Jay Lethal Interview
Posted by David Damage on Thursday, September 15, 2011
Under: Interviews
By WorldWrestlingInsanity.com on 2011-09-14 08:02:41
He's the man who redefined the color of Machismo and energized a
division. Now, Ring of Honor's reigning Television Champion Jay Lethal
joins James Guttman for a 46 minute shoot interview on ClubWWI.com about
his past, present, and future that any fan will freak out, freak out
over - dig it!
Having begun wrestling at the age of 16, Lethal has
experience that far exceeds others his age. From his six X-Division
title wins to his Ring of Honor return as they hit a brand new upswing,
fans around the world are familiar with his work. Lethal discusses it
all with the Insanity in a unique discussion filled with many topics you
won't hear about elsewhere including the hilarious story of his three
phone calls with Randy Savage (complete with impression), the wrestler
who convinced him to do the Savage impression on TV, TNA's focus
problems, the crazy story of how he ended up in the ROH Special K stable
in 2004, who came up with the name "Jay Lethal", the best wrestling
video game ever, Lanny Poffo's reaction to wrestling him, and tons more.
For a full list of topics, head to: http://www.worldwrestlinginsanity.com/am2/publish/newsnotes/ClubWWI_Jay_Lethal.shtml
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and information posted on World Wrestling Insanity, you can like us on
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As most fans know, Ring of Honor is embarking on a new chapter.
Recently bought into by Sinclair Broadcasting, the company is set to
make its TV debut with Sinclair on September 24th. Returning to the
Ring after over six years, Lethal quickly captured their TV
championship. As James Guttman points out, joining ROH during such an
exciting time has to be great for any star. But for someone like Jay,
who was there early on, the homecoming has to be sweeter. As Lethal
explains to ClubWWI.com members, it is...
"Now that I've been
back, how has it changed? I can tell you, the only two things that have
changed are a few faces because a couple of Ring of Honor guys are
still there from when I was there and Sinclair backing them. I am very
big on promoting the fact that Ring of Honor has always had one of the
best wrestling products out there. It's just their only flaw was that
they were unable to get this product out to the masses. Now they
actually have that opportunity with Sinclair Broadcasting Group having
bought out the company and being the new engine in the car, so to
speak."
James then mentions that Aaron Wood, a writer for
WorldWrestlingInsanity.com, is flying into New York from Scotland this
weekend and the top of his priority list was to attend the Ring of Honor
Death Before Dishonor iPPV on Saturday. Guttman along with other site
writers Matt Dawgs and Canadian Bulldog will be there too (http://www.rohwrestling.com/news/new-york-ny-sept-11th/ ).
As such a pull factor for viewers - even from across the globe - Ring
of Honor's momentum seems to be going strong. It leads JG to ask a
question he's asked others. With all the talk of TNA challenging WWE,
is the idea of ROH challenging TNA more believable? Is TNA's race
against ROH actually closer than the one they have with WWE? As someone
who's worked for both, Lethal tells ClubWWI listeners his thoughts and
why...
"Not only is that believable to me, but it's very
conceivable, I think, to many of the fans out there, especially Ring of
Honor fans - although they may be a little bit biased. But so am I
because I've worked for both companies. I was just recently let go by
TNA and I'd hate to make it sound like I'm very bitter, but I wasn't the
only one let go. There were a handful of my friends. Not just
friends, but also great wrestlers were let go and I just don't
understand the reasoning behind it... As a company, if you have anybody
on your roster, you'd want to find what they do well and feature that
one thing. I think that's one thing that TNA isn't doing. That's one
flaw that they're lacking for the bottom half of their show, anyway.
Ring of Honor, from top to bottom, their whole product is about
wrestling. We're not trying to focus on storylines and talking and all
the boring this and that. Our main focus, which is pretty cool - we're
going to get wrestling fans, because we're about wrestling - but another
aspect that we're reaching for that WWE and TNA doesn't seem to be
reaching for is that UFC fan. UFC fans are driven by competition.
Because that's what UFC is. It's real. It's a competition. And that's
what we're trying to center our Ring of Honor product on. I definitely
think that we have a great chance in overtaking TNA, if they're not
careful."
Jay speaks about specific friends let go from TNA
and his feelings overall about the company's strengths and weaknesses.
For him, though, his biggest strength in Total Nonstop Action wasn't a
creative decision as much as his own impression skills. As "Black
Machismo", Jay was known for his spot-on Randy Savage impersonation.
But the question that James always wondered was whether Savage was ever
approached to come in. It would make sense, right? Well, during the
ClubWWI.com discussion, Jay says it wasn't a consideration and seemed to
be more along the lines of thinking that Randy wouldn't do it if asked.
That is, until Hulk Hogan arrived and had an idea that sounds like
many other ideas credited to him…
"Hogan came in and a couple
of months from Hogan being there, he actually said he was talking with
the Macho Man and working it with him to come in. Hogan actually sat me
down and explained the whole thing he wanted to do too. He wanted to
film vignettes of me going to Hogan, me getting Hogan pissed off, and
Hogan yelling at me. Then the next time you see me, I'm at a bar and
I'm talking to somebody and you can't really see him because they're in
the shadows. But they have that Savage hat on. Eventually you hear
Savage say that we're getting Hogan right where we want him. We're
getting under his skin. We got him, got him, got him. So it was going
to be one of those things where I'm trying to get under Hogan's skin
because that's what Savage has me doing. Then Savage comes in and it
was going to be a big attack on Hogan. That was the original plan from
what I was told. I don't know if that was ever really going to happen,
but that's what Hogan told me personally."
James Guttman
remarks that it's funny how many of Hulk Hogan's TV ideas usually
involve people attacking Hulk Hogan. They laugh and go on to discuss
Savage's original TNA run in 2004 and more. Follow Jay on Twitter at
@thelethaljay. And remember, Jay Lethal is just one of hundreds of
stars available as soon as you sign up to ClubWWI.com. Over one hour
with Jesse Ventura. Over two hours with Jerry Lawler. And over a
thousand hours of audio - all ready to listen to right now.
In : Interviews