X

Netflix is working on a Vince McMahon documentary with WWE

It'll be a multi-part docuseries on WWE's famously eccentric chairman.

Daniel Van Boom Senior Writer
Daniel Van Boom is an award-winning Senior Writer based in Sydney, Australia. Daniel Van Boom covers cryptocurrency, NFTs, culture and global issues. When not writing, Daniel Van Boom practices Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, reads as much as he can, and speaks about himself in the third person.
Expertise Cryptocurrency, Culture, International News
Daniel Van Boom
2 min read
vincemcmahonmuscleandfitness
Muscle and Fitness

If you've even had a summer fling with professional wrestling, you know that WWE's CEO and Chairman Vince McMahon is insane on several levels. That insanity will soon be documented in a multi-part biographical series on Netflix .

WWE made the announcement during its Q3 earnings call with investors on Wednesday, reports the Wrestling Observer. It'll be produced by WWE and Bill Simmons, who also worked on HBO's 2018 documentary on Andre The Giant. Chris Smith, who helmed Netflix's Fyre Festival documentary, will direct the project. 

McMahon is known around the world for many reasons. He's played himself on WWE TV, on and off, for well over two decades, most notably during a late-'90s feud with Stone Cold Steve Austin. He's also a rags-to-riches story, growing up in a North Carolinian trailer home with an abusive step father and now reported to be worth $1.6 billion

Within wrestling circles though, McMahon is a more enigmatic and idiosyncratic figure. A notorious workaholic, he posed on the cover of Muscle and Fitness at age 70. Many former employees have noted how upset he gets after sneezing, on the grounds that he should be able to control the physical impulse to sneeze. Other famous stories include the time he drag raced and almost killed a member of the WWE writing team, the time he had an announcer fake arrested as a prank, and the time he tried to fart in someone's face but accidentally soiled himself -- moments before going to the ring for a live TV segment, where camera crew had to shoot around his backside. 

So, yes. The documentary should be interesting. There's no word yet on its release date.