Vince being interviewed by Congress. Vince rules! I didn't read the whole thing but I love how Vince and his lawyers argue:
Most answers are Vince and McDevitt is his Lawyer. Vince is funny.
http://oversight.house.gov/documents/20081231141214.pdf
As a matter of fact, we even sent out a press release for the last two who tested positive. They were not involved in a story line, okay. They did not appear on television. If in fact, okay, it's important that someone who tests positive, when they
test positive we announce ‐‐ which we haven't run into that quite frankly. We haven't run into the situation. And again the program is evolving, guys, okay. You're trying to do some sort of gotcha bullshit, okay. But the program is evolving.
And quite frankly for you to ask me or suggest to me what we do in our business, you know, in terms of creative is absurd.
Q Are you familiar with the story that I'm describing?
A Generally.
Q The journalist, a wrestling journalist, Dave Meltzer, in a July 2007 piece compiled ‐‐
Mr. McDevitt. That's an oxymoron.
BY MR. LEVISS:
Q ‐‐ a list of 60 or over 60 former professional wrestlers who in his assessment had died early. Are you familiar with ‐‐
A I'm not familiar with anything Dave Meltzer writes. He's a gossip columnist. I don't read what he has to write. Like I say, he's a dirt monger. There are a number of those. We call them dirt sheets and they have very little credibility.
BY MR. COHEN:
Q What about ‐‐ some of his work received coverage in a number of other more mainstream outlets, for example, Sports Illustrated. I believe Frank Deford did a story on the Meltzer numbers. Are you familiar with that?
A Look, I've borrowed one of Frank Deford's shoes one night. He doesn't like me.
Q Are you familiar with his story?
A No. Other than Frank Deford wrote something derogatory. But, you know, he has no sense of humor and he doesn't like me. We were bowling one night and I borrowed one of his shoes and he never found it. And so he had to walk home in a bowling shoe and one of his others, and he was upset about that I understand.
Mr. Leviss. I'm going to have to note that would be
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upsetting too.
Mr. O'Neil. Now we know the rest of the story.
Mr. McDevitt. You're hearing something for the first time, too. I never heard that one.
Mr. McMahon. Well, actually I also borrowed one of his wife's shoes, too.
Mr. McDevitt. That's a whole different story.
Mr. McMahon. I left that part out.
Mr. Leviss. I take it she was not your size.
BY MR. LEVISS:
Q Are you familiar with the book Wrestling Babylon by Irv Muchnick?
A I never read it, but I'm familiar with it.
Q I understand that he published a list of 89 former professional wrestlers who ‐‐ again he contended had died early. Have you heard of that?
Mr. McDevitt. I think that's the one he had a couple of people on the list twice.
Mr. McMahon. No.
Mr. McDevitt. That's the one he had a couple of people on the list twice.
Mr. Leviss. I'm sorry?
Mr. McDevitt. That's the one that has the same people on the list twice. That's the quality of his journalism.
Mr. Leviss. Okay.
Mr. McMahon. Where are you going with this? Cut to the chase, will you, please?