01:57
We got into a famous argument here where I chose Bert Reynolds to win in every situation over
02:05
Bert's bigger, Bert played ball, Bert's cars better than every car that Stallone ever had
02:14
Dude, he took a whole Kogan, Thunderlips.
02:16
He took out Thunderlips.
02:20
Well, we actually, we met you there at Road America and you arm wrestled our lead painter
02:26
and then came across, you guys were arm wrestling on a cooler.
02:31
After you destroyed him, you came across and slapped him in the face.
02:34
It's on video, dude, and he rolls over and then kicks over or somebody's like Honda
02:41
Yeah, it's all like Honda Spree.
02:43
Now that would have gone viral.
02:47
I got to go out as Goldberg.
02:48
Even though I'm 500 years old, I got to figure out the same stuff.
02:51
I'm not going to show up for my last match and some different stuff.
02:54
I'm not going to do it.
02:56
I don't know what about it for maybe a millisecond, but that's a cop out.
03:00
So it just pushed me to train that much harder to make sure I didn't have any cheese flopping
03:06
When did you first get interested in cars?
03:09
I mean, my dad was a Jaguar guy, take me to school in an XJS.
03:12
Brother had an XKG V12 convertible, British racing green, black interior four-speed GTXs
03:18
and chargers and freaking corn ads and they were mostly Mopar guys.
03:22
I number one followed suit, number two, I thought it was cool.
03:25
You're a Mopar guy.
03:26
I mean, there's inherently aren't like the best driving muscle cars.
03:30
How do you like that driving experience when you get into this?
03:33
That's not what your definition of driving muscle cars is.
03:40
Another episode of Oil and Whiskey.
03:41
This week, the man, the myth, the legend, none other.
03:44
The only person that we've ever had, I think that goes by just his last name and
03:47
everybody knows who the fuck he is.
03:50
Goldberg, welcome to the podcast.
03:53
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04:42
It's an honor to privilege, gentlemen.
04:45
I can't believe I hadn't been on beforehand, but it's good to be here.
04:49
I'm glad we could finally do this.
04:50
You've been quite busy over the past few weeks.
04:54
We had a pretty big milestone in the life, a retirement, a speech, a match, a speech
05:03
that maybe you may not get cut short, and we had the unfortunate, untimely loss of Terry
05:10
So you've had a lot going on.
05:12
Yeah, and that's just the tip of iceberg.
05:15
That's just the part that you guys in the general public know.
05:19
Everybody's got problems, and they seem to have compiled and multiplied over the past number
05:27
It wasn't the best month in the world, but again, it's about adapting and overcoming,
05:31
and everybody's got issues.
05:35
The legacy that Terry left behind is one thing.
05:37
It stands on its own.
05:38
There's no doubt about that, and my retirement match, that was fun.
05:45
Five months of eating like a freaking bird, that was, I'm glad that's kind of over with,
05:52
but then again, it's remorseful that the career quote-unquote is over, but when you're a wrestler,
05:57
you're never really freaking retired.
05:59
I mean, yeah, entertainer's an entertainer, regardless of the stage.
06:06
So what was the fitness regiment like getting ready for that, and how different was it
06:13
from when it was a daily thing?
06:16
Oh, it was a daily thing.
06:18
I mean, it's always a daily thing with me because I'm addicted.
06:21
I mean, I'm sitting in my garage.
06:23
I'm sitting in my office.
06:24
It's in my garage that's, you know, the top floor is a freaking 3,500-square-foot gym
06:30
that I built, you know, because I don't train at public gyms, number one.
06:35
And number two, it's convenient.
06:37
Therefore, you never have an excuse, right?
06:39
So with me, it's an addiction.
06:42
I do it all the time, whether it's on season, off season.
06:45
It's just the severity of my dedication, you know, the, you know, doing the kickboxing
06:53
and doing the just training, a completely different regiment to, you know,
06:59
put your underwear on in front of millions of people at 58 years old.
07:05
I mean, it's a whole different deal.
07:07
But I mean, I'm an athlete.
07:09
I'm a competitor and I like to hold myself to a very high standard.
07:15
And as long as that standard is, as long as I come close to that,
07:20
then I should be cool with everybody else.
07:21
So it's just me, man.
07:24
It's just what I do.
07:25
But yeah, getting ready, I had to kick it up to a different level.
07:30
And it's tough to kick it up to the level that you need to when you're 58
07:36
and you've got injuries and all kind of deficiencies.
07:40
But, you know, it's all good.
07:41
I did what I had to do and it was fun.
07:44
And I actually had a good time in there for for a little bit, you know,
07:48
What was the dietary regiment like?
07:51
What was the caloric intake for that getting ready for that?
07:54
Probably like 12,000 a day.
07:59
It was crazy. Wow, that's that's some eating.
08:03
Oh, yeah, man, I'm my own freaking chef.
08:06
I mean, I'm not going to discount my wife cooking, but I mean,
08:09
she cooked one of the nine meals that I made.
08:16
Yeah, it's I mean, I wake up in the morning and I have my huge breakfast
08:21
and I replicate it before I go to bed after I train.
08:24
And I try to eat every two and a half hours, three hours in between
08:29
and as much as humanly possible.
08:31
So it's a it's a it's a it's a job.
08:36
You know, it's it's not a like food.
08:38
I don't look at food as a delicacy anymore.
08:41
I don't get them, you know, I don't get super excited off of,
08:45
you know, a wonderful restaurant compared to how I used to because
08:49
it's just fuel. It's just fuel.
08:54
You know, what was that?
08:56
What was staying on the fitness and the dietary stuff?
09:02
Football, prime SEC, Georgia Bulldogs, eating and fitness
09:09
and then NFL and then also into pro wrestling.
09:12
Did that stay the same or did you have to tweak things along the way?
09:16
I had to tweak things, but I mean, you know, playing in Georgia,
09:20
it didn't matter what the hell I mean, I'm so young and it didn't matter.
09:23
I can see freaking anything and everything.
09:29
I've always been a guy that had to eat a lot to gain weight.
09:32
I've always been light, you know, compared to my, you know, peers.
09:38
The guys that do what I do, the football realm as a defensive lineman.
09:42
I wasn't that big, but so I've always had the job of having to eat.
09:47
But, you know, it's so good. I like food and it's it's good.
09:51
It's been it's it's different.
09:52
It's I wouldn't say that it's much different from football
09:58
to wrestling to whatever else I'm doing
10:03
because I still am the same guy walking around and doing all of them.
10:08
I don't really change myself for any of it.
10:10
So it I mean, I don't know.
10:15
I mean, there's a certain amount of of angst
10:18
you get, no matter what you're doing,
10:21
if you're doing it in front of millions of people
10:23
and you're wearing your underwear, right?
10:26
So I mean, you know, that that just adds a little different incentive to it.
10:30
So there are contract negotiations at the beginning
10:34
on that and what your uniform was going to be.
10:37
You know, I'll be honest with you, I didn't give a shit one way or another.
10:40
It didn't matter. I never thought about changing.
10:43
I never I'm Goldberg.
10:45
I got to go out as Goldberg, even though I'm 500 years old.
10:48
I got to I'm not going to show up for my last match
10:52
and some different stuff. I'm not going to do it.
10:54
Right. I mean, I thought about it for maybe a millisecond,
10:56
but that's a cop out.
10:58
So it just pushed me to train that much harder
11:01
to make sure I didn't have any cheese flopping out of my bag.
11:06
So I mean, it's it's true, though, but I worked my ass off
11:11
and and I enjoyed it and learned a little bit along the way.
11:16
And, you know, it was interesting before we go down into wrestling path
11:22
and eventually cars and stuff, which is, you know, kind of the point.
11:25
But I want to go into a little bit of football stuff
11:27
because I got I got some questions and you're from Oklahoma, right?
11:32
Born and raised in Oklahoma.
11:34
And why in that time, this is what late 80s, early 90s, right?
11:40
Why Georgia over Oklahoma?
11:43
Why Georgia, most importantly, over Alabama, especially in those times?
11:47
Right. And two older brothers who played in the
11:50
played division one and one went on and played for a little bit.
11:55
The NFL and they both went to University of Minnesota.
12:00
Completely different story line
12:06
than, you know, growing up and playing at your home school, right?
12:12
I grew up in Tulsa.
12:13
So Norman is, I don't know, an hour and a half, two hours away from Tulsa.
12:19
It's not the I mean, I was a huge football fan, but.
12:26
I didn't have the and I grew up in Oklahoma, but I didn't have the allegiance,
12:30
I guess, that most kids growing up in Oklahoma being football fans.
12:34
But I mean, for one reason or another, maybe because of my brothers.
12:37
When my brothers are much older than I am,
12:39
they're 70 in the 70s now.
12:41
And when I was a kid, all I knew was University of Minnesota football.
12:47
And so I really didn't have the passion for Oklahoma when I was growing up.
12:50
So that and in ninth grade, my great uncle, we had,
12:56
we were at a family reunion and my great uncle pulled me aside
13:00
and asked me where I was going to go play football in college.
13:03
And I told him I really didn't know.
13:06
And he said that he wanted me to go to Alabama
13:08
because one of his best friends was the coach.
13:11
And then his best friend, unfortunately, passed away before I became a senior.
13:17
And his his other best friend was Vince Dooley.
13:22
And he said, you're going to Georgia.
13:24
And I'm like, OK, but what I'm going where?
13:27
I mean, I've never even been there.
13:28
And so I took a trip there and then I called him and I said,
13:31
I'm going to Georgia.
13:32
And it was it was awesome.
13:35
I mean, I could have gone just about anywhere.
13:37
And the trip that I had in Georgia and the experience that ultimately
13:42
I had after five years of being there was, I mean, I don't know how you can top that.
13:46
But it was it was it was an unbelievable time.
13:51
But I didn't I remember having Switzer on the on the couch, you know,
13:55
in our house and Jimmy Johnson when he was at Oklahoma State.
14:02
I can't remember the coach for Arkansas at the time.
14:05
And, you know, all the all the schools that were surrounding states
14:11
wouldn't offer that was from Missouri.
14:13
And but Georgia was kind of a fluke because I was old home again.
14:19
But there was a reason behind it.
14:22
Well, in that time, if you couldn't have played for for Bear,
14:25
I mean, Vince Dooley is his who'll go down in history.
14:28
I was a great family, great man, great dynasty legacy.
14:32
I mean, he's as close to the bear as you would get.
14:36
Well, I'm extremely happy to hear you say that because he was like a second father to me.
14:41
And you you just described him to a T.
14:44
And he was one unbelievable human being.
14:51
Father, husband, coach, all of the above.
14:55
He was a wonderful guy, just absolutely wonderful.
14:59
Other than the fact that one time he thought that I was running drugs.
15:03
It turns out you weren't.
15:06
You got to keep it.
15:07
It was the strangest accusation I've ever had in my entire life.
15:11
I came out of a completely left field because one of my my oldest brother lives
15:15
in Miami and he has been extremely successful in his life.
15:19
And he from time to time would send me on a private plane.
15:24
Or I just I'd go to Miami a lot when I was at Georgia.
15:28
And he came to every game.
15:33
Dooley thought he put to, I don't know,
15:35
it was the strangest thing I've ever heard of.
15:37
Like, brother lives down there, dude.
15:39
I go there every freaking week and it's the weirdest thing.
15:41
But Miami and private jets and all that.
15:44
It's got to be in that era.
15:46
I mean, it has to be only be one thing.
15:49
It's got a little cocky feel to it.
15:50
Yeah, it's got a little like a white testarosa in there.
15:54
And usually you got it all going on.
15:56
Well, I was I've never met the Dooley's,
15:58
but I grew up in Alabama most of my formidable years there.
16:03
I mean, obviously my grandparents rabid Alabama fans and turned down.
16:08
Well, in that time of growing up,
16:10
I lived and died by sports radio, particularly Paul Feinbaum show, right?
16:15
So live Paul Feinbaum's radio show there for several years.
16:19
Vince Dooley's wife was a regular caller.
16:22
So they had a segment with Vince's wife every single day and call in.
16:26
It was like a 30 minute long deal with Paul.
16:28
And I got Paul's obviously a huge Vince Dooley fan.
16:31
And you just you've got to know via a radio show,
16:35
basically the family and the stories and so like that.
16:37
And it just always, even though they were Georgia, I'm Alabama.
16:40
You just one of those ones.
16:41
It's kind of the way we feel about Dabbo Sweeney.
16:43
You know, I'm not a Clemson fan, but Dabbo's got some Alabama ties
16:47
like Dabbo's a good guy, you know.
16:48
And it's just it's weird how you from a college football fan.
16:52
I wouldn't go that far, but now.
16:54
Yeah, Dooley was awesome.
16:58
And truth be told, my brother, my son was committed to he was going to commit
17:03
to Alabama before he committed to to Colorado.
17:08
The Saban thing kind of changed stuff.
17:10
Well, yeah, there was the same day he was going to commit.
17:14
Literally, it was hours after he left the house, told me he was commit.
17:18
And so I'm like, you've got to be kidding me.
17:20
But, you know, it saved us a lot of time.
17:22
It's a heartache, you know, who knows?
17:24
Everything happens for a reason, everything.
17:27
But I can tell you that after we went to his camp and he met Gage and we all
17:32
talked that yeah, he was I knew he was his days were numbered in the
17:37
college football coaching.
17:39
Just you could just feel it.
17:42
He was already fed up with what was about to happen.
17:46
That takes us to, I mean, current, but also past.
17:51
So your son, Gage, seen some social media pictures.
17:55
He's he's got a couple inches on you, doesn't he?
18:01
It's the way the angle was.
18:04
Three is what six one now.
18:06
But he we're about the same height, I guess.
18:08
The kids, they, I don't know.
18:12
But he's going to Colorado.
18:14
He's playing for Coach Prime in.
18:17
I want I want to hear some some Dion Prime stories.
18:21
It's very interesting that you played with Dion and now your son's going to
18:27
play for Coach Prime.
18:30
I don't seem like the guy that would hang with Dion.
18:33
I was a I was a huge I'm a huge Dallas Cowboys fan.
18:37
So you love him at one point and you hate him.
18:40
I loved him when he beat the shit out of Andre Ryzen.
18:43
That was that was a fucking awesome time.
18:47
And then Andre Ryzen played on the yeah, and I played with yeah.
18:52
Andre had that was the strangest thing I've ever seen his girlfriend
18:55
burned down his house.
18:56
Then two days later, he invites her to the Christmas party.
19:01
Yeah, I never understood that.
19:03
If she was what from TLC, right?
19:07
The left eye Lopez?
19:08
The left eye Lopez.
19:11
I got those were the day.
19:13
So how is how different is Dion now as a coach and a father than when it was
19:21
Well, I mean, he's the same person, but he's a completely different part.
19:25
He's a different person at a different part of his life, right?
19:29
Or he's the same person at a different part of his life.
19:31
He I mean, I'll be perfectly honest with you.
19:34
I don't deal with him during the season off season.
19:38
When I go to practice and I'll mess with him every once in a while.
19:42
But when he's in that coaching setting, I don't I don't dare get near him.
19:46
I wouldn't want to deal with all the people.
19:49
I mean, you can deal with enough people as it is.
19:51
You don't want me coming up talking because my son plays on your team
19:55
and we used to hang, you know, I mean, at some point when he's done
19:59
or when it's away from a coaching setting, then and the conversation won't
20:05
be skewed by my son being, you know, a player on his team.
20:09
Yeah, I will talk again differently.
20:12
But I just I feel as though I have to give him a lot of space and he deserves it.
20:17
And whether he deserves it, that's how I feel.
20:19
It's I'm not that parent that's down his throat going, hey, man,
20:22
you know what, my son should be freaking playing.
20:24
Yeah, that's the best way to do it.
20:26
You get fills on a different level, dealing with.
20:31
Kids baseball and we get to hear all the stories
20:34
about the overzealous parents on the. Oh, I did that.
20:38
Yeah, baseball is the worst thing in the world, especially in tech.
20:42
The wild expectations and disconnect from reality of how bad your kid is.
20:47
Is that what it is?
20:48
In 3200 bucks for the summer league to have your kid be that good.
20:53
Really? Yeah, we got a solid team playing a lot of the opposing teams
20:59
and hearing the parents go crazy and yelling at umps and it's it's nuts.
21:03
You look back like kids 11, like he's not going to go pro.
21:06
This is supposed to be fun still at this age.
21:08
Yeah, we hear everything, you know, we've all been.
21:12
Guilty of being overzealous at times.
21:15
But I mean, my God, some of these people, man, it's just they need to chill.
21:19
They live vicariously through their kids, either that or they're trying to.
21:23
I don't know. There's so many different reasons for people.
21:25
Don't have any sense anymore.
21:29
Oh, one more question on your son and we'll get back to it as I I mean,
21:34
he's a big dude, right? And he's going play D1.
21:39
That kid bends to 25 24 times.
21:43
Well, that's what that's where I'm going with.
21:44
Like, that's moving.
21:45
You still got you still got old man, dad strength, right?
21:48
But there's there's it comes to time like it's it's like you got to show.
21:53
You're can he take you yet?
22:02
But he thinks he can.
22:03
And that's all that matters first and foremost.
22:05
But secondly, he's always got the respect for me that even when he can, he won't.
22:12
I hope I hope it's great.
22:15
It's coming really soon.
22:16
You know, he might hold a vendetta and wait till, you know,
22:19
you crack in like late seventies or eighties.
22:22
Just a lot of things I have never taught.
22:25
He won't learn, I don't think willingly.
22:29
So I want to go through a little bit of mental headspace
22:35
time in career wise.
22:38
This is not a comparison whatsoever, but we had we had Brennan Chabon
22:43
and we became, you know, pretty close friends.
22:45
And there's some stuff that really wanted to know he's got a very interesting take
22:48
because of how many things that he's gone through that just didn't work out,
22:52
not work out, so to speak, in, you know, I guess the public size,
22:57
but work out in what goals he set for himself.
23:00
And I'm really interested in goals you set for yourself being football.
23:06
I mean, one, if you go to play D one, if you're going to play for
23:09
the University of Georgia, you're thinking about going to play
23:13
for the University of Georgia and being the best that there is.
23:15
And then what comes after that?
23:16
You're not thinking about career.
23:18
You're thinking about being the best college football player.
23:20
I would just have to assume.
23:22
And what take us through the heads?
23:24
There's some changes in life.
23:26
I'm very interested in the mental side of things.
23:31
Oh, I mean, you know, this has become more apparent the older I get,
23:34
because now I'm a teacher instead of a pupil.
23:37
But I apply the same shit to the same to every fricking thing I do.
23:42
I try to be the best at everything I do.
23:44
And there's no reason to put any effort towards anything
23:48
unless you want to be the best at it.
23:49
So whether I've been a television host, whether I've worked on cars,
23:54
whether I've been a husband, whether I've played D one football,
23:57
whether I played for the Falcons, whether I wrestled,
23:59
whether I've been an actor, I've tried to be the best at all of them.
24:03
Now, granted, I've tried harder at others than others
24:07
because of my passion or lack thereof.
24:10
But, you know, I don't think anyone should be doing anything
24:14
that they're not trying to be the best at.
24:16
If you are, then you're a sheep and you're a waste, I believe.
24:21
But, but again, someone always told someone told me
24:23
that there's always got to be people's slice of meat.
24:28
Right. But I'm not that guy.
24:29
He'd be a damn good meat slicer, though, to your point.
24:32
If that's what you're going to do, do it the fucking best.
24:34
A thousand percent, you know, like my son, if he goes on and plays
24:39
at first, he's got to hit the fricking field.
24:41
He's he's I think he's got one tackle last year, you know,
24:45
when he registered, but for, you know, you have to set your goals.
24:48
First, they have to be realistically.
24:51
They have to be realistically placed.
24:53
And, you know, you have to be got to be driven, man.
24:56
You got to be you got to be logical about your path.
25:02
And at the end of the day, if he goes any further in football,
25:08
I'll be as proud if he doesn't go any further in football,
25:11
I'll be as proud of him as if he was a 10 year old pro.
25:16
It doesn't matter because the work ethic that he's
25:19
that he possesses, the man that he's become,
25:22
the manners that he possesses, the fact that he's on the honor roll
25:27
the dean's list, excuse me, in college, it's a dean's list, not an honor roll.
25:31
But, you know, I mean, the kids don't really well for himself.
25:35
And social media wise, he's going out on his own doing his thing
25:38
and he's not on daddy's back, you know,
25:41
piggybacking on anything and he wants to do it all on his own.
25:45
And he's a wonderful kid.
25:48
I mean, even if he wasn't my kid, I would say the same thing about him
25:51
because he's he's just great.
25:54
And, you know, it's.
26:01
It's a it's a it's a different world we live in now.
26:07
It's a just especially, you know, college football landscapes
26:10
a completely different world now.
26:11
It's oh, I don't need to please dear God, don't get me started on that.
26:16
The portal, the portal is worse than the NIL is needed.
26:20
But the portal is absolutely sinful.
26:24
Yeah, no commitment.
26:29
And how can you have, you know, cohesiveness on a team
26:32
when every year it's a rollover on your roster?
26:36
Yeah, it's it's interesting from a if you apply it to a business standpoint
26:41
of employees, employer relationship, right?
26:44
And training and buy in and the system.
26:48
And when you have other schools, you know, potentially it's like
26:53
everybody's going to leave because they think the grass is greener.
26:55
And I wonder back about, you know, days you think about,
26:58
you know, Vince Dooley days in Georgia, Georgia, Georgia, two days.
27:02
I'm sure we're not.
27:05
The most conducive to your to your little soul, your little spirit, right?
27:09
And the the interpurses, you don't know shit about anything
27:15
when it comes to what you have to sacrifice to be a member of a football
27:20
team at a major college school back in the eighties.
27:25
They had to talk to you a little different.
27:27
I'm sorry, you know, but they don't know jack shit about it.
27:31
But just think if the if the you know, there was always that
27:34
I mean, everybody wanted to die, I'm sure, at that point.
27:36
But there was also the like, well, you know, if I'm if I'm going to quit,
27:40
like I'm looking at a year and a half of start over and trying to find another place.
27:45
If any of those times nowadays, like it's just like, oh, it's hot today.
27:49
I don't this fuck this. I can't I'm tired of this weather.
27:52
I'm tired of this coach. I'm tired of this going to Minnesota.
27:54
I'll be at it. I'll be at a new school tomorrow playing like that.
27:57
It's too easy for me and you don't have to sit out.
27:59
Yeah, it's ridiculous.
28:01
The whole fucking world's gone soft, dude.
28:04
Well, that's not that's a whole other conversation.
28:08
But yeah, it's the football thing.
28:10
And there's no such thing as a student athlete anymore, you know,
28:13
which I think is the biggest thing, not just because I have a kid this 19.
28:16
But, you know, these younger kids, they don't have a pot.
28:19
They don't have a chance in hell compared to these seniors
28:23
that are transferred from school to school starting, right?
28:27
I would be doing the same thing.
28:29
Maybe if I was in their shoes, I'd try to prosper and try to feed off
28:33
of, you know, what's available to me.
28:34
But at the end of the day, it's it's not fair for these kids, man.
28:38
It sucks in the on the football side when you were playing.
28:42
I mean, you were you defensive tackle.
28:46
You come out, I mean, that position by nature is
28:50
I'm going to I'm going to knock somebody's head off, right?
28:52
I'm going to I'm going to I'm going to pancake some guys.
28:55
I'm going to get to the quarterback and I'm going to make him
28:58
scared the next snap.
29:01
Are you is that a are you team like team, team, team?
29:05
Are you I'm just going to do as long as I do what I'm going to do
29:09
and everybody else does what they're going to do then as a team?
29:12
Not that one's better than the other, but there's different
29:14
mentalities in that of like.
29:18
Well, I mean, when I played at Georgia, we had the shirts
29:21
that were famously said big team little me on it, right?
29:25
And so, yeah, I'm always a team player, always.
29:27
No matter what, you're only as good as your weakest link.
29:30
Number one, number two, I like the team atmosphere.
29:33
I don't I don't like doing shit on my own.
29:38
Oh, I like playing a role.
29:39
I like leading people.
29:40
I like I like the camaraderie ship.
29:44
I like all of that kind of stuff, man.
29:46
No doubt the team concept is fantastic.
29:49
I mean, you guys got it right there in your podcast.
29:53
How does how do you transition that into pro wrestling
29:58
when you're selling your brand?
30:00
It's tough. You can't.
30:02
So that's that's one reason why it was difficult
30:05
because you have to be selfish in a way.
30:08
But then you can't be too selfish and then you can't, you know, be
30:12
the introvert and not, you know, there's a lot of things
30:16
that play into it, but it was difficult for sure.
30:20
No doubt, especially since I am that team guy.
30:23
Yeah, I get asked like I got a lot of questions for Goldberg,
30:26
but you're you're talking about like pancake guys,
30:28
and you got all these techniques and things.
30:30
Was that is that how you played?
30:32
No, I just know the football.
30:33
Is that how you played Madden on N64?
30:35
Was that your techniques?
30:38
OK, I know the game.
30:39
I know the game. I know the sports guy.
30:41
Yeah, I was trying to not get pancaked.
30:46
But moving into the wrestling stuff, man, I'm not a sport.
30:49
Like I and I respect the holiday or your career
30:51
and that you played pro. I'm just not a sports guy.
30:53
Football is the I know which one it is.
30:55
There's the round ones and there's the long ones and all that.
30:57
But, you know, at five, five hundred and fifty pounds,
31:01
I'm not exactly built for that type of shit.
31:04
But I was a fucking huge Goldberg wrestling fan, man,
31:08
like a little bit like fanboying at the moment.
31:11
Because when you hit the scene there, that was like,
31:14
and when did you start?
31:15
Because I was I must have been a teenager,
31:17
but you coming out and spearing the shit out of guys
31:19
was like the most electrifying thing I'd ever seen.
31:22
It's like 97 is when I started in November
31:25
when I had my first match, televised match.
31:28
And, you know, you asked me a minute ago
31:31
about having dreams and about accomplishing goals.
31:34
Yeah, I mean, I my goal was play in the NFL.
31:36
I got the ability to do that for a short period of time.
31:40
And then I had to figure out what the fudge
31:42
I was going to do with the rest of my life,
31:44
you know, when my dream got taken away
31:46
and the wrestling for 50 different reasons was an option.
31:50
And, you know, I found what I was looking for
31:56
in the football world and the wrestling world
31:59
as far as being, you know,
32:02
somebody that people could look up to
32:04
and, you know, just being that guy, you know,
32:06
I had to use a different vehicle to get what I wanted.
32:11
I was lucky enough to have an opportunity
32:13
to have two different options in a lifetime.
32:16
So I couldn't pass up the second one.
32:18
And I'm very appreciative of the opportunity
32:21
to have even been given that.
32:23
So how do you get into the wrestling?
32:26
Thank you very much, man.
32:28
How did you get into the wrestling from football?
32:30
Do you have connections or is that something you wanted to do?
32:33
How did it get presented out of the the idea get started?
32:37
I had a roommate at the Rams called named Kevin Green
32:41
who did the best Kolkhoge impression.
32:44
And he'd do it in practice.
32:45
So we were roommates and he always told me
32:49
that I'd be good at wrestling and I should do it.
32:51
And at University of Minnesota, back in the day,
32:55
my in the late sixties,
32:57
my brother had a house with with flair in Minnesota.
33:02
That must have been a while.
33:03
My other brother had a house with Ken Pitera in Minnesota.
33:08
So, I mean, there's always been ties there.
33:10
I've always been around it.
33:13
Living in Atlanta, playing for Georgia.
33:14
I'd go out all the frickin bars, you know,
33:17
at the late in the early nineties in Georgia, late eighties.
33:21
Yeah, late eighties and middle eighties and late eighties.
33:25
And you see everybody in Georgia.
33:27
Atlanta was the place to be. I mean, I have a.
33:31
I was in north of Atlanta in ninety.
33:37
Four ninety five ninety six and my buddy Corey,
33:40
you've heard all this Corey story.
33:42
So Corey lived in Shambly, which is a stone's throw
33:47
Buford Highway, right?
33:49
And that's where main event was.
33:52
So and I remember him telling me stories.
33:54
And his dad was always jacked and lifted and slight that was,
33:57
you know, old country boy and would tell stories about,
34:02
oh, you know, that like, you know, stings down there.
34:05
That stings place, you know, and that's all the rest was.
34:07
We remember going there at like 14 and 15 years old,
34:11
We would like hang out in the parking lot to see all the rest of us.
34:14
And it's like, they're there.
34:15
You're like getting in their cars.
34:16
So that was a that was a little secret little place of there are some
34:20
stories come out of that little gym.
34:22
Yeah, because I trained there when I was when I played for the Falcons.
34:27
And that's when I really crossed paths with him.
34:29
And I almost got in a fight with Bagwell and the whole Buf Bagwell.
34:36
One day I was working out in there and.
34:40
I thought they were making fun of me.
34:41
And I know it's a it's a famous story, but I wanted to kill all three of them.
34:48
I was about 300 at the time off season at the Falcons.
34:52
It was a different experience, different time in my life.
34:54
But they didn't appreciate the fact that I bent their bars
34:57
when I did shrugs in there.
35:01
You generally don't like mention that to the guy that just bent the bar
35:04
doing shrugs like, right?
35:06
That's because you're moving some fucking weight.
35:08
I don't I wouldn't think that there's anybody in there
35:11
that's willing to just back down.
35:12
I think there's a lot of there's a lot of testosterone flowing back.
35:18
Yeah. Yeah, you had a bunch of different guys in there.
35:22
Natural and unnatural testosterone, but it's regardless.
35:25
It takes whatever it takes.
35:27
It was a crazy time. Good God.
35:29
Back in those days was nuts.
35:32
That's where when did the car thing?
35:35
I mean, when did you first get interested in cars?
35:37
The amount of stuff that you've got in your interest
35:39
that couldn't have came at a late age.
35:41
It had to be an early thing.
35:43
Oh, yeah. I mean, my dad was a Jaguar guy.
35:46
And my brothers used to take his stuff out all the time
35:49
and hot rod it and bring it back and fix it up before they came back.
35:55
And so they became inherent mechanics and they became car guys.
35:59
And obviously I had to just follow suit.
36:02
I mean, my dad used to take me to school in an XJS, you know,
36:06
brown fricking Jag, you know, and brother had an XKE V12 convertible,
36:12
British racing, green, black interior, four speed.
36:16
My my buddy's older brothers, when I was in grade school,
36:21
you know, drove around and GTXs and chargers and fricking Corinettes
36:27
and, you know, everything, they were mostly Mopar guys.
36:32
And so, I mean, I number one followed suit.
36:37
Number two, I thought it was cool.
36:38
My first car was a 76 Trans-Am, and I haven't stopped ever since, man.
36:45
And I was lucky enough to get to a point in my life where I could,
36:48
you know, purchase my first car.
36:52
I really am appreciative of that opportunity and I don't take it lightly.
36:57
And they mean a lot to me.
36:58
Every car has got a story.
37:01
You guys know that, and I've got a small little place here in California.
37:07
Thank God it's not in California, in Texas.
37:10
And, you know, it's something that I dreamed up and took four years
37:14
to build there in COVID and got, you know, a number of cars here.
37:18
And, you know, you always want to have more and you're always working
37:21
on different things.
37:21
And, you know, I got two buddies behind these walls working on my Cobra
37:25
right now. I just jumped off of it.
37:27
So I'm just enjoying it, man.
37:30
And it started really early, you know, started ever since I remember.
37:35
My dad used to go 150 in his Jag.
37:39
We used to go to the lake and he used to tell me that he was
37:42
cleaning out of the spark plugs and, you know, he never forget stories like that.
37:47
Just cleaning them out, cleaning them out.
37:49
Did the car, did the cars ever live as a goal with your professional
37:53
career that you were into cars?
37:55
Obviously, no, they're not cheap.
37:57
Did you push yourself or was there a like, did you have your eye on that?
38:01
That's a thousand percent.
38:02
We all have our eye on certain things, right?
38:05
And if you have that checklist on the board, like a car, like you're
38:08
working on your car, right?
38:09
And you're you're marking off the fricking ignition box
38:13
and the coil and the fricking plug wires or whatever.
38:16
You're marking everything off.
38:17
And yeah, I mean, that's that's yeah, that's part of the part
38:21
of the reason why I work my ass off.
38:24
To enjoy the things that the finer things in life, and that's the ability
38:29
to have all the cool cars that I thought were cool when I was a kid
38:32
and replicate that now and update them and do different things with them.
38:36
And yeah, a hundred percent.
38:38
That's that's a huge driving force of mine.
38:41
What was the first purchase or the first check off?
38:44
Like you get finally get a little bit of money and you're like,
38:47
I'm going to go splurge and buy this vehicle.
38:50
Money was a 360 Ferrari, my brother's a Ferrari collector
38:54
and he doesn't have a 360, but I wanted a I wanted a DB DB nine.
39:00
I think it was DB set.
39:01
I don't know what which one was out.
39:07
But I was way too big for it.
39:08
And I wanted a Porsche, but I didn't really.
39:13
I really wanted a Ferrari.
39:15
And at the time, the 360 had just come out and it was surprisingly huge.
39:20
It was just like a big go car.
39:21
And I went down to Beverly Hills and it was the first Ferrari ever bought
39:26
and first time I made a purchase like that.
39:29
And it was cool, man.
39:32
The problem was that I expressed a lot of interest
39:38
in a twin turbo course that they had there at the same time.
39:42
And it was a toss up between the two and unbeknownst to me,
39:46
two weeks later, the Porsche shows up on a flatbed in my house in San Diego.
39:52
And the manager wanted me to just drive it for a couple of weeks.
39:58
He knew what he was doing.
39:59
The salesman right there.
40:00
He knew what he was doing and I bought it.
40:04
That's the car I traded to Jesse James a long time ago.
40:07
But yeah, yeah, that was the first one.
40:11
First one I did like that, you know, then I bought the Yankee,
40:14
the Yankee Camaro, then you know, you buy the Lawman.
40:17
I mean, there's there's different kind of goals that you reach, right?
40:22
And fortunately, I mean, I bought, you know, the transit,
40:28
the SCCA, Trans-Am 70 and a half, the Z-28, the Trans-Am car.
40:32
It's a good looking car.
40:33
It's a great looking car, man.
40:35
But they're all they're all cool as shit
40:37
because they all have stories behind them.
40:38
That car, so I'm in Japan wrestling.
40:43
And Bob Johnson, you guys have to know Bob Johnson.
40:48
So Bob, we know Bob.
40:51
Bob got me into it like back in the day.
40:54
Bob, Bob took me to Barrett Jackson for the first time.
40:56
Oh, it's dangerous.
40:57
You can have a whole podcast on Bob's stories.
41:01
You can have a whole year of podcast.
41:05
But long story short, I'm wrestling in Japan.
41:09
Bob is at Barrett Jackson.
41:10
There's a 68 Yanko RS SS Grotto Blue that's at that's at Barrett.
41:18
And I sent him there basically on my behalf to get that car
41:24
because I had looked at it already and I just was going to be in Japan at the time.
41:29
And so very long story short again, three o'clock in the morning,
41:33
he calls my agent up, agent calls me.
41:37
I'm I run up to my agent's room because he's on the phone with with Bob
41:43
and Bob got me the car.
41:46
And as we were on the phone, the lawman comes up on stage.
41:52
And I guess when they started it, they blew all the plants off the stage.
41:57
I'm told me about it.
41:58
And he goes and I said, well, what car is it?
42:00
And he goes, it's the lawman.
42:01
And before he even finished, I said, buy it because I knew the story on that car.
42:06
Yeah. And not many people did.
42:11
And then the car after that was the frickin Z28.
42:16
And so I got a three for on a roll on a roll.
42:20
But what's so cool about the Z28 was that, you know, I'd live 15 minutes
42:25
from Ernie Elliott and Bill Elliott's shop in Dawsonville.
42:29
And they restored that car the last three years at their shop
42:35
for I can't remember his name.
42:40
He was third in command at Barrett.
42:45
Gary Bennett. Oh, yeah.
42:47
So that car was Gary's car.
42:49
And so he sent it there to restore it.
42:52
And it was there for three years.
42:54
I used to take a 70 national record holder
42:57
challenger down their drag strip all the time.
43:00
And I'd see of them restoring this car.
43:01
I never thought that I'd buy it.
43:03
I never really looked at it.
43:05
And then here it is, the third car on stage.
43:07
And so I bought it.
43:08
I paid less than they did to restore the damn car.
43:13
Every time I hear that somebody mentioned Bob Johnson's name,
43:17
I just hear that voice.
43:23
Oh, Bob, we just saw Bob a couple of weeks ago.
43:27
We were in Columbus.
43:29
He taught me a lot about the business.
43:30
I got it. I got to tell you, Bob.
43:32
I mean, man, he taught me a lot about the business.
43:37
Everything about the business in the beginning, he was my mentor.
43:42
Yeah, he'd teach you a lot about life.
43:43
Everything he'll teach you about anything you want to know.
43:46
Just ask him, he'll teach you.
43:52
The the law man, that's a crazy.
43:54
That's a crazy story about those cars.
43:56
They did what, six of them?
43:58
Or no, the law man's the boss.
44:01
They did two of them.
44:03
They did like six or eight of the mock ones.
44:05
OK, were the cars that, you know,
44:08
the servicemen and women would drive on the courses.
44:11
But the the the four two nines were the
44:14
one was in the one was left in the states and one went on the tour.
44:18
And they were the parade vehicle, right?
44:20
So one was the press vehicle in the states.
44:22
And the other was the one that basically,
44:25
you know, like the VA, the guys in the VA
44:28
who couldn't take part in the the the tour itself.
44:32
They could at least go to the fucking wall
44:34
and look out the window and see this boss.
44:38
Four, two, nine, just ripping down the tarmac, right?
44:41
So it gave them a little bit of the red, white and blue that they needed.
44:45
And funny story, I mean, and.
44:49
I just learned of it a little while ago.
44:52
But when they when that first car was crushed,
44:55
so there were two of the four two nines,
44:57
the first car was crushed on the USS Coral Sea.
44:59
They dropped the cargo container on top. Oh, wow.
45:02
And so I've got the only one left.
45:04
And when it was crushed, they sent
45:07
orders back to the states for the second one.
45:09
Well, the second one wasn't built.
45:11
And the rumor is through.
45:15
Very reliable sources that will come out on my TV shows.
45:19
Come comes out on Paramount Plus here.
45:22
It's called Carlectables here soon. Oh, sweet.
45:31
was the owner of that car before I had it
45:34
is the one that told me the story.
45:36
But when they sent orders back to the states
45:40
for the second law, man, it wasn't.
45:41
There wasn't a second law, man.
45:43
It wasn't put together.
45:44
And they only had 72 hours to get it done.
45:51
Evidently, there was a car that was donated
45:54
with the serial number 429 and that car was owned by Carol Shelby.
45:59
And that's the car that's sitting about 50 feet away from me.
46:04
So, yeah, I mean, that that was that was the best part of my television series.
46:10
And I think back on it is just that information itself, you know,
46:14
because that's just I mean, the legacy in and of itself is pretty freaking cool.
46:17
But to know that that Carol had something to do with that,
46:21
you know, I mean, that's that's pretty sweet.
46:23
Tell us about the show. What's the show going to be about?
46:26
Oh, man, it's, you know, I built this
46:28
monstrosity of a garage 15,000 square feet over a four year period of time.
46:33
And I've got it's it's pretty bare, right?
46:37
And so originally, the show was me going out
46:40
and and looking for items that I can trade for to hang in my garage,
46:46
whether it's a twenty thousand dollar neon sign.
46:49
Or, you know, you look and look behind you.
46:53
Cool car guy stuff. Yeah.
46:55
Yeah. And it evolved into me hitting my cars out for other cars.
47:02
So at this time of my life,
47:05
I'm making sure that everything in my garage is usable.
47:10
Everything can be taken off a lift within five minutes.
47:13
Everything is very accessible, because I've been I've had places
47:16
in the past where it took me 20 minutes to get to a car.
47:19
And it's just you don't it's a pain in the ass.
47:22
So you never drive that car.
47:24
And so everything that I have now, I want it to be a manual.
47:31
And no matter how cool the things that I have other than the law man,
47:36
no matter how cool it is, I'm swapped.
47:39
I swapped it out on this TV show for for manual transmission vehicles.
47:44
So a little spoiler, I traded a 70
47:48
Coronet RT six pack car numbers match and one of 18 triple black
47:55
for a sixty four and a half convertible
48:00
Corvette four speed three twenty seven car
48:05
always wanted one, you know, so
48:08
and it gave me the opportunity to go drive, go do some cool stuff
48:11
that that I haven't done before, whether it's I went to
48:18
to DSR and put a DSR 1200 together that's going in my 70
48:24
Coronet and traded them out something for that motor, right?
48:29
So it was a cool deal.
48:32
It was a lot of fun, a lot of fun, I got to say.
48:35
When's that drop in that sounds like something something I'd be interested in checking out
48:40
should be within the month.
48:41
Man, CBS is going to start pumping it out there.
48:43
And it's a paramount plus thing and sweet.
48:47
And I'm looking forward to it, man.
48:49
We I got to drive with the with Hennessy in that F five.
48:54
And my neighbor picked me up in his helicopter on my driveway.
48:59
And one of the deer came out and tried to attack the helicopter.
49:05
Things that could happen here in Texas, but it was fun, man.
49:09
It was basically at the end of the day, it's just me and cars
49:12
and the cool people that I met along the way.
49:14
And whether it's a roadkill nights up there doing the burnout contest
49:20
and Radford's, you know, demon 170 or whatever the hell it was, man.
49:24
I went to I went to Alabama at the at the
49:30
ATF for a demonstration down there.
49:33
My buddy, Matt Kutcher, demonstrated a big demonstration,
49:36
an explosive demonstration for them.
49:40
I get to blow some cars up and, you know, just the fun stuff
49:44
that we like to do. That's awesome.
49:45
You've been you've been synonymous with with car entertainment,
49:48
car television for for quite a while.
49:50
I remember even back in the day when the when the first season,
49:53
the first episode of the Optima Ultimate Streetcar Challenge
49:57
when that launched, I was actually in Hollywood at the theater
50:01
when they did the launch.
50:03
Yeah, for that first deal, you were there.
50:05
I think it gave you a roll tide and ran away quickly
50:08
or something like that.
50:09
I don't remember his spirit is great.
50:11
But yeah, it was a series, man.
50:13
That was a lot of fun.
50:14
I got a 70 tram out of that.
50:18
I was bitten on a car.
50:19
I was doing the longest yard.
50:22
I drive up from San Diego to L.A.
50:25
Every morning and I drive back.
50:27
And then one morning I drove up and before I left,
50:31
I put a bid on a 70 trans and blue, white guts,
50:34
you know, white stripe down the middle,
50:37
non-numbered, non-matching car.
50:40
And I got back one day and I freaking won the car.
50:43
And long story short, again, I got all the sponsors
50:46
to jump on board at Optima.
50:49
And then we built the car for Wanda, my wife,
50:52
who's a stuntwoman, and she drove in it.
50:55
It was just a great experience.
50:57
A fun fact about the Optima Streetcar Challenge
51:00
that we actually we met you there at Road America
51:03
and you arm wrestled our lead painter
51:06
and then came across.
51:08
You guys were armwrestling on a cooler.
51:10
After you destroyed him, you came across
51:12
and slapped him in the face.
51:16
And he he rolls over and then kicks over
51:18
or somebody's like Honda Spree.
51:21
It's all like this.
51:23
Now that would have gone viral.
51:25
We kept it for us somewhere.
51:28
Oh, that's awesome.
51:29
It was armwrestling.
51:31
They just came across like that.
51:34
Oh, he was like our big guy.
51:36
You know, big Mike, small Mike.
51:43
Are you playing any of the pro touring stuff?
51:45
Are you sticking more original numbers matching rare cars?
51:48
What's your garage?
51:50
And I'm I'm putting to get so in the show.
51:52
I so I'm giving away a lot of shit.
51:56
So Mark Warman, I picked up the phone called Warman.
51:58
I traded him a 68 GTX 440 four speed numbers
52:02
matching car, not restored
52:06
for a 70 Corvette body, right?
52:09
And the Corvette body is up in Wisconsin now
52:13
where it met with the Salvaggio chassis
52:16
and it's waiting for the DSR 1200 that I put together
52:21
on an earlier episode of the show
52:23
and then Tremac did their thing
52:25
and then it's all coming together up at Salvaggio's place.
52:30
So and then I built a 68 M715 on a TRX frame
52:37
for a Magnaflow booth, hopefully.
52:41
You know how that is.
52:42
Trying to get a car ready for anything,
52:45
especially Seema's like fricking pulling teeth
52:47
out of an alligator.
52:49
It's coming up, man.
52:50
Oh, it's not on top.
52:52
It's not got the email today.
52:56
It's right around the corner.
52:57
I don't even want to think about it.
52:59
We've still got a whole booth design
53:00
and like nine cars and there's a lot of stuff.
53:04
Oh yeah, I can only imagine what you guys have to do.
53:08
So I'm not complaining.
53:09
The only year that we've never been behind
53:11
was the COVID year when they canceled it.
53:13
It's the only year that we've never been.
53:15
But we were behind right up until the end.
53:16
You still have to pay for it.
53:19
How's that stack up?
53:20
You talk about driving your muscle cars
53:23
and you're a Mopar guy.
53:24
Mopars inherently aren't like
53:25
the best driving muscle cars.
53:29
How do you like that driving experience when you do this?
53:31
It depends on what your definition of driving muscle car is.
53:33
You have to be comfortable in a car first and foremost, right?
53:39
It's just the Mopar thing has always been there
53:41
because they've always understood about us big lumberjack.
53:47
That's part of it, you know.
53:55
but on the other side of that,
53:58
I'll tell you that the only time,
54:00
I'm extremely claustrophobic.
54:02
And the only time I'm not claustrophobic,
54:05
what I'm claustrophobic is when I'm racing.
54:10
Because what's claustrophobia mean
54:12
when you're in a race car?
54:14
It means you're freaking great.
54:17
So I'm superseded any fright or any fear whatsoever
54:22
from claustrophobia when I'm in a race car.
54:23
It's funny how that works, right?
54:25
But, man, I just love room, you know,
54:29
like look at the new Corvette.
54:30
I mean, I can't take advantage of that flat plane crank
54:33
because I can't, I can be ported to that car,
54:35
but I have to be airlifted out, you know, the GTD.
54:40
I don't know how big that is.
54:41
That's a car that's on my list.
54:42
I'd love to get one of those.
54:44
I'd love to take advantage of, you know, just be,
54:48
I'm a Mopar guy because, you know,
54:50
a lot of the power and a lot of the size
54:52
and it's kind of goes together.
54:56
I can't see out of the Corvette.
54:58
I mean the Corvette, the Camaro.
55:02
European cars, I can't get in most of them.
55:04
They're too skinny.
55:07
But nowadays, you got the like the Lucid's
55:09
and what is it, the Jamera that's a two door,
55:14
actually like a four door that's a two door,
55:16
you know, size-wise that fits, you know, four, six, six guys.
55:20
And my first and foremost thing is about comfort, truly.
55:25
And then I go from there.
55:28
It wasn't enough to supersede the fact
55:30
that the new Dodge Chargers is a piece of work.
55:34
The fact that it's so big and comfortable,
55:36
it didn't, it still wasn't enough
55:39
to make it palatable for me.
55:44
I think we're going to see some new stuff
55:46
coming from Mopar here real quick.
55:49
Well, you know we are.
55:50
I mean, here X is the first
55:53
and then it's just going to be,
55:54
it's going to be the domino effect.
55:57
And Tim didn't come back first and foremost
55:59
to listen to anybody, number one and number two
56:02
to do things any differently than he did in the past,
56:05
which was an unbridled, unapologetic way
56:09
of putting horsepower in front of the consumer.
56:13
It's funny how on the OEs like they were,
56:18
you had a cup, you had one,
56:21
maybe Ford, maybe Ford,
56:23
maybe a little bit of a Chevrolet
56:24
where they were kind of like
56:26
talking out both sides of the mouth, right?
56:28
You know, we're going hard on the EV thing,
56:32
On the backside, they're kind of like,
56:33
all right, don't worry,
56:34
like we're still going to do some kind of cool stuff,
56:37
they kind of had predicted which way
56:39
the election was going to go.
56:40
Like they had said,
56:42
We're going to put all our eggs in this basket.
56:43
It was, it's funny to see
56:45
like the whole landscape kind of shift
56:48
without planning because like,
56:50
oh, it went a different direction
56:52
than what we had hedged our bets on.
56:53
So now it's like, you know what?
56:56
How fast can we get big horsepower?
56:59
These guys are beating our ass.
57:00
We're going to do this.
57:03
It was also logic, right?
57:06
I mean, serious, serious.
57:08
Well, yes, it should have been.
57:09
It never would have been logic
57:11
if the election would have gone the other way.
57:14
But who in their right mind is going to run a car
57:17
and only run a car that can't be charged in cold weather?
57:23
That's very inefficient
57:25
if it can charge in cold weather.
57:29
Where the grids can't support what is existing,
57:34
let alone what a grid of electronic vehicle charging stations
57:40
would cause to it, you know?
57:42
So I mean, it's just an illogical way of freaking thinking.
57:44
Well, 100%, but at the same time it wasn't,
57:47
the long term was not about the suppliers coming on board
57:55
with the customer base.
57:57
It was about the customer base having to bend
58:00
to what the supply was.
58:01
So they didn't really care about,
58:04
you're just going to change your way of life.
58:05
Like they don't care about you're not being happy
58:08
You're just like, you're not going to drive that much
58:09
or you're just going to conform to what's available.
58:14
is that even though they've tried to erase history
58:18
by them trying to do something like that,
58:20
we showed them that not everything is going to work like that.
58:26
There were the SEMA crowd, right?
58:29
You know, the people fighting for the emissions deal,
58:33
the Leno Law and all this kind of stuff
58:35
which we should be fighting for
58:37
is that's our love and our passion.
58:40
That's the crowd, you know, that's as passionate
58:42
as the people are about automobiles.
58:46
At least a certain generation is.
58:48
Well, that's the problem with pushing so hard
58:50
is because like a slow fade, you know,
58:55
the automotive industry, your blue collar people,
58:58
like you're generally too busy
59:01
one to pay attention, number two,
59:02
to like do anything about it
59:04
because you're working, right?
59:05
So it's not like you can just stop what you're doing,
59:07
you know, fill out a petition or go protest or something like that.
59:10
So a slow fade where it's one of those other things,
59:12
you're like, ah, that's kind of stupid.
59:13
I hope they don't go through that.
59:15
That allows things to go a different direction.
59:17
Now, a quick push of like.
59:19
That's not telling somebody what to do.
59:21
Yeah, putting a deadline on it and be like, guess what?
59:23
You know, 2030, no more gas cars.
59:26
And we're doing this,
59:27
now it's kind of like, oh,
59:29
I could maybe take off work tomorrow to go protest this
59:32
because this shit's real.
59:33
Now you're putting real deadlines on it.
59:35
That's when people started really, really waking up
59:38
and it started creeping down into,
59:40
even regardless if you're a car person,
59:42
when it's kind of like, oh wait, I can't buy that anymore.
59:45
I mean, lawn guys, I gotta buy an electric backpack blower.
59:49
That's just never gonna work.
59:51
It's just freedom, it's choice.
59:53
You know, Dodge and I talked to Kinescas about it.
59:56
The best thing they ever did
59:57
was the Super Bowl commercial with Harrison Ford.
00:01
Best thing they ever did.
00:02
Because even the playing field over the past year or two
00:05
when manufacturers, certain manufacturers,
00:09
most of the manufacturers were at least telling the public
00:12
that they had a choice, right?
00:15
Dodge didn't do that.
00:18
And that's where they really screwed up.
00:21
And they saw how badly they screwed up
00:24
once they played that commercial
00:26
and saw the good that it did
00:29
and the healing that it did overnight, I believe.
00:34
That they'd finally pulled their head
00:36
out of the fricking sand, you know?
00:38
Every time that started getting too serious
00:41
with the electric mandates,
00:43
I always just pictured myself like,
00:45
Stallone and Judge Dredd.
00:47
You know, when he's ripping that Boss 420,
00:49
it's all these electric fucking future cars
00:52
and there's Stallone just ripping gears
00:54
in this gas-eating muscle car.
00:58
Is, can you reference Stallone
01:00
in just about any conversation?
01:04
He was very formidable.
01:07
He shaped a young...
01:09
Only five and a half feet tall, though.
01:12
I relate, you know.
01:14
There's the connection.
01:17
We got one more and then we'll go to standard questions.
01:19
How did car casts come about?
01:22
You and Matt do a really great job on the podcast.
01:27
It's O.L. and Whiskey.
01:32
I appreciate it, man.
01:34
You know, Matt asked me if I wanted to do it.
01:35
I think Carola wanted to do a little different show
01:38
and Matt asked me if I had any desire to do it.
01:42
And man, I love Matt the Death and anytime.
01:45
I like the show because it's a range.
01:48
You can get a certain thing from Matt
01:50
and you can get a certain thing from me.
01:52
And the fact is, is that, you know,
01:53
I'm never gonna waver.
01:54
I'm always gonna be that predictable guy.
01:57
And there needs to be that guy
01:58
because there's a lot of like-minded people out there,
02:01
I believe, but there also are a few people
02:04
that want to drive a Ford Lightning
02:06
and, you know, care about the Mach-E
02:10
and stuff like that.
02:13
It's nice to have conversations with them.
02:15
It's nice to have a friend that likes to lean on that side,
02:18
because we can have, you know,
02:21
playful, jabbing conversations at each other.
02:26
And, you know, I sat still for a little while.
02:30
I came out of the barracks, man,
02:35
like full-fledged when God's finally decided
02:38
to come back and do their thing
02:40
and scrap, you know, what their exit plans were.
02:44
So, you do a great job, both of y'all do.
02:47
I always wondered, like, the chemistry's really good
02:50
or you do a great job of playing the ying and the yang.
02:56
We look forward to the show.
02:57
Now we come to standard questions.
02:58
Standard questions brought to you
03:00
by the Standard & Wheels, HRE.
03:04
First and foremost, I'm going to the favorite first,
03:07
because I think it's gonna set the tone.
03:08
You don't favorite car movie?
03:10
No, I'm going to our favorite question.
03:13
That is your most memorable law enforcement
03:21
I get a lot of them.
03:25
As car guys generally do.
03:29
300-pound wrestlers also probably have a little more than that.
03:33
I was chasing our quarterback with a brick
03:35
and I turned the corner and a policeman
03:39
who shined his flashlight in my face, I mean, it's not.
03:43
I escaped from the back of a patrol car
03:46
while my teammate talked the policeman out of arresting me
03:50
and he was gonna let me go anyway and I had already escaped.
03:54
Is that probably it?
03:56
Is that a graceful escape or is that like
03:57
a kick the door off the hinges escape?
04:02
That's your limitation.
04:09
I would kid up a new number one spot.
04:11
Oh, I promise you it's the one and only person
04:15
to escape that way.
04:17
Yeah, we've had some stories.
04:18
Nobody's nobody's bad enough to kick the door off.
04:22
I made that video of just a door exploding out.
04:25
Um, favorite car movie.
04:30
Smoky and the bandit, I got to go with that
04:32
because Bert's such a dude, man.
04:34
I mean, there's there's so many great car movies.
04:38
I mean, Bullet, Good Jesus.
04:40
I mean, you can't, I mean, you know what?
04:42
Those two are tied.
04:43
Bullet and Smoky and the Bullet Smoky.
04:45
Did you ever meet Bert Reynolds?
04:47
Oh, Jesus Christ, Bert.
04:52
We did the longest yard together.
04:54
Oh, I forget about the longest yard.
04:57
My wife worked with Bert for years
04:59
before I even met Bert.
05:02
And he turned me on to my agent.
05:06
Yeah, Bert and I, we had a lot of fun together.
05:09
He was a wonderful man.
05:10
I never got the pleasure of meeting.
05:13
I've, lots of movies revolve around Bert Reynolds.
05:17
But more importantly, there's only two people
05:20
we've talked about before.
05:20
There's two people in this world right now
05:22
that I wish I could have hung with and been friends with.
05:28
One's Whalen Jennings and the other's Bert Reynolds.
05:31
And anybody that knows either one of those
05:33
that probably tells you a lot about me
05:34
and my interest, but it's, there's.
05:37
What was our argument, Bert Reynolds versus Stallone,
05:41
We've, we got into a famous,
05:43
we got into a famous argument here
05:44
where I chose Bert Reynolds to win
05:47
in every situation over Stallone.
05:57
Bert's cars better than every car
05:59
that Stallone ever had in every movie.
06:03
Apollo Creed was bigger.
06:07
Dude, he took a whole Kogan.
06:09
He took out Thunder Lips.
06:13
Well, you don't have to go any further than that.
06:17
He didn't get a flight as he wants.
06:18
He can't get in the car.
06:19
You saw him body slam Hulk Hogan.
06:22
Dude, it happened on TV.
06:26
That was like in the late 80s.
06:33
Ray Mysterio Jr. was a bad ass.
06:35
Hey, Stallone, Stallone's great.
06:39
Great, great actor.
06:47
They're two totally different people.
06:50
I mean, as even as far as like that's concerned,
06:52
they're both up here, but they're both up there
06:56
for completely different reasons.
07:02
They weren't similar in any way, shape or form.
07:05
And I mean, come on.
07:09
Look at the body count.
07:10
Just look at the body count and tell me.
07:15
That one I'll give you probably.
07:17
You have to give him that.
07:20
There's no contest.
07:26
You already did first car.
07:29
We'll go best piece of advice you've ever received.
07:31
Hogan told me to, well, I mean, you know,
07:34
I'll say it's this one because it's fresh in my mind.
07:37
And Hogan always told me that when
07:40
I thought I was going slow enough in a wrestling match,
07:45
So I mean, well, wrestling business is concerned.
07:48
That was the best piece of advice I ever got.
07:50
And since Hogan just passed, I'll
07:52
dedicate that question to him.
07:55
I was I received a lot of great advice
07:58
from my father and my brothers as a kid.
08:02
Path of least resistance is probably the biggest
08:04
thing that I go by.
08:07
And treat people the way you want to be treated.
08:09
And they're all cliches after that, but they're
08:12
cliches for a reason.
08:16
Last, but not least, going wild car because he already
08:19
did the first car in in that first car.
08:25
What's the song you're listening to the most when you're cruising?
08:33
Yeah, that's that's the key at that time.
08:41
Life in the fast lane, I got to say.
08:48
I don't know who was.
08:50
I'm not sure he's saying it.
08:52
Yeah, some some rush or Billy Squire or Zeppelin or
08:57
something was playing on it or Boston, something was playing.
09:01
But I can't pin it down.
09:03
He had to change my way by rush.
09:06
Let's just let's say that when that's the only name of the song
09:10
And then you get to George and it's Skinner and Skinner only,
09:14
One of the ever things that ever happened to me was when I met
09:18
Skinner, Ricky Medlock.
09:24
The first time I was at Road Wild, we were going to Road
09:28
Wild for WCW and it was we had driven in on motorcycles
09:33
from Mile High Stadium from Denver.
09:36
It was the first time I was ever on the highway on a fricking
09:39
motorcycle and I got on the highway to go to Sturgis.
09:44
And man, that was an absolutely unbelievable trip.
09:55
I can't remember why I mentioned Sturgis, but yeah,
10:02
I told you guys have been hit in the head.
10:05
You didn't tell us, but we've watched your career.
10:10
One last one and we'll let you go.
10:11
Do you when you look back at fond memories of experiences,
10:15
right? Take take family and children obviously out of it,
10:19
right? Because that's always going to win.
10:21
But experiences and things that you've got to do,
10:23
relationships that you've got to have,
10:26
is it revolve around football, wrestling or cars?
10:32
Well, it sure does not revolve about wrestling.
10:37
I can tell you that.
10:41
It's mostly at this point in my, I mean, I'd say it's a mix
10:45
between cars and football.
10:47
But the things that we do later in life are indicative
10:52
of who we are as human beings.
10:54
And you can go no further than to say that I'm a football player
11:00
That describes me to a frickin T.
11:02
That's it. I'm not a wrestler that loves cars.
11:04
I'm a football player who loves cars.
11:06
Who just so happened to be a professional wrestler
11:08
during part of his career.
11:16
That's how I like to be described.
11:20
And like I said, a dude who treated people,
11:23
he wanted to be treated other than the fact that I bagged
11:26
on you guys for the podcast appearance the first time.
11:30
It's watering of the bridge.
11:32
And the arm wrestling event.
11:34
We're going to just make it up.
11:36
We're going to fly out.
11:38
We'll fly the studio team out and all that.
11:40
We need to do an in-person at your garage.
11:42
Let's do it 100 percent.
11:44
Let me see if I can, you guys see through there?
11:50
Let's see what the guys are doing.
11:56
I saw a little garage tour on YouTube.
11:58
You got a killer space there.
12:00
Here, man. I'll just do it.
12:06
How we doing, boys?
12:08
Oh, Jesus Christ, the bench showed up.
12:10
So we're working on the Cobra, putting the dash in today.
12:14
That's my buddy Clint.
12:16
Where are you, Clint?
12:18
There you go. There's Clint.
12:24
Here's Cobra. Here's the rest of them.
12:26
You guys will salivate over this chair.
12:30
We're just trying to have fun, man.
12:32
That's what it's all about.
12:34
Trying to have fun.
12:36
You fit into Cobra?
12:40
but I will fit much better now
12:44
I customized it quite a bit.
12:46
Whether it's raising the dash
12:48
an inch and a half,
12:52
taking the three inch risers
12:54
out from under the seats.
12:56
There's a number of things I'm trying to do.
12:58
You know who I bet fits good in a Cobra?
13:04
Me and Stallone together.
13:06
We both fit awesome in that.
13:08
One works the path.
13:14
It's been absolutely amazing.
13:16
I appreciate it, gentlemen.
13:18
It's been absolutely my pleasure.
13:20
I appreciate it. We got to do it again.
13:22
We're going to come out there and see you.
13:24
You can walk us through the shit. It's going to be fucking awesome.
13:26
Let's do it. I'm just waiting on you.
13:28
Right on, man. We'll be there.
13:30
Thanks, buddy. Appreciate it. Take care.
13:32
You all be well. You too.
13:34
Thank you, Jens. Thanks.
13:36
Really? That's a bucket list one.
13:40
Honestly, I could tell.
13:42
Even Rogan and all that.
13:44
It's cool. We have a relationship.
13:48
Yeah, when you know somebody.
13:50
The first time you watched him.
13:52
He's fucking intimidating.
13:54
You know how you always want to see me?
13:56
Yeah, you want to see me get spirited.
14:00
There's not many things that I would...
14:02
I don't think you would really...
14:04
No, I want to see him toss you.
14:06
I thought of what the damage would be.
14:08
It'd be funny, but I think the damage would be
14:12
I think he'd hurt himself more
14:14
because there'd be nothing stopping him.
14:16
He'd be like running through a sheet.
14:18
Stop it. More like a bedspread.
14:20
He'd be like, I could do that.
14:26
Like a nice heavy down blanket.
14:28
Like a weighted blanket.
14:30
Like posture up a little bit.
14:32
He would absolutely... I think you would split.
14:34
I had to turn to dust.
14:40
All I could keep thinking about is
14:42
the energy when he would spear somebody
14:44
and afterwards he's just like...
14:48
He made no friends in wrestling.
14:52
Yeah, a lot of intensity.
14:56
How would pay so much?
14:58
That would hurt me.
15:04
I'd be here bound the rest of my life.
15:06
I'd tell him to go 50%.
15:10
What were we just going to throw you in a pool?
15:16
Arm and leg and windmill.
15:18
Like a midget toss?
15:20
Like a 5 foot 5 toss.
15:30
We got to thank Eddie.
15:34
Eddie Pettis for the Mikters 10.
15:36
Eddie brought a banger.
15:38
We were professional
15:40
and we limited ourselves
15:42
because we had to do a...
15:44
The good stuff you want to sip on a little bit.
15:46
Yeah, but we have to make sure
15:48
that we don't get carried away.
15:52
We had an important guest.
15:54
This is really, really good.
15:56
I think we can hang out with
16:00
He told me to call him Bill.
16:06
That's the thing about car guys.
16:08
When you cut the celebrity stuff out,
16:10
car guys can always just hang.
16:14
Except guys in Mikey.
16:18
He just hangs a little too long.
16:20
He's in the saddle a little too long.
16:24
But when he breaks, he breaks.
16:28
You missed Jameson's night.
16:30
I missed the end of that.
16:34
That was probably the equivalent
16:36
of Goldberg tossing me around, right?
16:38
Yeah, but it was...
16:40
I'd never seen Jameson go to the dark side.
16:44
He's usually kind of in control.
16:46
Yeah, but that one, yeah.
16:48
The switch got flipped.
16:52
Somebody apparently put alcohol
16:56
that he kept bringing around until we've determined after.
17:00
We talked about it on the last one.
17:02
I do think that the Drivers and Dives
17:10
It's a mouthful. We're going to have to figure out the name.
17:12
That's a big fucking mouthful.
17:14
But I think that needs to happen.
17:16
While the stories are fresh and everybody's mine.
17:18
Well, I don't think, based on the text chain
17:20
that went on today, it's not going to be a problem
17:22
scheduling it with Mikey.
17:24
But he's always available.
17:26
Always available to hang out.
17:28
Today's golf day, right?
17:30
Thursday's golf day.
17:34
Wednesday's not work day.
17:36
Mondays show up early, leave early day.
17:38
Tuesday is try to get it done day.
17:40
Three-day weekend's like camping weekend, right?
17:44
There's a little bit of boating in there.
17:46
I think Tuesday's are
17:50
Dude, he wakes up Tuesday
17:52
to get ready to get after it.
17:54
He's coming tomorrow.
17:56
But Wednesday's the day.
17:58
I'm going to fuck this shit up on Wednesday.
18:00
Meanwhile, I'm going to play some golf.
18:02
I'm going to play a little golf today.
18:08
I'm going to do two days of work in a day.
18:10
And then go on to the lake.
18:12
What? What did you say?
18:16
Yeah, we got to do that.
18:18
But Mick, there's ten, it's a buy it.
18:22
You're probably not going to be able to buy it
18:24
because it's a glass.
18:26
It's going to be in the glass showcase if you find it.
18:28
That's a collector's item right there.
18:30
Have you had the rye, tenure?
18:32
I think I have it. I haven't opened it.
18:34
I've got it. I haven't opened it. It's the green one, right?
18:40
They're all ryes are green.
18:42
Banger. Is it? Is that a thing?
18:44
It is. I did not know that.
18:50
Weller 12 doesn't count.
18:52
Weller Reserve doesn't count.
18:54
But no, any green labels or green things
19:02
Yeah, I just had some Will It Rye
19:06
Family Reserve Rye.
19:08
You were there, you had it.
19:12
I'll tell you what we should review
19:20
bottle of eight year.
19:24
Old Dominic. No, at my house.
19:28
Old fits, eight year.
19:30
In the new decanter.
19:32
You can find, I mean, it's harder,
19:34
but it is out there.
19:36
That's their whole point was they wanted to make it accessible.
19:38
And it's a $60 bottle.
19:46
Great wheat in all the wheat spots
19:50
and all the great spice spots.
19:52
It's a good, good flavorful.
19:56
It's a banger that looks good on the shelf.
19:58
Anytime they're in those little
20:02
The decanter style bottles.
20:04
And then they get the sheath on them.
20:10
Sheath for your knife.
20:14
Put it on your hip and carry it around in your sheath.
20:18
No, because it's in a bag.
20:22
If you wanted to, you could.
20:24
Is there a bell loop on it?
20:26
It's got little stringies.
20:28
You could tie it off of your bell loop.
20:32
We'll just flat out.
20:34
We can keep going, but it's not a sheath.
20:38
They didn't call it a crown royal sheath.
20:42
Point awarded, Josh.
20:44
That's a rare victory.
20:50
I feel like we have some news to handle.
20:56
Besides go to weathertech.com and get
20:58
your vote is for a cup phone.
21:00
He had to go package deal.
21:04
Cup phone and the floor mats.
21:06
Oh, floor mats, yeah.
21:08
Not only in Chicago,
21:10
but have a son who eats cheez-its
21:12
and goldfish in the car.
21:14
It saves you hours of acumen.
21:16
I'm going to tell you from personal experience.
21:18
You get the new car
21:20
and you get the mats
21:22
and you tell yourself,
21:26
These mats are probably just as good.
21:28
I don't have to get weathertech.
21:30
Go ahead and live with that life for a week
21:32
and then say, you know what?
21:36
Buy weathertech mats
21:38
and then purchase them and save your vehicle.
21:44
Man, this thing rides pretty good.
21:46
I don't know if I need a Roadster Shop chassis.
21:48
You're lying to yourself.
21:54
I got the new GMC truck.
21:56
I came with those fancy carpet mats
21:58
that had a little medallion on them.
22:00
It's not weathertech.
22:02
That lasts about in Chicago
22:04
Do you know what they should have made?
22:06
Instantly upgraded.
22:08
Rear bumper covers.
22:10
If they would have made a weathertech rear bumper cover.
22:12
I wonder if you can get that with...
22:14
I think it would have to be a frame brace.
22:16
I wonder if you can get that with rewards points.
22:20
We will see you again next week.