Throughout my WWE career, I worked with a lot of Superstars! In this video, I'm going to share if they were cool or if they were jerks and what they were like backstage.
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@911y96 ай бұрын
You kept the Chris segment as classy as anyone could have. Appreciate you being able to see both sides of him.
@A_child_of_the_3_and_1-np8tm6 ай бұрын
Benoit is innocent. Eddie had to be murdered first in order to get Benoit and his son and his wife. Had those two not been there when the murder happened. Those two would be murdered on a different day.
@Sixsoul6 ай бұрын
Best I've seen anyone handle it by far. People like to either bury Chris or bury the whole thing under the rug and neither should be done. I get it but Maven has the right attitude about it in my opinion
@MavenKHuffman6 ай бұрын
🙏🏽 I just hate the thought of forgetting out of convenience. Chris was a damn good wrestler. One of the best. But that should never be the point. Nancy & Daniel deserve more….. and they deserve to NEVER be forgotten.
@DecadentDeviant136 ай бұрын
I enjoyed in his second Max Lethal diss how Tom MacDonald utilized. After some DX/Austin references in the jam...uttered the Benoit line... ~They're gonna need a whole family of coffins When you Chris Benoit 'em to solve all your problems.
@kenterminateddq53116 ай бұрын
@@MavenKHuffman Your emotions made me 😢 too, Mave. I agree with you, I refuse to forget about the memories of Nancy and especially, Daniel. That little boy or Woman didn't deserved to be forgotten.
@bicpapermate6 ай бұрын
I thought I'd tell my Torrie Wilson story. In 2003, I was watching the Royal Rumble in a bar. There was an important NFL playoff game going on at the same time as the Rumble. One TV was set to the Rumble, but all the other TV sets were showing the NFL game. A few wrestling fans were watching the Rumble TV set, but 80% of the bar was watching the NFL game. Then Torrie Wilson took on Dawn Marie. All of a sudden I noticed that every single NFL fan had decided they wanted to watch the Royal Rumble. The crowd around the one TV set showing Torrie Wilson was so deep that people were standing on chairs to get a better look. As soon as the match ended, the other patrons went back to the NFL game. Congratulations Torrie. You may not have been the greatest female wrestler of all time, but one night in 2003, you made 120 men give up the NFL.
@MeridianOne6 ай бұрын
🤣
@MavenKHuffman6 ай бұрын
HAHAHAHA… thank you for sharing. I can picture every head turning and gazing at that tv!!!
@hugocanedo33876 ай бұрын
@@MavenKHuffman I'd watch a video of Maven reading and commenting all of these subscriber's stories
@ironlift22756 ай бұрын
And that's exactly why it has become a laughingstock and an absolute tiny niche product. Because they despise what made the business popular in the first place.
@Yvanehtnioj20006 ай бұрын
@@ironlift2275I was just about to comment this. Idk why it’s seen as so bad when everyone loved it at the time and it was that kind of product that had over 5/6 million viewers a week regularly tuning in (amongst other things ofc). And let’s be real those matches are far more entertaining than what they do now.
@timwilson25286 ай бұрын
Maven does a damn near perfect Booker T impression! That killed me 😂😂!
@TheJudgeraye2 ай бұрын
Mave's pretty good at mimicking...i can tell cause so am i and i can see the efforts he puts in to imitating one of his acquaintances. It looks like he's just doing a minor impression, but then you notice it's really good impression
@willlofland3559Ай бұрын
I've never heard anyone do Booker like that. Amazing!
@philholmes37136 ай бұрын
Maven, I enjoyed you as a wrestler. However, believe your greatest gift to others will be your ability to connect with others through this medium. You, my friend, are an excellent speaker!! I look forward to seeing how you will continue to use your voice and positively impact others along the way. Rooting for your continued success, Phil
@MavenKHuffman6 ай бұрын
🙏🏽 thank you Phil.
@johnny58056 ай бұрын
00:22 Jeff Hardy 03:21 Mark Henry 05:50 Michael Cole 07:04 Torrie Wilson 09:29 Kevin Nash 10:45 Scott Hall 12:11 Rey Mysterio 13:54 Jim Cornette 15:30 Lita 17:02 Booker T 19:10 Tony Schiavone and Jim Ross 21:40 Jerry Lawler 22:54 William Regal 25:46 Shelton Benjamin 27:34 Riikishi 28:44 Eric Bischoff 29:55 Stacy Kiebler 32:11 Mick Foley 34:04 Chris Benoit
@MavenKHuffman6 ай бұрын
Thank you for the time stamps! Awesome I’m sure others will use this. 👍🏽
@thefab00756 ай бұрын
He forgot to put Matt after Jeff
@WhyHighC6 ай бұрын
2:11 Matt Hardy ... Don't ever disrespect the sensei of Mattitude again! We MFers can forgive you this once.
@PilloTheStar6 ай бұрын
@@WhyHighCI was looking for this lol. Peeps still treat matt like Jeff's shadow, and it's unacceptable
@Yvanehtnioj20006 ай бұрын
Edit this and put some respek on Matt Hardy’s name lol
@nathansal.40796 ай бұрын
Absolute mad respect for you talking about Chris. I could see how difficult it was for you to talk and give your thoughts about the whole situation, but as a fan, I genuinely appreciate you man. You’re absolutely right about not forgetting Nancy and Daniel too, their lives tragically ended, and they should not be forgotten 🙏
@49ersfanMatt5 ай бұрын
Yea I agree
@ronzarembski77454 ай бұрын
CHRIS DIDNT KILL HIS FAMILY HE LOVED HIS SON MORE THAN LIFE ITSELF. THIS WAS A MURDER THERES NO PROOF CHRIS DID THIS TO THIS DAY. HE WAS CLOSER TO HIS SON THAN ALMOST ANY FATHER WAS. I REFUSE TO BELIEVE CHRIS DID THIS.
@dezpotizmOFheaven4 ай бұрын
I can absolutely relate to the mentality he described in Chris, comming from being told "you aren't good enough" over and over and over again. It makes you bitter, no matter how much of an empath you actually are. It's tragic he "snapped" but as Maven said himself, he can not imagine, and noone can, except you're going through the same. I'm not trying to relativate what happened, just saying that I know exactly what it feels like and at some point it might just become to much for someone to handle, especially when noone's taking you serious. Just because you are "strong" and still go your way doesn't mean you have the power to handle some things, especially not if you are a man. We aren't supposed to show emotions in this world...
@49ersfanMatt4 ай бұрын
@@dezpotizmOFheaven i agree
@giacomomercandelli40355 ай бұрын
I gotta be honest. I am a fan from Italy. I have cancer, and I am subscribed to the website only to see the wwe of that period. Watching now your 2002 matches. Thank you for still entertaining me! I hope i will be "though enough" too in my battle. Jack
@Matty-kelly4 ай бұрын
Keep up a strong fight and beat it brother💪
@mindyabusinesses6494 ай бұрын
Let’s run this man’s likes up and try and get his attention.. bless up brother.. I will be praying to the lord for you man.. you got this brother.. 🙏🏽
@jspsahil44704 ай бұрын
You will get through it brother.. I have faith in u brother
@NedyahFox4 ай бұрын
Never give up
@shadow66334 ай бұрын
Keep being strong 🙏
@kevinoconnor17044 ай бұрын
Holy shit that ending. Maven, you have a rare talent for presenting, and did an incredible job of tackling a very difficult subject with sensitivity, heart, tact, and whole lot of insight. I've been loving watching through your channel in general, but that piece was on a whole other level. Much respect.
@WhyHighC6 ай бұрын
I like that you chose the V1 theme for Matt. That gimmick was criminally underrated.
@MavenKHuffman6 ай бұрын
Matt was ahead of his time!
@jonprice92146 ай бұрын
He had a good Mattitude
@HeHateMe16 ай бұрын
I miss the Matt Facts
@jacksonam.1056 ай бұрын
@@HeHateMe1He doesn't like mustard
@mindgames506 ай бұрын
Matt himself is underrated, love that guy
@ImAdaptking6 ай бұрын
That ending was powerful. I know it’s hard to separate the man from the monster, but I don’t think it’s fair to people who actually got to know him like you and other wrestlers did that you have to forget he existed, Daniel existed, or Nancy did.
@mikecash5636 ай бұрын
I agree whole heartedly with maven. What happened sucks, but mental illness is a real thing and causes amazing people to do stupid things (robin williams). Talking and learning about it is the best way to help learn more. Doesn’t mean it should erase his accomplishments and who he was. Sometimes we do and say stupid things because of how we are feeling, but when normal even we realize how bad it is, which can trigger another cycle.
@A_child_of_the_3_and_1-np8tm6 ай бұрын
Benoit is innocent. Eddie had to be murdered first in order to get Benoit and his son and his wife. Had those two not been there when the murder happened. Those two would be murdered on a different day.
@anxofmyown6 ай бұрын
Well I’ll be a mother fucker I found you on KZbin from Twitter
@kimpapkimpaha76986 ай бұрын
He wasn‘t a monster stop the bs. What he did was Disgraceful yet we need to understand WHY and WHAT made him do this unspeakable thing. You guys are probably supporting Politicians that are like 100000000x worse than him
@KGHoffy6 ай бұрын
@@kimpapkimpaha7698yup. Their dirt just hardly gets exposed
@aramanon4 ай бұрын
Is this the most grown-up pleasant man on the Internet?
@kazemshehadeh8052 ай бұрын
Yes. I just love hear him talking and presenting.
@DrSlick2 ай бұрын
Yeah it’s called being respectful. Something this generation is unfamiliar with.
@Zack_410Ай бұрын
@@DrSlick Everyone has said that about every generation ever
@BarrywHiteFTWАй бұрын
I love his personality. He'd be an awesome commentor.
@JT-di1uz6 ай бұрын
Thank you for handling the subject of Daniel, Nancy, and Chris gracefully. My heart broke when I found out as a kid what happened. I stopped watching Pro-Wrestling for 14 years since he did those unspeakable acts, because I idolized him. He was a hero of mine, especially as a Canadian. It's hard to separate someone's monstrous acts from the person that you thought you always knew. I've known people who have been nothing but the kindest of individuals to me and given me nothing by respect and care, only for them to do something unforgivable that turns all of that on its head. It's uncomfortable because a part of you will always see them for how they treated you, and a part of you will always see them for what they did to others. You see them in two different ways, and those ways are somehow completely blurred together, and yet they couldn't be further apart. Worlds apart from what you knew. So, sincerely, thank you for sharing your memories and thoughts on Benoit, but more importantly, thank you for showing Daniel and Nancy the respect that they and their memories deserve. I cannot begin to imagine how hard it must be to talk about it, let alone share to the public. But Maven, good on you for doing so. The world needs more people like you who are open with their emotions and can carry painful memories with them, but still keep the happy ones the closest to their heart. You're a good man.
@MichaelMedici61W24 ай бұрын
Same here… Benoit was one of my top 5 fav wrestlers. I was inspired to start working out because of him (and Brock later) and eventually got the same frame as he. We’re both short and the big traps I envied and I eventually got them. I loved his passion and that fire he had. I do my best to separate the talent and art from the acts. A tragedy all around. Hope you’re doing well.
@jamesAGarfield6084 ай бұрын
Nancy and Daniel are in hell lil bro get over it
@Ddken934 ай бұрын
I understand you perfectly. Chris Benoit was by far my favorite wrestler at the time. I used to enjoy every single one of his fights. I heard about what he did anecdotally. I was heartbroken, it took me a lot of time to accept that my hero was such a monster.
@garfieldrupe6303 ай бұрын
@@jamesAGarfield608 Children aren't sinners. You have no common sense
@jasonx11746 ай бұрын
Damn that ending to this video. Just the seriousness that Maven displayed is wow. No music, no laughing, and at the end he just puts the picture down and walks away. No clever comments or linking a video on screen. Gives me a good perspective on the gravity that was the Chris Benoit tragedy and how much it affected a lot of people. "2 families were gutted" is no other way to describe this.
@aidanthomas25106 ай бұрын
Yeah the ending was perfect, no more needed to be said really. I feel much the same, phenomenal talent but terrible person. I can see why people don't want him in the hall of fame, it would be very hard for it to not come up and you should not celebrate that. There is absolutely no excuse for what he did, however I do feel that he was never the same after Eddie died. Something in him died that day too. Also CTE of course.
@HaleStorm19986 ай бұрын
gutted**
@jasonx11746 ай бұрын
@@HaleStorm1998 thank you for the correction. Just edited it in.
@MarkBannonCAW6 ай бұрын
I Still Don't Think Benoit Did It I Think He Was Framed
@LarryTheDream6 ай бұрын
@@MarkBannonCAW *sacrificed
@nolan26066 ай бұрын
I’d love to see Maven make a video of him attending a WWE event and see everyone’s reactions to him being there.
@MavenKHuffman6 ай бұрын
Hahahaha… actually not a bad video idea. 🤔
@Urineil6 ай бұрын
I think that would be amazing. Always a fan and would love to see reactions of you watching a show. I know you don't watch the product much but maybe that would bring some gaming towards that bro
@johnnysilverhand73616 ай бұрын
@@MavenKHuffmando it Mave. I really enjoy your videos and so do many of your fans. Your channel is exploding. 200k very soon.
@apk43816 ай бұрын
What? He was a jobber, no one would recognise him.
@SportZFan4Ever6 ай бұрын
Make a sign with his name on it and an arrow ⬇️ pointing down at him in the crowd. 😂 ...Just be a fan in the crowd again lol.
@javierao23256 ай бұрын
Thank you MAVEN for respectfully talking about BENOIT……this video was awesome thank you 🙏
@MavenKHuffman6 ай бұрын
🙏🏽🙏🏽
@liambrown25896 ай бұрын
From the moment you said Chris name, we all knew you would approach this with compassion, consideration, and fairness. So unbelievably well handled, a topic that as you say MANY would worry is too much of a minefield to even touch on. Hat off to you brother ❤
@BarbabusDGreezy6 ай бұрын
I met Jeff outside of a live event in 2018 and he was the nicest guy ever and made time to talk to everyone I was with and took pictures with us and signed my shirt. Was so polite and gracious to talk to fans didn't have an air of "celebrity" to him just a humble kind soul.
@thebruhnetwork6 ай бұрын
Bro same! I met him back in 2021 and he was so kind and chill with his fans. Didn’t get vibes from him at all just nothing but good vibes.
@Ryanonfire036 ай бұрын
Outside of Smackdown in like 2005 maybe there was like 50 of us standing there where the wrestlers all drive out of the garage. Only one car actually stopped and got out and took pictures and signed for everybody. Even asked “everybody good?” Before he got back into his car. It was Jeff Hardy. 🙏🏼🙏🏼
@grcoon6 ай бұрын
I never had the opportunity to meet Jeff but while on my honeymoon in LA wife knew RVD owned 5 star comics and went on a limb to go there see if we could buy merch. We were inside for about 10 min girl behind counter said he was coming in shortly so we waited he was awesome took pics with us autographed his dvd we bought showed us his scar from his knee surgery and just made time for us as his fans
@clarity21156 ай бұрын
yeah, drug addicts are pretty nice when you talk to them
@caifabe80506 ай бұрын
i met Jeff outside of a house show in 2018 and i can vouch that he is every bit as kind and humble as you said. took time to talk to everybody, and i dont mean just a two second hi and handshake and photo, i mean like a minute at least per person talking to everybody outside. i still have my picture with him on my facebook.
@Youngy546 ай бұрын
One of the classiest ways of approaching the Chris Benoit situation I’ve probably ever heard from a fellow wrestler and former peer of his. Great stuff, Maven.
@dylanryan82415 ай бұрын
Benoit murdered his family lol
@Youngy545 ай бұрын
@@dylanryan8241 No shit.
@ants54495 ай бұрын
@dylanryan8241 yeah and plenty of wwe superstars you use to and still idolize abuse woman go figure
@jasonanderson50345 ай бұрын
@@ants5449 who says he likes wwe indie wrestling exists new jack did the classiest take and that was insulting him even new jack sees chris as unforgivable and new jack tried to kill a wrestler by stabbing him in the ring just cause they were stiff
@dylanryan82415 ай бұрын
@@ants5449 well abusing women is one thing, not great, but killing your own kid.... like common, he's twice as evil as the next wrestler in line.
@THEcrashpyonion4 ай бұрын
Only recently discovered The Channel but the descriptions, the respect but most importantly the honesty is brilliant. Genuinely could listen to Maven talk forever. Underrated talker on this evidence! 💪🏻
@MavenKHuffman4 ай бұрын
🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽
@jasonrigler70206 ай бұрын
He does great impressions. You can't help but like Maven. He seems like a really nice guy.
@corrick6 ай бұрын
That was the perfect ending for this series. They way you closed this out was done very, very well and respectfully to all involved. That was beautiful Maven.
@apk43816 ай бұрын
Maven - The guy who is only remembered for being destroyed by the first ever F5 live on TV. Way to take a bump, jobber.
@chargeentertainment29816 ай бұрын
@@apk4381so do you practice being a douche or does it just come naturally?
@tander1016 ай бұрын
@@apk4381Alright, day drunk guy.
@carlosbuenaventura118856 ай бұрын
Hi Maven! You’re one of my heroes. You inspired me to get back on my feet after heart surgery. I had a hole in my heart. It’s part titanium now and I’m not giving up. Thanks for showing me how to overcome odds and keep going. Much respect all the way from Manila. You rock!
@MavenKHuffman6 ай бұрын
🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽 WOW! I’m honored! And thank you so much. I’m glad I can help you face something so serious.
@LeviClay4 ай бұрын
Maven, I must say, during your WWE run I (like many others) put you in that lower midcard category, but I'm SO glad you've taken to KZbin the way you have. It reminds us that, in that business, you're only perceived the way the show runner allows you the chance to be perceived. You're an incredibly articulate and smart guy. A joy to listen to. I appreciate your honesty on all the things you talk about. It makes me wonder how many other guys who were stuck in similar spots on the card could also be wonderful entertaining speakers with your work ethic. Let's hope a few more guys see your videos and give it a shot. Great work buddy, keep it up
@therealangelalexander18585 ай бұрын
The ending to this video was perhaps the most tactful way I've seen anyone approach the Benoit subject, especially considering how hard it mustve been to talk about. I give you all the kudos in the world. Even if later information that came out about happenings prior to that horrific weekend further jaded my view on Chris and ontop of that aforementioned weekend, I do very much agree that just sweeping him under the rug would be as if to pretend what happened to Daniel and Nancy didn't happen at all. They both deserved better and they both should still be here. Tragic doesn't even begin to describe it. I hope Nancy and Daniel are at peace wherever they may be.
@djstevie696 ай бұрын
I've written this about 4 times. Thanks for talking about Chris. Honestly he was my favourite wrestler on the planet when he died. I was shocked, horrified when Vince announced it live. I watched that Raw with tears in my eyes. Devastated. As the story fleshed out my hurt turned to true horror and hatred of what he did. Nancy was one of my favourites from WCW managing Doom etc. I didn't know Daniel but I can't help but think of what that boy went through and also my thoughts spin around those who knew him and what you and people like Jericho went through. Just awful. Thanks for going over this, the more we reflect the more we heal.
@MavenKHuffman6 ай бұрын
“The more we reflect the more heel” 🙏🏽
@leviticustharpe49596 ай бұрын
Chris Benoit and Kurt Angle are the best and most intense technical wrestlers of all time
@djstevie696 ай бұрын
@@leviticustharpe4959 I can't disagree. He was at the top of the game.
@Silvr-mg1hw6 ай бұрын
The way you handled Chris at the end was beautiful! He was one of my all time favs. If there was one positive that came out of the horrible incident, it's that athletes and organisations started to take concussions and CTE alot more seriously. As well as the potential repercussions of it down the road and later in life. Well handled Maven.
@Nclchitchat6 ай бұрын
I don't believe that it was the CTE that caused Chris to do what he did, killing one person in a bout of un-controlled anger due to brain damage/CTE could be argued but to kill one person then wait a whole day and kill another person there has to be a level of cognitive thinking and premeditation. Along with the fact Chris had the cognitive ability to try and form a alibi/cover his tracks and showed remorse doesn't add up to him being out of control. Also tie in the fact just days prior he could remember his travel schedule and spots in a match among other things doesn't allow me to believe he was suffering from Alzheimer's or another form of dementia.
@teo_heel6 ай бұрын
@@Nclchitchat there was.. NO THINKING. Chris lost his mind. What you describe as being in control was not even close to be in control. It was chaos that controlled Benoit. That alibi thing was part of the chaos. He was not thinking straight for sure. He was thinking a lot of things in the last few days, he clearly wasn't sane. As someone who dealt with depression and other mental health issues I know that sometimes you just can't control yourself. Fuck... when I was in depression I was planning something similar to what Benoit did... I didn't want it to happen, I was just doing things uncontrollably. But somehow I managed to stop myself from that. Mental health issues isn't a joke. It can turn a good person into a monster in a matter of days. And if I remember correctly, Elijah Burke (the last opponent of Benoit) said that Chris asked him to memorize the spots as Chris wasn't sure if he would remember them. So dementia was forming for sure. About travel schedule... you know that he had phones and computer with internet? He could just use it, he had enough brain power to do that.
@higglybiggly11746 ай бұрын
@@Nclchitchatyou really don't understand CTE, and your comment proves that. His brain was changed. His mind was changed. Yes, what he did was premeditated but it came from a very damaged brain, and one that wasn't the same as it was before all the damage.
@vik24oct19916 ай бұрын
@@Nclchitchat I also believe in what you said, brain damage rarely leads to aggressive behavior but rather it more often leads to depression and suicidal behavior, benoit didn't seem like he was depressed but rather it seems like he had anger issues probably since his youth, his mannerisms while portraying his in ring character were so realistic that it seems like he wasn't acting at all and I am guessing he wasn't acting, those anger issues often leads to such violent actions, it doesn't help when benoit was working in a job which promoted his anger issues, he needed psychiatric help and meditative techniques to resolve his issues long before he got the brain damage, its very much possible that he had a dissociative identity disorder which is common among people who are struggling with anger issues.
@teo_heel6 ай бұрын
@@vik24oct1991 let's just say that Benoit might've depression for a LONG time. And it multiplies the aggression... I know that for sure. Sometimes I was just crazy mad for no apparent reason.
@carlitocool83936 ай бұрын
Chris will forever be one of the best wrestlers to have ever lived, but as a man he was disturbed long before he committed his unspeakable acts against his family. Eddie Guerrero seemingly was the only person that knew how bad it was for Chris personally and in turn, I believe Chris felt that only Eddie could understand him. When Eddie died, essentially, Chris died too. I believe Chris felt he lost his connection to the world when Eddie passed and Chris lost whatever sanity he had left. Thank you for speaking about him so elegantly and cherishing the memories of his wife and son.
@adamirishconundrum8514 ай бұрын
Chris who?
@Dev-qs7ss3 ай бұрын
@@adamirishconundrum851Chris Benoit
@davecarsley87733 ай бұрын
@@adamirishconundrum851 idiot
@GuyRasenAnime2 ай бұрын
@@adamirishconundrum851Chris Benoit
@crazychris11232 ай бұрын
Man, losing them both is what started my love for watching pro wrestling to trickle away and eventually fully stopped after Punk left.
@eddielcarrete10894 ай бұрын
Chris Benoit will forever be in my top 5 wrestlers of all time, his intensity, his technical mastery, the way he told the stories in the ring. This not excusing what he did, but I can not forget the wrestler from my teenage years to my early adulthood.
@frusciantegeartone6 ай бұрын
So glad you spoke of Jeff. It’s true, I met him and he was the nicest dude. Went to an impact taping in 2013 with my kids as we rocked our Jeff hardy face paint. After the show was over he went around outside the ring and gave everyone high fives. When he got to me and my kids he asked if we wanted to take a picture and complemented our face paint. Gave us the bro hug and took his time with us. Such a great moment as he was/is my favorite wrestler of all time and he was asking for a picture. Never would have imagined that would happen. Thank you Jeff!
@alexgeorge10286 ай бұрын
OH NO!!! Please don't let this be the final video you make of rating wrestlers!!!!
@CeemPlay6 ай бұрын
It has to be
@DAcheekO6 ай бұрын
Only so many guys that A. He worked with B. People care about hearing As much as I love Scotty 2 Hotty (for example) no one cares about maven’s opinion of him
@stephenpokocky98736 ай бұрын
:'(
@longfacetony816 ай бұрын
he was only there one season! 😜
@CeemPlay6 ай бұрын
@@DAcheekO Watch your mouth
@BM_7184 ай бұрын
Damn bro..that Chris Beniot segment was moving. What a shame...thank you for your videos Maven. Wild..
@sarahsloot22904 ай бұрын
The Stacy waitress story was heart touching, and I was always a fan. My mom as a waitress has a similar story where she happily served a couple that no one else wanted because they were profiling ethnicity and clothing, and she left with a $80 tip on a $70 check. Being professional and bringing your smile pays off.
@ASP_FC6 ай бұрын
Didn't expect to almost in tears by the end of a Maven video... RIP Daniel and Nancy Benoit 🙏
@PrinceVegeta6 ай бұрын
Mav I am so happy for you and what you are doing on YT so happy to see you having fun and getting your flowers I can't wait to see the next video brother!
@BoTheJo6 ай бұрын
Yo wassup Vegeta
@apk43816 ай бұрын
Maven - The guy who is only remembered for being destroyed by the first ever F5 live on TV. Way to take a bump, jobber.
@plewisjr906 ай бұрын
@@apk4381Why are you on this man's channel if you think he was just a jobber? You sound like a straight hater.
@dawapenjordorji6 ай бұрын
@@apk4381I understand disliking certain people and choosing to even go so far to hate them, and that's your opinion and you're free to have it, but why do you choose to spend your time writing these comments instead of staying away from his content? The last thing a person would do is to always be on the comments of someone they don't like
THE best ex-wrestler channel on youtube hands down. Theres zero bitterness or agenda, and all professionalism.
@forty_two426 ай бұрын
You are so respectful Maven. Not just to Chris but also to Jeff. His problems with substance abuse effecting his attitude has jaded alot people (including me) But you see Jeff for who he really is, not just as what he presents to the world. And that's really cool and a skill most people don't have.
@Whotuber-cu1zo4 ай бұрын
The thing I always realised with Jeff was his effort to meet and greet the fans on his entrance… there are “baby faces” who put no effort in to greeting the fans however Jeff without fail would always go and hi five/shake hands, greet kids. Apart from maybe Rey Mysterio you don’t really see that I think it speaks a lot about them and how they view the fans
@KabutungKabayo6 ай бұрын
Jeff Hardy is definitely the antithesis of "Don't meet your heroes". Very kind, very appreciative and just an all around good guy. Being the biggest fan of his, I'm glad that I got to meet him, had a few autographs signed and took some cool photos. He even chuckled at my joke.
@markl59986 ай бұрын
Jeff is unique and talented, creative and artistic
@nickynoodles876 ай бұрын
One thing about the hardys, they know how to show love and appreciation to their fans
@romuluslives27076 ай бұрын
Jeff is a awesome guy I lived near them for years and hung out with them. Super super down to earth. Shannon Moore and Gregory helms also
@TyrellDunn6 ай бұрын
Mav you did a great job handling the Chris Benoit part. It’s hard for us to separate at times Benoit the great technical wrestler from what he did when it came to himself and his family. I know it’s hard and it still is on many of us. Thank you so much for how you honored them all. Especially Nancy and their son. Class act
@bluwboy946 ай бұрын
Shelton is an amazing guy. Has been and always will be
@JustFrank275 ай бұрын
Everytime someone who knew Chris talks about him, they always talk about the kind person he was and how in disbalief they were when the incident happened. It's tough being reminded of this today, as an adult, with a child about Daniel's age. But you are right and I have the outmost respect for you and love how you talked about it. Mental illness awareness cause by years of abused to the brain due to concussions, need to be spread to prevent this from happening again. RIP Daniel, Nancy and Chris.
@Kyle-gi2jb6 ай бұрын
I was training to wrestle around 2007. Chris Benoit was/is my all-time favorite wrestler. I wanted to be like him and when that happened, I lost all interest into pursuing wrestling as a career. Also, I quit watching wrestling gradually afterwards as well. I just couldn't let myself get that invested into someone like that again.
@toshinronin6 ай бұрын
Kind of sad if you think bout it
@ericj33316 ай бұрын
You made the smart decision, whether you love wrestling or not, it's terrible for your body and overall health. People should have the right and freedom to do it, and I won't bash someone that does, but if you think pro wrestling doesn't come without a major price to your overall health, you're an idiot.
@3.2Carrera6 ай бұрын
Great video in a run of great videos. You have a gift for this Mav. I agree about Benoit as well. It has to be talked about. My son had brain injuries from playing football that completely changed his personality toward extreme anger and bouts of violence. This happened after Benoit's story and I used the lesson to get my son the help he needed. Sometimes the best decision is to walk away from something you love in order to live a normal life and this is extremely hard to see at the time. I paid the price for this both physically and mentally for many years while we worked through it, but eventually things got better for us and he's doing very well today. One of Jericho's old interviews discussing this probably saved my son's life.
@MavenKHuffman6 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing something so personal. I am glad he is better these days. 🙏🏽
@scorcher595 ай бұрын
You are absolutely right about Chris Benoit.
@katmadison34336 ай бұрын
Thank you for talking about Chris and his family. I know it can be hard to talk about something horrible like that, but they need to find their peace. Also thank you for keeping it on a positive note for the little boy. :)
@thesuperdingos6 ай бұрын
This is my favorite series of yours. They need to bring you back for another run as a manager or something
@octaviousrex68946 ай бұрын
Maven in the Judgement day
@LordYuriX6 ай бұрын
@@octaviousrex6894Judgement Day would be unstoppable then 😤
@andyblake96736 ай бұрын
@@LordYuriX heel maven would be lit
@MavenKHuffman6 ай бұрын
🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽 means a lot that you (and others) would like to see me back!
@lol_cow6 ай бұрын
Maven needs to be back on TV in WWE. Every other company is unworthy of his presence! 🙌
@charlesmarcus78646 ай бұрын
Whenever Maven drops a new video my day gets a little bit better. Keep'em coming sir
@MavenKHuffman6 ай бұрын
Glad I can help!
@rileysaxton3896 ай бұрын
Honestly man thanks for being so eloquent and respectful around the Chris Benoit stuff. That was the most in touch and genuine take I have heard. I hope the wwe picks you up and you can help them become relevant again.. if that’s something you want.
@sansthedrummer12 күн бұрын
I went to school with Benoit's 2 older children. They both thought the world of him and is still his oldest sons hero. That weekend completely devastated them, the whole community was crushed. When I was trying out for pro wrestling, I was being trained in his style, and that gave me newfound respect for the incredible skill he had in the ring. In the local promotions, his work is still highly respected. He will always be a favorite in that regard, but I can't forgive what he did or who he left behind, extreme brain damage or not.
@yungozXXX6 ай бұрын
“The greatest night of Tori Wilson’s life”😂😂
@TheJayLordx6 ай бұрын
I think that's the reason Jeff's stayed so over and people still love him despite doing some fucked up shit. You can tell he's the most genuine, sweet dude who just like everyone, has his problems. Unfortunately he has to deal with them in front of everybody seeing as he's in the public eye. Another top class video Mave, you're killing it brother 🤘
@Mike-O-Sullivan22 сағат бұрын
When someone can shoot from the hip as warmly, engaging and respectful as Maven, you know you're in the presence of a genuinely good heart. I'll be an enthusiastic subscriber 'til the end.
@cooper54813 ай бұрын
"The greatest night of Torrie Wilson's life" 😂 Gotta love Maven.
@seanmcintyre59366 ай бұрын
Powerful ending to this one. Benoit was a machine in the ring and I always wonder how people would regard him if it had not ended the way it did. May be a top 5, top 10 worker of all time. It’s tough to go back and watch though
@camerondalton14956 ай бұрын
People would regard him as one of the best workers of all time and he'd a hall of fame for sure.
@teo_heel6 ай бұрын
Not for me. Or... maybe it is, but not for the same reason as for others. I understand that Chris lost his mind. I understand why he lost his mind. And I understand that WWE did a lot of things to minimize the risk of Benoit-esque things to happen. Benoit inadvertently taught WWE a serious lesson... WWE still doesn't got it fully though. But things are changing for better. And when I see indy wrestlers doing the stuff that is banned in WWE for health-safety reasons the only question I ask is "Is it worth?". And the answer is ALWAYS NO. Wrestling shouldn't be the way to destroy your health beyond repair. Benoit destroyed himself beyond repair and he took others with himself because of the side effects of that destruction.
@A_child_of_the_3_and_1-np8tm6 ай бұрын
Benoit is innocent. Eddie had to be murdered first in order to get Benoit and his son and his wife. Had those two not been there when the murder happened. Those two would be murdered on a different day.
@carsonjamesiv25126 ай бұрын
The Cripppler was a BEAST in the ring.
@TimmyTurner4216 ай бұрын
Without a shadow of a doubt he would be in the Hall of Fame had this tragedy never happened
@nocheckmarkgames6 ай бұрын
RIP Nancy and Daniel. What sucks is WWE has trained itself to sweep things like this under the rug, to ignore or deny. When something like this isn't just Vince might go to Jail, or, some people might get fines, people lost their lives. Possibly because of Poor Concussion Protocols, and Drug Abuse within the industry, and I just think that when you have a platform that is as big as WWE's, you are obligated to do more. They could start awareness campaigns, funding drives, and charities in their names, but instead they choose to sweep it under the rug, and it's a shame. This is your best work on KZbin, Glad to Be Here.
@igormorais41926 ай бұрын
This is the first time I see anyone talk about Chris Benoit or anything good about him. Im glad you did.
@JacobWrestledGod5 ай бұрын
You really touched me with that ending. Let’s honour Nancy and Daniel, let’s remember how deteriorating mental health and head injuries can be so dangerous
@martinbeales20656 ай бұрын
Hey Mav. Just wanted to say you did a fantastic job of talking around the Chris B incident. Truly one of the worst things to have happened in Wrestling in recent years. A true tragedy in all sense of the word. I agree with you completely. If these things aren't talked about then we don't learn from them and then we miss the opportunity to spot warning signs in others.
@chrisbuek6 ай бұрын
Damn you're good at this. I had the pleasure of meeting you at a bar in Doylestown, PA, back in 2008 or 2009. You immediately stopped what you're doing and gave all your attention to me and my friends, who were all WWE fans. You are one of two wrestlers I have met out in the world and not at an event. The other was Ricky Steamboat. I consider myself extremely fortunate to have met two genuinely nice, kind, and classy professionals like yourselves. Keep up the great work.
@fgcpeak95916 ай бұрын
kiss me pretty
@chrisbuek6 ай бұрын
@@fgcpeak9591 I'LL DO IT LATER!
@annawreckshxt5 ай бұрын
Woah, my hometown
@AdamPalomino5 ай бұрын
Nice to see Benoit is finally being talked about. That's a shoot from Heyman which shows you can separate the man from the work, a Mt Rushmore from Taker which shows likewise, and now you've also confirmed it. I hope this prompts fans to take their heads out of the sand a little, and face the elephant in the room when it comes to this business.
@javongraham30765 ай бұрын
Undertaker mentioned him on his podcast about his favorite little guys to wrestle.
@disliked13905 ай бұрын
"separate the man from the work" bro no way y'all nuts. This dude is a monster. A parasite, he deserves nothing. Wont make me feel bad for him. I'm glad he's gone.
@ants54495 ай бұрын
Exactly been plenty of accused killer associated killers and woman abusers go through wwe and most of them never got the same treatment from the fans
@cl54705 ай бұрын
@ants5449 did they murder a 7 year old? JFC. Benoit simps are the cringiest of cringe.
@dadnonlyd35 ай бұрын
@@cl5470 murd3ring kids is trendy now so.....
@neojd4 ай бұрын
That final segment hit hard. Benoit was 1 of my faves at the time. The personification of Ruthless Aggression. You handled it very respectfully.
@documentthedrama82796 ай бұрын
Damn, man feels like 2007 again he was a legit hero, mostly because he loved his son so much and you could tell- as well as such an incredible wrestler. when i heard what happened i was in shock.
@teo_heel6 ай бұрын
That speech about Chris Benoit... Maven was struggling a bit with words. Understandably.
@MavenKHuffman6 ай бұрын
I was for sure!!!
@teo_heel6 ай бұрын
@@MavenKHuffman but the way you talked about Benoit... about Nancy and Daniel being completely forgotten.. that hit HARD. Thanks for that. I also can't understand why Nancy (with all the things she did for wrestling business before retiring for good in 1997) is not talked about anymore. She should be spoken about... her death should be spoken about. But what I can see that WWE is doing a good job of minimizing the risk of Benoit-esque things to happen. No more chair shots to the head. No more bladejobs, no more risky moves like piledrivers done left and right. Wrestling still can be great without these moves. Look at Walter/Gunther, his matches against Ilja Dragunov... oof, that were some of the most brutal matches in WWE... and there were no bleeding or chairshots to the head. It was about hard-hitting stuff. Chops, lariats, power moves, submissions. And that was BEAUTIFULLY DONE (Can't wait to see Dragunov in the main roster in the match against Gunther). Or Gunther versus Sheamus (and triple-threat with Drew McIntyre added). That's the real wrestling at its finest.
@MrStevestain5 ай бұрын
Much respect, especially for how you handled the Chris Benoit conversation. I can't even think about that situation without getting emotional. I had been a huge fan of Benoit, went to a number of house shows where Benoit & Angle were the main event, neither one of them even acknowledging the audience, they just wanted to have a freaking intense pro wrestling match of the type that you didn't see anyone having at that time. So, yeah, Benoit deserves all the kudos for how great a pro wrestler he was as well as all the horror at what he did with the end of his life and what he did to two other human beings. RIP, Nancy & Daniel.
@Pjungwp5 ай бұрын
Honestly, I can't even call myself a wrestling fan but I truly enjoy your videos. Keep them coming!!
@Jungletraveler00_126 ай бұрын
Cool Regal impression, lad! 😂 Thank you Maven for this series. Really cool hearing stories of other wrestlers. Didn't expect Benoit at the end.
@KageyVision6 ай бұрын
Spot on with Jeff Hardy being an awesome guy to meet, he had time for EVERYONE at a regular house show. You handled the Chris Benoit segment very well & that is something I’ve said before, by erasing him, you do make Nancy and Daniel become a footnote when you hear his name. Really great point about talking about him to possibly help a future family avoid that happening if possible. 👊🏾
@mykealdridge18612 сағат бұрын
Glad to see someone address Chris so humbling and with the respect the subject is due. Not just brushing over it, well done Mav.
@krazydae2 ай бұрын
Yo Appreciate the way you talk about Chris. One day we gotta be able to accept his wrestling side🗣️
@Tim82ATW6 ай бұрын
One of the best wrestling channels on YT!!! Keep up the good work Maven.
@carlosdisla49206 ай бұрын
That Booker impersonation was spot on. We need to see more of that lmaoooo
@OxBoys5 ай бұрын
That was a tough one to end on, great job on another excellent video!
@johnleestewart5 ай бұрын
Damn, Maven. You entertained me for almost an hour with this, then made me feel teary eyed. You pulled emotion of of a person better with this video than any Hollywood production. You articulated things so well .
@sparkywayne67666 ай бұрын
40 min?! Holy cow Maven spoilings us out here
@willkayl87936 ай бұрын
When I first saw Maven on screen, I wouldn’t have thought in a million years he would be such a great storyteller with a great outlet for those stories. Also, Cornette was always the best heel in the business for decades and, his stories are great, too. Thanks for giving this old guy a walk down memory lane, my friend.
@MavenKHuffman6 ай бұрын
1st, THANK YOU… honestly I think I may have uncovered a skill not even I knew I had. 2nd, Cornette is SUCH A good heel. Him managing the Midnight Express is some of the best work EVER!
@jefferyvnelson71445 ай бұрын
Thank you sir, I was all in when you were active, my favorite bit was also the super market fight. I love your honesty and I could watch all day. Keep on keeping on Mavin!
@weedward4 ай бұрын
I just binged all three episodes of this series. I loved it! I grew up watching this era of wrestling. Thank you so much for your videos. I hope you see as much growth and success as possible in 2024! Your positivity and honesty with such high levels of respect to your co workers and their families is truly a sight to behold.
@DonDada7736 ай бұрын
Maven never disappoints he always uploads bangers after bangers 🔥🔥
@MavenKHuffman6 ай бұрын
🙏🏽🙏🏽
@DonDada7736 ай бұрын
@@MavenKHuffman the fact that you reply to your community is another reason I love this channel god bless you maven never change good sir
@blahteggie6 ай бұрын
Thank you Maven for making these videos. I feel like I get to live my childhood dream of walking into a WWE locker room and getting to know how each superstar is really like and not just what we see on camera. You make me feel like I know which guys I can be friends with, can trust and which guys I should stay away from. Things I would never know had you not made these videos. So thank you and keep up the great work!
@juanortiz88115 ай бұрын
Just watching these videos really lets me relive everything! Thank you for burning that line between us and the legends. You are awesome Maven!. .
@Soon_Solstice4 ай бұрын
Maven, your channel is great. I just recently discovered it, and I've been binge watching the episodes ever since.
@aidanthomas25106 ай бұрын
As a Cornette fan I'm glad you brought him up, that man deserves way more credit for what he's done for the business imo. Glad you included that photo of him on OVW with JR too as I know having him announce was one of the things Jim is most proud of.
@311bomb6 ай бұрын
I've always felt that keeping Chris Benoit's name swept under the rug was a bad move. You've said it...not talking about it takes away from the lives that were taken and the memories people had with them. We should always talk about those we've lost, no "forget" they ever existed. This was a great segment and I can't wait to see more videos in the future!
@jennalamb699221 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing your experiences and doing so with such grace and consideration. Some of the things you talk about and share can’t be easy but the fact that you do it anyway and with such personal passion speaks true volumes to your character. In another video you mentioned losing your mom to cancer; I am so sorry for your loss because no matter the age, the death of a parent is devastating but she can rest well knowing that she raised such an amazing man that is helping countless others ❤
@calvincameron3542 ай бұрын
I remember being a kid watching Maven go from tuff enuff to the WWE man. Good to see you still doing great.
@mikerollins30886 ай бұрын
"Jeff was one of those guys that didn't say NO to anything that was presented to him"! "I mean that in a good way" 😂😂 This gave me a little chuckle!
@onefatpiggy6 ай бұрын
Stacy Keibler was on a different brand, she's on Raw but she's always been travelling with Maven and Orton. When Stacy was introduced this year in the Hall of Fame, there were videos of her interacting with Rey Mysterio and HHH and she seems to be very nice and very missed by people. Aside from being close friends with Torrie and Mick Foley too. Victoria said her and Molly always give a beating to Stacy every single match but she never complained nor said no. She's just my favorite Diva ever
@lionfire835 ай бұрын
You did an incredible job handling the last one with tact and class Maven!
@usgovernment992227 күн бұрын
I think Stacy Keibler is the most naturally beautiful woman to have been in WWE.
@wetwilliam79786 ай бұрын
Warms my heart hearing you talk so nice about Jeff, especially w the discourse around him rn. He’ll always be my alltime favorite
@MavenKHuffman6 ай бұрын
He’s one of my all time favorites too! One of the nicest guys I have ever known
@Swolling6 ай бұрын
The Booker T impression was incredible
@leighvallely9752Ай бұрын
I don’t know how you ended up on my feed, I don’t even watch wrestling but I’ve binged these videos for the past week. This guy is charisma personified
@maven88475 ай бұрын
Dude this is an awesome channel to find! In 2002 my parents saw you wrestle and obviously loved your name! Had your action figure all throughout my childhood, happy to see that you're still doing awesome
@kayare76 ай бұрын
I think people do talk about Benoit and the events in 2007. I do think the big issue with WWE not mentioning it partially stems from the idea that they may be marketing it by discussing it, which would be seen as in poor taste. But I deffo agree on the importance of it being a learning experience to prevent it from happening again.
@AbdulAziz-im2em6 ай бұрын
Which is why WWE should talk about it. What happened to him was years of physical and/or substance abuse which was common practice in the industry at the time. His death made the industry serious about CTEs and other head trauma related injuries, probably saved Edge and Bryan's lives too. Still, what he did was unforgivable, objectively. But life is hardly ever black and white. And just deleting him from history is a great disservice to what he and others went through for the industry.
@FozzQuaker6 ай бұрын
About Benoit, Couldnt have said all that better myself... Your right about needing to keep dialogue open about what happened, because when the talking stops, history tends to repeat itself... You dealt with the subject with dignity, grace and respect...Keep up the good work, we absolutely love what your doing... In future could you go in depth about subjects like Tough Enough and winning and how some of your biggest moments came about
@Kwaighzo5 ай бұрын
Of all the takes on CB I’ve heard, this one is new to me and it’s honestly a great one to hear. It does need to be talked about more.
@hoffbeezy5 ай бұрын
That was honestly hands down the best way I've ever seen anyone handle the topic of Chris Benoit... Usually it's one sided or a pros and cons list of his accomplishments and his evil decisions he ended up making but maven said it so perfectly, we really do need to talk about it more and not sweep it under the rug because it's a touchy subject... Nancy and Daniel did not perish in vain, let it be a learning lesson to open doors of conversation of mental health and CTE and save lives instead of protecting a brand...
@nicoluna34646 ай бұрын
"The monster" snapped in him for the little care they gave it to his serious problems that he had in his head and what happen unfortunately happened and should not have ever happened . I'm sure he wasn't the friendliest man in the world but probably before when he was a little more healthier he wasn't a bad person and a bad father at all , the brain problems he had made him change completely until he became a psycho sociopath , a shame for him and obviously much more by Nancy and Daniel . I loved your position with your opinion towards Chris, you have to respect his great career, his professionalism because as a wrestler he was one of the best even though he has done what he has done which was a such a sad tragedy . Great video Mave and I hope next year is much better than this year was for you .
@YoungRocks6 ай бұрын
Man… the ending was very eloquently delivered and I respect you very much for addressing it.
@redefv5 ай бұрын
I love the respect brought to every aspect of the business by this channel.
@joecook38984 ай бұрын
Benoit is always such a tough one to tackle and you did it brilliantly. For me Chris is one of the top performers of his era, he could sell anything and make a match real. But you have to separate that from the acts he did to his family which were evil.