Pete Gas interview

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Dat Girl

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Pete Gas of Mean Street Posse fame appeared on Inside The Ropes Thursday night. Highlights from the interview are as follows:

Meeting Hulk Hogan for the first time, when he was a teenager: “Vince was renting a house near where the house he’s in now was being built. Vince was cool, he let us drink in the house, he let us drink beer but the one condition would be, we gave him our keys and we weren’t allowed to leave. He knew kids would be kids and so he would go and get us some beer. So we’re swimming in the pool and we hear Vince’s car pull up and we hear a harley davidson coming up with it, so we go out and see Hulk Hogan get off the bike, coming towards the house and he’s carrying our beer. So at the 15th Anniversary of RAW, I had mentioned that to Hogan, I went over and introduced myself and fortunately he remembered me, I was honoured. I told him “the last time I saw you” and I’m telling him the story and he’s looking at me and he says “so I was carrying your beer?” and I was like “well, yeah I guess if you think about it you were” and he said “So you owe me one? Go get me a fucking beer!” I went up to the concession stand and got him a beer, I guess that was my payback.”

How Mean Street Posse was formed: “It was the idea of a few people. Vince Russo, Ed Ferrara and Chris Chambers who really ran with it. They wanted Shane to have some heat going into WrestleMania. One day Shane called us to come to his office, I’ll never forget it was a Friday. Rodney and I used to work out at the Titan building. He called us into his office. He says to us, “Sunday at 10 o clock, can you go over to the studio, and dress really preppy? Here’s the script.” He then ripped it up and said “fuck the script” and told us to tell stories about what we did as kids and he told us Chris Chambers would splice it and fix it and we’d be on Monday Night Raw. It was supposed to be a 2-3 week little stint. They brought us to Albany the week before WrestleMania for RAW. By the time we got to WrestleMania, I remember sitting in the front row, Isaac Hayes was in the row behind taking pictures of us. There were a bunch of signs with our name on it. We went and about ten days later, Shane handed us cheques and he said “Do you guys have any vacation time?” and he said “We wanna take you on the road for a little while.”

Bradshaw almost injuring him early in his career: “We were facing Faarooq and Bradshaw, The Acolytes, and Bradshaw went to hit me with a steel chair and I took it, straight to the head. Now Shane had told us certain things about respect and that after the matches you shake hands and thank the other guy for the match. So I wasn’t going to let him know I was hurt, so I shook his hand afterwards and said thank you. He told me six months later that through doing that I earned his respect. The next day, two specific people approached me. Mick Foley, checked if I was okay, and Chris Jericho, who told me that I proved I was tough and next time to put my hands up if I get hit with a chair shot.

Shane McMahon leaving WWE and his relationship with Vince: “They’re very close. Vince was the best man at his wedding. There’s no animosity there. Shane keeps things very close to himself. Shane had something to prove to himself, he wanted to do something for himself and start his own business. As far as his relationship with his family, they’re so close. A couple of weeks ago, Shane’s company went public and he was in New York ringing the bell and I know his father was right by his side.”

In the interview, Gas talks in detail about his WWF run, working with Gerald Brisco and Pat Patterson, winning the WWF Hardcore title at WrestleMania 2000, and recalls a wrestlers court story about Teddy Long being put on trial by the Acolytes for being cheap. The audio interview can be accessed at www.facebook.com/theinsidenetwork.
SOURCE
 

Solidus1

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Why was this nobody interviewed? He and the Mean Street Posse had a few matches on Sunday Night Heat, that's it. Never won a match either.
Is he back?
 

Lacky

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Solidus said:
Why was this nobody interviewed? He and the Mean Street Posse had a few matches on Sunday Night Heat, that's it. Never won a match either.
Is he back?

Not that I know of, I haven't read anything anywhere.
 

Dat Girl

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Mainly because I assume that they worked with tons of superstars, including the chairman and Shane McMahon up close, and they fought a lot of teams and people even if they did get owned, so it's sort of interesting to hear it from someone who has nothing to lose by talking to a reporter.
 

Leo C

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Just for being in the WWF at one point he's more well known than lots of wrestlers, plus, with no chance of coming back (virtually), he can give insight on how things were there.