Disco Machine interview
by Jason McCord
Jason McCord: First off,
Disco Machine, thank you for taking the time to sit down to do
this interview with me.
Disco Machine: My pleasure.
McCord: Congratulations on
being ranked number five on socaluncensored.com for the month
of July.
Disco: Wow, I didn't know
that, excellent!
McCord: You had a pretty
good month. How do you feel about how you have done?
Disco: I am actually disappointed
with this month. The match that I had with Shogun against Excalibur
and Yakuza was really good. As far as my other matches, I wasn't
that happy with them. I don't think I did as good as I could have.
Some things got kind of messed up. On a whole, everything at Revolution
Pro is a learning experience. I am really happy and fortunate
to be with a group that we can learn and grow, and you can screw
up things, but you get better with every show. Having weekly shows
is really valuable to all of us.
McCord: What brought you
to Revolution Pro?
Disco: I came to Arizona
four years ago without an inch of wrestling training, just a love
for the sport. I met AWC in 96, and they came out with AAA and
he was working with Konnan, and I just happened to hook up with
him and just start up a friendship. We had a long distance thing
going. I did the old Rudos website where he sold tapes and I did
the website. When I moved out here in 1997, I started training
in 1998 with them and ironically I was with all the guys training
before their WCW match. That was a real thrill and just basically
just hung around to the point where I just took pictures, I did
the website, and did everything little around and stuck around.
Next thing I was training, and now I have three years of experience.
It has been a long road but it has been very fruitful.
McCord: What were you doing
before you were wrestling?
Disco: I am a graphic artist
by trade, and I was doing that in Arizona, but I was not making
enough money. I was kinda stuck out there, and I said "You know
what? If I am ever going to live out my dream and come out to
California", which I have wanted to do all my life,"and be a graphic
designer". I came out here and did that , and it has been the
best thing that ever happened to me. I met my wife and I am wrestling
weekly. I have a good job that has afforded me to buy a house.
In the four years that I have been here, my life has turned around.
McCord: How did you feel
about your first match? What was it like?
Disco: (laughs) My first
match, ironically enough was an international affair in Mexicali.
It was against a guy named Aguila Real, a guy who no longer wrestles.
This is how bad our match was, he never wrestled ever again! I
did a whole bunch of really bad moves in front of literally, 30
kids and Bill Cuppernell (laughs). The show itself got screwed
up. They promoted it on a Saturday. They didn't get the flyers
out, so I went out in the streets of Mexicali in my wrestling
uniform saying there was a wrestling show down the street. I asked
people to come in and we got 30 kids, but it was a really good
experience. The next night, I wrestled Yakuza which was I kinda
term my first real match because it was in front of about 200
people. It was the scariest thing I have ever done, and it was
the most fulfilling thing I have ever done.
McCord: I have noticed with
the character of Disco Machine, you can be face or heel. Lately
you have been a face. What do you think the difference is between
the heel Disco and the face Disco?
Disco: A lot of people have
tried to get heel heat by just being a big bad guy. I am not afraid
to make fun of myself. A lot of people think that the Disco gimmick
is a "gay" gimmick, so it is really easy to get heat, if you kind
of go along with it and stuff. I am not gay and I would like to
state that on the record (laughs), my wife will attest to it.
It is fun a lot of the times when you are able to make fun of
yourself, the character, because people will really hate it or
really dig it. It goes both ways, for instance, when I first came
out, people just hated it and hated it because I did Disco and
Disco sucks, really easy to hate. If you notice there are guys
out there, not so much disco gimmicks, but the guys in UPW, Gorgeous
and Young (G.A.Y.). People love them because it is such a funny
gimmick, people kinda laugh at it, not really hate it. It is easy
heat, and some people cant get people to clap once for anything
they do.
McCord: So it seems that
the face Disco Machine may add more comedy to a match?
Disco: It is weird, the face
Disco Machine doesn't have to do anything to get cheered. I just
do my regular stuff that I would regularly do. The heel, I kind
of have to go overboard and tell people or associate with the
people that are heels. Like when I was in GuRenTai, everyone knew
to hate me because everyone hated UltraTaro Jr. (TARO), Kikuzawa
and NOSAWA. It was more like heel by association. Lately, I have
been getting a face reaction because..... I am not even sure why.
I just think people are getting into it rather than hating it.
McCord: Do you think it could
have been when you came back, your first feud was with Matt Sinister?
Disco: Actually, if you go
back, that could have led to it. If you go before that, my first
match back was against Damien and Halloween with Matt Sinister.
So maybe people got the perception that I was bigger than I really
was. It has actually helped, and sometimes those situations come
up and you don't plan on them.
McCord: How did you feel
about wrestling Damien and Halloween?
Disco: I was defiantly one
of the best things that has ever happened to me, especially in
my wrestling career because when I was in Phoenix, the first time
I met AWC, I took Damien and Pierroth Jr. to a Circle K in Phoenix.
I was just a fan, and they asked me if I had a car just to go
to the store. I took them to the store, and little did I know
5 years later that I would be in the ring with Damien. It was
really just how things circle. They were really professional,
Halloween left a few bumps on my head, so I was really happy with
it, AND THEN THEY PULLED DOWN MY PANTS! (laughs)
McCord: What was one of your
most memorable matches?
Disco: For all the wrong
reasons, one of my most memorable matches was with Super Dragon.
We had a big match, and Super Dragon blew out his knee about five
minutes into it. We were in the main event, we had to keep on
going. I wound up separating my shoulder in that match too. My
most recent match that is memorable is the tag match (Disco/Shogun
v. Yakuza/Excalibur). I was just so happy with it that it was
third match on the card. We were getting good heat, and we hit
all of our moves, and it was really exciting. I felt that, that
was what I always wanted to have for Revolution Pro, to have those
style of matches like Japanese hard style matches, good near falls,
and just kinda build on that. That is a match I like most recently.
McCord: Who do you see as
a dream opponent, someone you might want to wrestle in the future?
Disco: Someone that I haven't
wrestled?
McCord: Anyone
Disco: That is a really
good question. I like to wrestle Excalibur. When he first came
into Revolution Pro, we were both pretty much at the same point,
we were both very green, really hard to work with. But he has
come a tremendous way with his matches with Super Dragon and things
like that. Down the road, I would like to wrestle him, and then
I would like to get in the mix with Super Dragon. I don't think
I am at the level of those guys yet because of the time I took
off earlier, but I would like to get right back into it, and get
some really good feuds.
McCord: Were you injured
during your time off?
Disco: I took off for personal
reasons. At the end of 2000, I did have a shoulder injury. I have
a separated shoulder where two out of the three tendons are still
severed. I am only wrestling with one tendon in my shoulder. I
have kind of rehabilitated it back but it is not at the strength
I would like it. So I work really hard to rehabilitate it and
do things and not injure it again, but it still nags me every
once in a while.
McCord: Where do you see
yourself and the Disco Machine character in the future with Revolution
Pro?
Disco: It's weird, everytime
I try to evolve the gimmick, it just sort of doesn't go anywhere
because the "old" Disco stuff just gets over really well. I don't
have to really do much with it. I would like to say that Disco
Machine kind of evolved into "Rave Machine" and eventually a "Sex
Machine" (laughs). I would love to evolve into "Sex Machine".
It has been my dream gimmick, a friend of mine came up with that,
doing more like the James Brown type of thing. That would be fun,
that is where I see it going. If it doesn't go there, I am happy
with Disco Machine.
McCord: Let's do a little
name association, Excalibur!
Disco: He has come so far
in so little time, and I am really impressed with him. He has
really solidified our group and I am really happy with the progress
that he has made, and Nook forward to wrestling him in the future.
McCord: AWC
Disco: We have gone a long
way, him and I together. We've been traveling on the road with
no sleep in the middle of Mexico or wherever the heck we were
to having a ring that we can come to weekly. We use to sneak into
places and train and now we have a full facility, and now we're
running every week which we've always wanted to do. It's all the
dream of him and I am just glad to be his right hand man.
McCord: Matt Sinister
Disco: He is defiantly the big man
of Revolution Pro, there's no doubt about that. I fear every time
I am in the ring with him. He is the Vader of the group and I
know when I get in the ring with him I am going to get powerbombed
one time, hard on the mat everytime I wrestle him. He's a good
guy and he tries really hard. With the cruiserweight division,
sometimes, he doesn't fit in, but he is defiantly a force. I have
had some really good matches with him, and I can't say that about
a lot of people.
McCord: Anyone who wants
to start training.
Disco: Get your ass into
our ring and come down here. Don't think that you can watch wrestling
and do it in your backyard. We all did that, every single one
of us that trains at Revolution Pro, anyone who wrestles anywhere
has practiced in their backyard, on the bed or whatever. The best
way is to come in and take a bump with a professional. They know,
and they can tell you how to do it, and do it right, and I'll
tell you what, I have been training for three years and sometimes
I feel like I have been training for three days. You always learn
something in the ring. You have to be trained by a professional,
there is no two ways about it.
McCord: The Fans.
Disco: I wish we had 500
more fans! I know we do, but I wish they would come out to our
shows. We've got a really exciting brand of wrestling. A lot of
people would really enjoy it. Make the trip to come see us because
we are defiantly worth it. I am really thankful for our fans that
come out every week because even though we get 100 fans, they
are 100 strong fans. We have always had our solid core fans. I
am thankful overtime we have a show for them because I would have
had my separated shoulder for nobody.
McCord: Any closing thoughts
you would like to add?
Disco: Yeah, come check out
Revolution Pro. I am sure there is a lot of people that are gonna
be reading this that are online that have heard of Revolution
Pro but never really experienced it. I think that you would be
pleasantly surprised by what you see. You are going to see stuff
that you don't see other places. It is a Japanese/Mexican hybrid,
it is really exciting. Come out and we will put on a show for
you like you have never seen before
McCord: Ok, Thank you for
taking the time to do this interview with me!
Disco: Thank You Jason McCord!