Current AEW announcer Justin Roberts put on a welcoming face to audiences in WWE for 12 years, but no one knew what was truly going on behind the scenes.
Exclusive: Justin Roberts Reveals WWE Experience
I didnโt know what to expect when I contacted Justin Roberts.
Itโs a Thursday morning, sunny here in Alabama, and weโre having a phone conversation about his time as a ring announcer in WWE.
His voice isnโt what I expected, either. Itโs a little deeper and slower than the fast-talking Chicago native I pictured in my head.
In his memoir, Best Seat in the House, Roberts thoroughly detailed repeated bullying at the hands of multiple WWE superstarsโspecifically John Bradshaw Layfield.
For longtime fans, tales of JBLโs abuse are nothing new. But the depth of his behavior in Robertsโs book has intensified scrutiny of the retired wrestler, especially in light of WWEโs โB A STARโ anti-bullying campaign.
Unlike many talents, Justin Roberts doesnโt sound like he misses WWE.
"No," he says when I ask him if someone from WWE approached him with the right offerโin fact, he doesnโt let me finish the questionโ"Not interested."
You donโt often hear of a talent shutting the door that firmly on a WWE return.
In the world of wrestling, money almost always talks. Throw enough of it in the right direction, and fences can be mended.
Even Bruno Sammartino came back to the WWE fold after enough outreach and cash. But Roberts is pretty clear that his days with WWE are over for good.
And he doesnโt sound bitter about it.
"I just look at it as a closed chapter of my life," he says.
"I donโt think thatโs bitter. If I were bitter, I think I would be going โI still ought to be there โฆโ but you have to realize that I was treated very badly by WWE, and I have no interest in going back."
If Justin Robertsโ story with WWE sounds like a love affair gone bad, itโs because thatโs just what it is.
As a boy growing up watching wrestling in the 1980s, Roberts played with action figures and booked his own matches between plastic superstars.
He lived and breathed wrestling, and every step along the wayโfrom high school to college to early adulthoodโRoberts was continually working on getting his foot in the door of WWE.
There were fits and startsโone of the things we learn about WWE is that they never flat-out say "No" to talentโbecause they may have a use for them at some point.
Itโs an understandable philosophy, but it can also be used to string talent along with the prospect of finally making it to WWE in some capacity.
Roberts took pains to make the book as real as possible, and it shows. Readers see the good and bad side of WWE.
The highs are very high, but the lows are very, very low.
"I spent 12 years in WWE," Roberts said. "When youโre with a company that long, youโre not going to have a story thatโs always happy.
“What some people never understood โฆ people thought I had the greatest job in the world. They couldnโt understand why I wasnโt happy at the end."
But then you read the book. Robertsโs first international trip with WWE, where he was once held down in submission holds by Jamie Noble, and Chris Benoit simultaneously was a nightmare for the young announcer.
Later on, as he rested in his hotel room chatting online with Colt Cabana, JBL and Benoit went through the building, rattling doors and looking for him.
Throughout his tenure, Roberts would be a frequent target for JBL, who often asked why the announcer hadnโt killed himself yet.
In any other corporate world, the atmosphere would be labeled toxic. Because itโs โsports entertainment,โ the superstarsโ behavior could be written off as โboys will be boys.โ
The best of times seem easy to see.
Robertsโs relentless enthusiasm for wrestling converted his father into a fan, and superstars like Batista, Randy Orton, and Chris Jericho would contact the elder Roberts while he battled lung cancer.
In a touching moment, Roberts details how Chris Benoit approached him and asked if he could call Robertsโs father.
A Dream Diminished
But the most untarnished moment in Robertsโs mind is when he realized heโd accomplished his dream.
"There were a lot of really great moments, but the one that really stands out to me is the first time I was standing in the middle of the ring at Raw for a tryout," he says.
"Just knowing how impossible it was, I was thinking, โWow, I got this. I made it.โ"
But the road was still winding ahead of him. Some of the most impressive moments in the book come from Roberts, detailing how he broke into wrestling, constantly pushing for a way to be involved with the business he loved.
From working shows with Dale Gagneโs reborn AWA program in the 1990s to helping run independent shows with the Navajo Kid in Arizona to running his own indie promotion, Roberts steeped himself in the business.
Itโs impressive and gives a ton of depth and insight into Robertsโs character.
He never took no for an answer.
He looked for ways to be involved, to make the programs with which he was involved better.
We talk a little bit about Raw’s Nexus takeover, an angle that saw several wrestlers destroy the WWE ring and attack personnel at ringside.
In a memorable visual, Daniel Bryan choked Roberts with the announcerโs own tie. It was great televisionโalmost a throwback to some of the old territory days in its brutality and viciousness.
"I thought it made great TV," Roberts said. "Vince was happy with it, Bryan was happy with it. Everyone was happy with it."
Except then they werenโt. Advertisers thought the angleโspecifically Roberts being chokedโwas too brutal for WWEโs PG rating. Bryan was released for a short time until the heat around the angle died down.
"Oh, that was real," Roberts said. "He absolutely was choking me. Thankfully it wasnโt for that long.
“I tried to get my finger in there between my collar and my throat, but it was too tight. But I loved the angle. I mean, I was always down there; why should I be off-limits when things like that happened? I thought it added to the angle."
There are things Iโm not touching, like how WWE now has a charity (Connorโs Cure) that wouldnโt exist without the work of Justin Roberts or how the announcer was informed that his contract wouldnโt be renewed following Raw one night after the talent had completed a grueling tour of Malaysia.
Those stories are in the book, and theyโre absolutely worth reading on your own.
Justin Roberts – Still a Fan of Wrestling After Time in WWE
As we briefly discuss 1980s wrestling, I hear the infectious joy in Robertsโs voice. Heโs still a fan of wrestling. You can tell.
Thatโs potentially the most inspiring thing about his story: wrestling is a business that can break people physically, mentally, and spiritually. Knowing that Roberts kept his outlook, kept his love of the game โฆ well, thatโs a great thing.
"I grew up liking wrestling. I didnโt have a favorite; I loved the whole thing. Loved the whole show. I was into everybody. All the characters were entertaining, different," he said.
"Iโm still a fan. Iโll still watch it if Iโm at home. But Iโm not into the show the way I used to be. Creatively itโs not the wrestling I loveโitโs a different show."
Ring announcers can be an overlooked part of a wrestling show, but Roberts was the everyman, the point of entry for fans who attend WWEโs live events. A
nd his schedule was the same grueling schedule as the superstars he announced. The miles took their toll as they added up, year after year.
"Itโs incredibly taxing physically and mentally. You might fly from California, go to the East Coast for a shot, then go off flying to Europe for a tour," Roberts said.
"Travel is crazy. The company doesnโtโlook, they donโt factor in time for talent to adjust to the travel. Youโre literally on the road all the time."
A simple tip helped keep Roberts sane on those long journeys.
"My secretโI tried to get window seats on planes so that I could sleep enough to make the time go by," he said.
"And of course, some of the people, I mean, youโre around entertaining people who can make the time go by faster. I was riding by myself at first, and you can read about that in the book.
“But you kind of find people like you, and you get together, and it makes the time go easier.ย Towards the end, I was riding with Miz, Zack Ryder, and Dolph Ziggler."
As we close our interview, I decide I have to throw the Squared Circle community on Reddit a bone.
During every AMA for wrestlers, someone always asks about the size of Batistaโs genitalia.
Itโs a recurring meme that has its own notoriety.
So, laughing, I ask Roberts the question.
Roberts is quiet for a second while he thinks of a response.
"Iโll say this: Batista has a huge heart."
Thatโs Justin Roberts in a nutshell.
I think heโs a good guy, willing to play along with a joke, keeping his sunny and optimistic outlook despite some of the tough things heโs had to face.
Justin Robert’s ability to communicate and captivate audiences is unparalleled, and he has been a huge part of the success of All Elite Wrestling since their creation in 2019.
His voice is synonymous with the company, and he has become one of the most recognizable voices in wrestling.
Despite his long career in sports entertainment, Justin Roberts still shows no signs of stopping anytime soon.
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