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NewsEric Bischoff Reveals The Typical Work Day In WWE, His Frustrations, More

Eric Bischoff Reveals The Typical Work Day In WWE, His Frustrations, More

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During the latest edition of his “83 Weeks” podcast, Eric Bischoff commented on his typical work day in WWE, Vince McMahon’s personality, and more. You can check out some highlights from the podcast below:

On what a regular working day was like for him in WWE and the part of it that frustrated him the most: “For the most part, the writers – the people I worked with every day – a lot of them were from New York City and took the train in every day. The mornings didn’t really get going until 10 o’clock. I’d show up and get gassed up and hit the coffee machine and get my day going. Then it was, for me, the morning always started with meeting with the writing team and picking up where we left off the night before or attacking a new assignment. In most cases, that new assignment would be, ‘OK, you have a meeting with Vince on Tuesday night at 6 or 8 and he wants to see what we have in mind for X.’ Part of the team would work on what needed to be done for television, and part of the team would work on preparing for the meeting with Vince. My role wasn’t really creative in a sense that….I wasn’t really day-to-day in the writers’ room. I managed the writers’ room. I would also be meeting with the head of licensing and promotion or on a phone call preparing for the FOX launch……the rest of my day would be working back and forth with writers. We were constantly interviewing new writers and production assistants. That would usually take you through the day and then most of it was preparing for or meeting with Vince.

“This is the part that drove me batshit crazy, and this is one of the things I didn’t really adapt well to is I don’t like sitting around waiting. I just don’t. It’s a waste of my time and I get bored with myself. The mental energy in my head when I’m sitting around doing nothing is not healthy. It was me and [Triple H] and Bruce [Prichard] and half a dozen other people – as we’re preparing for this meeting all day with Vince at 6 or 8, inevitably, you’d get that call that Vince is running late. OK cool, how late? He should be ready by 8. Great, we’ve got work to do and can keep ourselves busy. Quarter until 8, ‘Vince isn’t ready yet.’ We’re all still here, let us know…..’Honey, I know it’s midnight and I told you I’d be home but we’re waiting to go into this meeting with Vince.’ There were often times the 6 or 8 meeting with Vince didn’t start until midnight. That’s the culture. It’s hard to be productive or go off in a direction if you haven’t gotten the approval you need or the buy-in you need along the way…..oftentimes what wore me down wasn’t the call at 3 in the morning, it was knowing that I have to be prepared for a call at 3 in the morning. You’re never really away from anything. I took my phone to bed with me. That’s the part that really got to me. I’m not blaming Vince McMahon or WWE. That’s their culture, and my job was to adapt to it. I failed at that.”

On the aspect of Vince’s personality that surprised him the most: “I don’t know Vince real well. The last thing I wanna do is try to pretend I do. I don’t think a lot of people know Vince real well outside of his immediate family and people he’s very close to in business. That’s a very small circle of people. From my limited time there, in addition of some of the things I’ve heard Vince do for people – some of it nobody has ever heard of it, and some of it I know first-hand having been in proximity to certain situations. I think Vince has a much bigger heart than anybody gives him credit for. It’s offset sometimes professionally with the things he says and the way he carries himself, but I think there’s a much more compassionate person and side of Vince McMahon than most people would realize unless you’re in that inner circle or close to it.”

(h/t – 411 Wrestling)

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