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5 Facts About Dana White’s Pro Wrestling Debut in Memphis

Dreadhead Kev

UFC president Dana White ringside on Beale Street.

Last weekend in front of Jerry “The King” Lawler’s Hall of Fame Bar & Grille on Beale Street, UFC president Dana White was involved in a professional wrestling match for the first time ever. White’s debut in the squared circle was another historic wrestling moment in city know for its wrestling history. 

Here are five facts about the UFC boss’s “Beale Street Brawl”:

1) White was in the corner of Derrick King and Matt Serra in a tag match featuring one wrester and one MMA fighter on each team and one WWE Hall of Famer as a special enforcer outside the ring.

2) White entered the ring towards the end of the match and played an important role in the finish before getting attacked from behind by Maria Starr.

5 Facts About Dana White’s Pro Wrestling Debut in Memphis (5)

3) All of the action was filmed for the reality show Dana White: Lookin’ for a Fight.

[slideshow-1] 4) White picked Memphis over Mania.

5 Facts About Dana White’s Pro Wrestling Debut in Memphis

5) Mr. Belding was there.

5 Facts About Dana White’s Pro Wrestling Debut in Memphis (2)

5 Facts About Dana White’s Pro Wrestling Debut in Memphis (3)

Listen to Kevin Cerrito talk about pro wrestling on the radio every Saturday from 11-noon CT on Sports 56/87.7 FM in Memphis. Subscribe to Cerrito Live on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, tunein, PlayerFM or Sticher. Find out about his upcoming wrestling trivia events at cerritotrivia.com. Follow him on Twitter @cerrito.

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News The Fly-By

Q&A with Derrick King, Star of WGN’s Wrestling With Death

In the late ’90s, when Memphian Derrick King, aka Mr. Personalities, was taking on Jerry “The King” Lawler and other pro-wrestling legends on local TV, he never dreamed he’d end up working in a funeral home in rural Arkansas.

But that’s what happened after King married into the Latham family of Osceola, Arkansas. The Lathams run Mid-Southern Championship Wrestling in the Northeast Arkansas town, and they also happen to run Wilson Funeral Home. The family, including King, are the stars of a new WGN reality show, Wrestling With Death, which offers a glimpse into the family of “morticians by day, wrestlers by night.”

King still wrestles — in Osceola, Memphis, and Newbern, Tennessee — but now he spends most days greeting customers in the funeral home (and occasionally digging graves and embalming bodies). King took a few minutes to talk about his wrestling career and what this season of Wrestling With Death has in store.

Bianca Phillips

Derrick King

Flyer: How did you get involved in Memphis wrestling?

Derrick King: I started at the age of 16. I used to work at Piggly Wiggly in Memphis. One of the wrestlers came in who used to wrestle on Memphis TV. I recognized who he was and I asked him how to get into it. He had a school in Dixie, Arkansas. So I drove over there every Sunday morning and trained for three months. And the next thing you know, I’m a pro wrestler.

What was the most memorable moment in your wrestling career?

I grew up watching Memphis wrestling. And getting the opportunity to wrestle Jerry Lawler or being with Dave Brown or being promoted by Randy Hales of Power Pro Wrestling, that was a big deal. Those kinds of things don’t happen to people overnight. My dream was to be a wrestler and to actually live out my dream and be [wrestling] on Channel 5, where I grew up watching it. Life could have been over the next week, and I could say, I got to do everything I wanted to do.

Why did you go by Mr. Personalities?

I used to dress up as different wrestlers, like Jeff Jarrett, Jerry Lawler, and Shawn Michael. I’d come out and imitate these guys and eventually have to wrestle them dressed like them.

When did you meet the Latham family, the funeral home owner/wrestling family on Wrestling With Death?

I wrestled for the Lathams in Osceola when I first started wrestling in 1995 or 1996. I met their daughter, Jamie, who is now my wife, and we had an on and off relationship for years. And four or five years ago, we started dating again. We got married a year ago in November.

Did you realize when you married into the family that you’d working for the family business?

No, absolutely not. I just thought I was going to be a wrestler forever. But when I got married, I realized that wrestling wasn’t going to pay every bill for my wife’s lifestyle. I had to do something, and working in the funeral home was flexible around my wrestling career. But once I was in, I was hooked. You end up doing all kinds of things you’d never thought you’d do.

On the first episode, you said that you don’t like being dirty and you don’t like death. Has this job helped you open up to things that make you uncomfortable?

It has opened my eyes to a lot of things. I would have never thought I’d be in a funeral home for as long as I’ve been in one. Of course, digging graves, that kind of hard work and manual labor was something I never did before. They put me to the test to break me into this family. I grew up a little bit.

Can you say anything about what’s coming up on the show?
I would say watch every episode because there’s something crazy in every one. It’s all real. Everything that happens to me, and I can only speak for myself, is for real. I know people watch reality TV and think that it’s scripted. But this is real life happening.