Words matter. These are the best Adam Page Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
Part of what I’ve tried to do since I became ‘Hangman’ is try to give back to the world because I know I can make people feel a little more uncomfortable than maybe most wrestlers do.
There are a lot of guys who have never had to go to a commercial break during their match.
It wasn’t until I had a platform and an opportunity like ‘Being the Elite’ to show people that I’m a real human being. Show people I have a personality. I think that’s helped more than anything in my career.
I had an interest in film, but I didn’t want to go to Hollywood and make movies.
I always knew that in the U.S., if you wanted to be a wrestler, Ring of Honor was the place to be.
I found out I was joining Bullet Club and going to New Japan and had probably two or three weeks to get ready for that.
I moved back home after graduating from Virginia Tech. And that’s when reality hit. I knew I had to do something. I guess it doesn’t click when you’re that young. I was 19 and had finished college. I got home and had to figure out what I was going to do.
I got into circuses and put on circuses in the backyard. My dad had horses and he’d bring them and we’d do horse tricks. I was 6 or 7 years old putting on circuses for the family or whoever in the backyard.
Doing comedy stuff is maybe more fun, but maybe the serious stuff is a little bit more rewarding.
When I was 19 or 20 years old, I wasn’t making a living wrestling. I needed a full-time income.
My number one goal has always been to try to tell interesting, cohesive, long-term stories.
I like to think I’ve always been a good wrestler.
For the past, I guess, three years or so when I joined Bullet Club and as a member of The Elite, I was honestly kind of in the shadow of all of my friends.
Bullet Club has been huge. It’s something that’s transcended wrestling a little bit.
That always catches you by surprise, you know, the amount of inspiration, should you choose to, that you can give to people.
It’s been pretty wild, but the teaching schedule is a pretty awesome fit for wrestling. No weekends, all summer, and plenty of sick time.
I really don’t feel like just going to WWE is the absolute end-all, be-all in wrestling.
I have not held a singles title in New Japan or Ring of Honor, whether that’s the TV title or the world title or something else.
Well if it’s outside of New Japan or Ring of Honor, I’m just worried about tacos, mostly. You gotta go corn tortilla, a little steak, a little cilantro, a little onion, and maybe a little salsa. No cheese or sour cream and all that crap.
When I was a little kid, WWF was all I had access to. After a year or two when I found the indies and could watch wrestling live, it was just as big a deal to me as WWF.
I’ve been honestly sitting in the living room every day doing little DIY projects. Painting and making stuff and all that stuff. That’s been kind of cool. I got to find out I apparently have a passion for that.
I’m sure there are people wearing Bullet Club shirts who don’t even know what it is. It’s one of those kind of things, but that’s good.
As a wrestler, sometimes I’m fortunate with some free time.
My life did a 180 when I joined Bullet Club. Joining Bullet Club opened the door to New Japan for me. It made me more valuable.
The Bullet Club is fine, man. We’ve got a lot more to focus on than the problems that we may or may not have with each other. When you have so many guys together that are so talented, you’re going to butt heads.
That first year I was in Ring of Honor, maybe it wasn’t even a year, I was wearing the trucker hat thing and wearing John Deere stuff because I felt like part of what made me different from a lot of guys was that I was kind of a good ol’ boy and a southern type of guy.
We’d like to put an end to SoCal Uncensored, but I really want to spend more time with Bury the Drug Free Bear. I think he’s going to be really big.
I feel like everything in my life has somehow just fallen into perfect place at the perfect time. I don’t know how it happened. It’s always like right at the point of my life about to fall apart, and then something amazing happens. I don’t know how, but it happens.
Being in the Bullet Club is definitely a huge opportunity and guarantees more eyes on my work.
All In’ is not my baby, it’s my brother or my cousin. We sold out a 10,000 seat arena in less than 30 minutes, and that, to me, says a lot about the health of wrestling outside of the machine.
I had a cousin who dated someone in CWF, so I was traveling to shows by age 10 or 11. I got to work with them later after I started wrestling, and it was awesome.
I was brought up knowing that you have to make a living.
I was a high school teacher when I joined Bullet Club and started going to Japan.