Dean Ambrose On Not Being A Traditional Heel Or Babyface, His First WrestleMania Experience
- Dean Ambrose recently spoke with The Asbury Park Press to promote the March 2nd RAW. Below are some highlights:
His first WrestleMania experience last year:
"It's always trippy for me to be in front of that many people because it's just kind of hard to understand. Like, wrestling in front of 20 people or 100 people can be a little weird, but wrestling in front of a sold out 'Monday Night Raw,' 13,000 people, it's kind of above your scope of understanding people. It's just kind of this big, giant mass of noise. So actually, in a lot of ways, it's easier. But it's cool to feel the electricity going on in the towns right around this time, getting ready to go out in front of 80,000 people at WrestleMania, and that's what you look forward to every year."
"Coming out at the 50-yard line at MetLife Stadium and feeling the rumble of 80,000 people for the first time at WrestleMania 29 was something that I'll never forget, and that was right there (in East Rutherford), so it's a good place to be to get in the right mental state for WrestleMania."
Not being a traditional heel or babyface:
"I'm just trying to go out there and just do what I do authentically and just be me, and do things the way I want to do them and look at the world the way I want to look at it. If people like it, cool, I appreciate that, and if you don't, I don't care."
"I'm maybe the only guy who might have that attitude. But I'm the only guy who can get away with stuff that would be despicable, deplorable stuff if done by anybody else, but done by me it's a little bit different. I'm not squeaky clean and I'm not a cookie-cutter pretty boy or anything, so I don't want to try to portray that and I'm not going to do things that way. If you like me, cool. If you don't, then I really could care less."