This week on the Red Six Podcast the gang looks forward and backwards before crossing the stream. The crew gives their thoughts about the upcoming CBS All Access series, “Star Trek Picard: sponsored by Monster Energy Drinks”. The lack of front bumping in Sports Anime and the excessive front bumping found in classic wrastlin’ the boys grew up enjoying. So lace your boots tight, pop your spandex, and get ready to eat turnbuckles as we bring the love and laughs of Wrestlemania I!

Mr T gassing out at Wrestlemania 1
RiP You Rowdy Prince.

Outro

Real American by Rick Derringer

Released: 2005
Genre: Rock
  • Derringer was heavily involved with The Wrestling Album, a 1985 collection of WWE (then WWF) theme songs and walk-on music composed for wrestlers at the time. “Real American” was originally intended to be the new theme song for tag-team combo Barry Windham and Mike Rotundo (otherwise known as the US Express), however they joined the rival NWA (National Wrestling Alliance) shortly after the album’s release. Consequently, it became WWF Superstar Hulk Hogan’s new theme, and has been associated with him ever since – it still being his walk-on/Titantron music to this day.
  • Pop star Cyndi Lauper has several cameos on The Wrestling Album under the pseudonym Mona Flambé. “Real American” is one of them, as she contributed backing vocals to the track.
  • The WWE was huge in 1985, with Hulk Hogan its biggest star. This was also the age of MTV, and the organization took pains to present their talent as rock stars. WWE boss Vince McMahon pushed the music angle, which was much more about the visuals than the sound. On The Wrestling Album, some of the wrestlers (Junkyard Dog, Hillbilly Jim) sang, but unlike his daughter, Hulk Hogan did not.

    His proxy was Rick Derringer, who brought some musical credibility to the project. Derringer was heard and not seen, however, as the video was all about Hogan, with action footage and some “Born In The U.S.A.“-inspired American flag visuals, including a not-so-subtle scene with Hogan playing guitar in front of a giant American flag.

  • This being the Cold War era, the jingoistic tone of this song playing into the storyline of Hulk Hogan as American fighter, defending against the Russian threat of Nikolai Volkoff and the evil Iranian, the Iron Sheik. There was little subtlety in this narrative, and that’s reflected in the video, where Hogan is juxtaposed against various American icons, including George Washington, Martin Luther King and John F. Kennedy.
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