John Cena brought back a little of his Thuganomics side during a recent interview.
In his first interview after his retirement match, WWE legend John Cena appeared on Cody Rhodes’ What Do You Wanna Talk About podcast. Freestyle rapping about tuna fish on a random bus journey was what saved Cena’s WWE career and gave birth to the Doctor of Thuganomics. He proved that the character still lives inside him when Rhodes gave him a task during their conversation.
Cody Rhodes showed John Cena an ad jingle for Wheatley Vodka and asked him to replace a word in it. Cena didn’t take much time and came up with something on the spot.
He took the line, “Why should Moscow always get the mule? Vodka this good is an American jewel,” and hilariously replaced it with, “Why should Moscow always get the mule? Vodka this good, I repeatedly play with my tool.”
Word Life.
John Cena Names CM Punk Promo As His Favorite Pro Wrestling Moment
Speaking in the same interview, John Cena named CM Punk’s promo at the Night of Champions 2025 Pre-Show as his favorite pro wrestling moment of all time.
“I can’t get past Phil Brooks, CM Punk, Saudi Arabia,” John Cena began. “I think that might be my favorite moment in wrestling. I was lucky enough to have a promo with him that night and a match (the following night), so I’m attaching myself to that moment, because I think it’s one of the best moments in wrestling.
“Phil goes out there, I want to say Phil, because it’s his development as a man. Front row, there’s a dude to hold him accountable, and I’m huge on accountability. In the right moment, Phil was accountable for what he said, he gave a good explanation for the why, and what can we do after that. ‘I’m Sorry,’ and then you leave it. That’s all you can do. Forgiveness takes time, and when someone’s ready to forgive, they’ll mend that fence.
“That gentleman forgave him right there, and bro, the forgiveness was infectious. Phil went on that pre-show at 5 PM. We did a promo at 8:30. He went from being the most hated person to saying sorry to one guy and being forgiven, and then the whole pre-show forgiving him. Then he went out in front of 31,000 people, and they forgave him. I don’t know if there’s a better moment than that,” John Cena said.
Read More: WWE Legend Says John Cena’s Last Match Felt Like A Reunion
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