Mickie James Interview
Posted by David Damage on Sunday, October 16, 2011
Under: Interviews
Mickie
James participated in an interview with Female First while she was in
the UK promoting TNA Wrestling's upcoming Maximum Impact Tour and
recalled her reaction to being released from her WWE contract last year.
She admitted it was as big a shock for her, and did upset her.
"I think it angered a lot of people," she says, continuing: "It would be one thing if I was doing a poor job, and I didn't capture the fans every time I went out there, or if I wasn't so good at what I did."
As it was, it drained her of her passion for wrestling, until one show in a high school gym.
"I looked around the locker room, looking in these peoples' eyes. There
were people who had never been anywhere, never wrestled anywhere except
here. You could see that fire in their eyes, that desire and that
wanting to make it. I thought...s***, what happened to that?"
She adds: "It was one of those wonderful eye-opening things. I do this
because I love it, I love entertaining the fans. I love what I do out
there, and I'm amazing at it."
This led her to TNA, with the
organization acquiring another wrestler who gained notoriety in WWE.
Whilst TNA sometimes comes under fire for pushing homegrown talent aside
in favor of former WWE talent, she thinks it's important to keep it
fresh.
"You can't do the same things over and over again. We
have so much talent, there are ways to keep it fresh," she explains,
before pointing out that AJ Styles and Samoa Joe are still featured
regularly on television.
She then adds that if people wanted to watch the same thing over and over again, they would tune into WWE.
"TNA really started to make a name for themselves with the X Division,
stuff like that, because it was different, nobody else was doing it,"
she says.
According to the article, the industry has it's
detractors, both in the wrestling press and with skeptics. James has a
less-than-favorable opinion on the subject of "the poor end of the
wrestling press" (referred to as "dirt sheets"):
She points out
that "nobody reads those things", adding: "I feel like, nine times out
of ten, it's somebody who thinks they know, but really they don't."
The industry also faces criticism from those who disregard what the
wrestlers do as fake. James says, "We'll never try to pull the wool over
anybody's eyes and say there's not a certain artwork to it. I guarantee
you, 9 out of 10 people in the world wouldn't step in the ring and do
what I do, nor could they. I think we have one of the hardest jobs in
the world."
She also discusses her memorable program with Trish
Stratus, balancing her music and wrestling careers, the experience of a
live TNA show, and more.
In : Interviews