Real Pro Wrestling Stories with Jim Cornette and Brandon Easton

Ever since I started writing for Pro Wrestling Stories, Jim Cornette was the Moby Dick to my Captain Ahab: the one interview I wanted more than anything. Right as we got Corny, author of the recently released Behind the Curtain: Real Pro Wrestling Stories, on the line, my phone cut out. Disaster struck, and panic ensued!

Wrestling historian and personality Jim Cornette takes you through the real stories behind the biggest moments in Pro Wrestling history through his upcoming graphic novel entitled 'Behind the Curtain: Real Pro Wrestling Stories'
Wrestling historian and personality Jim Cornette takes you through the real stories behind the most significant moments in Pro Wrestling history through his upcoming graphic novel entitled, โ€˜Behind the Curtain: Real Pro Wrestling Stories.โ€™

Jim Cornette – Wrestling Manager, Historian, and Now Author

As a wrestling personality and as a podcaster, Jim Cornette disseminates knowledge and opinion on a twice-weekly basis with his partner in crime, Brian Last. Cornette answers listener questions on Mondays on the Drive-Thru,ย and The Jim Cornette Experience drops on Thursdays. Both should be required listening for any wrestling fan.

But now that the interview was actually about to take place, technical difficulties struck — at least for a moment. Site editor and all-around mensch JP Zarka got me back on the line within two minutes.ย 

"I canโ€™t wait to tell the story on my show about how I did this call with two guys on a soup can and a string," Cornette started, laughing.

We were there to talk about Cornetteโ€™s then-upcoming graphic novel, Behind the Curtain: Real Pro Wrestling Stories, and to pick his brain about some names not often mentioned in modern wrestling history. The graphic novel, published by IDW, is based on stories researched and told by Jim Cornette, written by award-winning comic book scribe and screenwriter Brandon Easton, and drawn by Denis Medri.

"When I started out announcing the Real Pro Wrestling Stories project — itโ€™s actually a graphic novel — but I started out calling it a comic book because I always wanted a comic book," Cornette said. "I collected comics before I got into wrestling."

The project quickly grew. Instead of a simple comic book, a Kickstarter showed just how much fan interest was in the graphic novel. Backers blew past the original goal of $25,000, and within a short amount of time, it had exceeded every one of its stretch goals, too.

"The response from the Cult of Cornette has been tremendous," Cornette said. "We blew past the goal for 30 days in 23 hours." And contributions kept coming in. Nearly 1,200 backers pledged more than $69,000 for the graphic novel.

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As a detail-obsessed fan, photographer, manager, owner, and booker, Jim Cornette’s history comes into play here. He first started going to wrestling cards at the Louisville Gardens, where he watched Southern legends like Jackie Fargo, Jerry Lawler, Bill Dundee, and Tojo Yamamoto. The wild action of the Memphis territory informed a lot of Cornetteโ€™s views about the wrestling industry. And when Cornette began working as a ringside photographer for the promotion — his way into the business that he loved — he still wasnโ€™t officially "smartened up" to the business.

"Jerry Jarrett (who promoted the Memphis territory) used to say, โ€˜He may be smart to the business, but heโ€™s not smart to my business,โ€™" Cornette said.


Did you know? Real Pro Wrestling Stories author Jim Cornette and Paul Heyman broke into the wrestling business by first working as ringside photographers. Both had photo credits in a variety of magazines, including the "Apter mags."


But eventually, Jim Cornette began working in his home territory as a wrestling manager. From there, he went to Mid-South to work for Bill Watts as part of the legendary Midnight Express. That Express train took Cornette to Dallas to work for Fritz Von Erich, and finally to the Carolinas to work for Jim Crockett Promotions. Thatโ€™s already a world-class resume for any wrestling personality. But Cornette wasnโ€™t done. After Ted Turnerโ€™s organization bought WCW, Cornette eventually left to form Smoky Mountain Wrestling. A call from Bruce Prichard led to Cornette working as WWE world champion Yokozunaโ€™s "American representative." He co-owned Ohio Valley Wrestling for a time and booking for TNA (now Impact) and Ring of Honor.

Thatโ€™s an exhaustive resume, and it shows Jim Cornetteโ€™s knowledge — and love — of the wrestling business.

Details on Behind the Curtain: Real Pro Wrestling Stories by Jim Cornette

Behind the Curtain: Real Pro Wrestling Stories preserves some of the most exciting and eventful parts of professional wrestling history, like the 1975 plane crash that broke Ric Flairโ€™s back and crippled Johnny Valentine.

"We picked nine stories to tell," Brandon Easton said when I interviewed him by phone in early October. "We broke it down into three chapters, with three stories in each chapter."

Easton isnโ€™t just an award-winning writer. Like Cornette, heโ€™s also a longtime fan, and he first remembers watching wrestling in the early 1980s as a boy in his native Maryland.

"Being in Maryland, we got a lot of crossovers. We saw the WWF, Crockett, Mid-South," he said. "You could watch wrestling shows from six different territories in a weekend. I always enjoyed NWA wrestling. There was a grittiness to Southern wrestling that you didnโ€™t see (in WWE)."

Easton remembers a particular scene that showcased precisely how vicious the Southern style of wrestling could get. In 1985, Tully Blanchard and Magnum TA were in a hot feud for the NWA United States Championship, culminating in an "I Quit" match inside a steel cage at Starrcade. When Blanchardโ€™s valet, Baby Doll, threw a wooden chair into the ring, Magnum eventually got his hands on a broken piece of the chair and threatened to gouge Blanchardโ€™s eye out with it, resulting in the future Horseman quitting the match and the title.

"It was brutal," Easton said. "I was like โ€˜Holy shit!โ€™ Iโ€™d never seen anything like that before."

Easton has written about wrestling before, working with artist Denis Medri on a graphic novel about Andre the Giant’s life, titled Closer to Heaven. That kind of work led to this collaboration with Jim Cornette.

"The folks at IDW did that great Andre the Giant graphic novel a couple of years ago, which was kind of his biography," Cornette said. "The same team of writer and artist, Brandon Easton and Denis Medri, are doing this piece of work. Theyโ€™re my stories, but I tend to go into a lot of detail, and itโ€™s a lot different when youโ€™re writing scripts for a graphic novel. The great thing is that the guys at IDW and Brandon, especially, are all wrestling fans. They like and respect the sport of professional wrestling, and not only the current stuff but the history of things."

Easton is responsible for translating Cornetteโ€™s verbose storytelling to the page, and even though the writer is a longtime fan, he still learned new things from Cornetteโ€™s stories.

"I think my favorite story is the Sputnik Monroe story about desegregating the arenas in the Memphis territory," Easton said. "Most of the stories in the book I already knew, but I had never heard that one, and itโ€™s the most illuminating, for me. It shows that wrestling can affect a positive change in the world."

A sample of Denis Medriโ€™s artwork from Jim Cornette's upcoming Behind the Curtain: Real Pro Wrestling Stories: The Fabulous Freebirds in the ring, complete with their Confederate battle flag ring gear during a feud with the Junkyard Dog from the early 1980s
A sample of Denis Medriโ€™s artwork from Jim Cornetteโ€™s upcoming Behind the Curtain: Real Pro Wrestling Stories: The Fabulous Freebirds in the ring, complete with their Confederate battle flag ring gear during a feud with the Junkyard Dog from the early 1980s

While we were talking, I looked at some of Medriโ€™s art. What struck me was that one of the stories depicted the Fabulous Freebirds in the ring, complete with their Confederate battle flag ring gear during a feud with the Junkyard Dog from the early 1980s. I asked Easton, who is black, if that overt racist symbolism bothered him while he was writing the book.

"Growing up as an African-American fan, you had to develop a thick skin," Easton said. "You had to reconcile what you saw on TV with your own life and experiences. But when it came to wrestling, I loved JYD, and growing up in Maryland, there were Confederate flags everywhere, so the flag didnโ€™t bother me. You straight-up gotta have thick skin to be a wrestling fan and be black."

But Eastonโ€™s race certainly played a part in the way he consumed and reacted to wrestling. Heโ€™s still angry about the feud between Triple H and Booker T for the WWE world title — specifically about the promo where Triple H told Booker, "People like you donโ€™t win against people like me." And then Triple H, a heel at the time, retained the title against Booker at WrestleMania 19. Thatโ€™s been 15 years, and itโ€™s a slight that still burns because Triple H retaining violated everything about good wrestling storytelling.

"Thatโ€™s the kind of thing Iโ€™m offended by," Real Pro Wrestling Stories writer Brandon Easton said. "That, and that neither JYD nor Bad News Brown (Allen Coage) never won a title in WWE or something like Vince McMahon using the N-word. That wasnโ€™t even for an angle or reason, just him being stupid."

Other stories covered in the volume include the feud between Jerry Lawler and comedian Andy Kaufman and the original Montreal Screwjob involving Ed "Strangler" Lewis and other tales.

Jim Cornette canโ€™t hide his enthusiasm for the graphic novel.

"Itโ€™s a great project, and itโ€™s all real old wrestling stories," Cornette said, emphasizing the word real. "Itโ€™s the stuff you would think would be made up, except itโ€™s legitimate. And itโ€™s the stuff from these wilder and larger-than-life people that used to dominate the business."

Even if the book wasnโ€™t already a financial success — and it is, thanks to the backers on Kickstarter — a project like this is a labor of love for Cornette, who has a passion for sharing the history of professional wrestling with an audience thatโ€™s always eager to hear more.

Jim Cornette Presents Behind the Curtain: Real Pro Wrestling Stories was released in the fall of 2019 and can be purchased from the IDW website here.

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Bobby Mathews is a contributor for Pro Wrestling Stories as well as a veteran journalist whose byline has appeared in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, The Birmingham News, The Denver Post, as well as other newspapers around the country. He's won multiple awards for reporting and opinion writing, and his sports journalism has garnered several Associated Press Managing Editors Awards. He has covered Division I college athletics and professional sports including MLB and NFL games. He has won awards from press associations in several states, including a General Excellence award from the Georgia Press Association while sports editor at The Statesboro Herald. He currently lives in suburban Birmingham, Alabama and can be reached on Twitter @bamawriter.