and Samoan athletes on the map.
From the isle of Samoa,
High Chief Peter Maivia!
My grandfather
wrestled for Vince McMahon Sr.,
and then in the '80s, my dad came along,
Rocky "Soul Man" Johnson,
and, along with Tony Atlas,
became the first Black tag team champions.
The Rock,
everything he do is just like his father.
Walk like his father,
dress like his father.
You didn't know better,
you'd think that was Rocky Johnson.
I remember meeting
Vince McMahon Jr. when I was 11 years old.
Looked down at me, "Good to meet you,"
gave me a firm handshake,
and looked me in the eye.
I'll never forget it.
Here we go with a newcomer
who's really made a name for himself
as of late, talking about Rocky Maivia.
When he came in,
we really promoted him
as this third-generation guy
that you're gonna love.
This guy
is gonna be phenomenal.
The first
third-generation superstar ever.
We shoved him down their throats.
Uh-oh.
You hear the chant of
- Rocky sucks!
- "Rocky sucks."
Rocky sucks!
They hated him.
A lot of our audience, I think,
thought that this person was just, like,
handed this opportunity,
and no matter how hard
Dwayne worked in the ring,
initially, people start booing him.
I'm sick of hearing about
Rocky Maivia's old man. Who cares?
Rocky sucks! Rocky sucks!
The fans hated The Rock
because WWE told us to love The Rock.
And it took The Rock turning heel
and acknowledging
that the fans were booing him
for the fans to start to love him.
We are the Nation of Domination!
The Nation of Domination
was a faction that was based on pride
in being of color
and not being held down by the man.
The newest member of
the Nation of Domination, Rocky Maivia!
I talked to Vince, and I said,
"I would just love
the opportunity to speak
on why I'm joining the Nation,"
and he said, "You got it."
I got three words.
"Die, Rocky, die."
That's the gratitude I get
from you pieces of crap.
I said, "It's not a Black or white thing.
It's a respect thing."
"It's about me kicking your ass thing."
This isn't about the color of my skin.
This is about respect.
Sometimes in our lives,
we find these moments
where there's a shift and a click,
and you go, "Man, there is
some real power behind that."
Well, Rocky Maivia's a lot of things,
but "sucks" isn't one of 'em.
And boom, just like that, within a month,
I became the hottest heel in the company.
- if you smell what The Rock is cookin'.
- what The Rock is cookin'.
I remember having a conversation
with Vince and him saying,
"I'm gonna make you WWE Champion."
Sharpshooter!
That's a sharpshooter!
Sharpshooter!
Ref's gonna ring the bell!
I said,
"You know, this is a really big deal."
I said, "I'm first WWE champion of color."
He said, "I know."
And he goes, "But I don't see that."
Vince, and I know this for sure,
he was always about,
"I don't care what color you are.
You could be black and green and purple."
"You could be a unicorn
for all I give a shit."
"As long as you are drawing money,
you will be champion."
It ain't got nothing to do with color.
It's not racism, it's business.
He don't see Black. He don't see white.
He sees only green.
For people who knew WWE
at that time, the Attitude Era,
it was a unique and special time,
because it truly was
whatever you can imagine,
we can do.
And we did.
Someone help!
Oh my gosh! Oh my God!
Oh!
- Look out!
- See what just happened!
The Attitude Era.
Man, it was a movement.
Everywhere you went, you saw Austin 3:16,
you saw DX.
- Suck it, man.
- Right!
You saw The Rock.
Everybody was in on it.
They were so popular.
Their merchandise was everywhere.
The influence was all over the culture.
We're gonna have WWE superstars
right here in the house.
Ladies and gentlemen,
The Rock!
You invited The Rock
to speak
at the Republican National Convention?
Please welcome
the one, the only, Triple H.
For a lot of us
in the Attitude Era,
we went from being like,
"Yeah, I'm a dude on TV
that people recognize occasionally,"
to, "You can't go anywhere."
It was getting out of control.
They're making way more money now
than they did then,
but as far as actual real popularity,
that was the peak.
It's the entertainment
phenomenon of the '90s.
A billion-dollar industry worldwide,
a TV-ratings smash,
a sport, of sorts,
that draws more teenage male viewers
than Monday Night Football
or World Series Baseball.
People who remember that period,
that is a very fond memory,
because wrestling really was
huge mainstream at that time.
From a pure marketability standpoint,
the product they were putting on was,
was awesome. It connected.
Um, from a moral standpoint,
morals are morals,
but it rubbed some people the wrong way.
One true thing
about professional wrestling,
millions of fans are pouring in.
But this business has serious questions,
some involving violence
and sexually explicit content.
Promoters would have you
believe that it's family entertainment.
But if you've never been to a show
or never seen one on TV, watch one.
You're in for a shock.
As performers, you're going
for whatever the biggest reaction is,
and you're seeing these things
get bigger reactions than anything else.
So you're going down that road of,
"I'm going to be edgy."
I got two words for ya.
"Suck it!" Yeah!
It was a lot of fun
and a lot of freedom,
but there's a lot of stuff online that
you can watch, where I go, like, "Oh"
"How did we ever
get away with that stuff?"
You can take your pick
of either one of these hoes.
Critics say WWE
blows away the envelope of good taste.
Perhaps no one
has been more critical of McMahon
than New York Post columnist
Phil Mushnick.
They knew that they could
get away with everything.
Not anything, everything.
And they pushed it.
They pushed that for all it was worth.
We're gonna go low,
and then we're gonna go lower,
and then we're gonna go lower.
This was maybe a standard deviation
beyond what we were doing before,
um, but it was still family-friendly.
No one got killed.
The Rock
is inside that casket!
There was, you know, no rape.
Come on out, you rapist!
No use of knives or guns
or anything like that.
Witness a recent
simulated castration scene.
So, it's still family-friendly,
maybe for more of an adult family,
not for young kids.
They were doing the double-talk.
They'd say, "We're not marketing to kids,"
when, in fact, their audience was kids.
And so some people would go,
"You've got a responsibility
to not be such a bad influence on kids."
"We're not marketing to kids anymore.
That's what we used to do."
All right, whatever.
I think it was primarily
aimed at young males.
Action figures, dolls.
These aren't being
bought by and enjoyed by adults.
These are for 8-year-olds, 10-year-olds.
Frankly, the Attitude Era,
the kids embraced it.
-Suck it!
-Suck it!
They were seeing something
maybe they weren't supposed to see.
So, the Attitude Era,
in many ways, probably attracted kids.
Would I have let my kids watch it?
Yeah, I probably would have.
It's a monster, is really what it is.
It's a nationwide monster
that's gotta be stopped.
The principal is entitled to his opinion.
I'm entitled to mine.
We wholeheartedly
would want parents and everyone
to exercise their freedom of choice.
Damn it, it is America.
Go live in your world.
Don't like us, click us off.
Don't watch us.
Look, I I was the one
certainly leading the charge in that,
"Don't tell us to raise your children.
You need to raise them yourself."
"If they're influenced by TV,
that's your fault."
Now, having a daughter, uh, I
Look, there are times
we probably could have been less
less objectionable towards our women.
It is time to stop your grinnin'
and drop your linen.
Oh my!
We continued to consistently
go over the line in terms of taste.
Uh, there were
a lot of questionable things.
You look pretty good on your knees, Chyna.
It almost looks like a natural position.
It was exploitive of women
like you wouldn't believe,
but that's what was selling,
and the audience was guys.
Teenage guys seeing women like that,
from a pure marketing standpoint,
it was, uh, very, very successful.
The Attitude Era women
weren't really considered wrestlers.
Eye candy.
That's kind of what they were at the time.
Sable was
the pioneer WWE diva, so to speak.
She knew exactly what her role was.
People know her as Sexy Sable,
but she was also
athletically contributing to the show,
which I think is overlooked,
because it wasn't normal,
it wasn't acceptable,
it wasn't what the women did.
You know, at the time, late '90s,
you had Jerry Springer.
Just when you thought
you'd seen it all, the bad get badder.
You had trainwreck television
that was happening.
Howard Stern was huge.
I wanna bang Bonnie, Jill, and Brandy.
The Attitude Era was a reflection
of what was going on in the world.
I've got to question
Society at that time
was a lot sexier,
and we were reflecting that in every way.
Some of the things
Eh
Bra-and-panty matches, I'm not sure
that, uh, that would be suggested today.
At that time,
that was what was on television.
Vince McMahon is part of his time.
The difference is
that he's in a distinctive position,
where he reinforces those tendencies,
rather than challenging or changing
or transforming them into something else.
We more or less followed
what was going on
in the entertainment business.
A lot of times, the highest quarter-hour,
the highest rating
in that segment were women.
Much higher than some of the great matches
and things of that nature.
We felt like we needed to be edgy,
'cause that's what
television was at that time.
And this is live TV,
and there ain't a damn thing
Vince can do about this.
We'd always want
to serve our audience, so we did,
and, of course, took it
maybe a little too far in some cases.
You can look back at it now
and say how crazy it was,
You can look back and say,
"God, you should have never done that,"
or, "That was so inappropriate," or, um
It was.
And, uh
Who's worse, the guy that did it
or the people that loved it? I don't know.
Welcome to the War Zone, everybody!
I'm Jim Ross.
I've been joined by James T. Gordon
here at ringside.
The owner of World Wrestling Entertainment
is on his way
Owen Hart,
I am ordering you
to appear in this ring right now.
There he is, right there.
He's coming, but are we gonna see
reporting for duty or for a fight?
After the problems I had
with Bret Hart, I met with Owen.
I said, "Do you want to stay with us,
or do you wanna leave with Bret?"
He said, "Well, I'd like to stay."
It's time for me to do what I have to do,
and that is remain right here
in World Wrestling Entertainment!
When I went to WCW and Owen stayed,
nothing was the same anymore.
He thought I was mad at him.
If anything, I had great sympathy for Owen
and felt badly that he was in
the predicament that he was in.
Owen had nothing to do
with either me or Vince,
but he was gonna pay for it,
and they kind of humiliated his character
as often as they could
for quite a while to get at me.
The hypothesis that we would do
something against Owen because Bret left
only speaks to Bret's ego.
Really, Bret?
You know, why would we do that?
We don't care about you. You left.
We're trying to make Owen a star.
What? What is this?
So they ended up
doing a storyline with him,
where they said,
"You're gonna be the Blue Blazer again,
and you're gonna be
this sort of clumsy oaf hero."
May 23rd, '99.
Can you talk about that day?
That was Owen.
Folks, let's take you now
to an interview conducted earlier tonight,
and we got big problems out here.
Blue Blazer, you got a big match tonight
We were live
in a pre-taped interview of Owen.
We were going to drop Owen down,
kind of like rappelling
from the top of the ceiling.
Owen was to fly, so to speak,
as we've done before,
from the rafters of the building.
I'm watching
the pre-tape interview,
and I hear someone say,
"Owen's in the ring."
I went, "What the hell is he doing?"
I was on a flight,
and I could feel something.
Something overcame me,
and I can remember going,
"Something bad happened. I can feel it."
Ladies and gentlemen,
when you're doing live television,
a lot of things can happen,
and sometimes they are not good.
Uh, the Blue Blazer,
as we know is Owen Hart,
was going to make a very spectacular,
superhero-like entrance from the rafters,
and something went terribly wrong here.
Thank God, for the audience,
that we were in a blackout.
So they didn't really see it. Thank God.
When the lights came up,
they saw Owen in the ring
and medical personnel were working on him.
We wondered whether or not,
"Could Owen be alive?"
Uh
Surely he could be.
Jerry Lawler back joining me here.
King, I was just reiterating to the fans
this is not a part of the show.
Uh, we're here to entertain and have fun,
but this is neither.
No. It's, uh It's
It doesn't look good at all.
Jerry Lawler came back and says,
"Bruce, I I think he's dead."
I'm like "No."
You know, I was like
"How do you even say that?"
The policeman that
was next to me, pulled me off to the side,
and Vince was there, and he let us know
they pronounced him dead.
I have the unfortunate responsibility
to let everyone know
that Owen Hart has died.
Owen Hart has tragically died
from that accident here tonight.
The decision that, uh,
basically, I had to make,
was whether or not the show goes on.
The live audience
didn't really see what happened.
Had they seen, no question,
you have to shut the show down.
He didn't announce
to the live house
'cause he just didn't think
that was the right thing to do.
Those people came to see a show.
They didn't come to see somebody die.
And, me as a businessman, it's like,
"Okay, let's continue on.
Let's continue the show."
First off, Owen Hart,
I'm praying for you, buddy.
And I am too.
Val Venis, you've been chasing
these puppies around.
Well, pal, I got news for you.
Those are my puppies,
and they always have been.
They never should have continued the show.
You know,
one of your buddies just died.
Like, literally just died in this ring,
and his blood is right there,
and we're going out there wrestling,
trying to perform for this audience
that doesn't even know it,
while we're brokenhearted.
What you do,
your business, is entertainment,
and you allowed
the entertainment to continue
with the blood of Owen Hart
still in the ring.
I'm not sure
that's not disrespectful to Owen Hart.
There were a lot
of negative comments, actually,
as to whether or not
the show should have continued.
I actually know firsthand
from the wrestlers involved
that they wheeled my dead brother past
right past all the wrestlers
and actually pushed wrestlers out the door
and said, "Go, go, go. You're on."
Naturally, Bret's gonna feel like,
you know, like a brother should.
He had every right to say
anything negative about our company.
I think if Vince McMahon had dropped
Shane McMahon from the ceiling,
uh, and he splatted on the mat,
I don't think he would've scraped him off
and set the next match up.
Had it been me, not just my son,
had it been me who was
"splatted on the mat," as Bret said,
I would want the show to go on.
So get me out of there, you know,
and let the show go on.
I'd do it with me,
and to this day, I would.
It really was very hard
for me to take at that time
because I kept thinking that maybe it was
Maybe they murdered him to get back at me.
At 10:01 a.m. this morning,
my legal counsel
filed a wrongful death lawsuit
for my husband's death.
In terms of Owen, we settled
a lawsuit basically with his wife,
and then we find out,
which we thought all along,
it wasn't our fault.
Unfortunately, the apparatus
they were using was defective,
and the manufacturer
knew it was defective,
and then we sued the manufacturer.
They investigated Vince and WWE
for a long time.
A policeman from Kansas City's,
uh, police department called me,
and he goes, "I promised you I'd call you,
and I'm calling to tell you
there's nothing criminal here."
"This was just a horrible accident."
And for me, when I heard that,
it was like, "Okay, it's an accident."
I basically, I think
in my heart of hearts, forgave Vince.
I had plenty of reasons
to have issues with Vince,
but they were on a professional level
and not a personal level.
Do you think there will be
any changes in wrestling because of this?
I certainly hope so. We're not
so dead against the wrestling business,
but we are disappointed
in the drastic turn
that wrestling's taken
in the last two years,
and it's a shame that the fans
have sort of become wild dogs
that sort of want more
and more and more all the time.
At that point,
we're all pushing the envelope.
- Look out!
- Oh my
Everybody's willing
to do whatever it takes.
No one's saying,
"I don't want to do that,"
or, "That's too dangerous."
Oh my
but at some point, enough is enough.
He's burning! Put him out!
We want to give
our fans what they want.
We're probably pushing it
as far as we can right now,
but who knows as it relates to the future?
Holy shit, holy shit, holy shit