Each episode also features his sons Blade & Dallas as well as WrestleZone Radio’s Nick Hausman as the co-hosts. You can find some of Bret’s comments from the episode transcribed below.
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On Ryback’s demeanor backstage at WWE Payback the night before he posted his comments speaking out against WWE:
BH: I saw him one time throughout the night. He didn’t look happy but he looked like he was concentrating on his match. We just passed by each other. I never saw him. I never saw his match.
On the way wrestlers get paid:
BH: All I know is that wrestlers get contracts now. They get signed to a certain amount and how that reflects on how many dates they have a year or what they get paid or how that comes down to PPVs. Whether that’s extra on top of what they make. I don’t know. It seems to me if you get signed to a good contract then you don’t need to worry about how many days you work. You just have to show up and do the dates that you are required. Who cares if you win? Who cares whether you’re on the PPV or not on the PPV? I suppose there is probably some kind of monetary, I’m guessing, I am sure there has got to be a monetary connection to that. Like a bonus. Sort of like you get a bonus on top of what you’re salary is if you’re on these PPVs. As far as wrestlers winning and losing and not getting paid the same? I don’t know that’s the case. For example, if Yokozuna was wrestling me and I was the Champion, I was the highest paid guy on the card. This was before contracts. The big guaranteed contracts. If I was wrestling Yokozuna and I was the Champion and he was the challenger he basically got the same pay as me for that night. We were both paid equally as far as I know. We both got the same pay off. That’s why it was so important to work with the Champion. You got a title shot. You get to work with Bret Hart while he’s champion for two months. That means you get top pay for two months. Every night you’re getting paid the same amount as the Champion. That was my understanding of it. That’s why it was important. People would go, “Why would you care when you lose the title?” When I lost the title and they came in and told me I was losing the title to Yokozuna in Las Vegas. That he was going to lose it like a minute later to Hogan. It was a big drop in salary. I’m not getting paid top money anymore. I’m getting paid main event money but I am not getting the World Champion payment. I remember, it’s a big step down. You’re just not being paid the same. Me losing the World Championship is just like someone losing the Stanley Cup or the Super Bowl. People say, “Wrestling’s not real.” It’s real. I get people that have mocked me or criticized me over the years saying, “He took wrestling too serious.” I was the hardest working guy in the company. I was the star of the show and I wasn’t getting paid top money. Hulk Hogan started making the top money and he wasn’t the top guy anymore. I had a right to my complaints. Yoko got the belt, eventually, from Hogan and I was supposed to get the title but Hogan made sure that I didn’t get it. So he stopped me and he stopped my family from making a living. He cut in to my income. That’s why I was always so bitter and still am towards Hogan. I’m like, “You cost my family income. By deciding that you didn’t want to drop the belt to me. You wanted to drop it to Yoko instead because you wanted somebody big or something.” I don’t remember what his reasoning was. You changed my fortune and my financial outcome because of your decision. That’s not right. Vince made the decision to put the title on me at SummerSlam. Then Hogan changed all that and they wound up going in a different direction. I was working with Jerry Lawler at SummerSlam. I’d been slanted in a different direction that was out of the money. It’s not fair. Those are more grievances that I would have as a wrestler. As far as I know, unless things have changed, the winner does not make more than the loser. The main event makes more money than the opening match. If you’re not one of the main events then you’re not making as much money. It’s hard to say. Wrestling has changed so much and probably the financial structure has changed the most. I know years ago there was a criticism of me that I didn’t like to lose. It’s not that I didn’t like to lose. I had no problem losing but I knew that if I was losing a lot of matches that I wasn’t going to be in the big main events. If you’re not in the big main events… that’s where the money is.
This episode features Bret and his sons Blade & Dallas talking to WrestleZone Radio’s Nick Hausman about a variety of topics including:
- What it was like for Bret to be backstage and working with WWE again at Payback
- What his interactions with Triple H, Stephanie, Shane and Vince were like
- Vince’s concern for Bret’s health and wanting to keep him limited in Natalya’s match
- How the idea of “The Chicago Screw Job” came about
- What the original plan was for Bret at the end of Natalya and Charlotte’s match
- The WWE continuing to revisit The Montreal Screw Job
- Charles Robinson getting to work with Ric Flair again
- The atmosphere backstage at WWE Payback after Enzo’s injury
- Ric Flair seemingly threatening a fight with Natalya on RAW
- Charlotte’s concerns for her Dad and how much he’s willing to do in the ring
- Whether or not it was difficult for Bret to put The Sharpshooter on Ric Flair
- Blade & Dallas’ memories of Vince McMahon
- Vince McMahon’s impressive food spread at WWE events compared to the catering that wrestlers get
- Bret’s take on the tension between Shane and Stephanie McMahon backstage at WWE Payback
- Ryback asking to be taken off the road by WWE and the recent outspoken comments he released about the way WWE pays and treats it’s talent
- The way it was determined how much wrestlers got paid back when Bret was wrestling
- Why Bret is still bitter towards Hulk Hogan to this day
- Roman Reigns’ current presentation and advice that Bret has given him
- Kevin Owens and Sami Zayn putting on a five-star match at WWE Payback
- More…
This episode also features Bret giving his “4 Out Of 10” award of the week as well as answering questions from the #AskTheHitman mailbag.
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