Exclusive Ring Rust Radio interview with Jeff Jarrett about Global Force Wrestling and it's upcoming TV show 'Amped'
The
hosts of Ring Rust Radio – Donald Wood, Mike Chiari and Brandon Galvin –
had
the chance to speak with Global Force Wrestling founder Jeff Jarrett recently.
With GFW hosting shows all over America, the company recently announced several
championship tournaments as well as an upcoming TV Show titled “Amped.” Ring
Rust Radio talked to Jarrett about that and more. You can listen to the
interview at the link below or continue on to read the entire interview here!
Donald
Wood: The biggest news from Global Force Wrestling recently has been the
announcement that the television program will be called Amped. The first taping
will be Friday, July 24 at the Orleans Arena. Can you give us any more
information on how many episodes you will be taping and what channel, dates and
times will wrestling fans be able to watch the finished product?
Jeff
Jarrett:
You’re digging for the good stuff and I appreciate that. We just named it
Amped, and we are in the discussion of how many episodes so I can’t tell you
how many right now. We are going to be shooting on content next Friday,
then August 21, and October 23. One thing is for sure, we are starting
four tournaments starting next Friday: The Global Championship, the Tag Team
Championship, the Women’s Championship, and the Nex-Gen Championship. We
do have Bobby Rude appearing and in my opinion he personifies what GFW in some
shape, form, or fashion is all about. He is a wrestler under a contract
for another promotion who will be appearing on our program. The number of
episodes is a moving target at this point. We are going to go shoot the
tournament then we get back who knows? It could be ten episodes, twelve,
fourteen, who knows? It’s a work in progress. When you are trying
to line up domestic and international, it’s a real challenge to try and please
everybody. We are going to do our very best to expose the product to as
many wrestling fans as we can.
Mike
Chiari: There's a lot of excitement surrounding the various GFW championship
tournaments that were recently announced, but the one that really caught my eye
was the Nex-Gen Championship. Explain the Nex-Gen division, what type of
performers we'll see taking part in it and why you think it's going to be an
asset to GFW.
Jeff
Jarrett:
Nex-Gen is a term we really thought about and studied. When you look at
pro-wrestling in 2015, there are certain guys that are going to wrestle like
the next generation and they are going to take it to the next level.
Whether it be the speed of the Young Bucks or the innovation of the Bullet
Club, there are so many different talents that will take it to the next
generation. Then you see a guy who is a rookie, brand new in the
business, and isn’t a household name today. But in the next generation of
household names he will be. It’s a little bit of both, no weight limit,
it’s a division of guys who want to get in there and wrestle. They may
never have won a title before or it may be their style of wrestling that will
give them that first opportunity to wrestle for that Nex-Gen title. It’s
not a traditional type of division by any means.
Brandon
Galvin: Hacksaw Jim Duggan recently stated GFW will be a PG, family-friendly
product. With WWE also promoting a family-friendly product, what will GFW do,
or what would you like to see GFW do, to separate itself from WWE within the PG
environment?
Jeff
Jarrett:
It goes without saying that WWE is sports entertainment. They invented
the term and they do it better than anybody else. It’s a very lucrative
business for them and my hats off to them on how they have created their
genre. We are professional wrestling, there are a lot of similarities but
we are going to be more docu-style. Are we going to have story
lines? Yes. It’s like how you have story lines in a sporting event
like a baseball or football game. We are not going to write stories per
say, but more along the lines of documenting them. There is a story
behind every GFW athlete. Questions like: Why, why did you get into
the business, why did you want to be a professional wrestler, why GFW, why do
you want to be a Champion, why do you do this in your persona, what makes you
tick, what’s going on in your family life? That all affects the business
and how you climb the ladder of success. That’s a big difference between
writing story lines and documenting story lines.
Brandon
Galvin: When we had you on last, you had mentioned you were following WWE’s
product and watching the network. Recently they were promoting their ‘Beast
in the East’ show. On there they had a documentary style program on Finn
Balor and his climb in the business is that the style you are getting at?
Jeff
Jarrett:
If you watch the GFW YouTube channel it will give you a sample. Back at
Wrestle Kingdom 9 we documented our journey leading up to it. We also
have videos coming out to give you a feel for it with guys like PJ Black, the
Bollywood Boys, the Akbars, and Mordetzky. The videos dive into the
talent and the wrestler’s lives and what’s really going on in their
world. Just recently, we took a real life situation, I went back into TNA
with a lot of raw emotion and I don’t want to get to long winded on this, but a
non-TNA talent left the promotion with the King of the Mountain title.
Eric Young was pretty vocal about it backstage and went on a Twitter rant about
it. He said it didn’t have anything to do with it but if you connect the
dots you can see it. My hats off to him for being vocal about it.
Eric and I have a personal relationship that goes back over ten years. He
has been at every 4th of July party at my house except maybe one he
missed. We have a real close relationship and I respect him because he
didn’t go behind my back about his frustrations. He just made it vocal he
didn’t like it. I told him he should come up on the tour and we can talk
about it. He took me up on it and came and had a match against Johnny
Gargano, local independent superstar, from the AIW. You don’t see that
kind of stuff in any other promotion.
Donald
Wood: One person who has been giving GFW trouble already is Eric Young. Do you
think the confrontations with Young could lead to tension between the GFW
wrestlers and TNA wrestlers, possibly resulting in an invasion angle as
mentioned before?
Jeff
Jarrett:
The word invasion is kind of been there and done that in my opinion.
Certainly you can already see that Bobby Rude is coming to Vegas next Friday
for the first ever set of Amped tapings and he is under contract with
TNA. Eric Young was just with us this weekend. We are in
discussions of the next steps of this business agreement. Global Force
Wrestling and TNA wrestling, whether it’s a co-branded show, a co-promoted
show, a collaboration, that’s all in discussion right now and I am reporting it
in real time as much as I can. As a wrestling fan myself, this kind of
stuff excites me because you just don’t see this nowadays. Years ago you
had hand shake agreements between promoters, you had Ric Flair as a traveling
champion, and Dory Funk working for multiple promotions. Once the
territory system went away, you were left with the big two of WWE and WCW.
Then you were down to the big one, just being WWE. Then you had had TNA
and Ring of Honor come around with every promotion acting like an island.
WWE can do that since they have north of 90% of the market share. You
have all the smaller promotions fighting and clawing for that brand
identity. I believe with GFW and our mission statement, we want to have a
working relationship with any and all promotions because rising tides raise all
ships. I went out and formed the relationships that I have had over the
years and made them more formal with New Japan and Triple A and around the
globe with the independent promotions in Europe, South Africa, and Australia.
Mike
Chiari: There's obviously been a ton of speculation regarding some type of
working relationship between GFW and TNA since you competed at Slammiversary
and won the King of the Mountain title. I'm not saying it will, but if an
arrangement was to be reached at some point, how do you think both sides would
benefit from something like that?
Jeff
Jarrett:
End of the day and this may sound cliché, if the wrestling fans benefits, than
9 times out of 10 the promotion will benefit. There was chatter about
Karen and I coming back to that promotion, and that created positive chatter
for TNA. That fed into the positive chatter for GFW including Bobby and
Eric and all of that helps the promotion. As we move along, it helps
create brand awareness and creating a little bit of that mystique. End of
the day, people want to see fantastic professional wrestling and that should be
everyone’s common goal. That’s what we are headed for and that is
fantastic professional wrestling.
Brandon
Galvin: As one of the founders of TNA, is there any key philosophy or business
strategy that you took away from your time there as you continue to develop and
push the GFW brand?
Jeff
Jarrett:
We all are a sum total of all of our decisions and life experiences. This
is my 29th year in this business as an active wrestler, growing up in it, I’m a
third generation, and there are just certain things you learn. That sort
of looking in the rear-view mirror on one hand and on the other you need to be
looking forward. Where do you want to be in one year, two year, three
years, five years, and even ten years from now? Technology has turned the
cable business upside down and it’s gone in lightning speeds in the last few
years. Now you have everything like Hulu, Netflix, and all the streaming
services including the WWE network. It’s all a game changer for our
business. It wasn’t too long ago where fans were expected to pay for
twelve to thirteen pay-per-views a year. Now it’s down to $9.99 for the
network for everything included. Now we have the technology to watch
lucha libre, strong style, or wrestling from any country in the world all at
the click of a button. The technology has changed the wrestling world so
you have to try to stay ahead of the curve. I have taken a lot of my life
experiences to help my team in GFW to help us evolve and put out a very
compelling product.
Donald
Wood: GFW has already been putting on live events across the country on the
Grand Slam tour. How have the fans embraced the new wrestling promotion thus
far and do you consider the tour to be a success?
Jeff
Jarrett:
Success, absolutely. One of the barometers is black ink and red ink, you
want that black ink, and we got it. On the flip side of that is when you
are at the shows it’s one thing to get the electricity and vibe from the people
on the way out talking about how much fun they had. Then at the end of it
you had the owners and GM come up to you and you know at the end of the day
that really is the true barometer. This is a grass roots initiative and
its year one of this initiative and now we're on to step one of building the
brand of live events. We have done this and now we have had all seven
teams come up to us and tell us how much they love it, they want us on the
schedule, and they all want us back. From their perspective, professional
wrestling in their ballpark is unique. They have about a 140 day season
and only 70 games so half the time their park is empty. They want to fill
it with more concerts and events because it’s beneficial to them since the
venue is there and not in use. It’s really a win won when we come to
town, we put the ring up on home plate, have the event, and we are dialed into
the ticket base and media contacts with their promotions. It’s a
different concept and we are using it as a building block to get out there and
now the brand awareness in each of these markets is experientially bigger then
what it was when we do these shows.
Mike
Chiari: You have a full plate when it comes to running GFW, but after wrestling
at Slammiversary many are wondering about your future as an in-ring performer.
What are your plans for the King of the Mountain title, and also, what are the
odds that we'll see you competing in the ring at some point as part of the GFW
roster?
Jeff
Jarrett:
Slim and none on the GFW roster. If you caught Impact when I made the
surprise appearance, I told them that I don’t know where the disconnect
is. You are calling me to come wrestle but I don’t even wrestle for my
own promotion. Then we talked through things and it was the King of the
Mountain match and Slammiversary. I like to keep myself in shape but I
wasn’t anywhere close to in my age and career the shape I wanted to be
in. I was happy with the match but I have no plans to be an active
wrestler on the GFW roster. As far as the King of the Mountain title we
have a call this Friday. We are going to figure out what our next best
step is. We have a title, that is not GFW property, it’s in our
possession, I could vacate it, have a one night tournament, block A vs. block
B, there is just so many ways to go about this and we have to figure that
out. It’s pretty exciting just to have the opportunity but what we are
going to do with it I am not sure just yet.
Brandon
Galvin: You've always been one of the most well-rounded performers in
wrestling, but has there ever been somebody that you were nervous to against?
Jeff
Jarrett:
Well, it goes without saying that I have been blessed to wrestle some of the
very, very best. In my early days Jerry Lawler, he had this aura and
ability in the ring. Certainly not the Jerry today but the active weekly
wrestler that had a presence about him that would put you on edge. I also
had a series of matches against Shawn Michaels later on who could be called the
best in-ring performer ever. I had another series with Ric Flair and it
goes without saying his pedigree. Just a couple of years ago I had
multiple, high-profile matches against Kurt Angle. Kurt has so much
tenacity, athletic ability, strength, and drive. Still to this day,
before I went through the curtain at Slammiversary, I had butterflies and was
nervous. That same feeling should never go away and if it does you should
get out of the business. I felt it that night and I sure felt it the next
day after that.
Labels: Amped, GFW, GFW Amped, GFW championship, GFW TV show, Global Force Wrestling, Jeff Jarrett, NXT, Ring Rust Radio, Slammiversary, TNA, WWE
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