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View Full Version : Shawn Michaels Suicide & More



Black Widow
12-23-2009, 06:03 PM
Throw your hands in the air! Wave 'em like you just don't care! Because as of now, all the members of Men on a Mission are right here! That's right! We brought you the first post-WWE interview with Mable aka Big Daddy V. We brought you the first ever shoot interview with Oscar. Now former WWF Tag Team Champion Bobby “Mo” Horne joins them on ClubWWI.com for an uncut 50 minute shoot interview that can only be summed up as explosive!

No one is ready for the stories that Mo has to tell. His tale is both uplifting and tragic as he details his love for the business and appreciation for the McMahon Family but his unhappiness with the way WWF management was allowed to treat talent. Bobby tells horror stories about some of the incidents that occurred including the story of how Men on a Mission were fired two months after their debut, the role Yokozuna played in it, how Bam Bam Bigelow got involved, what Vince McMahon said when he fired them, why Vince called his roster a “bunch of p*ssies,” and much more. The politics backstage could sometimes be too much and, as Bobby explains to ClubWWI.com listeners, it affected him in ways he could have never imagined…

“It was a horrible experience, bro. I almost committed suicide. Yeah. They starved me out after an incident with Shawn Michaels…For nine months, they took me off the show. They took me off TV. They starved me out . I didn’t make no money. But what was really funny was that I was on the road the whole time. For nine months, I was on the road, but I wasn’t allowed to work TV. I wasn’t allowed to work any of the house shows. But I was at every single one."

Mo talks about the new Shawn Michaels and how, if being born-again means making amends, then he’s still waiting for his apology from HBK. But the issues backstage at WWF didn’t end there. Bobby talks about his disgust for Bill Watts, what Watts said to him that sent him over the edge, racist promoters, and more. But aside from the management issues, there were the hazing issues. Bobby and Nelson “Mable” Frazier didn’t get it like Oscar did. As Oscar explained in his ClubWWI.com shoot, he was new to the business. And the boys took great pains in reminding him of that with "ribs" that were far from the jovial jokes we hear about today.

"I never inquired about going back or anything to that nature. Man, that company almost cost me my life…Vince McMahon, thank you. Thank you and your family for the opportunity. You didn’t have to give me a job. I know a ton of people who wish they had a job today. I had one. So when you look at the wrestling books, as far as tag team champs, my name is there. So as far as that experience, I’m grateful or whatever. But some of the people that I had to work with, man, and the management - some of the management I had to deal with on a daily basis drove me to almost commit suicide. I wouldn’t wish some of that stuff that went on there on my worst enemy. Oscar got tortured. He may not have even told you or touch on some of this stuff that happened (during his ClubWWI interview). But he got tortured. I’m talking physically abused."

The stories will blow your mind. Bobby talks about the horrible way WWF wrestlers helped Oscar celebrate his birthday and how he wound up bleeding by the end of it. Also, he names the tag team legend who, when walking by Oscar in the hallway, ripped his clothes from his body for no reason whatsoever. It’s a contrast to the ha-ha practical joke stories we’ve all become so used to hearing.

Although he’s not looking to return, Mo’s not bitter about the business itself. He still watches TNA, WWE, and even subscribes to ClubWWI.com. Although Horne has nothing but appreciation for his opportunity with WWF and Vince McMahon himself, he’s not looking to come back. He’s presently training for MMA and has no desire to return to World Wrestling Entertainment. His description of the experience as a whole sums it all up…

“When I left Vince in 96, it was like, “I don’t ever want to put myself in that environment again.” Because to me, it was horrible. It was such a horrible experience. The entire experience was horrible. Oh. Bro. The entire experience was horrible. It was horrible. I had more fun working for the Jarretts in Memphis making $120 a week. Living in a cheap rundown crack hotel, going up the road, I had more fun than working in WWF.”


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