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Rob Van Dam Confirms His WWE Status, Comments On Possibly Retiring From The Ring

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Source: PWInsider

Rob Van Dam did a Q&A at the Mid-Atlantic Legends Fanfest in Charlotte, North Carolina today and confirmed that he’s in between WWE contracts right now but going to TNA or ROH would breach the deal. RVD said he has a valid merchandise deal with WWE and intends to return but doesn’t feel like he’s in a big hurry to get back.

RVD also said it’s possible he does a “retirement tour” but has no plans for one right now. RVD added that he will wrestle until an undisclosed time that likely isn’t “too far off.”

New Details On MVP’s TNA Departure

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Source: Wrestling Observer Newsletter

The Wrestling Observer Newsletter is reporting that TNA decided to fire MVP after the entire Hernandez-Lucha Underground situation went south. MVP had pushed for the company to bring Hernandez into the company to be a part of his BDC stable, which was later unceremoniously disbanded.

MVP was apparently thinking about leaving the company, but TNA decided to fire him anyway. MVP ended up taking the heat for the Hernandez situation.

Big Plans For Rey Mysterio’s AAA TripleMania PPV Entrance, Backstage News On GFW Attendance

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Source: Wrestling Observer Newsletter

– We noted a while back that Rey Mysterio is a new brand ambassador for Paramount Pictures in Latin America, which is why he promoted the recent Terminator movie. Rey will be incorporating themes from the movie Mission Impossible into his entrance at next Sunday’s AAA TripleMania pay-per-view, as he faces Myzteziz (the original Sin Cara).

– As noted, Jeff Jarrett’s Global Force Wrestling promotion held their first TV tapings earlier this month at the Orleans Hotel in Las Vegas. The Wrestling Observer Newsletter notes that they taped 5 one-hour TV shows. There were around 3,000 fans in attendance but most of them were comp. One source noted to The Observer that there were stacks of free tickets for anyone who wanted them at the hotel.

Chris Jericho Talks Hulk Hogan Controversy, His Thoughts On Miz Replacing Hogan On ‘Tough Enough’

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Source: Talk Is Jericho

On the latest episode of Talk Is Jericho, Chris Jericho commented on the recent Hulk Hogan controversy and the Miz replacing Hogan as a judge on Tough Enough. With respect to Hogan’s racial comments, Jericho stated, “it’s a rough situation for everybody.”

“All I know is that Hulk has always been a nice guy to me and I’ve seen him sign hundreds and hundreds of autographs for kids, waiting for an airplane and I was there standing next to him,” Jericho said. “It doesn’t excuse what he said. I’m not saying anything about that. I’m just saying I think he has got a good heart and was maybe caught in the wrong place, saying things that he shouldn’t have said, but all you can say is that I hope Hulk rebounds and comes back from this and I hope he digs down deep inside and finds out what kind of a person he really is. And I think, if he can do that, then people will get a chance to see the real Hulk and terrible, terrible situation and Hulk should not have put himself in that position. Like I said, man, it’s a tough thing. A lot of times, friends do things that you wish they hadn’t have done, but you don’t abandon them completely.”

As for the Miz replacing Hulk Hogan on Tough Enough, Jericho said that he is “really excited that Miz is involved.” According to Jericho, the show has “more energy than it had before” with the Miz replacing Hogan.

“[I’m] sorry to see Hulk Hogan go, but I think in the long run, Miz might not have the tenure that Hulk has, but he has more personality in the soundbites and maybe a little bit more passion,” Jericho added.

Mark Henry On How Veterans Treat Younger Talents Now, His WWE Career, Vince McMahon, More

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Source: Talk Is Jericho

This week’s episode of “Talk is Jericho” with Chris Jericho features former World Heavyweight Champion and The World’s Strongest Man, Mark Henry. Courtesy of my good friend Mark Adam Haggerty, below are highlights:

Chris starts the show by performing his cowbell rendition of Mark Henry’s theme song. Mark can’t remember the name of the Oscar Award-winning hip hop duo that performed his track—Three Six Mafia—and says: “I can’t remember. I been hit in the head too many times. Maybe I should get in on this lawsuit with these dummies.” Mark says that the majority of the people on the lawsuit only worked in the WWE for a brief period, and it was toward the tail-end of their careers. He says that he mentioned Sinn Bodhi AKA Kizarny on another podcast, and Bodhi was livid over the shoot Henry did on him. Mark went on to say, “Kizarny’s mad at me like he could hold water.”

Mark says that his very first wrestling match was on pay-per-view. He wasn’t trained, he had never taken a bump, but Jerry Lawler insisted that he could work with him. Jericho asks for the details of the feud and Mark says: “Well Jake got cleaned up. Uh—quote, unquote.” Mark says that the developmental system was devised specifically for him: “Doctor Tom just decided he was gonna stop wrestling and start training full time.” Mark Henry was the first Developmental Superstar in history, as well as the first wrestler in WWE to receive a guaranteed contract. Henry says that he’s the second longest contracted wrestler—after the Undertaker. Other Superstars like Goldust and Triple H were around before Mark, but Goldust has come and gone, and Triple H is now semi-retired. Mark says that a fan once told him he’s had over 8,000 wrestling matches, and that he’s in the Top 10 for most matches of all time.

Chris asks how Mark got into the wrestling business. Mark is—or at least was—the real “World’s Strongest Man.” He’s the only man in history to become a world champion in Power Lifting, Olympic Weight Lifting, and Strong Man Competition. Added to that, he’s the only man to also hold a world championship in professional wrestling. That technically makes Henry a 3-sport world champion. He was touring talk shows after the 1996 Summer Olympics, and he was asked by Oprah what he likes to do to unwind. He told her he likes video games, live music, and all sorts of sports. “But on Saturday and Sunday,” Henry continued, “I’m watching wrestling. Don’t even try to bother me. Those are my wrestling days.” Vince McMahon called Mark personally and when Mark picked up, Vince said, “So I heard you like to watch wrestling.” He identified himself as Vince McMahon, and Mark immediately hung up, thinking it was his friend Wes. Mark’s manager called him and asked why he hung up on Vince McMahon. Mark was eventually invited to visit Stamford, where he met Yokozuna, played WWF: The Arcade Game [which was in the lobby], and worked out with Vince McMahon.

Mark told Vince that he was used to training for up to six hours a day, and Vince told him: “You can’t work out like that on the road.” It was bittersweet for Mark, who had a passion for weight training, but was eager to become a WWE Superstar. When Vince and Mark were in McMahon’s office, Vince showed Mark the cast Andre the Giant wore when he broke his ankle. Mark told Vince a story, that brought the WWE Chairman to tears. When Mark was a young pudgy kid, he went to the Beaumont Civic Center with his grandmother to see wrestling. When the wrestlers were coming through the curtain, all of the kids rallied alongside the railing in the hopes of getting to touch their heroes. Mark was shoved so violently that he spilled over the railing and fell face-first into the entry aisle. Andre walked up to him and helped him to his feet. The Giant then lifted Mark Henry over the railing and placed him safely on the other side. Vince responded with tears in his eyes: “I miss him.” Mark Henry says that Vince McMahon has touched so many lives, not just in terms of wrestling but in the world of business, and predicts a future National Holiday when Vince eventually passes.

WWE sent Mark to train in Calgary with the Hart Family. Mark lived in the Hart House while training and said he even helped babysit the kids, and help around the house whenever he could. He remembers Owen Hart fondly, and says that Owen is “one of the Gods of Wrestling.” Chris remembers meeting Mark Henry at the Hart School, when Y2J was working as a trainer. The first thing Mark asked Chris was: “Can you teach me to do an arm drag like Ricky Steamboat?” When WWE launched their Developmental System, he lived with Dwayne Johnson, who he still remains close friends with to this day. He says: “My council is my wife first, then the Undertaker, then Dwayne.” He credits the Undertaker with smartening him up to the inside of the wrestling business. When he first showed up, ‘Taker called him a Babyface, which infuriated Henry, who didn’t know what it meant. ‘Taker took him to the side and explained how to behave and what certain things meant. Mark said it took him a few years until he was comfortable enough around the locker room to actually succeed inside the ring. He says he’s never been a big fan of ribs when they “go too far.” He says someone put feces in the Rock’s food once, and insisted Mark didn’t say anything because “the rib wasn’t on him.” Mark refused to let the Rock eat s–t, and blew the joke out of loyalty to his friend. “It was very cliqued up back then. You had the Puerto Ricans, and Shawn and his crew. It was like jail.”

Mark says that the wrestling industry is different from anything else because of how most veterans treat the young talent. “There are guys who failed, and they’re willing to teach you how to succeed, based on what they did wrong. You don’t get that in a lot of places.” He does say that things are different now however. He says when he and Chris came into the business during the 1990s, main event talents would pray for the fresh faces to fail, just so they didn’t lose “their spot.” That’s what made talent so hungry in those glory days of the business. “Now the young guys know,” Mark says, “If you listen and don’t screw up, and wait your turn, you’ll get your shot.” He gives additional credit to guys like Billy Gunn, Ron Simmons, Mike Rotunda, and the Brooklyn Brawler, who worked with him before and after events to help him get better.

Chris asks Mark how he went from Sexual Chocolate to a monster inside the ring. Mark remembers a house show where the production team played a public joke on him. He went to the ring, and waited for his opponent. The producers—including Vince McMahon—played three different entrance themes, before Mark got hot and asked for the mic. He started cutting a promo on the guys in the truck, and the mic was cut off. He stormed out of the ring and through the curtain, where he could only find a writer that gave up the entire rest of the crew. Mark says that he destroyed “$10,000 dollars’ worth of equipment in Gorilla.” He called Vince and cut a promo on him with the intention of quitting when he returned to TV that week. When he saw him, Vince told him that he needs to channel that aggression inside the ring. He went on to show him a clip of how angry he got while they were ribbing him. Vince told him he could make a lot of money if he acted like that when the cameras are rolling. Mark says that he was scared to let that side of him come out, because he’s not stable when he’s that angry.

Mark says that one of his greatest accomplishments in life was winning the world heavyweight title from Randy Orton at Hell in the Cell. He puts that alongside his match with the Undertaker at Wrestlemania 22 at the top of his list of favorite matches of all time. He says that he appreciates Randy Orton: “Randy’s Randy, you know? He’s a different kind of bird. But he’s in my top five—top three.” He says his favorite people to work with were the Undertaker, Orton, Shawn Michaels, and Rey Mysterio. When he gave his salmon-colored jacked retirement speech, it was because he was actually thinking of hanging up his boots. He approached Vince once again and told him it was “getting harder to come to work.” He even pointed to the fact that he “gets hurt every month.” Vince told him, “You’ve got a long way to go,” and convinced him to sign a 3-year deal then and there. Henry says that Vince McMahon could “talk paint dry.”

They finish their conversation by talking about Mark’s run as “Sexual Chocolate.” He says, “I believe it! I was into it! I tongue-kissed Mae Young!” He says that when they were filming the Valentine’s Day segment in the motel room, Mae decided to smoke a cigar between takes. It was so funny to people on set that it was incorporated into the segment. He says he loves Mae Young, and that she was always asking to get hit. “Nobody wanted to hit her! But if you didn’t she’d tell you that you were being a—uh, a ‘C-Word.'” They laugh about how Mae “talked like a sailor,” and even had an anchor tattoo. Mark says that “Sexual Chocolate” ended 15-years ago and every night he still hears people chant “Sexual Chocolate. Clap-clap-clap-clap-clap.” He says that he doesn’t care what people remember him as, as long as they remember him. To this day, he doesn’t understand why Mae Young gave birth to a hand. When he asked Vince about it recently, the Chairman chuckled and hollered: “It’s a hand!”

Full Content Listing For WWE’s ‘Sting: Into The Light’ DVD And Blu-ray Set

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Courtesy of WrestlingDVDNetwork.com, below is the full content listing for WWE’s “Sting: Into The Light” DVD and Blu-ray that comes out on October 13th:

DISC 1:

Documentary:

Now or Never
NWA Clash of the Champions – March 1988
California Kid
Driving to Success
WCW Great American Bash – July 1990
WWE Consumer Products
Franchise
Black and White
WCW Starrcade – December 1997
WWE Community Relations
Moment of Truth
The Last Nitro – March 2001
WWE Digital Media
A Transformation
WWE Executive Management
WWE Survivor Series – November 2014
Signed
WWE WrestleMania XXXI – March 2015

DISC 2:

Stories:

Talker
Inner Circle
Hulk-A-Dear
Getting Chased at the Mall
WCW SuperBrawl ’91
SharpDeathShooterLock?
Rappelling
Shake
IGN Visit
Behind the Scenes: ID Shoot
WrestleMania XXXI Axxess

The Freedom Fighters vs. David Johnson & The Invader
Memphis Wrestling • November 1985

The Blade Runners vs. Tracey Smothers & Ricky Gibson
Mid-South Wrestling • March 2, 1986

UWF Tag Team Championship Match
Sting & Rick Steiner vs. Brad Armstrong & Tim Horner
Universal Wrestling Federation • May 29, 1987

NWA World Heavyweight Championship Match
Ric Flair vs. Sting
Clash of the Champions • March 27, 1988

Sting vs. The Great Muta
WCW / NJPW SuperShow • March 21, 1991

WCW World Tag Team Championship Match
The Steiner Brothers vs. Lex Luger & Sting
WCW SuperBrawl • May 19, 1991

Submit or Surrender Match
Sting vs. Cactus Jack
WCW Power Hour • November 23, 1991

DISC 3:

King of Cable Tournament Match
Sting vs. Rick Rude
WCW Clash of the Champions XXI • November 18, 1992

WCW International World Heavyweight Championship Match
Sting vs. Vader
WCW Slamboree • May 22, 1994

Sting vs. “Stunning” Steve Austin
WCW Saturday Night • April 8, 1995

Sting vs. Hulk Hogan
WCW Monday Nitro • November 20, 1995

“Winner gets both WCW Tag Team Titles”
Sting vs. The Giant
WCW Great American Bash • June 14, 1998

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Match
Sting vs. Goldberg
WCW Monday Nitro • September 14, 1998

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Match
Sting vs. Diamond Dallas Page
WCW Monday Nitro • April 26, 1999

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Match
Sting vs. Bret “Hit Man” Hart
WCW Monday Nitro • October 18, 1999

Sting’s WWE Debut
Survivor Series • November 23, 2014

Sting vs. Triple H
WrestleMania XXXI • March 29, 2015

BLU-RAY EXCLUSIVES:

NWA World Tag Team Championship Match
Sting & “The American Dream” Dusty Rhodes vs. Arn Anderson & Tully Blanchard
Clash of the Champions • June 8, 1988

King of Cable Tournament Match
Sting vs. Flyin’ Brian Pillman
WCW Saturday Night • November 7, 1992

Sting vs. Scott Steiner
WCW Monday Nitro • May 27, 1996

WCW United States Championship Tournament Match
Sting vs. Booker
WCW Spring Stampede • April 16, 2000

Triple H and Sting: Face-to-Face Confrontation
Fastlane • February 22, 2015

Sting Speaks!
RAW • March 23, 2015

Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson Offers His Thoughts On Hulk Hogan Controversy

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Source: Zap2it

While promoting the HBO dramedy series Ballers at the Television Critics Association’s press tour in Beverly Hills, California on Thursday, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson was asked about Hulk Hogan (real name Terry Bollea), whose termination from WWE last week coincided with the publication by the National Enquirer and Radar Online of racist remarks allegedly made by the wrestling legend on a leaked sex tape.

“I was pretty disappointed with what I heard, like all of us, by the way,” said Johnson. “I’ve known Terry for a lot of years, my dad helped train him in Florida in the ’70s when he was breaking into the business. My uncles helped train him too as well. I have not known the man to be racist.”

Johnson adds that while there’s no justification for what Hogan said, he believes everyone has “talked trash,” especially in private.

“It’s funny, it’s one of those things where—and not justifying what he said—we’ve all talked trash, especially in private,” said Johnson. “He said what he said, and he’s paying the price.”

Spoilers: TNA Impact Wrestling And Xplosion Tapings From 7/30/15

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TNA taped more Impact Wrestling footage on Thursday night in Orlando. No word yet on when these will air. Thanks to Jeremy for the following spoilers:

* Micah defeated Jessie Godderz in a match for Xplosion

* Tigre Uno defeated Kenny King to retain the X Division Title

* Jeremy Borash tried filming a guy in a Bigfoot costume but he ran away, then came back and dances

* Dixie Carter cut a promo and announced a #1 contender’s match with the five winners of Lethal Lockdown

* Chris Melendez defeated Eric Young in a Lumberjack Match. Melendez wrestled on one leg and retrieved his other leg from Young

* Gail Kim defeated Jade to retain the Knockouts Title. Rebel and Marti Belle attacked Gail after the match but Velvet Sky and Madison Rayne made the save

* Awesome Kong came out for a staredown with Gail

* EC3 defeated Rockstar Spud to retain the World Heavyweight Title. Ethan ordered Jeff Hardy to attack Spud but he refused. Matt Hardy ran out but Tyrus beat him down. Ethan ordered Jeff to hit Matt or get fired. Hardy hit a low blow on Tyrus and Jeff nailed Etha

* Abyss cut a promo on James Storm and left The Revolution. Manik removed his mask and also left. Mahabali Shera came out and issued a challenge to Storm

* Drew Galloway defeated Lashley, Bram and The Wolves in an elimination match. Galloway gets a title shot at Bound For Glory

* Jeff Hardy quits working for EC3. Matt Hardy is revealed to be in the Bigfoot costume and will face Tyrus at Genesis

* Awesome Kong defeated Brooke Tessmacher

* Trevor Lee defeated DJ Zema Ion and Tommaso Ciampa in a Triple Threat

* Shera defeated James Storm in a No DQ Match with help Abyss and TJ Perkins

* Rebel, Marti and Jade defeated Velvet Sky and Madison Rayne in a handicap match

* Dixie, Galloway and Ethan cut promos to hype the main event of Bound For Glory

* Galloway and Matt Hardy defeated Ethan and Tyrus. Jeff Hardy is announced as the guest referee for the BFG main event

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