Bray Wyatt recently spoke to Busted Open Radio and he talked about the humble beginnings of NXT and what it’s like to work with Triple H. You can check out the full interview here along with some highlights below.

Good guys and bad guys in professional wrestling:

“TV and movies have changed everything about that. Stone Cold Steve Austin, for instance. There still is, to me, the cliche ‘good guy’ and ‘bad guy’. I really believe that, but there’s also guys like me and Roman that kind of blur the lines… Deadpool has this wonderful thing, and I think this explains this wonderfully. He tosses a guy up and he sticks him with two swords and he goes, ‘Hey, hold on. I know it looks like I’m a hero here, but I want you to know something. I am a bad guy’ and he slices the guy in half. That’s a great testament to, I think, what I am. I fight for what I believe in, but I’m not a good person. I never claimed to be and I’m not.”

What it’s like to work with Triple H:

“Me and Triple H, I think we have a love-hate relationship. I love him, he hates me. I’m just kidding. Hunter was there at the beginning of NXT. It was nothing, it was still FCW, it was a warehouse, and when he came in, everything started to change. It was a lot of cartoon characters. It was, I’m not going to name names, but a lot of goofs and, you know, guys just wearing trunks and going out there, baby oil all over themselves, and then there was me. When we started that first show, I was one of the first characters to ever come out and I was so different. No one understood that at that time because NXT was not what you see today with all these bright characters. Finn Balor coming out with all the, whatever, devil crap. It wasn’t like that then. It was just cartoon characters and when I walked out, it was just a great feeling because people immediately accepted what I was doing. They didn’t care about the other guy. They didn’t want to know about how it happened. They were just happy it did. They were very receptive and Hunter was instrumental in that for believing in me when not too many other people did… He’s carried me a long way and I owe him everything.”

Husky Harris:

“I explain the old guy as a shell of a man that never really existed at all because that’s exactly what it was. It was ‘the man’ trying to make into something that they thought would be humorous for them, but it meant nothing to me. Never did and it never will.”

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