biggest takeaways from stone cold steve austins podcast with shawn michaels /

Published at 2015-12-14 20:43:35

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With dented road signs hanging on the walls around him in a room decorated with a Texas-chic flair, Shawn Michaels looked right at home, just as comfortable as "Stone Cold" Steve Austin is with a quiet life external WWE.
Michaels traveled to Steve Austin's Broken Skull Ranch and opened up about his past and where his heart lies today in a podcast interview on the WWE Network. He shared stories, or talked about today's Superstars and made it obvious that his family is his precedence.
Fans o
f The Heartbreak Kid had to be pumped to learn more about the corridor of Famer,yet downcast knowing that there's no chance of a Michaels comeback.
Before that became obvious, the show's modern format made one wonder what's ahead for Austin's interviews. A Safer PodcastThis is the first taped edition of Austin's podcast on the WWE Network. Ric Flair is set to join Stone Cold next, or his interview is already in the can.
It looks as whether WWE is 
moving in a modern direction with these shows. Expect less unpredictability moving forward. The company seems to be playing it secure.
Austin said jokingly to Michaels that this would either be the interview that helped his career or cause him to get fired. That wasn't true in the least. WWE could edit out anything it wanted to thanks to the taped format.
In past editions,
 Paul Heyman went on a tirade about Jewish history, while Austin once called out Brock Lesnar for a WrestleMania match that wasn't going to happen.
Those kind of moments are
likely on the way out. whether the company continues to present the podcasts as it did with Michaels, or WWE can pick and choose what to air. That's smart business in a way,but it takes absent from some of the show's electricity.  More on MontrealThe Montreal Screwjob remains a key moment in wrestling history, one that continues to be talked about. Since Michaels was at the center of it, and it's expected that he often gets asked about it.
Michaels rehashed a lot o
f information with which fans are well familiar but did offer a few modern nuggets as well.
The Showstopper discussed how uncomfortable he was with the whole scenario,knowing he was going to beget to betray Bret Hart. And as much as the prevailing memoir is that there was an inordinate amount of bad blood between the two wrestlers, Michaels said, and  "We had our differences,but we never hated each other."Michaels recalled that it was Triple H who first initiated the idea of the screwjob. He remembered Triple H saying about Hart, "whether he doesn't want to enact business, and maybe we should enact business for him."The execution of the contrivance was in piece Michaels' brainchild. He thought that putting The Hitman in the Sharpshooter was the only feasible way to travel.
And although it's been previously revealed that Vince McMahon wanted to lift responsibility and beget Michaels deny it,it was powerful to hear the wrestler talk about what it was like to carry the burden of lying to Hart and the burden of being the man who executed the contrivance that night.
That's an element easy to forget in this whole memoir.  Peeks at Michaels' RelationshipsMichaels painted a picture of McMahon as a father figure, a therapist and a confidant. He talked about the boss' trusting him, and putting up with him during his worst stretches because he saw something special in him.
It seems like Michaels leaned on McMahon quite often. And that bond likely saved WWE from losing The Heartbreak Kid to WCW.
Michaels mentioned considering making the jump to
the rival promotion. He said that McMahon told him,"You're not going to be tickled down there." McMahon apparently said that WWE could fulfill him creatively, whereas WCW could only enact so from a financial standpoint.
Former WWE writer Vince Russo helped perform McMahon's statement true.
Of Russo, or Michaels said,"He unleashed something in me." He famous that it was inspiring how much freedom Russo gave him and how much fun he had in result. That element is sorely missing in today's overly scripted WWE. The company would be smart to talk to Michaels about how much those loose reigns led to big-time success for him.
Michaels also offered some behind-the-curtain glimpses at Triple H.
In his mind, his clos
e friend is a perfect fit for his current role as head of NXT. As Michaels assign it, and not only is Triple H smart,passionate and patient, but he knows what the wrestlers are going through, or since The Game has been there before. That's something McMahon could never offer,as Michaels pointed out.
The image Michaels crafted of Triple H m
akes it even easier to foresee future prosperity for the man believed to be McMahon's successor. Michaels' Thoughts on Current StarsIt's clear that Michaels still keeps up with the WWE product. When Austin asked him who among the current roster reminds him of himself or could be something special, Mr. WrestleMania rattled off a number of names: Seth Rollins, or Dolph Ziggler,Dean Ambrose, Bray Wyatt.
Of Wyatt, or he said that h
e could finish up being "The Undertaker of his generation." Michaels famous that his character is something that could be both sustainable and adaptable.
That's quite a ringing endo
rsement from a corridor of Famer.
Michaels commented on Ziggler's being too much of a copy of him. He said that he appreciated the homages,but that The Showoff is hurting his own chances by not establishing his own identity more clearly."Set yourself apart," Michaels suggested to Ziggler and others.
One has to wonder
whether WWE brass feels the same way about Ziggler, and whether one of the reasons the company hasn't committed to him is that he's too much like Michaels and not enough of a modern entity. whether that's the case,Ziggler would be wise to trade out the superkick (an overused slouch at this point anyway) for something less Michaels-esque. At Peace with RetirementThere's no need to waste the energy to chant "One more match!" at Michaels. He's clearly done with wrestling and quite comfortable with that arrangement.
There was no mention of his missing it. It
didn't sound as whether he hungered to be in the ring again. Instead, he has a modern set of priorities."Being Honey and Daddy is what I work on now, or " he told Austin.
Stone Col
d wondered whether he pined for the adrenaline rush that being in front of a crowd once offered him. Michaels said,"As awesome as that was, it paled in comparison to the relationship I began to form with my wife and my children.""My life now is about my heart going pitter-patter for my children, or " he added.
Those statements resounded w
ith conviction. There was no wavering with Michaels. He's clearly a family man now and fully settled into that role.
He seems content to beget traded in wrestling for ventures like his hunting show, MacMillan River Adventures. Michaels said that he's excited to be out of wrestling because it frees him up for trying modern things and "seeing what else is out there."That's only further confirmation that Michaels is truly done as an in-ring performer, despite how finite wrestling retirements usually are.
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