"If I say the sky is green, the sky is green, dammit!" - Vince McMahon said this in real life, according to former WWE name

2 hours ago 1

close

The reality of working under Vince McMahon has been revealed by a former WWE employee. Vince ruled over WWE with an iron fist, and for those who worked under him, it was about not getting in the bad books of the former CEO.

There have been quite a few infamous stories about how Vince liked to have absolute control over everything that happened in his promotion, and now Jimmy Jacobs, who worked in WWE from 2015-2017 as a writer, has shared his experience.

Jacobs was a part of the creative team at the sports entertainment giant before being fired. In an interview with Bobbo's World, he revealed how life was under the Genetic Jackhammer.

"At WWE, so many people were playing to not lose because Vince was pretty volatile, and you’re always one weird interaction with Vince away from being in the doghouse. Walking on eggshells," he said.

Jacobs said that people were afraid for their jobs and were trying to save themselves from McMahons' wrath. He mentioned that you couldn't disagree with him.

"People aren’t trying to do what’s best; they’re trying to do what won’t get them called to Gorilla by Vince going, ‘Why the hell did this happen? If I say the sky is green, the sky is green, dammit.’ That’s a Vince quote. Try working for that. ‘If I say the sky is green, the sky is green,’ I have to deny reality,” he revealed.

You can watch the interview below:

youtube-cover


Vince McMahon went over every word in the script

During the interview, Jimmy Jacobs also revealed how Vince McMahon would micromanage stuff, and it would be very difficult to change anything in the script if the talent wanted it.

In WWE, Vince read every single word that was in the script. He wanted every word written down that the performer was going to say. There are reasons for that. I’m not faulting him for that. But part of the trouble at WWE is, if you wanted something changed, it was a difficult process because Vince has to approve it, but Vince is a busy guy.

Vince McMahon trying to control every aspect of WWE programming isn't surprising. In fact, talent had to seek his approval before any dramatic change, including their look.


If you use quotes from this article, please credit Bobbos' World and give an H/T to Sportskeeda Wrestling for the transcription.

Why did you not like this content?

  • Clickbait / Misleading
  • Factually Incorrect
  • Hateful or Abusive
  • Baseless Opinion
  • Too Many Ads
  • Other

Was this article helpful?

Thank You for feedback

About the author

Sherjeel Malik

Sherjeel Malik is a writer at Sportskeeda and covers pro wrestling. He was hooked on the product from the moment he saw The Hardy Boyz jumping off ladders during the Attitude Era. While he comes from an engineering background, Sherjeel’s love for pro wrestling and content writing led him to pursue a career in sports journalism. Before assuming his current role at Sportskeeda, Sherjeel worked at other reputable organizations for five years.

While writing articles, he ensures that he only relies on credible sources for information and covers relevant subjects that do not project an agenda against a particular person or association. WWE legend Paul Heyman once shared Sherjeel’s work on his social media handle.

Sherjeel’s earliest memory of pro wrestling is watching Stone Cold Steve Austin and The Undertaker square off for the WWE Title in the main event of a pay-per-view in 1998. His favorite wrestlers are Randy Orton and Jeff Hardy. While he admires Orton for his character work as a heel, he looks up to Jeff because of his unique wrestling style and risk-taking ability.

If he could go back to the Attitude Era, Sherjeel would like to manage Ken Shamrock and be his mouthpiece. He feels Shamrock’s promo skills prevented him from becoming a main event-level act in WWE. Hence, he would like to help the UFC Hall of Famer get over with fans.

When not writing about pro wrestling, he likes to read classics and fiction books.

Know More

Edited by Sherjeel Malik

Read Entire Article