Cornette Takes Aim At Triple H, Kane/Bollywood, Ziggler
Jim Cornette has a feature on his official website, www.JimCornette.com, where fans can ask him his take on any subject. He admits to being "politically incorrect." Anyway, when asked who he feels is the most overrated wrestler of the past and today, he feels overrated is not the correct term, instead opting for "overpushed." Cornette said, "Who has been pushed on a major league basis way more than their talent or attitude should have dictated?" For the past, he names Ultimate Warrior and Sable, proceeding to go on a rant on both of them. For the present, he says Triple H. Cornette wrote: "For the present, let's go with Hunter Hearst Helmsley-McMahon. Actually, he's a very good worker and studies the business. His promos are usually as exciting as a coma and last longer than this recession, but he has good matches. Problem is, as hard as he's been crammed down people's throats for the past 10 years, he should have surpassed Hogan, Austin, and Rock, but HHH is what is called in the business "the guy that works with the guy that draws money." He should be in there to have a good match and put the star over. Actually, he should have been fired in 1996 when he s**t on the entire sport with the infamous "curtain call" at MSG, but Vince, the guy with "balls of steel", let HHH piss in his face and not only didn't do anything about it, but let him marry his daughter! And a sledgehammer? Jesus Christ, I wish he'd hit me in the head with it before he starts talking on TV. HHH will be the top guy in the WWE until he looks like Dick the Bruiser in his final days working an Indiana county fair show, and if THAT'S not overrated, I don't know what is."
In an interview with IBNLive.IN.com, Kane discusses meeting Bollywood action star Akshay Kumar, who he feels is India's equivalent to Sylvester Stallone and Arnold Schwarzenegger. He also discusses how the Bollywood star, who fought a fake Undertaker in one of his films, would fair against the real WWE Superstar.
It would appear that Dolph Ziggler's theme song is stock music similar to the former themes of the Hardy Boys and Jillian Hall as it has been used on the weekday television entertainment news program Access Hollywood quite a bit in recent weeks.