Rhodes discussed some of the finer points of the promo, including letting CM Punk know he would reference Punk’s infamous «pipebomb» promo in order to avoid any possible heat, in addition to what he described as his «heel run» during the back half of his AEW tenure. He then circled back to his previous point of the «exit interview» promo and elaborated on his «wanting them to know» remark. He wanted to make it crystal clear that the «them» in question was the AEW fans.
«I just, selfishly, wanted fans to know ‘I love you guys so much. And I did all this. And if you have forgotten about it, I don’t think that’s cool,'» Rhodes said. «But it’s part — it’s the nature of it. Me, Matt, and Nick talk about it all the time. People don’t remember … It’s so odd, because I was so mad at different journalists and stuff like that for how they discredited my dad, took things away from him. And then later he passed away and ‘Oh yeah, he did all of this and that.’
«As mad as I was, I felt like in that moment, I was like ‘Oh. It’s happening all over again. Happening to me.’ There’s too many egos in wrestling, including my own,» he added. «I can’t take credit for the revolution. I can’t. There were other people. Was I big part of it? Sure.»
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