The Undertaker
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
So he's done it a few times.
I don't want to be cool.
No.
If it's my job.
to get people that, cause my job is to get this, this baby face over like this.
And if the baby face is brand new and they don't really know him and I have all the equity because I've been here for 20 years, it is my job to make that audience absolutely despise me.
And I'm not going to do it.
So like now, like sometimes I'll be like, I'm not going to do anything cool in my match.
Nothing cool, because I don't want them to cheer a cool move.
I'm just going to do dirty stuff, mean stuff, and hopefully this crowd will start understanding, oh, wow, I want this guy to win because that guy's such a jerk.
And so now it's been tough.
this past couple, like I would say past year, uh, because now I feel like the audience kind of knows me, not just from WWE, but all the other ventures of Ms and Mrs dance with stars, whatever it real world, whatever it may be that now they just know the work ethic and they know what it takes to do that and what I'm doing.
And then I come on podcasts and I put everyone over and I'm like, ah,
well, this is going to make my job really hard tonight, you know?
I got a lot of credit for that.
I don't think John Morrison, Damian Priest, as well as Bad Bunny get enough credit for it because...
I remember Bad Bunny training, and this was during COVID times where we were at the baseball field in Tampa, and every time I would come to the show, he was there early in the ring.
And he would be practicing.
Then he would go sing at the Grammys.
He'd be right back in the ring.