The Dirty White Boy On Being Pitched T.L. Hopper, Vince Russo Hating Southern Characters, SMW

Today The The Two Man Power Trip of Wrestling features a very rare interview with a former Smoky Mountain Wrestling Heavyweight champion The Dirty White Boy" Tony Anthony. From his days under a mask as one half of The Grapplers with Len Denton, through his wars in Continental and The USWA with Tom Prichard all the way through his multi time World Championship reigns in Smoky Mountain Wrestling, Tony Anthony takes John and Chad on a very humorous and intense journey through his career and all of the success found along the way. The full episode can be downloaded at this link.

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His intense matches and feud with Tom Prichard:

"It was just something that comes along every once in awhile where two guys gel together and they just go out and they go at it and they give 110% and they give it their all. It was a painful pleasure to work with Prichard and I can't put him over enough as a competitor and a great wrestler and an all around cool dude."

What was The Dirty White Boy persona:

"The Dirty White Boy was basically a character that was an all american biker who would kick ass and didn't take anything from anybody and did things his own way. It started way back with me and Len Denton many many years ago where we started "The White Boys."

Working for Jim Cornette In Smoky Mountain Wrestling:

"Jimmy is something else that is for sure. When it comes to doing the booking and those kinds of things than he has a great mind, he really does. I've said this before in some shoot interviews when his mind is set on one particular thing you can't beat him and he's top notch and excellent. But when he is trying to book here and he's thinking about another territory it lacks and starts dropping off because he's got his mind elsewhere. As long as he stays focused everything is great and it really was in SMW. Smoky Mountain was a dream territory for me because I was home. I could live at home and just make the towns around here and it was wonderful."

"Anytime the company says they are going to put the title on you they expect you to hold up your end of the deal. There was some pressure but basically with the guys that I had to work with I knew that I was fortunate to have a good group of people and it just kept getting better and everybody worked hard. We got a good response from the fans so the pressure eased up and I loved going to my job. Not a lot of people can say that in the world but when you ask someone and they tell you that I hate my job, well I loved my job. I hope that it showed and the wrestling fans were happy."

Moving to the WWF and Vince McMahon's pitch of T.L. Hopper:

"At that point in time in the WWF Vince was going through this phase and what he was thinking I don't think anybody really knows but if you know Vince he's not the type of person where he says we've got this for you and you say back: "Well Vince what about this and let's do this?" He's dealing with so many people that he didn't have time for that so I figured go ahead and go along with it and get your foot in the door and see what happens and see where it goes from there."

Does it bother him how T.L. Hopper is remembered in a negative light by the fans and by the WWE:

"I really don't know. People didn't like me but everywhere I went they knew me. Everywhere I went up North they knew I was T.L. Hopper but I knew that it wasn't for me and I was just going through the motions and basically making a paycheck and at the end of the day Vince has got the final say so he can change stuff if he wants to and if he don't than he won't."

The short lived pairing with The Godwins as Uncle Cletus:

"It was great and I love those two guys. They are good people and are very talented and it was good. I honestly thought that we were going to get a good run with it and then we come in and they said they (WWE) were going to change the they (The Godwins) dressed. Right there I knew somebody was killing this and I don't think it was all Vince's idea. I think that people were talking hard on it and that nobody wears bib overalls anymore and that is the stupidest thing I've ever heard anybody say. If you come to the South everybody wears bib overalls so I knew something was up."

Vince Russo being a factor in the changes and Jim Cornette being phased off the WWF creative team:

"Oh yeah, yeah that guy is an idiot. Plain and simple and I call it like is, he is an idiot. He didn't like that and he wanted to go his way and the I'm smarter than everybody else but he's a moron.

"Jim wasn't getting as much input as he was used to putting in. I had seen there was going to be a clash and I knew it was just a matter of time."

For this and every other episode of The Two Man Power Trip of Wrestling please subscribe to us on iTunes, Podomatic, Player FM, Tune In Radio and The IRW Network, The EXCLUSIVE home of The Triple Threat Podcast featuring Shane Douglas & TMPToW. As well as follow us on Twitter @TwoManPowerTrip

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