McMahons reveal little on TSN
By GREG OLIVER --
SLAM! Wrestling
The biggest surprise to come out of Off The Record's interview with
Vince and Linda McMahon Wednesday night was that they met in church. Not
only that, but Linda was just 13, and Vince was 16. Three years later
they were married.
Now, almost 33 years later, Linda McMahon is the CEO of Titan Sports,
parent of the WWF, and Vince McMahon as owner and Chairman of the
company.
TSN's Michael Landsberg didn't fill up the full half-hour with Vince and
Linda, unlike Tuesday's full show with Vince (of which there were many
unanswered questions). Instead, we got a few fairly predictable answers
to simple questions and Landsberg letting them off the hook and avoiding
a tough one.
Linda sees Vince "as a very shrewd businessman" and "a wonderful
husband, a great father, he's someone that I've been proud to call my
best friend. We've had a wonderful lifetime together. Always bumps in
the road in any relationship. We had ours. There will probably be more
to come. But he's a man of integrity, a man of principles, someone I
admire and respect very much and I would say that even if he weren't
sitting next to me."
No surprises there.
Shortly thereafter, Landsberg asked how they met, and whether wrestling
had ever jeopardized their relationship -- an excellent question
following up on Linda's quote.
The McMahons then went into their cute story of how they met, and never
got to the tough part of the question.
Vince explained to the audience that he is mostly involved in the
creative aspect of the WWF show, and his wife stays completely out of
that side of things.
"She describes herself as nuts and bolts, but it's far beyond that,"
said Vince. "She's always been right there, sometimes behind me,
sometimes infront of me, helping to grow this company."
From the boardroom in Stamford, CT, Linda is asked to play a reactionary
role on occasion. "Since I'm not part of the storyline and not part of
the creative aspect of it, even though I'm more insider than the viewing
audience most of the time, my reaction really is pretty typical. So
it's: How do I react? How do I react as a mother? How do I react as a
woman?"
Vince said that he is completely comfortable with his children being
involved in storylines, including sexual innuendos regarding his
daughter. "I think I err on the conservative side as a dad," Vince said.
Linda didn't go quite that far, and said that of course she worries
about his children when they are in the ring. "It clearly is a different
level when it's your son or your husband or your daughter doing it. You
know that there is always a risk and you assume the risk when you step
into the rink. But when Shane was standing on top of those ladders, that
was really ... I actually stood up in the middle of the floor and kind
of said 'I'll be glad when he's down.'"
Before going to the first commercial, Landsberg asked who was the true
Higher Power at home, and who had control of the remote control. It
turned out to be Vince.
After the break, Landsberg asked about the Sable lawsuit. Linda said
that it would probably be settled by the time the show aired (it was
taped last Thursday, and the suit has indeed been settled). Bound by the
settlement-in-progress, the McMahons would not comment about Sable /
Rena Mero specifically, and again, beat around the proverbial bush.
Landsberg wondered about wrestlers who begin to believe their hype, who
have become too immersed in their character to see reality anymore. He
used three examples, and Vince responded to each: Bret Hart ("no
question about Bret"), Sunny ("I'd have to go there as well, probably")
and Sable ("again, as a part of the settlement thing, I'm not supposed
to speak ill of Rena Mero. So I won't.")
Linda praised Jim Ross, the Vice President of Talent Administration, for
keeping the wrestlers ("talent") grounded. "Celebrity is a heady
experience," said Linda.
In the final segment, Landsberg tried to get the McMahons to talk about
entertainment vs wrestling. Vince called the term 'wrestling' "archaic"
in regards to the WWF, and that it's the brand that is far more
important.
"I think we have the license to go in any direction we want to go," said
Vince. "Less physical, more physical, more in the ring, more out of the
ring."
After the interview was concluded, Landsberg summed up his experiences
back in the studio in Toronto and talked about the upcoming Stephanie
and Shane McMahon episode, now scheduled to run at 6 pm ET next Tuesday,
August 3. From the clip that was shown, it looks promising, if only to
see the siblings outside of their wrestling personas.