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View Full Version : Booker T Not Happy With New Day’s Parody of His N-Bomb Botch



Kemo
07-04-2017, 03:46 PM
We all know that LaMelo Ball dropped a few ‘N-bombs’ during his appearance on Monday Night RAW alongside brother Lonzo and father LaVar, however, this is definitely not the first time we’ve heard the word on WWE programing. One of the most famous instances involved WWE Hall Of Famer Booker T, who cut a promo on Hulk Hogan backstage before accidentally saying “Hulk Hogan! We coming for you n****”.

During last week’s episode of SmackDown Live, The New Day decided to parody this with Big E saying “Listen up and put this flava in your ear. We want that gold sucka and at Battleground, we comin’ for you…” – right before getting cut off by Xavier Woods. Booker T took to his podcast, Heated Conversations, and expressed his displeasure for The New Day’s segment:

“I just want to make it publicly known that I don’t condone that at all especially coming off of Monday Night. We as a people, we gotta know when it’s time to speak up and when it’s time to shut up. My mother taught me that a long time ago. If you don’t know, it’ll come back and haunt you. [The WCW promo blooper] has haunted me for this many years. You put yourself in a situation for something to happen, just like Mike Tyson did, something can happen. For these young kids to understand and realize and be able to speak up for themselves…you know…then again, I spoke up because I was talent.

“I spoke up because I knew that I could speak up. I implore these young people out there to know exactly what they’re doing and how they are affecting our young people that are coming up. That’s the most important thing as far as I’m concerned. Me personally, I know I’ve made mistakes. That word that I said on national television in front of the world – I wish I could go back and erase it. I wish that I could take it back. I wish that WWE would never do something like that ever again.”

“Me personally, I don’t appreciate it. I don’t know if [WWE] knew that the parody was gonna go down because I know those guys do a lot of their own stuff. I don’t think that we as a company need to go that route. I think that parody should not have ever been shown on television because it wasn’t a great moment for us as black people. For us as black people, it was one of our worst moments. Just like the [Lamelo] Ball thing. The kid is 15-years old [and] I don’t blame him or anything like that. It was something that slipped out just like myself [in 1997], it was something that slipped out. For me as a person that’s trying to set an example for us as black people and for me to let so many people down – even the ones that thought it was the cool – even the ones that thought it was an anthem…

“…I want them to know that it was my worst day that I could have ever had being a black man and letting so many of our people down by calling us that word or saying that word in any realm [or] any form was definitely not right by any means. I wish I could take it right back. That one blemish is the only thing they have over my head that they could put out there to try to make me look bad in any way shape, form, or fashion. Of course, I could put a spin on it… … but does that make it right? No, it doesn’t make it right. It’s still a stain, a blemish, a mark that no surgical procedure could ever repair. So I just want young people to know exactly what they’re saying and when they’re saying it.”