John Cena and Method Man:
Thuganomics 101
MTV.com
John Cena's a busy man. On Sunday,
he stepped in to the ring to beat the 7-foot-tall, 500-pound Big
Show for the WWE U.S. Championship at Wrestlemania XX. But his
biggest challenge may lie even further down the road, as Cena
prepares to enter the rap game. The rising WWE star has proven
that he can move arenas with his mic skills as easily as he does
with his in-ring skills, and his debut album is expected to
arrive later this year. Through the power of his weekly
appearances on the WWE's Smackdown, the self-proclaimed "Doctor
of Thuganomics" has already tried out his rhymes on millions
of ears, but is he ready to go toe-to-toe with hip-hop's big dogs?
Who better than Method Man to find out? The hip-hop icon (and
wrestling fan) sat down with Cena recently to talk about their
shared loves: wrestling and hip-hop.
Method Man: When did you fall in love with hip-hop?
John Cena: In 1985, my dad bought me a CD player for
Christmas. This is when CDs first came out. I wanted the
boom box with the TV in it. I got the CD instead. I didn't even
know what CDs were. I was rocking tapes like everybody else. One
of the first CDs he ever got me was the Fat Boys' Crushin':
"The Fat Boys are back/ And you know they can never be wack!"
Right after that, everything just kind of fell into place. I
wore that CD out, then everything else hit after that. I
must have been 10.
Method Man: Are all your rhymes you say when you come out
the ring written, or off the head?
Cena: A lot of stuff is off the top of the head, but
because they let me go off the top of the head so much, sometimes
I say things that make Vince [McMahon] go, "It's a little
too raw for TV." Now I burnt my bridges too much, so I gotta
run everything by everybody to make sure, but once in a while I'll
try to slip my stuff in.
Method Man: You are officially a rapper, 'cause they hit
us with that every day, all day. "Can we have a chart of the
lyrics so we can know everything you're going to say? No, that's
not acceptable!" Last year at Wrestlemania, you issued an
open challenge for a rapper to come battle you, and no one
answered the call. How surprising is that?
Cena: That was something I could understand. I've been
doing this rap thing not for a while, only two or three months. I'm
a small-time white kid trying to represent hip-hop. If a hip-hop
artist comes up and beats me in a battle, who did they beat? A
small-town white kid who ain't never been an MC, who ain't never
done nothing. Now if an MC comes to battle and they get beat by a
small-town white boy, that's MC suicide. So there wasn't a
positive aspect for the rapper, nothing positive that the rapper
could gain out of it. There is no exposure they can possibly have,
so I can understand why it didn't pan out. We had a little fun
with that anyway. We had cardboard cutouts, just poking fun at
people. It's all fun. We keep it on wax. There's no worries
... nothing's going wrong.
Method Man: And plus, a lot of y'all rap dudes can't fight
anyway, so all you'd have to do is just sit on it and be easy.
Cena: Nah, we had some fun instead. Hopefully, at the end
of the year, or the years to come, you'll see some hip-hop people
like Meth up on WWE!
Method Man: If you had a choice of rappers, what MC would
you choose as your tag-team partner present company
excluded?
Cena: Man, Bone Crusher's a big dude, and he ain't never
scared! I ain't forgetting about him. He's a big dude.
Method Man: And he don't look like he stinks. That's the
biggest thing to me. Most fat dudes look like they funky. He don't
look like he stink. He look like a rather clean brother.
Cena: I could ride with him, too. I'd be like, "All
right. We got to travel, but you ain't gonna stink up the car.
You're a big dude, so you're gonna hold it down." Bone
Crusher, if you need me and you want to slam some bodies down, I
ain't never scared!
Method Man How daunting will it be to make people believe
you're a legitimate MC?
Cena: Well, the thing is, I'm doing an album. I'm rapping
every week. If you watch wrestling, you now know the hip-hop
culture is being represented with wrestling. For the longest time,
the cultures have almost been parallel. They're very similar, but
there's never been that joint, there's never been that bridge. I
don't care if they recognize John as an MC or as a rapper. I want
people to look at WWE and know that hip-hop is accepted in that
circle.
Method Man: Who are some of the people that you're working
with on your album?
Cena: I'm looking forward to working with my boy Freddie
Fox. Maybe we can get some members of the Wu, maybe Meth, Red.
Anybody over there from Def Jam, I'm feeling Joe Budden. Joey's
one of my guys. Eminem, obviously I'm a fan of his. Pretty much
my feel toward MCs is, if you really got heart, you got passion,
let's get on and do something. I like doing stuff with people
that's real.
Method Man: So, there's not a collaboration that's about
to go down with 'NSYNC or Christina Aguilera?
Cena: I won't be doing that.