Messiah interview
by Cal Manska & Lonnie Hill
Just recently, the rumors of the Messiah being
fired from XPW for having a love affair with Lizzy Borden soon
spread all over the Internet. He contacted Cal Manska and Kfir
Hezroni from XPW1.com, telling them it was false, and giving them
his number to do some sort of interview. Luckily, Cal was willing
to have me along to conduct the interview so it could be on both
of our sites. Interviewing Messiah, I could tell he was genuine.
He pulls no punches, but at the same time, he shows someone who
truly loved what he did. In one of the best interviews I've ever
conducted, Messiah spoke candidly on many subjects involving his
past, XPW, the rumors, and even his own recount of the events
at ECW Heatwave 2000. I could not be more proud of this interview,
and I want to thank Messiah again for being generous enough to
share this time with us.
- Mr. Hill, 08/28/01
Mr. Hill: My first question is the one on
everybody's mind. What happened between you and XPW?
Messiah: Well, obviously, I am no longer
with XPW. It was a decision that was made about a week ago, and
other than that, there is really nothing more to go into. We had
a falling out.
Cal: Was it a mutual decision?
Messiah: No, it wasn't a mutual decision,
but at the same time, it was a decision that I really had no power
over. I've told people before that pretty much everything I had
was gone in the span of 48 hours. I had to wake up the next morning
just being a "regular guy," if you want to call it that. I don't
know if a lot of people know this, but I also worked for Extreme
Associates, so when I woke up, I was no longer part of XPW or
Extreme Associates. I had no place to go really.
Mr. Hill: What has it been like working for
XPW over the past year and a half?
Messiah: Honestly, it was a roller coaster
ride, but it was the funnest roller coaster I've ever been on.
Working for XPW kept me on my toes. I can honestly say that, while
I wasn't with the company when it first started and I don't have
the claim to fame that guys like Jimmy, D, Webb and Kaos have,
but I was there when it was still a baby. I mean, when people
see XPW, they usually put three faces to it: Supreme, Sabu and
me. I was almost like the XPW poster boy. *Laughter* I was getting
sick of myself, seeing myself on the website and stuff. I wasn't
put in that place by myself, I was put in that position by Rob.
He felt that I could be in that position, and that I could, for
lack of a better word, "be" XPW. It was funny, because I used
to get jumped on a lot for being a "Tommy Dreamer ripoff" or "Tommy
Dreamer wannabe." As far as what I wore, that wasn't my decision,
but at the same time, it was very much an honor to be considered
the Tommy Dreamer of XPW. If they asked me to do something, I
did it. It sucks to know I won't be wrestling for XPW anymore.
Whether or not it's a permanent thing, I don't know, but don't
expect me to be coming back like next show or anything, that's
defiantly not gonna happen. But anyway, working for XPW was probably
the greatest thing that ever happened to me. It's also one of
these things that I think a lot of wrestlers go through. You think,
"man, I don't know if I should be doing this with the rest of
my life. Why am I gonna do a thumbtack match?" You're always second-guessing
yourself, and I constantly did that. But being faced with the
fact that I can't do it at all now, I wish there was a bed of
thumbtacks or a bed of barbed wire in front of me right now, I'd
go face first through it. The fact that I can no longer wrestle
at XPW is very much a hard thing to swallow.
Cal: Going back now, how did you originally
hook up with XPW?
Messiah: Basically, I've only wrestled for
two promotions in my entire life. One was XPW, the other was Slammers
Wrestling Federation. I knew a lot of guys coming out of Slammers,
like "White Trash" Johnny Webb, Homeless Jimmy, Dynamite D, etc.,
and I only wrestled for Slammers. Then, I took about a year off
from wrestling and moved to Georgia. I was there for about 8 months,
then I came back. I was watching wrestling one night, and a thing
for XPW came on. I noticed I had wrestled a lot of those guys
at Slammers. I wanted to get back into wrestling, but I didn't
know how. I was very much a dreamer. So I went to the show, bought
a ticket, and stayed after. I approached Dynamite D about getting
in, and he was like, "yea." Also, my trainer was Carlito Montana,
and he had just started there at the time as well, and that was
how it all began.
Cal: Did you make your gimmick before coming
in?
Messiah: Oh no, that was Rob. That was all
Rob. Rob and Kevin totally came up with that. I mean, when I was
in Slammers, I was "Iron" Mike Earnheardt, and oh boy, that was
probably the gayest, biggest homo gimmick you could come up with.
*Laughter*. That was always what I was. Verne Langdon always said
I would never be a heel, that I have too much of a pretty face,
and then I went to XPW and Rob is like "you're gonna be a heel."
I was thrilled.
Mr. Hill: The night you debuted, Guido was
doing the ring announcing, and he called you "Jesus...."
Messiah: And I almost punched him in the
face for it! *Laughter*
Mr. Hill: How did that happen?
Messiah: When Rob first saw me, I was under
the Blunatic mask, and I was jobbing out to Nicole Bass. I was
actually taking the choke slam from Nicole Bass! *Laughter* They
were trying to think of a way to use me, and in the mean time,
they were jobbing me out as much as they could. Originally, he
wanted to use me for a tag team that was basically a Right to
Censor type gimmick. It was a pair of bible thumping brothers
who go against everything XPW stood for, but at the same time,
they cheat. The problem was, there was no one good to fill the
spot for my tag team partner. I got a meeting with Rob, and I
sat down and said, "I got an idea for a gimmick." He said, "OK,
what is it," and I told him "we have a great gimmick here, why
can't I just wrestle singles?" Supreme was right there, and he
said, "yea, you should do it." Rob agreed to it, but told me "if
you drop the ball, it's your ass." So I come to practice the next
week, and I see him walking down the hall, and he said, "what's
up, Jesus?" I said, "WHAT?" Originally, I was supposed to be "Luke,
the moral crusader." Rob says, "hey, you're gonna be Jesus." I'm
like "no, I can't," because I come from a Christian background.
I went to Sunday school, and one time, I went to Brazil to help
build a church with my father and my stepbrother, so I told Rob,
"c'mon, you gotta be kidding." So basically, the day of the show,
I believe it was December 17th, 1999, they didn't have a name
for me, and Guido just calls me "Jesus," and I got up in his face
and said, "don't you ever call me that again." From that point
on, I told them "I'll be either Savior or Messiah," and they said,
"we'll call you Messiah."
Mr. Hill: You had a match with Dynamite D
at the Palace in January that some fans to this day call "the
best XPW match of all time." What are your thoughts on that match,
and the steady push your began to receive afterward?
Messiah: The funny thing was at the time,
I was a curtain jerker. I think that match was like the second
on the card, and after it was over, I felt great. That was when
I really came into my own, if you will. That was also the first
time I did the Godsmack. When I had D in the fireman's carry,
I can remember hearing someone call "Louie," like for the Spicolli
Driver, and then I did the stunner out of the blue, and everyone
popped for it. I remember the feeling I had when that happened.
Also, any time you wrestle Dynamite D, you're gonna have a great
match. That guy will put you over, and he comes up with some of
the most innovative stuff I've ever seen. One thing I was proud
of, and I'm not a very internet friendly person, I don't get on
the internet that often, but I used to check it for feedback sometimes,
and for the fans to call it the best match in XPW history, even
to this day, felt good. What's funny is I watched the match about
a month ago, and I can see some of the stuff I improved on. I've
never had a match that I'm 100% satisfied with, I'm my biggest
critic, I'm very much a perfectionist, and I watched that match
like "ohh, I just messed up that punch," ya know? At the time,
it was the best match I've had, but I know I've had better matches
since then. They may have not been as technical. Ya know, I didn't
go to the show on Saturday, I wanted to, even if it just meant
sitting in the bleachers by myself, I wanted to support the company
by being there, but I heard Kaos and D tore the house down. I
heard that match went 100 times smoother than the match that D
and I put on almost two years ago. They're always improving, and
I wish I could have been there to see the kind of match that those
two put on. As far as my push in XPW goes, when I started out,
I was the new kid on the block. I was jobbing out to Nicole Bass,
but I didn't wanna overstep my bounds. I was never one of those
guys who said "no, I'm not doing that." I just wanted to wrestle.
You know, XPW fans are smart fans. They don't have a tally sheet
of how much you win or lose. They're all about what you do in
that ring. I remember I had confrontations with guys before where
I didn't feel very comfortable, especially in these past few months.
When Vampiro was coming in, he wanted to work with Sabu, and they
wanted to put him with me, which made me feel nervous, because
I was kind of representing the XPW workers to him, so I couldn't
screw up.
Cal: Was Sabu considered one of the workers?
Like, was he one of the boys backstage?
Messiah: Yea, he was. I mean, he never dressed
with us or anything, but he would sit down with us and crack jokes.
He'd make fun of Kronus just like everyone else would. He was
a cool guy. When I was in Toledo for the Insane Clown Posse thing
(Gathering of the Juggalos), it was me, Kid Kaos and Homeless
Jimmy, and he was watching out for us. The three of us had never
been on the road before, so we were very inexperienced and very
green, and Sabu was there to watch us. He was taking care of us,
and me and Kaos told him "thank you very much for what you did."
Cal: Are you friends with any of the wrestlers?
Like, do you talk to any of the wrestlers still?
Messiah: Yea, that was my biggest concern.
I can't help what's posted on the internet, it's just going to
happen. A lot of times I see something and I'm like "WHAT?" The
funniest thing I read was in the Torch, where they had a show
recap of Scene of the Crime, followed up with "XPW notes." One
of them said "the wrestlers consider Rob Black a Paul E. wannabe,"
which is bullshit, and they went as far as to say "Messiah is
like a Tommy Dreamer, except he is not liked backstage." I'm like
"What?" I'm fuckin' friends with everybody in the back. Everybody
from the San Jose crew of Pogo, Rizzono and Vic to everybody from
here in Socal. I was friends with everybody and I hung out with
everybody. When the Rev Pro guys were around, I was the first
one to introduce myself to those guys, and they were cool guys
too.
Mr. Hill: Yea, one of the things Excalibur
told me about you was that you were really cool to them.
Messiah: Exactly. XPW always got bashed because
we were all "dickheads," and it was bullshit. We have a laid back
locker room where everybody is friends with everybody. No one
is trying to get over on anybody. We all changed together in the
same locker room. We were all buddies. We hung around each other,
we goofed on each other, and we were very much a big family. The
guys who I am very close with are like Dynamite D, Supreme, Kaos,
Homeless Jimmy and Angel. Those are the guys who I'm very close
with, the guys I go out to dinner with, and the guys I called
and told that I was no longer with XPW, because I didn't want
them to read the shit that was gonna be on the Internet, because
I knew there was gonna be shit. I'll be honest with you guys,
I didn't want to do any interviews. I told Kevin, "I don't plan
on doing any interviews. I was born in XPW, and I'm dead in XPW."
I think I came full circle as a worker in XPW. My punches weren't
as stiff, I was doing better at fitting together a match, etc.
It was like everything I had learned in wrestling school was clicking.
I used to be clumsy and whatnot, but everything started clicking.
In order to become a great, or even good, professional wrestler,
you always have to have an open mind to learn, and one of the
great things about XPW was bringing in guys like Vampiro, Sabu,
New Jack, Candido and Shane Douglas. Those guys will teach you
as long as you're willing to listen. I was friends with all those
guys too. The hardest part about all of this is I'm not gonna
be able to give a hug to Supreme or to Kid Kaos before a deathmatch
or something and say "hey, be careful out there," or when they're
done, I can't say "great job guys" and it hurts that I won't be
able to do that anymore.
Cal: What's your future in pro wrestling?
Messiah: I've never had to send out feelers,
and I wouldn't know how to start sending them out. This was like
starting new for me. The day I was let go, I bought a new house.
I lost people I care about, and people I love. I just wanna say
something, and I think you guys might be tippy-toeing around it,
but, I heard the rumors about me being caught sleeping with Lizzy.
That's just bullshit. When I saw that post, I knew I had to do
something, because that was bullshit.
Mr. Hill: You mentioned that you were "XPW
born and XPW dead." The fact remains that you are a professional
wrestler and you have gained a lot of fans. Would you go out there
and work for a fed like MPW or Revolution Pro?
Messiah: I would like to do it, I really
would, but right now, I just need to get my head on straight.
I'll tell you guys this much: at the time XPW let me go, I was
going through a lot of personal stuff. When I say that, I don't
mean drugs, alcohol or anything like that, I just mean personal
stuff. It was affecting my work at Extreme Associates, and it
was affecting my work at XPW. Rob tried to help me out as best
he could. So did Kevin and Tom Byron, but I wasn't getting things
done on time, and that affected the company. I was also missing
practices, and I missed a Saturday show that they did. Basically,
they tried to help me out, and I dropped the ball. Like I said,
Extreme and XPW are like a family, and now I'm faced with not
being a part of that family. It sucks.
Cal: Do you have any hard feelings?
Messiah: No. I don't have any hard feelings
at all. Like I said, I dropped the ball when I was being helped.
Cal: Did you hear about the promo at the
beginning of the show?
Messiah: Yea. I kinda knew it was coming.
I remember telling Kevin, "what are you gonna say, I went to heaven?"
They did what they had to do. I'll be honest with you, I was willing
to do anything to make things right. I told Kevin that I would
wrestle a deathmatch and a world title match, I just wanted to
make things right.
Mr. Hill: You won the XPW World Title in
May in a match with New Jack. How do you feel about XPW's booking
decisions pertaining to the title (i.e. the champion has only
been pinned for it once)?
Messiah: The world's worst fuckin' job is
being a booker, especially in XPW, because you have guys like
Sabu and New Jack who actually wrestle for other companies. Our
shows have to get switched around. We'll get a call saying "hey,
so and so has another show scheduled first on this date." It was
just one big mix up, and I they figured they would just put the
belt on me, because I'm someone who will stick around and be here
for shows. I was very hesitant to have the belt, because of the
backlash, but at the same time I felt it was a great honor. One
of the things I will always cherish is that I was XPW champion,
and that they gave me the belt and had the confidence in me to
let me represent the company. As far as booking decisions go,
I really can't say anything because I don't know what I would
have done if I was in their shoes because, like I said, being
a booker, especially for XPW, is one of the toughest jobs in the
world. When you have so much talent, and you have guys who are
calling up who want to come in all the time, and you have guys
you want to come in but have previous dates and stuff, it's hard.
I mean, Kevin and Rob will be at the office until four in the
morning trying to come up with stuff. They're always trying to
please and surprise the fans. It's defiantly a tough job, and
I didn't see any problem with anything that they chose.
Mr. Hill: This question just popped into
my head, and if you feel like answering it, go for it. Let's go
back to last summer, and ECW's Heatwave Pay Per View...
Messiah: *Laughter*
Mr. Hill: Looking back, what are your thoughts
on what happened?
Messiah: Every time I do an interview, this
is like the main question, *Laughter* but I don't have any problem
answering it. We went down there to get free publicity. We were
like "hey, ECW is in town," so we bought front row, we had our
shirts, we were psyched. It was bullshit, because ECW was suing
as at the time for the name "(e)Xtreme," which was a bullshit
lawsuit, because there are plenty of feds out there with the name
"Extreme." So we got there, and the Atlas security guys told us
"I can't let you guys in with those shirts on. If you turn the
shirts inside out, I'll let you in." They wanted to see where
we were sitting too, but because so many of our guys were in the
cheap seats, one of them just showed the guards his ticket. So
we sat down, and the pay per view starts. We were all looking
at each other like "Rob is gonna be fuckin' pissed off," because
he spent all this money on front row seats, and the shirts didn't
get on. What was funny was if you watch the PPV, you never saw
us once anyway, so they way overreacted. The main event came,
and we said "if we're gonna do it, lets do it now," so we did.
We showed our shirts. Supreme got his torn off, Kloss got his
torn off, I got mine torn off. What was funny was as security
was escorting us out, I had my hands behind my back, and some
guy hits me upside the head. Kaos and I turn around thinking it's
some old, drunk fan, and it's fuckin' Paul Heyman! He doesn't
have his hat on, he hasn't shaved, and he's just like "you motherfuckers!
You motherfuckers!" So we get thrown out, and Paul Heyman looks
at Kid Kaos and spits in his face. He's like "hit me you motherfucker,"
when there are three LAPD officers standing three feet behind
us. If any one of us took a swing, we'd be arrested right on the
spot. Kaos was about to do it, and I just stopped him and said,
"Paul, we're not gonna hit you. Why would we do that, so you can
arrest us? All we wanted to do was wear our shirts, but you wouldn't
let us do it. It's as simple at that Paul, all we wanted to do
was wear our shirts." So he spits in my face, and he's screaming
"hit me you motherfucker, you pussy," and I'm like "no, I'm not
gonna do it." So then he turns around and goes back into the building,
and that's when the whole ECW locker room ran out. No one took
a swing at me, but Kid Kash and Balls Mahoney were in my face,
and I'm not the biggest guy in the world anyway, so I was like
"OK." And then there was a big scuffle, and they beat up a lot
of the ring crew guys, and that was pretty much it. That's all
that happened. I'm not saying XPW was in the right, but all we
wanted to do was wear out shirts, and like I said before, if you
ever watch the PPV, you don't even see us anyway, so it was all
for nothing. They wasted their breath on that. It was stupid.
That's really all that happened. I remember reading somewhere
that "Sabu and Supreme were planning on doing a run in." It's
like "what are you talking about?" We never tried to disrupt the
PPV. Not one time. We just wanted to wear our shirts. But when
push came to shove, it was like "OK, put up a shove." It's funny,
since ECW isn't around anymore, the guys who didn't make it to
WWF are calling up XPW looking for work now. These are the motherfuckers
who tried to do shit in the street.
Cal: Do you have any harsh feelings towards
them?
Messiah: No. I mean, New Jack was one of
the guys who beat the tar out of one of the ring crew guys, and
New Jack is the coolest guy in the world. He told me stories about
guys who used to wrestle in ECW want to come to XPW to get heat.
If they try something, they try something, I can handle myself.
There was no heat with anybody. It happened, but it happened back
then, so fuckin 'what. You're here with us, and that's what matters.
Mr. Hill: Well man, I want to thank you for
doing this interview with us. We wish you luck in the future with
whatever you do.
Messiah: I want to thank you for giving me
this place to vent. Like I said, I need to get my head straight
and decide on whether or not to continue wrestling.
Cal: I also want to apologize on behalf of
XPW1.com for posting the rumor about you and Lizzy.
Messiah: It's OK. I don't have any hard feelings
about it, because you were just doing what you had to do. When
I saw that post, I knew I had to come out and say something, because
Lizzy was one of my best friends in the back. We used to goof
around just like we goofed around with the rest of the boys. This
Internet rumor has affected the people I love, and that is where
I draw the line. Once again, thank you for giving me this place
to vent, and for getting the truth out there. |