If I'm studying in NXT and trying to make it to the main roster, I would be watching Randy Orton.
— Goldust
Six-Man Tag Matches are good to have on the show because they're very exciting.
In the '70s and the '80s, what wrestlers were doing back then, yes, they're taking bumps, and they're busting up their bodies and things like that, but now, we got these cages: they're falling off.
It's important to give back.
You can have a bad opponent out there and still get the job done. You just have to work around certain things.
We got tables they're going through constantly, chair shots, all this, very dangerous maneuvers where you can possibly break your neck or something like that.
You wouldn't catch me dead in a fanny pack.
There would be no Goldust without the fans. They've made my career.
My favorite opponent is probably Randy Orton.
The business changes, and we don't all have to like the change, but it's, ultimately, the business is changed. But, that being said, I don't like it, and I'll tell you why. Because without the new school that we have right now, or without old school, there would be none of this new school, so it started somewhere, right?
I chose to go down a very dark place, and I can't change that, but those moments have served as an education for me.
People have come up and told me they were WCW fans from the early '90s, or they were watching my work in FCW when I first started in the late '80s, and they'll spit out a match of mine that they still remember. I stand there in awe, shocked that someone still remembers.