Road Trip After Hours w/ WWE Hall of Famer Teddy Long and Host Mac Davis Podcast Por Mac Davis and WWE Hall of FamerTeddy Long arte de portada

Road Trip After Hours w/ WWE Hall of Famer Teddy Long and Host Mac Davis

Road Trip After Hours w/ WWE Hall of Famer Teddy Long and Host Mac Davis

De: Mac Davis and WWE Hall of FamerTeddy Long
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The Fastest 30 Minute Wrestling Show with WWE Hall of Famer TEDDY LONG and MAC DAVIS! It's FAST, It's FUN and it's FREE!

© 2025 Road Trip After Hours w/ WWE Hall of Famer Teddy Long and Host Mac Davis
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Episodios
  • Christmas Night With Teddy Long And Mac
    Dec 26 2025

    A quiet Christmas night turned into the kind of live hangout we love: full of warmth, road stories, and the kind of honest talk only a tight community can handle. We kicked off with Lola in her holiday outfit, fan roll call lighting up the chat, and Mac’s Waffle House saga that only wrestling lifers truly understand on a day when everything else is closed.

    From there, we pulled back the curtain on how holiday shows used to work in the territory days—double shots in Greensboro and Atlanta, no time off, just the grind that built entire careers. Then we compared that to today’s schedule, where TV and premium live events set the tempo and wrestlers actually get time with family. It’s a real marker of how the business evolved and what it owes to the people who carried it when the road was all there was.

    We also faced a tough headline: the Ric Flair cameo that left a bad taste for fans who paid top dollar for a milestone message. We talked about what fans expect with paid access, the risks of tying big life moments to celebrity shoutouts, and how creators should protect trust. The mailbag kept spirits high and real—Die Hard’s Christmas status, Grinch-vs-Santa self-portraits, and a candid memory of a holiday lost in the haze. Music shoutouts ranged from the Isley Brothers and the O’Jays to DJ Khaled, Cardi B, and a dash of Teddy Swims, because comfort tracks matter this time of year.

    We wrapped with what’s ahead: celebrating Abdullah the Butcher’s 80th birthday in Atlanta with Ron Simmons and the Rock ’n’ Roll Express, plus MLW returning to Center Stage in March. If you want us at your con—Jacksonville and beyond—say the word and tell organizers. We’re here for the meet-and-greets, the stories, and the sushi spots we never forget. If this felt like a living room on Christmas night, that’s by design.

    If you enjoyed the show, tap subscribe and ring the bell to help us reach 10,000. Share this with a friend who loves old-school road tales and modern wrestling shifts, and drop your take: is Die Hard a Christmas movie? We’ll see you next week.

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    29 m
  • Abdullah The Butcher Joins Us To Share Stories, Set The Party, And Reflect On A Life In The Ring
    Dec 19 2025

    Fans once cleared aisles when Abdullah the Butcher walked through the crowd. That same aura lights up our mics as we celebrate a true original, swap stories from the territory days, and lock in plans for his 80th birthday weekend in Riverdale, Georgia. Teddy Long traces his own path back to Abby’s open door—backstage access, lessons learned the hard way, and a lifelong respect for the kind of ring psychology that made people believe.

    We dig into what made Abby’s presence so singular: the menace that felt real, the fork that made you flinch, and the way Japanese crowds reacted with equal parts fear and fascination. Gary Hart enters the chat as the gold standard of authenticity at ringside, proving how the right manager can sharpen a legend’s edge. Between memories, we get practical: The black tie purple carpet birthday celebration and awards banquet at the Prince Hall Grand Lodge, Ticket info, payment options, and pages to follow are all covered, because honoring legends works best when the room is full.

    Then we shift to a modern flashpoint: John Cena’s retirement finish. We unpack why a tap undermines “never give up,” and outline a cleaner, character-safe alternative—an injury setup and a pass-out finish in the vein of Bret vs. Austin. It’s not nostalgia for nostalgia’s sake; it’s a reminder that consistent storytelling is still the engine of great wrestling. By the end, you’ll feel the throughline from Abby’s believable chaos to today’s booking debates and see how the craft still lives in every detail.

    Join us for a night of respect, humor, and sharp candor—and make plans to be part of Abby’s milestone celebration. If you had a favorite Abdullah moment, share it with us, hit follow, and leave a review so more fans can find the show.

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    37 m
  • How A Legendary Ref Turned Heel, Survived Hogan–Sting Chaos, And Built A Hungry Roster In Atlanta
    Dec 12 2025

    Ever wonder why crowds once believed with their whole hearts? We sit down with legendary referee and promoter Nick Patrick to trace the line from real-deal kayfabe to today’s indie surge in Atlanta—and we don’t dodge the messy parts. From growing up with The Assassin, Jody Hamilton, to flushing blades as a kid and learning the code that kept heels and babyfaces apart, Nick maps how presentation shaped passion and why belief is a choice a promotion must earn every night.

    We unpack the Starrcade storm around Hogan vs Sting from the person counting the fall. Nick walks through conflicting instructions, a missing all-hands huddle, and the trust gap that turned a dream finish into a debate that still rages. Then the conversation shifts to craft: why calling it in the ring beats memorized marathons, how announcers should react to what unfolds, and how a ref can get real heat by playing the guy everyone thinks they can whip—until his friends show up.

    The story lands in Atlanta with Deep South Wrestling. Nick breaks down a smart local model: outdoor brewery shows along the BeltLine that hook walk-up fans, a family-friendly tone with room for edge, and a card built for variety—technical, high-flying, comedy, and grit in the right spots. It’s not two hours of the same match; it’s a show that changes gears like a great main event. We share a moving moment when a fan took his graduation walk in the ring, then pivot back to business with dates, a new indoor home at Monday Night Garage, and monthly livestreams on the horizon. The takeaway is simple and powerful: make moments, not checklists. Teach young pros to work the people, not just the moves. That’s how you make wrestling feel real again.

    If this conversation hits your wrestling brain, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves WCW history or indie gems, and leave a review so more fans can find it. Then come see Deep South Wrestling in Atlanta and tell us what moment stole your night.

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    42 m
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