Interview with Ken Kennedy - January 2008
Eric:Your theme song is on the RAW greatest hits CD despite the
fact you have been on RAW for less than a year. How does it feel to
have your song placed aside the songs of wrestlers like the Rock & Steve Austin so early in your career?
Mr. Kennedy: It’s a testament to the hard work that I’ve put
forth all these years and I’m honored to be on the CD next to those
greats. It’s weird. They say that success happens over night and I’ve
been working at it for so long, for over seven years, that when stuff
like this happens you have to step back for a moment and say that I’ve
made it. To be on that CD is a testament to the fact that I’ve made it
to some degree. I’ve still got a lot to do.
Eric: How did you wind up with Turn up the Trouble as your theme song?
Mr. Kennedy: I sat down with Vince and Stephanie (McMahon),
Kevin Dunn, the executive producer, and John Laurinaitis, who is the
head of talent relations, and we all had a meeting together one day.
Vince said “what kind of music do you like to listen to?” At the time,
coming from the independent scene, I had been using Pour Some Sugar on Me
by Def Leppard. I said that I kind of want that ‘80s rock. I like
that stuff and thought it was good for my character. Kevin said that “I
think we’ve got something that we’ve had in the tank for awhile and we
really haven’t had a place to use it”. So Jim Johnston had made this
song and they played it for me. I remember listening to it and not
really liking it the first time I heard it because the voice was a lot
different on there. Jim Johnston’s voice kind of sounded like Sammy
Hagar and I can’t stand Sammy Hagar. I’m a Van Halen fan, not a Van
Hagar fan.
I remember Vince asked me what I thought about it and I said I don’t
like the voice on it and asked if there was anything they could do about
that. He went back and I guess that Jim came back into the studio that
week and re-recorded the song and put a little twist on his voice. In
the track, I’d say he kind of found an AC/DC type of voice. He came
back to me, played it for me, and I said “that’s great, that works”.
I’ve been fortunate enough to have the same music the whole time I’ve
been in the WWE and I don’t plan on changing it anytime soon.
Eric: Who came up with the idea for saying your name twice and having the microphone drop down to you?
Mr. Kennedy: It was a combination of years and years of
different things happening and it is just kind of weird how it all came
together. I used to announce basketball games when I was in high school
and as kind of a rib, one of my friends suggested I say the last names
twice because it would be kind of funny because old boxing announcers
used to do it. So I started doing it and people were laughing at it and
thought it was good, and were entertained by it. It brought another
little dimension to the basketball games I was announcing.
When I got down to OVW, Paul Heyman said just on a whim one night, “Hey,
tonight I’ll let you go out there and announce yourself”. And I kind
of just pulled that from my archives and I said “Hey, would you mind if I
said my last name twice?” He told me to go for it. I went out there
and I did it. I came back to the locker room and everybody was like
“that was great when you said your last name twice.”
I was just telling someone earlier that it is funny how the stupidest
things in life get over. And I worked six-and-a-half years to get to
the WWE, clawing, scratching, and fighting my way in. It took me to say
my last name twice in order to get the job. Five weeks later, I was on
TV.
Eric: When you wrestle a televised match, are you more concerned
with putting on a great performance for the live crowd or the television
audience?
Mr. Kennedy: Well TV is a lot different than our house shows. At
our live events, we have a lot more lee-way to play with the audience a
little more. [On televised shows] We know that the audience is there
but I don’t cater to the audience as much when we are on live TV. We’ve
got certain times that we’ve got to hit and I don’t have the time to
sit and cater to the fans [in the audience].
Eric: At last year’s WrestleMania, you won the Money in the Bank match in front of over 80,000 people. How does it feel to work in front of such a large crowd?
Mr. Kennedy: It’s weird because before I went out I was very
energetic, pumped up, and had those little goose bumps. I don’t get
that all the time. Usually, I’m pretty calm before I go out for a
match. I’ll tell you, I was real nervous, but it was a good nervous.
It wasn’t a “Oh God I’m not going to be able to do this nervous” or a
weak-kneed nervous, it was a kind of positive stress.
I went out there and I remember thinking to myself that it doesn’t look
like 80,000. When I was in the ring, they were all kind of packed on
top of each other and it didn’t look like there were that many people
there. I remember afterwards, I went to the top row where all the
families were sitting, and I looked and it was amazing to me to see how
many people were there. When you looked down from above, it was like a
sea of people. It was insane. And that’s when it really hit me that
“man I can’t believe I just performed in front of all those people”.
Eric: Since WrestleMania 24 will be taking place outdoors, I was curious if there is a difference wrestling indoors as compared to outdoors?
Mr. Kennedy: Yeah, definitely. One of those things you don’t
think about is the way that sound carries indoors and outdoors. It’s
different and that affects the way that the crowd sounds to you. A lot
of times we do feed off of that crowd emotion even though I am not
necessarily catering to them.
I remember wrestling outdoors in a stadium in New Zealand. It didn’t
sound like the crowd was very loud when in fact there were other people
sitting in the crowd that were like “I can’t believe how loud that crowd
was”. They were insane but you don’t get that. That might affect some
guys. It may play head games with some of the guys because like I
said, we are so used to feeding off of that crowd emotion. So it is a
little harder in an open air stadium.
Eric: Having done so much early in your career and with the
potential to do so much more, has anyone in the WWE taken on the role of
mentoring you to get to the next level?
Mr. Kennedy: Yeah, I think a lot of guys have. There are so
many guys that I’ve looked up to and I can’t honestly nail it down to
just one. There are so many guys, from top guys to mid-card guys to
guys that are lower on the card. [Steve] Austin for a while, he would
call me regularly and say “Hey, I watched you match last night and here
is what you did wrong.” And every once in a while, he’ll come down to
TV’s and we will talk about stuff and throw out some ideas and stuff.
You know, Undertaker, when I was working with him, Shawn Michaels, Triple H, JBL,
these are all types of guys that while they don’t necessarily come to
you, but if you go to them and ask of them, they are totally willing to
help. They realize that they are not going to be around forever and
they want to cultivate the next batch of wrestlers that are going to
take over, that they are going to be able to pass that torch to. One of
the things is that they are not going to look for those guys, they are
going to wait for those guys to go and look for them. I actively take
that role.
Eric: Having been on both RAW and SmackDown, do you find that there is a real rivalry between the two brands?
Mr. Kennedy: Yes, but it is definitely a friendly type of
rivalry. I probably shouldn’t say friendly, but it is professional. We
don’t pull ribs on each other or anything like that, or do anything
harshly towards each other. But there definitely is that feeling of my
stuff is better than your stuff. I’m on the better show. We just go
out there and try to have the best show possible. We all know that we
fall under the same umbrella. I do think that the guys in SmackDown
think that there show is the best and the guys on ECW think that there
show is the best and likewise for the RAW guys.
Mr. Kennedy: After I get off the phone with you here [note: 9:30 AM], I’m going to have breakfast and get my haircut because I haven’t been able to do that in about two weeks and it is starting to get long. I’ll find a gym, hit the tanning bed and we have to be at the building at 2:00 today. When I get there I usually do some taped interviews for commercials. They’ll usually have some radio spots or television spots or some WWE mobile stuff that I’ll do in front of the camera. And then it’s just trying to figure out what we’re doing tonight for the show and getting that all squared away [note: this show was the episode of RAW that featured RAW Roulette]. And then it is getting ready, getting stretched out, pumped up, get ready to go, go out there, get my thing done in the ring, and then when I come back after the show tonight [which ended at 11:05], I have an autograph signing. I’ll be signing copies of the DVD for the RAW 15th Anniversary. And then I’ll probably go and grab a bite to eat somewhere and then hit the rack by about 2 or 3. And then turn around about three hours later and catch a flight back home.
In : WWF/WWE Interviews