Interviews
The Miz – WWE Tribute to the Troops
Q) Why does this event continue to be important for the company and for you personally?
A) For me personally, it’s one of my favorite specials that WWE does. It’s incredible to be a part of it. I’ve been doing this for about six years now. WWE has been doing it for 12 years. My first year actually being a part of Tribute to the Troops, I actually got to go over to Iraq and witness what our soldiers go through on a day-to-day basis. Now we can watch the news all we want and how they portray what a war is like and what’s going on, but until you actually go over there and see the life that a soldier lives, you have a whole newfound appreciation for the life they live. I mean, when I went to Iraq, it was like a desert. There was nothing there. Some of the camps don’t even have running water. So these guys would be in the camp for six months to a year, and they would have to go, number one, in these tubes, and number two, in a wad bag where they would go and then they’d put in the field and light it on fire. It was just incredible. The only thing to do over there was work, eat and, if they had a gym, work out, and if they had Internet, if it was on, they could use that. But I mean, they really couldn’t talk to their families. They’re secluded and all they really see is the soldiers in uniforms. So to bring the WWE out there in our normal clothes is just refreshing. It puts a little difference in their normal average everyday routine, and it kind of boosts morale, is what most soldiers would tell us after we leave. It would give them a new sensation, a new feeling of joy, which is the little things that you can do for what they do for us. I remember being over there and talking to an 18-year-old kid who I asked him, what do you do? And he’s like, well, I drive the armored vehicle. So he goes and shows me the armored vehicle, takes me around it, and I saw this orange pole sticking out at the front which seemed out of place to me, and I go, what’s the orange pole for? And he goes, oh, it blows up the landmine before it blows us up. And I go, oh my God, have you ever had that happen? He goes, yes, it just happened yesterday. Wait a second, this cannot be the conversation that we’re having right now and it can’t be normal. It was just a normal conversation, like so matter-of-fact, but, yes, it just happened yesterday. No big deal. It’s like, no, that’s not normal. Being blown up by a landmine, and granted, the armored vehicle is able to take that, but you still, I mean, that’s scary. That’s supposed to be fearful. But these guys are the true real-life action heroes and they’re over there. So it’s the little things that we can do to really give back to our United States Armed Forces and our military. It’s truly incredible what they go through on a day-to-day basis. I mean they’re away from their families, they’re away from their friends. I remember signing an autograph and a soldier gave me a picture of me and a baby, and I go, what’s this? And he goes, oh, you met my son before I did. And I go, oh my God. It just blew me away, it gave me chills, to hear that. But they’re so proud and they’re so respectful and happy to do what they’re doing. And I just have the utmost respect for our United States Armed Forces, for what they do. So it’s the little things that we can give back. Being at Fort Benning this year in Columbus, Georgia was truly an honor and so much fun. I mean some of the soldiers are being deployed the next day. So this might be the last time that they get to spend with their family and friends for a very long time. So, hopefully, we can give them a memory that’ll last a lifetime with their family.
Q) With your experience, as you talk about your six years of experience in going to the Tribute to the Troops and your interaction with the troops, how did that impact as, your role with The Marine, and did you have these memories as you’re going through the process of making the movie?
A) Absolutely. It’s a tremendous amount of pressure to go into a movie and call yourself The Marine, especially the sacrifices that each and every marine goes through on a day-to-day basis. And so when I went to do this movie, I said, I want a marine there, show me how they clear a room, how they hold a gun. I wanted to be able to do everything that, the marine does. But honestly, like I’m not going to war. I’m filming a movie. I mean, these guys are the true heroes, and I’m just trying to make an action film that hopefully while filming it, I’m like, God, the only thing I want, like I could care less about all the critics, the only critic that I really care about is the United States Marine Corps and if they approve of it, if they like the movie. So from the feedback that I’d gotten, most people say, they really enjoyed the movie. So that’s enough for me.
Q) Just do you have any particular memory from this experience of going to Fort Benning?
A) Absolutely. Each time we go to a different place, whether it’s going to Iraq or Bahrain or going to Fort Hood or Fort Bragg, like Fort Benning, each have a different vibe. And just going – of uniformed soldiers with their families, with their friends, is just an amazing sight. And it always gives me a newfound appreciation of what we’re doing, whether the soldiers are booing me or cheering me, it doesn’t really matter because I like – WWE always likes to give them the show that they see on Monday Night Raw and the show that they see on Friday Night SmackDown, but also make it extra special. We bring all our superstars and divas. And not only that, we bring Florida Georgia Line to perform for them, and there’s a bunch of celebrity messages from Angelina Jolie to Eva Longoria to the Kardashians, and many, many more. So it’s a lot of fun and it’s really cool and it’s very impactful.
Q) You kind of touched on this a little bit earlier, but is there a specific moment where you actually got to sit down and talk to a soldier whose story impacted you the most?
A) Those were two really good stories. Another one, I was in Bahrain, on an aircraft carrier, where they don’t see land for like 30 days. They’re on the ocean for that long. And we went to like a private location, couldn’t say where we were in Bahrain or where we were. But we get in there. And I started talking to this one soldier and I asked him why did you join? And he said I was working at (Lids) and just thinking about my life, and my wife, she got pregnant. And it got me thinking do I want my daughter to go to show-and-tell or to talk about her dad and do I want her to say, “Hey, my dad works at (Lids), or do I want her to say, my dad is the United States Armed Forces?” And I just wanted her to be proud of me (and I wanted her) to have respect for me. And I couldn’t see her respecting if I just worked at (Lids). I can see her respecting if I worked for the United States Armed Forces. I want to do something noble, something that she can be proud of. And I wanted to protect her along with everyone else in the United States. And I was like, I was blown away by that, because it’s so true. I don’t have one, but from what I’ve heard, when you have a kid, it changes your life and it changes your whole mentality. was on the wrong track. I was doing bad things, wasn’t really mature. But being in the Armed Forces really got me – made me mature. It made me have to grow up. I’m a man that my daughter can be proud of. And I could be an example for her and her friends. And I was just blown away by that.
Q) I’m curious to know that, in the six years that you’ve been doing Tribute to the Troops, if you have a favorite place that you’ve visited?
A) I would say Iraq. It was my first tour for Tribute. And it just blows you away. Like we went to so many bases. And just to see the lives that they live out there, it’s really truly hard to explain. I mean it’s a desert and there’s nothing to do, and I could just see people going stir crazy, especially when you’re away from just normalcies, things that we take for granted, they don’t have. The Internet, it doesn’t work most of the time. Nowadays, you look at kids and you look at the adults, you look at everybody, they’re always on their phones. They don’t have their cell phones out 24/7 texting, their buddies, Facebooking and Twitter. It just can’t happen. So I mean a lot of the times their Internet doesn’t work, so they don’t get the small things that we take for granted. And it was truly interesting. I mean like I said, I mean I visited one where there’s no running water. I couldn’t imagine not living with water for six months to a year. I mean, just the things that they go through on a day-to-day basis, it’s just incredible and so noble. It’s really cool.
Q) Why do you think people enjoy tuning in to the annual special?
A) I think people really enjoy tuning in because it’s a feel-good moment. It’s something that puts a smile on your face, that you can sit down with your family in front of your fire maybe sip on some eggnog if you want, and just really enjoy a fun, interactive show where you get to see a crowd really interacting with the superstars, and you can laugh, there’s drama, there’s comedy, there’s action, there’s real-life, true stories in there, you get to see our soldiers in their uniforms, with their families. And it’s just a really feel-good moment and I think people appreciate that. And I think, with all the negativity that’s on the TV these days, it’s kind of nice to have something that’s all about positive and giving back, because this is the time to give back. It’s the holiday season.
*CONFERENCE CALL*
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