The following are interview highlights with Extreme Reunion's Shane Douglas:
On his WWE run in the 1990s:
"If weâd had a backer like Panda Energy or Ted Turner, I thinkâŠ.no I know weâd have wiped the mat with the WWF. Paul Heyman was that talented a booker and our dressing room was that talented. Vince McMahon ripped everything off from us. Heâll tell you he didnât but itâs as blatant as the nose on my face."
On Sabu:
"I remember in 1993, sitting in the back watching him, Iâd never met him. He hit a triple moonsault, I jumped out of my seat as a fan, Iâve always been a huge mark for Sabu. I spent this past weekend with Sabu and heâs been going through a tough time recently with his family and his wife and things. Iâve heard all sorts of horror stories about Sabu, that he turns up at shows not able to perform."
On how TNA books their locker room:
"I look at Dixieâs dressing room and you have Samoa Joe, Bobby Roode, AJ Styles, Christopher Daniels, they had Petey Williams. Iâm a mark for those guys. That said, Iâm anything but a markâŠ. Iâm a critic for the way that talent has been used. I hope that in a year from now, Iâll be able to say Iâm booking for the Bobby Roodes, AJ Styles and Samoa Joes as opposed to having to sit back and watch them being mis-used by a company that just doesnât get it."
On difference between the original ECW and TNA:
"Without going into my whole TNA rant, sheâs over $150 million in the red, has nothing to show for it. Hasnât produced one bankable star in 7 years. The original ECW on the other hand launched in 1993, spent $8.27 million dollars, and in 7 years how many bankable stars did ECW, Paul Heyman create? Dixie was onto a decent idea and then instead of going with what could have given her Dad some return on his money, she went with the whole Hulk Hogan/Ric Flair routine. My personal differences aside with those guys, the fact that in 2012, weâre still talking about the guys that headlined wrestling in 1984, is laughable at best, sad at worst."
On his work being copied by Steve Austin and CM Punk:
"Well to say itâs not true would be ignorant. The fact Iâve carved out a niche in the business and had an almost 30 year career and done well without competing at a WrestleMania is something Iâm proud of. To be in a business thatâs dominated by one guy and be able to do well without having to walk on that stage is great."
On why he left ECW in 1995 for WWE:
"The way it was pitched to me isnât the way it played out. It took seven or eight trips up there for me to sign. There was something in the back of my gut that told me it wasnât the right fit. I no desire to leave ECW but in 95, I was reaching my mid 30âs Iâd been the World Champ multiple timesâŠIâd pretty much done everything in ECW, all I could do is repeat. That was one of the reasons I didnât wanna miss an opportunity to make a living for my family. The last time I went there, I took my ex-wife with me, and I was working as a teacher five days making good money and making pretty good money the two nights a week working for ECW."
"She looked McMahon in the eye and said 'What could you possibly offer my husband to make him leave all that and being home in bed with me every night?' and he leaned across the table and he stroked her hand and said "You have my word as a gentleman that Iâll make your husband a very wealthy man.' He went on to tell me, 'It's not uncommon for someone in the position weâre putting you in to earn $300,000 a year minimum base salary.' I spoke to Piper, Hennig, etc and they said Vince told them the same thing and they got rich. I called home one night and my wife said the cheques hadnât been great and she said they all came to $1,400 and I told her to add them up and she said that was them all added up."
On his feud with Ric Flair on WCW TV in 2000: "
Hell yeah. If a company is investing a seven figure income to me, which Bischoff did for me for three years, but Iâll go into any situation in the ring. Iâm a professional."
On Ric Flair negotiating with ECW in 1998:
"Flair had started discussions with ECW when he had his problems with Bischoff, about working with me. His concern to Paul Heyman was, that I would shoot on him. He wanted $150,000 for one match which we couldnât possibly afford that. So I suggested to Paul, offer back to him, three shows, first one in Charlotte. I put him over, 55 minutes. Second, Pittsburgh he puts me over, same time frame. Third time in Philadelphia, I have no doubts that promoted well, we couldâve sold the Spectrum out."
Shane Douglas also recently spoke to our friends at Ring Rust Radio, check them out at HERE.
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