1. My opinion is, Junkyard Dog
was the most prominent
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2. Black wrestler to ever
lace a pair of boots.
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3. Overcoming incredible
odds, a young,
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4. Black wrestler rose from
humble beginnings to become
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5. a generational superstar,
achieving unimaginable
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6. heights in a sport dominated
by white performers.
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7. Yes, he did, he paved
the way for all of us.
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8. You feel you're gonna
be wearing the crown?
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9. Just as sure as
I'm Black and the
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10. day's sunny,
Mean Gene.
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11. His charisma and, you know,
his personality
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12. is what got him to
where he was,
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13. 'cause he was a
fan favourite,
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14. no matter how
you looked at it.
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15. JYD was on top,
selling it out.
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16. I mean,
it was incredible.
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17. If you guys could
just hear the crowd,
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18. they just loved him.
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19. And couldn't
nobody stop him.
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20. He's invincible!
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21. There ain't
nothing else all I can do
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22. no better,
and that's fighting.
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23. I seen the stars for him,
because at that time,
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24. there were no
Black superstars.
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25. Bill Watts,
he saw dollars.
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26. I saw his charisma,
and named him.
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27. Gave him music,
and did everything,
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28. and he was so dynamite.
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29. The unlikely friendship
between promoter
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30. Cowboy Bill Watts and
The Junkyard Dog
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31. was tested when the Dog
defects to the WWF.
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32. I think Dog went because
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33. there was a better
opportunity.
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34. You know, there's
more money and then
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35. he was gonna be a
big star there.
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36. But JYD's dreams of
achieving superstar status
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37. in the big leagues
fell short.
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38. Vince McMahon didn't
use him like Bill did.
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39. I wish he had because he
could have been
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40. one of the biggest
stars in the WWE.
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41. Yeah, it broke his spirit
because he went there to be
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42. that big hero again,
and he didn't get it.
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43. How can Vince McMahon
put everything on JYD?
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44. 'Cause you don't know if
he's gonna show up or not,
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45. you're not dependable.
Untrustworthy.
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46. Dog forgot one thing-
you can't do
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47. what the white man do
and keep your job.
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48. When you're trying
to become a star,
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49. and on your way to stardom,
you can figure out a lot of
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50. things to be successful
as a wrestler-
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51. you have to put
the time in.
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52. You have to become
known by the fans.
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53. You have to be able
to sell your product.
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54. You have to be able
to have some dialogue.
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55. When Junkyard Dog came to
Mid-South, he had dialogue,
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56. he had style, he had
physical attributes.
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57. These things turn
into box office.
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58. These things
turn into money.
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59. Sylvester Ritter was
probably the greatest star to
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60. come through the
state of Louisiana...
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61. they ever had,
in terms of wrestling.
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62. He represents the people.
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63. They all love him.
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64. Dog had a great following.
He was universally loved.
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65. That gleam in his eye,
his little smile that he had...
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66. was infectious.
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67. Man, he just got over.
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68. The people in
Louisiana loved him.
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69. You know, he'd get to
the ring, you know,
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70. and he'd grab that top rope
and lean back and
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71. shake his legs
and his butt,
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72. and the people would
just go wild.
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73. I'm lacing up the boots,
and the whole building's
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74. going, "Who that?
Who that?
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75. Who that gonna beat
The Dog? Who that?"
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76. Boom, boom, boom.
"Who that?"
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77. I'm lacing up my boots,
going, "Holy smokes!"
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78. More than just a wrestler,
Junkyard Dog is a hero to the
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79. working class, a beloved
figure in the city of
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80. New Orleans who became
a superstar to fans
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81. across the Southeast...
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82. transcending the sport
to become an icon.
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83. The Junkyard Dog,
brother,
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84. nobody messes with the
damn Junkyard Dog.
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85. I'm Jake "The Snake" Roberts.
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86. Hall of Famer, and I can
still kick your butt.
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87. Mid-South, I am tired
of you ripping me off,
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88. and playing your
stinking games with me!
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89. New Orleans was
his town, man.
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90. By God, if you were
wrestling him, brother,
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91. you were scared
to death...
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92. because you didn't know if
you were gonna make it
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93. out of that arena back to
the dressing room.
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94. Police usually had to
carry the guys out that
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95. wrestled Dog, because
if you parked your car
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96. in that parking lot,
they would destroy it.
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97. "Who that gonna
beat that Dog?"
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98. Nobody, that's who.
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99. Before becoming one of the
most popular wrestlers the
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100. south had ever seen,
The Junkyard Dog was
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101. a rookie named
Big Daddy Ritter...
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102. Searching for his big break
in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
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103. Well, Dog tried to get into
wrestling several times.
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104. They were all
short-term deals.
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105. He wasn't on everybody's
most wanted list
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106. because then, A,
he was Black.
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107. And, a lot of the
white promoters-
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108. and they're all white-
had a quota, seemingly...
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109. unwritten, unstated,
but it was there.
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110. And so, he didn't
fit their quota,
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111. they already had
a Black babyface.
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112. I ain't gonna
hire another one.
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113. It's sad to say.
It's coarse, it's hurtful.
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114. I am Jim Ross.
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115. Been into wrestling
since 1974,
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116. and along the way I got
to meet The Junkyard Dog,
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117. become friends.
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118. It's great to have you
back, Junkyard Dog.
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119. JYD, when I first met him,
was all-
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120. seemed like he was
always smiling.
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121. And his skillset
was limited.
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122. But my God, the charisma
and the love that
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123. he created
with fan base.
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124. Well, you can't
coach charisma.
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125. You either got it,
or you don't.
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126. Despite Ritter's charisma
and size, only Bill Watts,
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127. the owner and promoter
of Mid-South Wrestling,
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128. decides to take a chance
on the young brawler.
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129. Cowboy was bigger than life.
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130. He was a disciplinarian.
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131. He was kind of like
the head coach.
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132. You know, I never met
Vince Lombardi,
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133. the famed football coach of
the Packers that won multiple
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134. Super Bowls, but some of my
older peers said that Watts
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135. was Vince Lombardi-like.
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136. "My way or the highway.
Here are the rules.
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137. There are not many of them.
I expect you to adhere to them,
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138. and there's no negotiation."
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139. Bill Watts gave him the
biggest break for a Black man.
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140. Oh, I'm gonna turn this off.
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141. Hey, this is "The Birdman",
Koko B. Ware.
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142. Man, you know me flying
all over the place
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143. in the wrestling business.
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144. "The Birdman"!
Koko B. Ware!
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145. I mean, wrestling is a
white man's sport.
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146. JYD, well, he wasn't
a wrestler at all.
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147. He couldn't put you in a
leg lock or a chicken wing.
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148. He don't know nothing
about all that.
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149. He was a street fighter.
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150. Bill Watts gave
him a chance...
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151. to draw some money,
and you know what,
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152. he bust Louisiana
wide open.
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153. Mid-South Sports was
based on realism.
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154. So, athleticism,
realism,
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155. making it more easy
to suspend your disbelief of
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156. the art form that
is pro wrestling.
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157. Watts had a rule-
if you go to a bar,
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158. or you get into any kind of
scuffle and you
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159. get your ass whipped,
you're fired.
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160. The booker for Cowboy
Bill Watts was Ernie Ladd.
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161. Ernie Ladd was
a philosopher.
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162. He was 6"9 and
300 pounds.
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163. So, Ernie was always
looking for talent.
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164. Somebody along the way
told Ernie that, "Hey,
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165. there's this Black guy,
big, muscular powerhouse.
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166. Kind of guy you'd like,
Ernie,
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167. that you ought to
take a look at."
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168. So, Ernie brought
Dog in and,
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169. he had a rough start because
Cowboy didn't know that
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170. Dog was not a great
technical wrestler.
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171. He brought that big, fine,
Black specimen
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172. of a body down that aisle.
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173. Some young gals started
screaming and hollering,
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174. and we would
excite the crowd.
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175. He was so statuesque,
and he looked great.
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176. Turn your head,
you wouldn't forget him.
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177. Dog just clicked with
the wrestling fan,
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178. so he knew how to connect
with the audience.
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179. This is "Mr. USA",
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180. WWE Hall of Famer,
Tony Atlas.
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181. So all you boys
in the Mid-South,
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182. get ready for yourself,
because I got trouble here,
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183. and I got trouble there!
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184. And I got trouble coming
your way, to the Mid-South!
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185. We gonna boogie,
baby!
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186. So, I have to give credit for
this to Cowboy Bill Watts.
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187. Bill Watts came up
with ideas.
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188. Dog was a hell of
a football player.
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189. He was a hell of a street
fighter, he was a brawler.
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190. So, what Bill Watts did
was create matches
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191. that fit Dog's style.
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192. Bill wanted Dog to do a
few things really well-
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193. clothes lines, thumps,
body slams, tackles.
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194. And so, those things, based
on his football background,
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195. those things could be
translated
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196. very easily into
pro wrestling.
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197. Boom, power slam!
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198. To boost Junkyard Dog's
star power,
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199. Bill Watts and Ernie Ladd
know they need to find the
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200. perfect villain for JYD
to face in the ring.
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201. Which, wait a minute!
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202. What's he doing?
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203. There's nothing that he
couldn't do in the ring.
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204. You know, if he was in the
ring with the right guy.
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205. I am Ted Dibiase.
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206. Towards the end of my career,
I was known in the WWE as
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207. "The Million Dollar Man".
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208. - 1, 2, 3!
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209. 1, 2, 3.
Alfred nearly raises a hand.
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210. He put something
in that glove!
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211. And the thing that
I did was,
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212. I always highlighted
in the ring
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213. what he did best.
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214. I mean, Bill Watts
coached me.
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215. The Funks coached me.
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216. They would say, "Teddy,
you gotta basically put him
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217. in the middle of the ring
and work around him,
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218. and emphasize or highlight
the things that you know
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219. he does very well, and stay
away from the things that,
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220. that he doesn't do so well."
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221. He had enough trust in me
to know that, you know,
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222. I wasn't gonna make him
look bad out there.
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223. I was always gonna
make him look good.
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224. The Dog just thumped him,
and there's the count.
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225. Well, you talk about an
action-packed duo, they are.
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226. We became friends.
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227. We traveled together a lot,
and so much so that
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228. when we got married,
JYD was my best man.
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229. That's how close we were.
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230. That chain around his neck.
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231. Put that music on, "Another
One Bites The Dust".
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232. And he came back
in with the thump,
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233. the rest of it is history.
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234. There he goes
with that big thump.
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235. He just put him
about 6 feet under.
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236. Bill Watts is the first
wrestling owner, promoter,
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237. who ever featured as
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238. one of his very top stars,
a Black guy.
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239. This last year has kind of
been the year of the Dog.
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240. I don't know if it's a
Chinese year of the Dog
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241. or not, but in
Mid-South Wrestling,
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242. it was the year
of the dog.
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243. Bill Watts took JYD and
made him "thee" star.
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244. When you get
awards like this
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245. it's because you're
doing so many good things.
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246. They had a very, very
close relationship.
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247. Anything that Dog needed
or wanted, or disliked,
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248. he would never talk to
the wrestlers about it.
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249. He would only talk
to Bill Watts.
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250. I don't think anyone
in the business
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251. did more for an individual
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252. than Bill Watts
as he looked at
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253. mentoring and helping Dog.
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254. Bill looked at him
like he was family.
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255. You always go out
and give 100%
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256. for the people
and for yourself.
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257. A lot of people were just
astounded that Cowboy
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258. was so friendly with
a Black person.
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259. And, Cowboy said, "I want you
to know one thing," he said,
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260. "my favourite colour
is green."
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261. And, at that time,
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262. JYD was selling tickets,
lots of 'em.
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263. Junkyard Dog's
captivating presence
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264. draws capacity crowds
night after night,
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265. inspiring his fans to
stop at nothing
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266. to defend their hero.
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267. The fans not only looked up
to him, they worshipped him.
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268. I'm Jim Cornette.
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269. I've been involved in
a variety of ways in
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270. professional wrestling over
the last 40-something years.
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271. Because that's all you are,
is a yellow, dog-faced liar!
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272. You know what he just did?
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273. He just wrote a cheque that
his rear end won't be able to-
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274. The downtown Municipal
Auditorium was
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275. the Dog's house every
Monday night.
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276. And The Freebirds come in,
and they want to take over.
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277. The Freebirds had hair cream
that could remove your hair.
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278. And, they said they were
gonna use it to take the hair
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279. away from one of
their opponents,
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280. but when Junkyard Dog
came in,
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281. and tried to do
something about it,
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282. "accidentally",
according to The Freebirds,
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283. the cream wound up
in his eyes.
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284. I mean, this is supposed to
be a solution to remove hair.
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285. The agony he's in.
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286. My God, that moment
right there...
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287. The Freedbirds were dead men.
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288. When the word got out that
JYD had been blinded
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289. by The Freebirds,
and then
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290. when JYD went on
television and said,
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291. "My daughter, my baby
daughter is about to be born
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292. and I'll be able
to hold her,
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293. but I'll never be
able to see her,"
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294. the people wanted to kill
The Freebirds, literally.
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295. As the highly-anticipated
Dog Collar match with JYD
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296. against Freebird Michael
Hayes approaches,
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297. Dog plays his
part at ringside,
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298. until one fateful night
when the line between
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299. fiction and reality
really blurs.
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300. JYD, himself,
told me this story!
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301. Others have disputed it.
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302. But it sounds very typical
of New Orleans and
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303. the wrestling scene
at that time.
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304. They're in the downtown
Municipal Auditorium.
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305. And Dog is sitting
at ringside.
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306. He's blind,
but he's in the corner.
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307. The Freebirds look around
and they see Dog
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308. sitting in the corner,
and all of a sudden,
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309. some guy comes
over the railing and
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310. is right there at
Dog's shoulder,
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311. and the guy pulls out the
biggest gun he's ever seen,
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312. and said, "Don't worry,
Dog, I got him!"
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313. And for two seconds,
Dog is conflicted.
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314. "Do I grab this guy's gun
and save their lives,
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315. but expose
that I can see?
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316. Or do I sit here and
let him shoot him?"
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317. And while he
was conflicted,
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318. the cops came
over the rail and
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319. grabbed the guy
and took him down.
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320. In our little world
out there in Mid-South,
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321. he became bigger
than life.
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322. Sometimes you wonder
when success comes
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323. somebody's way...
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324. is it truly a
blessing or a curse?
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325. JYD, JYD...
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326. he transcends race,
colour, and creed.
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327. He's everybody's champion.
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328. Under the guidance of
legendary promoter,
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329. Bill Watts, The Junkyard Dog
has emerged as a main event
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330. superstar in Mid-South,
drawing record breaking
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331. crowds for the company.
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332. He was the Black Hulk
Hogan down there.
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333. Louisiana, Oklahoma,
Arkansas...
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334. I mean, he had all those
towns just sewed up.
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335. Let me tell you something,
"Buzza Wuzza",
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336. it ain't but one Dog.
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337. Well, there wasn't many
Black wrestling stars
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338. when I broke in
the business.
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339. I'm WWE Hall of Famer,
Teddy Long.
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340. You will go, one-on-one,
with The Undertaker!
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341. Dog was a big draw.
He had that charisma,
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342. so he brought
the Blacks out,
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343. and then also, he brought
the whites out.
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344. There were whites
that loved JYD, too.
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345. So, Bill Watts knew
that was money, okay,
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346. so that's why
he pushed Dog.
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347. Oh, the crowd said,
"Who that? Who that?"
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348. Who that? Who that?
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349. "Who that?
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350. Who that gonna beat
that Junkyard Dog?
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351. Who that?"
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352. You know, in Mid-South,
we stop at a restaurant,
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353. we stop at a gas station,
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354. people recognized us
where we went.
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355. We got a letters at Mid-South
asking that the Dog and the
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356. different stars can drop
by and visit 'em.
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357. I know we got a
nice letter from a
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358. kindergarten teacher
in Lecompte.
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359. Well, the Junkyard Dog
found time,
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360. and when word got
out in that town,
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361. they had Junkyard Dog Day,
and I'll tell you,
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362. it was great.
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363. After he got his,
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364. he wanted to reach back
and help others.
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365. He got more pleasure
out of helping you,
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366. talk to the kids,
give them money.
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367. Very generous,
not just with his money,
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368. but with his time.
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369. You know, you get
fame and stuff,
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370. you get very well-known,
and then forget about
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371. the way that
you grew up.
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372. That's why I like to go back to
the schools and visit.
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373. Long before the bright
lights and roaring crowds,
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374. Sylvester Ritter, the man
behind The Junkyard Dog,
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375. grew up in a small
North Carolina town.
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376. What a lot of people
don't understand or,
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377. don't know about it is,
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378. it's a true rags to
riches story for him.
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379. My name's
Jarvis Woodburn.
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380. I'm the nephew
of Junkyard Dog.
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381. I called him Uncle Dog.
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382. That's what he was to me.
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383. This was the- God, this was
the old, old one, I believe.
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384. Yeah. He grew up
without a dad.
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385. My great grandmother,
which is his grandmother,
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386. is the one that raised him
and my mom.
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387. True southern upbringing.
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388. Family first,
treat all people equally.
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389. And, that's just the kind
of person that he was.
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390. This is the home where...
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391. Sylvester grew up,
he and my mom.
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392. My grandmother,
great grandmother.
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393. Ah, great,
great grandmother.
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394. It was old school.
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395. Wake up in the middle night,
gotta go to the bathroom.
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396. Gotta do a number one,
you go in the bucket.
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397. Gotta do a number two,
either you hold it,
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398. or you're coming outside
and use an outhouse.
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399. There we go.
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400. Ah, there's the source
of heat right there.
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401. And this was kind of like
the living room area.
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402. This was a bedroom,
here.
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403. It's very cramped.
I mean, when I-
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404. I remember, when I was
growing up there
Copy !req
405. was actually two
beds in here.
Copy !req
406. There's that wall with all of
the, like, photos and stuff.
Copy !req
407. There's actually a...
Copy !req
408. a real, real young
picture of him over there.
Copy !req
409. If these walls
could talk.
Copy !req
410. But I grew up just like
everybody else, with nothing.
Copy !req
411. I grew up hard,
back down in the South.
Copy !req
412. North Carolina.
Copy !req
413. But I fought, and I'm
stilling fighting,
Copy !req
414. trying to build on myself.
Copy !req
415. I saw him one time
give the fans,
Copy !req
416. he took the dog chain
off his neck and
Copy !req
417. gave it to a kid with
a family there.
Copy !req
418. They just loved it.
Copy !req
419. He still stayed humble.
Copy !req
420. You know, he wasn't a guy
that you couldn't talk to.
Copy !req
421. Dog never changed,
he never changed.
Copy !req
422. He was the same guy,
each and every day.
Copy !req
423. Though fame didn't change
The Junkyard Dog,
Copy !req
424. life on the road,
and the days and weeks
Copy !req
425. away from home begin
to take their toll.
Copy !req
426. He would always try to
come home around-
Copy !req
427. especially the holidays,
when my mom cooks.
Copy !req
428. But then after that,
it's just kind of like just
Copy !req
429. hanging out with the family
for as long as they can
Copy !req
430. before they gotta
get back on the road.
Copy !req
431. He had a daughter,
Latoya.
Copy !req
432. His daughter was with us
since she was two,
Copy !req
433. going on three years old.
Copy !req
434. He loved her to death,
she loved him.
Copy !req
435. She was definitely
a daddy's girl.
Copy !req
436. He was a great father, he was
just on the road all the time.
Copy !req
437. Being on the road
all the time is...
Copy !req
438. Well, I mean,
it can take a toll.
Copy !req
439. It taxes on your body,
it taxes on your mind.
Copy !req
440. It taxes mostly on
your relationships...
Copy !req
441. with your children,
with your wife...
Copy !req
442. with your family.
Copy !req
443. You know, an average week
was 1500,
Copy !req
444. 2000 miles a week.
So, you're in a car a lot.
Copy !req
445. And, you're away from
your family a lot.
Copy !req
446. And sometimes, a big, old,
fat joint was your solace.
Copy !req
447. And of course, for Dog,
Copy !req
448. this created more
of an appetite.
Copy !req
449. We both were
experimenting with
Copy !req
450. drugs at the time.
Copy !req
451. I remember JY showing me
a jar that he had
Copy !req
452. over 1000 hits
of Speed in it.
Copy !req
453. You know, and...
Copy !req
454. of course,
when he came South,
Copy !req
455. it came with him.
Copy !req
456. Yeah, he was already
into the Speed,
Copy !req
457. into the downers,
and sleeping pills.
Copy !req
458. Ah, I hadn't gotten
into that yet, but...
Copy !req
459. I was soon to start.
Copy !req
460. There was a couple times
on the road with him,
Copy !req
461. he would always keep his
pinky nail a little bit longer.
Copy !req
462. And I'd look over and
see him, you know,
Copy !req
463. and he was just
about to do it,
Copy !req
464. and he looked over at me,
and he goes,
Copy !req
465. "If I ever see you
doing this, I'll kill you."
Copy !req
466. "Alright. You don't need
to tell me twice."
Copy !req
467. Kind of like
rock 'n roll, I mean...
Copy !req
468. I didn't know
wrestlers had groupies.
Copy !req
469. Found that out.
Copy !req
470. It's kind of like you
see on TV with
Copy !req
471. these rock stars
and stuff.
Copy !req
472. It was just like
anywhere they went...
Copy !req
473. restaurants, bars.
Copy !req
474. When you got fame
like this, he said,
Copy !req
475. "You can actually
make money."
Copy !req
476. I said, "What are you
talking about?" He said,
Copy !req
477. "I'm not gonna sleep with
them for free."
Copy !req
478. I mean, some of these
chicks would pay.
Copy !req
479. I started hanging out
with Dog 'cause I got
Copy !req
480. free beer, free food,
and I got laid.
Copy !req
481. And they paid for it!
Copy !req
482. We was in Little Rock,
Arkansas,
Copy !req
483. and I was low on money
'cause at that time,
Copy !req
484. unfortunately, I was
involved with drugs, and...
Copy !req
485. Dog said, "I can get you some
money." I'm like, "Okay."
Copy !req
486. Said, "I got some
girls coming over."
Copy !req
487. "Oh, thank you."
Copy !req
488. The door opened, and these
three girls came in.
Copy !req
489. And each one of them
gave Dog $100 apiece
Copy !req
490. to get laid by
the wrestlers.
Copy !req
491. So, anyway, Dog said,
Copy !req
492. "He don't do no screwing.
He like your feet.
Copy !req
493. So, he gonna play
with your feet.
Copy !req
494. You let him play
with your feet."
Copy !req
495. So, I'm playing with
the girls' feet.
Copy !req
496. Dog getting ready
to do the girl,
Copy !req
497. and then we hear another
knock at the door.
Copy !req
498. He thought it was another
one of the wrestlers.
Copy !req
499. It was the girl's husband.
Copy !req
500. You know, he wanted to
fight Dog so, he did.
Copy !req
501. It didn't last long.
Copy !req
502. Dog beat the hell
out of him.
Copy !req
503. The girl stayed.
Copy !req
504. Dog was one of the highest
paid guys in pro wrestling
Copy !req
505. at that time.
Copy !req
506. He never made under
a grand a week.
Copy !req
507. I think he was probably
averaging more like 2 or
Copy !req
508. $3,000 a week, and in
a territory that size,
Copy !req
509. that was pretty
extraordinary.
Copy !req
510. Bill, he did nice things
for him, including a car.
Copy !req
511. You know, when he
pulled up to an arena,
Copy !req
512. you got noticed,
in a positive way.
Copy !req
513. As one of the biggest
draws in the territory,
Copy !req
514. The Junkyard Dog catches
the eye of WWF promoter,
Copy !req
515. Vince McMahon.
Copy !req
516. In the summer of 1984,
Copy !req
517. McMahon makes
JYD an offer
Copy !req
518. that's more than double what
he's paid under Bill Watts.
Copy !req
519. Vince McMahon was starting
the national expansion...
Copy !req
520. that he started in 1984.
Copy !req
521. And Vince was trying to
suck up all the talent.
Copy !req
522. Unfortunately, the thing
happened that
Copy !req
523. I never believed
would happen...
Copy !req
524. and that was,
Dog walked out.
Copy !req
525. He walked out on his
professional saviour,
Copy !req
526. and he went to
WWF for the cash.
Copy !req
527. Oh, hoo...
Copy !req
528. Ah, I'd loved to
have seen him
Copy !req
529. when he got
that phone call.
Copy !req
530. A lucrative offer from the
WWF proves too strong
Copy !req
531. for The Junkyard Dog
to resist,
Copy !req
532. as he suddenly
departs Mid South,
Copy !req
533. sending shockwaves
through the territory
Copy !req
534. and leaving promoter
Bill Watts stunned.
Copy !req
535. The big topic of conversation
is The Junkyard Dog and
Copy !req
536. what's happened to him
and, we don't really know.
Copy !req
537. We do know that he's
left the Mid-South area.
Copy !req
538. When Dog left Mid-South,
it broke Watts' heart...
Copy !req
539. 'Cause he had never
been as kind...
Copy !req
540. and as giving to
anybody in his career.
Copy !req
541. Bill went on television,
Copy !req
542. had a little verbal tirade
directed at Dog.
Copy !req
543. I want to comment one
minute on The Junkyard Dog,
Copy !req
544. because I watched him come
to Mid-South as a youngster,
Copy !req
545. and a lot of people
watched him grow to
Copy !req
546. become truly a superstar.
Copy !req
547. But then JYD walked out,
not only on Mid-South,
Copy !req
548. which really hurt me
personally 'cause
Copy !req
549. I considered him
a great friend-
Copy !req
550. he walked out
on all the fans.
Copy !req
551. I mean, to see a
white man cry...
Copy !req
552. over a Black man
back in the day...
Copy !req
553. I saw tears come out
of Bill Watts' eyes.
Copy !req
554. This has hurt him bad 'cause
Bill Watts did everything
Copy !req
555. he could to keep him there.
Copy !req
556. And it just looked like
overnight, he was gone.
Copy !req
557. But in the aftermath
of his departure,
Copy !req
558. rumours circulate that his
sudden exit from the company
Copy !req
559. is motivated by
factors beyond money.
Copy !req
560. Dog told me this story,
Copy !req
561. the way he went to the WWF.
Copy !req
562. Dog was in the bathroom,
and he was in the stall.
Copy !req
563. Bill Watts and Grizzly Smith,
they came in the bathroom,
Copy !req
564. and they didn't know
Dog was in the stall.
Copy !req
565. Grizzly Smith went to tell
Bill Watts, he says,
Copy !req
566. "Well, I think we're gonna
lose Sylvester.
Copy !req
567. I hear he's going to the WWF,
he's going to New York."
Copy !req
568. The next thing Bill Watts
said to Grizzly Smith, said,
Copy !req
569. "Ah, don't worry about it.
Copy !req
570. That nigger ain't
going nowhere."
Copy !req
571. Dog heard that.
Copy !req
572. And so, that's when he
made up his mind
Copy !req
573. to leave and go to Vince.
Copy !req
574. After The Junkyard Dog
leaves Mid-South
Copy !req
575. in the summer of 1984,
Copy !req
576. Bill Watts begins a
search for his replacement.
Copy !req
577. Brother, it scared him to
death that his territory
Copy !req
578. was gonna just collapse.
Copy !req
579. So desperate...
Copy !req
580. that immediately
he tried to
Copy !req
581. slide in another
Black superstar.
Copy !req
582. Bill made a,
I think, a...
Copy !req
583. mistake, in the sense that,
Copy !req
584. we started trying out every
Copy !req
585. African American wrestler
that we could bring in.
Copy !req
586. George Wells...
Copy !req
587. You can't run this dog out.
Copy !req
588. I'm here to stay,
and I'm here to
Copy !req
589. whip a whole lot of behind.
Copy !req
590. Brickhouse Brown.
Copy !req
591. Brickhouse Brown!
Copy !req
592. - The Brickhouse is styling.
Copy !req
593. They brought another guy in,
called him "The Snowman".
Copy !req
594. I had the pleasure
of wrestling him.
Copy !req
595. Jake The Snake,
he tried to take me out.
Copy !req
596. These thunder cookers,
he can't do nothing with it.
Copy !req
597. Did not work.
Copy !req
598. I want the sucker right down
here in the middle of this ring
Copy !req
599. right now!
Copy !req
600. Butch Reed was a
very good wrestler,
Copy !req
601. but he wasn't the Dog.
Copy !req
602. He was a bodybuilder.
Copy !req
603. He was too pretty-
not that big, ugly,
Copy !req
604. bad son of a bitch that
people could identify with.
Copy !req
605. And on and on.
Copy !req
606. No, none,
forget about it.
Copy !req
607. They were
good guys, they tried.
Copy !req
608. But,
replacing a legend...
Copy !req
609. that's like hiring the next
cowboy to replace John Wayne.
Copy !req
610. How the hell you
gonna do that?
Copy !req
611. The fans of the WWF
welcomed JYD with
Copy !req
612. open arms and
thunderous applause.
Copy !req
613. This place has
gone bananas!
Copy !req
614. He certainly has his legions
of fans here, by the thousand.
Copy !req
615. And these fans are
with him all the way!
Copy !req
616. He is something!
Copy !req
617. McMahon did a phenomenal
job of marketing JYD
Copy !req
618. when he hired him.
I will give him that.
Copy !req
619. You have become one of the
most popular athletes
Copy !req
620. in the World Wresting
Federation, perhaps in,
Copy !req
621. in the most shortest length
of time than anyone
Copy !req
622. ever to enter the ring.
Copy !req
623. You know, I've been
very fortunate.
Copy !req
624. A lot of help
come from...
Copy !req
625. just understanding
the people,
Copy !req
626. getting along
with people.
Copy !req
627. It don't make no difference
what race or colour is.
Copy !req
628. Financially, it was the
best move Dog ever made.
Copy !req
629. He told me one time,
he was making
Copy !req
630. six figures a quarter on
his action figure.
Copy !req
631. That's the third time
my junkyard's
Copy !req
632. been burgled this month.
Copy !req
633. There's only one way to
protect this place, amigo,
Copy !req
634. you've gotta get
yourself a Junkyard Dog.
Copy !req
635. I thought that was cool,
seeing the cartoons on
Copy !req
636. Saturday mornings,
his action figure.
Copy !req
637. The music video,
all that stuff,
Copy !req
638. that was pretty cool
as a kid to see.
Copy !req
639. Ah, "Grab Them Cakes".
Copy !req
640. He couldn't sing
for shit though.
Copy !req
641. And his dreams were
all being fulfilled...
Copy !req
642. and he was
making money.
Copy !req
643. He was doing it, man,
he was doing it.
Copy !req
644. Junkyard Dog, and
World's Heavyweight Champion,
Copy !req
645. Hulk Hogan!
Copy !req
646. Longevity-wise, you know,
it's hard to stick around.
Copy !req
647. Extremely
competitive business,
Copy !req
648. everybody wants Hogan's
spot, the spot below that.
Copy !req
649. A lot of hungry guys.
Copy !req
650. And, hard to
stick around.
Copy !req
651. As The Junkyard Dog joins a
WWF roster packed with
Copy !req
652. some of the biggest
names in wrestling,
Copy !req
653. his magnetic presence can
only carry him so far.
Copy !req
654. Despite his best efforts,
he fails to recapture the
Copy !req
655. towering heights of his
glory days in Mid-South.
Copy !req
656. I don't think the industry
was ready to go that route.
Copy !req
657. Um, how can I say it?
Copy !req
658. With a...
Copy !req
659. Black wrestler.
Copy !req
660. That's just my opinion.
Copy !req
661. I really believe that JYD
thought that Vince McMahon
Copy !req
662. was gonna push him the
same way as Bill Watts.
Copy !req
663. And, it didn't happen.
Copy !req
664. He figured, well, I done
let Louisiana down.
Copy !req
665. I done let my family down.
Copy !req
666. I done let Bill Watts down.
He was just heartbroken.
Copy !req
667. Having left the Mid-South
territory behind for the
Copy !req
668. promise of even greater fame,
The Junkyard Dog fails to
Copy !req
669. reach the same level of
prominence in the WWF.
Copy !req
670. Me and Dog wanna be
climbing up mountaintops!
Copy !req
671. We want to go to
the promise land!
Copy !req
672. We want to be with
Hulk Hogan, brother!
Copy !req
673. They pushed some
Black wrestlers there,
Copy !req
674. but as far as putting the
Black man in the money spot...
Copy !req
675. No...
Not at all.
Copy !req
676. They didn't go there.
Copy !req
677. So, I gotta put this Black
and white thing together
Copy !req
678. all the time, 'cause that's
the only way I see it.
Copy !req
679. From 1980, to...
Copy !req
680. I would say '86, 80% of the
top wrestlers were minorities.
Copy !req
681. In the Vince Sr. era,
Copy !req
682. Vince McMahon Sr.
figured that
Copy !req
683. you have to have a person
representing every
Copy !req
684. nationality of people,
and that was his idea.
Copy !req
685. Pedro Morales,
Bruno Sammartino,
Copy !req
686. Rocky Johnson,
The Wild Samoans,
Copy !req
687. Mr. Fugi,
Bob Backlund.
Copy !req
688. In that whole list, I named
how many white people?
Copy !req
689. One.
Copy !req
690. But right now, let's begin
the festivities without
Copy !req
691. further ado,
let's go up to ringside.
Copy !req
692. When Vince Jr.
took over, well,
Copy !req
693. there wasn't as many
minorities on top.
Copy !req
694. He came with the Hulk Hogan,
Copy !req
695. Roddy Piper, Bret Hart.
Copy !req
696. Well, he had a
pecking order for Dog.
Copy !req
697. He needed a Black
wrestler, but that,
Copy !req
698. he had to push the
Caucasian wrestler.
Copy !req
699. It's not racism, it was
a business decision.
Copy !req
700. He wanted to get the
white fans to come more.
Copy !req
701. Vince McMahon didn't
use him like Bill did.
Copy !req
702. I wish he had,
because if he'd a...
Copy !req
703. opened that door, I think
he could have been
Copy !req
704. one of the biggest
stars in the WWE.
Copy !req
705. Do I think it affected
him? Absolutely.
Copy !req
706. And I think that was when
Copy !req
707. the drugs got really bad.
Copy !req
708. Dog started off with pot.
Copy !req
709. And, that led to cocaine.
Copy !req
710. He just smoked it.
Y'all call it "crack" now.
Copy !req
711. Once he got into the coke,
Copy !req
712. the coke took him.
Copy !req
713. He had to have it
every day.
Copy !req
714. JYD didn't care
where he was at.
Copy !req
715. He'd just pull
it out and do it.
Copy !req
716. On airplanes and
everything, man.
Copy !req
717. He got me in
trouble one time.
Copy !req
718. They were doing a TNT thing
that Vince used to do.
Copy !req
719. He said, "I want you to make
sure he gets there."
Copy !req
720. They got a Learjet
for him, a nice jet.
Copy !req
721. So, when Dog landed,
Copy !req
722. they got the guy with
the limousine to
Copy !req
723. pick us up at the airport.
Copy !req
724. Dog sent the limousine
out to the ghetto
Copy !req
725. to get some dope.
Copy !req
726. So, they're driving around.
Copy !req
727. "Dog, we gotta get
to the building. Dog!"
Copy !req
728. Finally, he found somebody
to sell him his dope.
Copy !req
729. The limousine driver had
no idea what was going on.
Copy !req
730. So, Dog asked, "Is it
okay if I smoke?"
Copy !req
731. The limo guy, he thought
he means cigarettes.
Copy !req
732. Dog said, "Yeah." He
takes out his crack pipe,
Copy !req
733. and he started smoking
crack in the car!
Copy !req
734. All of a sudden,
the limo driver's like...
Copy !req
735. He don't know
what the hell to do!
Copy !req
736. We finally get Dog there,
but we late.
Copy !req
737. Which means I
missed my match.
Copy !req
738. Dog forgot one thing that
Thunderbolt Patterson
Copy !req
739. was trying to teach all
of us Black wrestlers.
Copy !req
740. Thunderbolt used
to always say,
Copy !req
741. "You can't do what the white
man do and keep your job."
Copy !req
742. By the late 1980s,
The Junkyard Dog
Copy !req
743. is consumed by a
devastating drug addiction,
Copy !req
744. and its consequences
are felt
Copy !req
745. far beyond the
squared circle.
Copy !req
746. He didn't look good.
He would talk, but...
Copy !req
747. he wasn't that cheerful
Dog that we knew.
Copy !req
748. He just wasn't
the same person.
Copy !req
749. He didn't care
what happened.
Copy !req
750. He didn't care at all.
I mean, he just...
Copy !req
751. Oh, my God, yeah,
he was out of control.
Copy !req
752. I remember him sitting there
in Madison Square Garden.
Copy !req
753. And loading a pipe up,
Copy !req
754. and hitting it right in
front of everybody.
Copy !req
755. I go, "JY, what are you
doing, man?" He goes,
Copy !req
756. "---- them,
they don't even know,
Copy !req
757. they don't even
know what it is."
Copy !req
758. You know?
Copy !req
759. He was just-
Burnt.
Copy !req
760. Oh, yeah, the Dog came
out of his hiding place.
Copy !req
761. Started to begin to move
up and down
Copy !req
762. that ladder once again.
Copy !req
763. And like I said,
time and time again,
Copy !req
764. if a Dog needs a
bone to chew on...
Copy !req
765. Of course, he had
a drug problem.
Copy !req
766. Everybody was
taking drugs back then.
Copy !req
767. I can't throw no stones.
Copy !req
768. I- A to Z- I just
never had that
Copy !req
769. addictive type personality.
Copy !req
770. But Dog,
he struggled with that.
Copy !req
771. He sank into it. It was
more and more, and...
Copy !req
772. You know, there was no
talking him out of it.
Copy !req
773. No-shows, the way
I understood it.
Copy !req
774. But when you
miss shows, you,
Copy !req
775. you scare 'em
when you do that.
Copy !req
776. I didn't have
no idea that he was
Copy !req
777. leaving or
anything like that.
Copy !req
778. And that's the way the
wrestling business,
Copy !req
779. it was like that.
Copy !req
780. They didn't give you
two weeks' notice.
Copy !req
781. Tell you, "Hey, leave."
Copy !req
782. A guy can't go
buy groceries.
Copy !req
783. He don't have
any money.
Copy !req
784. And you haven't
seen your family.
Copy !req
785. It's disheartening.
Copy !req
786. He definitely
had a great soul.
Copy !req
787. If JYD's story isn't
a cautionary tale,
Copy !req
788. then people aren't
paying attention.
Copy !req
789. Fired from the WWF,
Copy !req
790. and struggling to
make ends meet,
Copy !req
791. JYD turns to the
independent circuit,
Copy !req
792. performing in small
high school gyms
Copy !req
793. for diminishing crowds.
Copy !req
794. After hitting rock bottom,
JYD's fortunes change with
Copy !req
795. an offer to join World
Championship Wrestling,
Copy !req
796. where his old friend
and mentor, Bill Watts,
Copy !req
797. is now in charge.
Copy !req
798. And Bill Watts came in, and
he knew that he could make
Copy !req
799. his mark if he recaptured
that Black superstar.
Copy !req
800. He was likeable as hell.
Copy !req
801. Everybody there
was happy to...
Copy !req
802. try to resurrect him,
shall we say.
Copy !req
803. I knew that his days of
working on the top were over.
Copy !req
804. He didn't know that.
Copy !req
805. He didn't seem like he
wanted to admit it, but...
Copy !req
806. you ain't the same guy.
Copy !req
807. And, you look bloated.
Copy !req
808. You're not JYD right now.
Copy !req
809. And at some point, you hold
out hope that somebody that
Copy !req
810. you love and respect, well,
they'll see the light.
Copy !req
811. But let me tell you something-
as my daddy would say,
Copy !req
812. "They gotta carry
their share of the water."
Copy !req
813. I get mad when I pull up
stories about it.
Copy !req
814. First thing people say,
"Drugs this, drugs that."
Copy !req
815. You got a, a guy that
came from nothing,
Copy !req
816. and they pulled him out
of that environment...
Copy !req
817. give him all this money.
Copy !req
818. I'm not making excuses,
but yeah, he did drugs.
Copy !req
819. Whoopee. I mean,
everybody got demons.
Copy !req
820. I'm pretty sure the last time
I seen him was like 1995,
Copy !req
821. and I came in and he
was just mumbling.
Copy !req
822. That was about it, man,
Copy !req
823. and I went back to where
he was sitting, they said,
Copy !req
824. "He's in the ring."
I went out to watch,
Copy !req
825. they were ringing the bell,
it was over.
Copy !req
826. Lasted about two minutes.
Copy !req
827. That's all he gave 'em.
And he came back,
Copy !req
828. grabbed his money and
walked out the door.
Copy !req
829. Didn't say bye, didn't say hi,
didn't say nothing, man.
Copy !req
830. And I know exactly
where he was at.
Copy !req
831. He was wanting to get outside
so he could get high again.
Copy !req
832. Been there.
Copy !req
833. I've been there.
Copy !req
834. If he had his drug fix,
he was perfectly happy
Copy !req
835. to go into isolation until
he needed the money.
Copy !req
836. Then he'd work a show
Copy !req
837. for some independent
promoter for the cash.
Copy !req
838. You see the pain
that you get
Copy !req
839. from the cocaine is because
Copy !req
840. you look in the mirror
every now and then,
Copy !req
841. moment of clarity, and
you'll look at yourself and
Copy !req
842. you'll see just how far
down you've gone.
Copy !req
843. That's painful and,
it's also shameful.
Copy !req
844. And those two things,
man, will kill you.
Copy !req
845. In just over a decade,
Copy !req
846. JYD goes from
headlining the Super Dome,
Copy !req
847. to working a part-time
job at a local Wal-Mart.
Copy !req
848. Dog is used to being
treated a certain way for
Copy !req
849. a long period of time,
from his football career
Copy !req
850. to his wrestling career.
And then all of a sudden,
Copy !req
851. all that is taken
away from him.
Copy !req
852. You have to get used to
being treated...
Copy !req
853. like shit, pretty much.
Copy !req
854. When I hit that spot,
I tried to commit suicide.
Copy !req
855. I was homeless for
a year and a half.
Copy !req
856. I slept in the park.
Copy !req
857. Didn't shower, or bathe,
or brush my teeth,
Copy !req
858. or comb my hair for
a year and a half.
Copy !req
859. That was right
before Saba Simba.
Copy !req
860. So, Dog was going
through the same thing.
Copy !req
861. He didn't save his money.
Copy !req
862. Dog was very
careless with money.
Copy !req
863. He was making 8,
$10,000 a week!
Copy !req
864. It just came so easy to him,
Copy !req
865. and all of us
felt the same way-
Copy !req
866. not just Dog-
that it would never end.
Copy !req
867. We figured this
would never end,
Copy !req
868. that we always gonna
be making money.
Copy !req
869. We always gonna
be big stars.
Copy !req
870. This would never end.
Copy !req
871. So, the phone rings one day
and I get a call from JYD.
Copy !req
872. I hadn't talked to him
in quite a while and,
Copy !req
873. he knows by now that,
you know,
Copy !req
874. I've had this change in
my life and that I'm now,
Copy !req
875. not only doing school
assemblies, but I'm,
Copy !req
876. I'm speaking at churches.
Copy !req
877. If you're a wrestling fan,
you may have
Copy !req
878. remembered the
Million-Dollar Man.
Copy !req
879. How many in this room would
say you remember that guy?
Copy !req
880. Yeah! Woo!
Copy !req
881. And he said, "I want you to
encourage those kids
Copy !req
882. you're talking to...
Copy !req
883. not to do what I did."
Copy !req
884. And I was just like, "Wow."
Copy !req
885. I did what he
asked me to do.
Copy !req
886. That sin, that one that goes
away for a week or a month,
Copy !req
887. and then it rears its
ugly head and it's back...
Copy !req
888. or maybe even worse,
it's there every day.
Copy !req
889. Drugs, alcohol, addiction.
Copy !req
890. Here's a guy who was
the biggest name.
Copy !req
891. And, succumbed
to drugs.
Copy !req
892. And of course, yeah,
it was probably
Copy !req
893. one of the last
conversations we had.
Copy !req
894. The last time he came home
Copy !req
895. was for his daughter's
graduation.
Copy !req
896. He was coming
from Mississippi.
Copy !req
897. Dog was real proud
of his daughter.
Copy !req
898. He wanted to make sure
that he was at
Copy !req
899. his daughter's graduation
because,
Copy !req
900. I mean, she would
want him there, too.
Copy !req
901. I mean, that's- you gotta
feel real proud if your dad
Copy !req
902. is The Junkyard Dog and he
walks into your graduation.
Copy !req
903. It don't get
no better than that.
Copy !req
904. So, he was certainly
determined to get there.
Copy !req
905. From where he was
living out in Mississippi
Copy !req
906. to Charlotte,
North Carolina
Copy !req
907. is about a 9-hour
drive one way.
Copy !req
908. He misses the graduation.
Copy !req
909. We're all at my mom
and dad's house.
Copy !req
910. He shows up. Of course,
he apologizes,
Copy !req
911. you know,
that he was late.
Copy !req
912. He holds my son
for the first time.
Copy !req
913. My son was six months old,
but he looks like
Copy !req
914. a little miniature baby
doll in his hand.
Copy !req
915. And he held him for a while,
but that was
Copy !req
916. the last family photo
taken of him.
Copy !req
917. And then, later on,
you know, he said,
Copy !req
918. "Well, I'm gonna get
back on the road."
Copy !req
919. So, I met him at
this gas station,
Copy !req
920. and there's something on
the driver's side door.
Copy !req
921. I'm like, "Dude, what's that?"
And he goes, "Puke."
Copy !req
922. "Boy,
so you had a long night,
Copy !req
923. last night." So, I didn't
think nothing else about it.
Copy !req
924. And I said, "You gonna
drive all the way back home?
Copy !req
925. You're not gonna pull over
to sleep or anything?"
Copy !req
926. He said, "Nah, I'm just
gonna go ahead and drive on,
Copy !req
927. you know,
make it straight home."
Copy !req
928. I didn't know that
was gonna be
Copy !req
929. the last conversation
I had with him though.
Copy !req
930. On June 1st, 1998,
Copy !req
931. after leaving a
celebration of his
Copy !req
932. daughter's high
school graduation,
Copy !req
933. The Junkyard Dog sets out
on the long and
Copy !req
934. fateful journey home.
Copy !req
935. We talked 10, 15 minutes,
right before he was getting
Copy !req
936. ready to go, he's done
gassing up and everything,
Copy !req
937. and he's...
Copy !req
938. I said, "Well, man," I said,
"when you coming back down?"
Copy !req
939. He said, "Man, you know,
I'll be back on the 4th.
Copy !req
940. Be back on the 4th." I said,
"Alright, well, cool, man,
Copy !req
941. I'll see you then," you know,
dapped each other up.
Copy !req
942. He gets in the car, and
he drives away, I go home.
Copy !req
943. The next day, I get
the call at work,
Copy !req
944. and it's my mom.
And, she's...
Copy !req
945. you know, very upset,
and I just- she said,
Copy !req
946. "Sylvester got
killed last night."
Copy !req
947. I was like, "Wait, what?"
And, she...
Copy !req
948. rambled something, and I
could barely make it out.
Copy !req
949. I just heard, "Car,
he got killed,"
Copy !req
950. and she hangs up
the phone.
Copy !req
951. And, according to
the authorities,
Copy !req
952. the accident happened
that morning.
Copy !req
953. So, he drove all through
the night, all night long.
Copy !req
954. He fell asleep, there was
no skid marks.
Copy !req
955. You can see where the
car veered off the road,
Copy !req
956. and it flipped
several times.
Copy !req
957. There's no way he could've
been wearing his seatbelt
Copy !req
958. 'cause he was too damn
big for that seatbelt.
Copy !req
959. He shouldn't have been
in that car anyway.
Copy !req
960. And, it was head trauma.
Copy !req
961. According to the autopsy.
Copy !req
962. A lot of time when you're
on the drugs, you know,
Copy !req
963. you're up three or
four days sometimes.
Copy !req
964. You don't get no rest until
sometime the body just says,
Copy !req
965. "Hey, I don't want no more.
I'm shutting down."
Copy !req
966. So, that's what the
body has to do to you
Copy !req
967. for you to
really go get rest.
Copy !req
968. So, I think Dog just
hadn't had no rest,
Copy !req
969. and the body
just shut down.
Copy !req
970. It broke my heart.
Copy !req
971. And I'm sure it broke
the world's heart.
Copy !req
972. He loved Ted Dibiase.
They was like brothers.
Copy !req
973. And, I know it
broke Ted's heart.
Copy !req
974. I was very hopeful then that
he was gonna get better.
Copy !req
975. Next thing I know,
he's, he's had a...
Copy !req
976. car wreck.
Copy !req
977. I got a phone call when
he had the car wreck.
Copy !req
978. To tell you the truth,
I was happy for him.
Copy !req
979. 'Cause I was still caught...
Copy !req
980. in the trenches.
Copy !req
981. And I knew that
he'd escaped.
Copy !req
982. I knew that the
pain was over.
Copy !req
983. I started crying 'cause I
realized I never got to tell him
Copy !req
984. how much I loved him.
Copy !req
985. The period of time
I was around him,
Copy !req
986. he was such a
dynamite human being.
Copy !req
987. The fact of how we ended
Copy !req
988. our relationship was
not near as important
Copy !req
989. as the time
we spent together.
Copy !req
990. JYD was a neat,
special person.
Copy !req
991. And then you also see
the terrible battle
Copy !req
992. that's fought when guys get
something that
Copy !req
993. gets a hold of them that
they can't whip.
Copy !req
994. Alright, so, this is
his grave site here.
Copy !req
995. One of his last
wrestling pictures.
Copy !req
996. And, just below him,
this is his daughter.
Copy !req
997. What actually, what it was,
was a ruptured heart valve.
Copy !req
998. It actually
literally exploded.
Copy !req
999. There was nothing they
could've done anyway.
Copy !req
1000. And then, she passed away,
a few minutes after that.
Copy !req
1001. And she was 31 years old.
Copy !req
1002. My mom comes and she puts
flowers and everything.
Copy !req
1003. Never misses a
holiday, birthday.
Copy !req
1004. My mom finds it
very difficult
Copy !req
1005. to talk about Sylvester...
Copy !req
1006. because she was so
close to him and,
Copy !req
1007. she raised Latoya
as her daughter.
Copy !req
1008. It's just traumatic for her
to go back down memory lane,
Copy !req
1009. so to speak.
I think it just opens up...
Copy !req
1010. too many wounds that probably
haven't fully healed.
Copy !req
1011. He was a trailblazer, man.
Copy !req
1012. I'm sure a lot of those
young guys
Copy !req
1013. appreciate the path
that you laid for 'em.
Copy !req
1014. Yes, he did, he paved
the way for all of us.
Copy !req
1015. I mean, any time he came out,
you always remember JYD,
Copy !req
1016. and you will remember him
when you left that arena that
Copy !req
1017. night so, Dog's legacy is
he's just one of the greatest
Copy !req
1018. Black stars in pro wrestling.
Copy !req
1019. JYD did more to
create awareness...
Copy !req
1020. and acceptance within
the closed world,
Copy !req
1021. very prejudiced world
of pro wrestling.
Copy !req
1022. He stepped to the
front of the line,
Copy !req
1023. and he stayed in the front of
the line for many, many years.
Copy !req
1024. The charisma was natural,
and real, organic.
Copy !req
1025. And that's what separated
him from the pack.
Copy !req
1026. Oh, the crowd saying,
"Who that? Who that?
Copy !req
1027. Who that, who that?
Copy !req
1028. "Who that gonna beat
that Junkyard Dog?
Copy !req
1029. Who that?"
This guy is a true hero.
Copy !req
1030. So, I prefer to remember
him in the happier days.
Copy !req
1031. And not anything else.
Copy !req
1032. He broke the barriers.
Copy !req
1033. I mean, the fans are
just all over you, Dog.
Copy !req
1034. It gets pretty hectic at times,
but I enjoy it, man,
Copy !req
1035. I love it. But see,
in this business,
Copy !req
1036. I let them get close to me.
Copy !req
1037. He always had a moment
for a kid, or a grownup.
Copy !req
1038. He had that charisma that
made him a god to those that
Copy !req
1039. loved him, and there
were so many people
Copy !req
1040. that loved him,
Black and white.
Copy !req
1041. Yeah, hard to find anybody
say something bad about JYD.
Copy !req
1042. He was a stand-up guy in a
business where
Copy !req
1043. there's not a whole lot of
stand-up guys.
Copy !req
1044. An honour to introduce
Sylvester Ritter,
Copy !req
1045. The Junkyard Dog, to the
Wrestling Hall of Fame.
Copy !req
1046. I'm hoping that he's
remembered for
Copy !req
1047. good stuff that he did
in the industry.
Copy !req
1048. LaToya Ritter will be
the recipient of
Copy !req
1049. the award for her dad.
Copy !req
1050. While I'm standing here,
it's important to me-
Copy !req
1051. and I know it would be
important to him-
Copy !req
1052. to introduce his sister,
Christine Woodburn.
Copy !req
1053. He called her "Big Red".
Copy !req
1054. I didn't get to speak to
JYD very much at the end,
Copy !req
1055. but again, that last
conversation when he said,
Copy !req
1056. "Tell my story...
Copy !req
1057. when you're talking
to those kids."
Copy !req
1058. That told me, I said,
"The guy that I knew is back."
Copy !req