
“The Lethal Weapon” Steve Blackman appeared as a guest on the latest episode of “INSIGHT with Chris Van Vliet” for an in-depth interview covering all things pro wrestling.
Featured below are some of the highlights and a complete video archive of the discussion.
On being in pain throughout his WWE career: โYes. I think it would be like Monday Iโd wrestle and get a migraine, and I donโt mean a little headache where, oh, I have a headache. No, I mean feels like youโre being stabbed in your head. Throw up, lay down, throw up, lay down, go to bed. The next day, sleep all day, wrestle the next day, the migraine again, go through that next day resting. So itโd be like every other day Iโd have a migraine. Iโm not being funny, but you canโt imagine what itโs like getting forearmed or body slammed when you have a migraine, you feel like a grenade went off in your head. I wrestled Kane one night in a hardcore match. I landed on the back of my head on the floor. My foot got caught. I jumped off the rail, kicked him, my shoe hit him on the chest, and I landed on my back. The migraine kicked in in one second, just shot up through my spine. Every time he hit me, I felt like a grenade was going off, and that was the beginning of the match. We had 15 minutes more to go, and Iโm like, Oh my God. Iโm just fighting through it, fighting through it. Iโd sit out in the hall and just squeeze my head. And then a night in a hotel, Iโd literally lie on my side. Sometimes Iโd have a baseball in my bag. Iโd put a baseball under my back, try to lay on it. Iโd find a spot where I could pinch off the nerve going to my head. So finally, after about an hour, I could fall asleep, and then sleep the whole night and the next day I would just be tired from the pain, but Iโd wrestle again, and thatโs what I went through for years. Iโm going to say, 80% of my run. It was brutal. Iโm like, Man, if I had that stuff done before I went back, it wouldn’t have got much worse in there. But if Iโd had that done and then gone back, I just couldโve done a lot more. There were nights where I wanted to do more crazy stuff, and I just couldnโt. My head hurt too bad. So I just do what I could to get by. But the hardcore stuff worked out great for me, because I could just showcase weapons and speed and things like that. It sounds funny, but I was getting cracked as much as them, but it was still easier on my neck.โ
On Head Cheese: โI donโt know how that came about, but it got over. The vignettes were comical. People popped like crazy on them. Itโs funny because it got over great for three months, hereโs another one, we were going to get the tag belts at that time. And one of the guys in the office said something to, I donโt know if it was Vince or whoever was pulling the shots that night, itโs usually Vince, said, โI donโt think we should give him the belts yet.โ And they just squashed it and squashed our gimmick. I donโt want to say who it was, thatโs not me, but Iโm like, Really, dude? I didnโt find out till a year later. But Iโm thinking thatโs brutal. So he goes up there and uses some clout to put a stop to it.โ
On whether he realized it would be that popular: โI did not. It did. It got a heck of a pop. That place popped. Al was a comical guy, so the stuff that he would have me do and stuff, it was entertaining. Iโd get to the arena and theyโd be like, โSteve, youโre going to milk a cow tonight.โ I said, โYeah, sure, I am.โ Iโd walk to the locker room, then Iโm on the farm milking a cow. The next week of TV, theyโre like, โSteve, youโre doing a comedy skit at a retirement home.โ Iโm like, ‘Yeah, sure, I am.’ And yeah, that womanโs yelling that unscripted โBlackman, you suck!โ You remember that? I just remember her yelling that at me. So it was funny, it was going well, and then someone stepped in and squashed it after a few months.โ