LG
09-06-2013, 03:02 AM
Source: Chad Dukes Wrestling Show
As noted earlier, Kaitlyn recently spoke to Chad Dukes of The Chad Dukes Wrestling Show. Here are some more highlights from the interview:
Total Divas: "I think it's such a great thing for the WWE in general it brings people that don't normally watch, aren't typically wrestling fans, aren't sports entertainment fans, people that would just watch the E! network, and it kind of gives us like a broader demographic, and opens up our world to people. "Also, people that are fans get a chance to see inside and how things work. It definitely blurs the lines of what's reality and what's entertainment, sometimes even for me. I didn't really understand the concept of how this whole divas thing was gonna go down, it's definitely very, it's hard to get used to. You know we're always on camera anyways on TV days and stuff, but there's like extra cameras, E! cameras, following these girls around everywhere and sometimes it's a little bit intrusive. Though, you know I found out stuff about pixelating, its extensive and time-consuming. So if you don't want to be on camera, you just throw up a couple of gang signs, or you know something that they might have to pixelate and then boom, you don't have to worry about being on the show. "In all seriousness, it's a really great concept bringing all kinds of new fans into our world."
Her recent live tweeting of Raw: "They (WWE) definitely encourage us to get out there on social media in all avenues. When I'm not on the show and I'm just backstage and I wanna be involved, it's a great way to interact with fans and kind of express our opinions of the show and our reactions and stuff like that. "They don't encourage all the things that we say, but it's our opinions and it's a lot of fun."
The life and death of Cody Rhodes' Mustache: "Honestly, from the moment that I first saw Cody, he had an injury and I didn't see him for several weeks, he showed back up, he made a big comeback backstage, he showed up at work wearing some kind of completely out of character, like a white suit and some kind of weird white fedora and just had this creepy pencil thin mustache. And we were like, 'Is that Cody's evil twin?' And Cody is the evil one so we were like, 'Is that Cody's good twin?' "Slowly I was so impressed with his mustache and he kept it and it kept getting more and more character. We would be backstage, or I'd be watching the matches and all of the sudden you'd hear 'Cody's mustache,' an actual chant. I'm gonna come clean, I actually started some of those chants, like from the corner.
So I just had this love affair with his mustache, just only his mustache, the rest of him you know, give or take. "Then it was so funny because as time went on he would have to trim it and do all that stuff and he wasn't very good at it. So he would trim one side and then it would be a little shorter than the other side. He'd have to trim up the other side and it kept getting smaller and smaller and smaller and dangerously close to a Charlie Chaplin mustache. So when he finally shaved it off it was really sad, it was like the end of an era. I don't know, maybe he'll bust out a soul patch."
As noted earlier, Kaitlyn recently spoke to Chad Dukes of The Chad Dukes Wrestling Show. Here are some more highlights from the interview:
Total Divas: "I think it's such a great thing for the WWE in general it brings people that don't normally watch, aren't typically wrestling fans, aren't sports entertainment fans, people that would just watch the E! network, and it kind of gives us like a broader demographic, and opens up our world to people. "Also, people that are fans get a chance to see inside and how things work. It definitely blurs the lines of what's reality and what's entertainment, sometimes even for me. I didn't really understand the concept of how this whole divas thing was gonna go down, it's definitely very, it's hard to get used to. You know we're always on camera anyways on TV days and stuff, but there's like extra cameras, E! cameras, following these girls around everywhere and sometimes it's a little bit intrusive. Though, you know I found out stuff about pixelating, its extensive and time-consuming. So if you don't want to be on camera, you just throw up a couple of gang signs, or you know something that they might have to pixelate and then boom, you don't have to worry about being on the show. "In all seriousness, it's a really great concept bringing all kinds of new fans into our world."
Her recent live tweeting of Raw: "They (WWE) definitely encourage us to get out there on social media in all avenues. When I'm not on the show and I'm just backstage and I wanna be involved, it's a great way to interact with fans and kind of express our opinions of the show and our reactions and stuff like that. "They don't encourage all the things that we say, but it's our opinions and it's a lot of fun."
The life and death of Cody Rhodes' Mustache: "Honestly, from the moment that I first saw Cody, he had an injury and I didn't see him for several weeks, he showed back up, he made a big comeback backstage, he showed up at work wearing some kind of completely out of character, like a white suit and some kind of weird white fedora and just had this creepy pencil thin mustache. And we were like, 'Is that Cody's evil twin?' And Cody is the evil one so we were like, 'Is that Cody's good twin?' "Slowly I was so impressed with his mustache and he kept it and it kept getting more and more character. We would be backstage, or I'd be watching the matches and all of the sudden you'd hear 'Cody's mustache,' an actual chant. I'm gonna come clean, I actually started some of those chants, like from the corner.
So I just had this love affair with his mustache, just only his mustache, the rest of him you know, give or take. "Then it was so funny because as time went on he would have to trim it and do all that stuff and he wasn't very good at it. So he would trim one side and then it would be a little shorter than the other side. He'd have to trim up the other side and it kept getting smaller and smaller and smaller and dangerously close to a Charlie Chaplin mustache. So when he finally shaved it off it was really sad, it was like the end of an era. I don't know, maybe he'll bust out a soul patch."