Woooooo! Becoming Ric Flair (2022) - full transcript

"Nature Boy" Ric Flair, the most prolific and controversial Superstar in professional wrestling history, discusses his 50-year Hall of Fame career.

- Okay, gentlemen.

- Okay.

- Sound speed.
- Sound speed, yes.

- Okay.
This is Ric Flair interview,

take one.

- What is your name?

- Richard Fliehr.

- Who is Richard Fliehr?

- I don't know.

The luckiest... he's
the luckiest guy in the world...

And who had a chance to become
Ric Flair, for good or for bad.



That's who Richard Fliehr was.

- Who is Ric Flair?

- The wildest son of a bitch
who ever lived.

I've got the style

and profile

like never before!

Let me go on record
as telling the whole world,

to be the man,
you gotta beat the man,

and I'm saying, woo!

- He was, like,
the standard-bearer

for what a wrestler should be.

- The Nature Boy... woo!

Space Mountain in himself!

- I think Ric Flair
is the barometer



of the greatest World Champion
of all time.

- Ric Flair
is the champion again!

- He was ahead of his time.

He was very colorful.

- He was just
unbelievably captivating.

- It attracts you from
the moment that you see him

and hear him talk.

- I can't help it
that I look good,

smell good... woo!

Can dance all night long.

- He was the most exciting,
prolific shit-talker

that all of sports
entertainment has ever seen.

- My shoes cost more
than your house!

- He was a guy that has been
willing to do it his way,

no matter what
the consequences may be.

- I got so wrapped up
in being Ric Flair

that I probably neglected
my family a little bit.

- I've never seen
Ric Flair vulnerable,

but I saw it that day.

- I don't know how he survived

all the things
he was going through.

I think what he did was just
go back into Ric Flair:

be a persona, be a character,
so he didn't have to feel.

It's a battle within him,

'cause he has
to be on all the time.

- If anything, it was
"My dad has to slow down."

- Ric lived his gimmick.

Ric is no longer Richard Fliehr.

He's Ric Flair.

- I don't think he knows
who Richard Fliehr is.

I think that was lost
a long time ago.

- The Nature Boy,

the jet-flying, kiss-stealing,

wheeling, dealing son of a gun

intertwined with sports,
music, pop culture,

America.

When you say the name,
you get a reaction.

- 45 years
of great entertainment!

- Woo!
- You're talking

to the Rolex-wearing...
- Kiss-stealing... woo!

Limousine-riding,
jet-flying son of a gun.

- Now give me two claps
and a Ric Flair!

Woo!

- Woo!
- Woo!

- Woo!
- Woo!

- Woo!
- What?

Richard Fliehr, to be for real!

But your name is Flair to us!

It'll always be Flair to us!

- Many know that man,

but this is the story of a man,

the one behind the cameras
and away from the limelight.

This is the story of a man

caught between
a character and reality.

It begins on Poplar Avenue
in Memphis, Tennessee.

There are abandoned
brick buildings here now.

Seven decades ago,

back in 1949,

an orphanage stood here.

This is where life began
for the man we'd come to know

as Ric Flair.

What is your given name
at birth?

- Fred Phillips.

I just found that out
three years ago.

- What was
your birth mother's name?

- Yeah.
- The woman

who gave birth to you.

- I think
it's in my bio somewhere.

I think she was a nurse,
and I think... I thought

he was an architect.

- Your birth mom, again,
according to the biography,

is Olive.
- Kay, right.

- And Luther...
The name of your father.

- Luther... that is...
That's correct.

My brother actually
reached out to me.

- How did you find out
you had a brother?

- Someone reached out to Wendy

through her social media.

I would say
about four or five years ago,

there was a person who, um,
had documents,

and he got his adoption papers,

and his mother
was the same mother.

He didn't want anything.
He just wanted to let,

you know, Ric know that,

you know,
they had the same mother.

- Um, I just... she said,
"Do you wanna meet him?"

I said no.

I don't have any curiosity.

Got enough to be curious about

without someone
I've never met in my life

and meet him now at 73.

What are we gonna talk about?

Ruin our life?

You know, he probably
only wanna meets me

'cause I'm what I am...

Whoever I am,

if that makes sense.

- He's always seen himself
as "he's an only child,"

and rightfully so.
He was raised an only child.

So he didn't really connect
with the person

or find out any more.

- Well, tonight's story
is about babies right here

in the United States
in Memphis, Tennessee,

in the 1940s,

who were taken
from their parents

and not just handed over
to other couples,

but sold to other couples
with the connivance

of a corrupt judge.

- Tennessee Children's
Home Society.

- Yeah.
It was a adoption agency

that was illegally founded,

and they were selling babies,
black market babies

that had been stolen
from the mothers in hospitals.

- You may have been stolen
or taken

from your birth parents.

What's your reaction to that?

- They put me up for adoption,
and I went into an orphanage.

And I was sold to the orphanage,

and my parents bet...

I'm basically
a black market baby.

I'm adopted
and couldn't have been adopted

by two finer people.

I'm not sure they knew
that it was illegal or not.

I doubt very seriously
that they did.

No, my parents
were so honest and straight,

but that's how it came about.

As I got older, they wanted me
to know more about it.

I just said, "Mom and Dad,

"you don't need
to tell me anything.

I don't need it.
I don't care."

"I'm happy here."

I got two of the greatest
people in the world.

I was raised by a medical doctor

and a mother that had a master's

in theater and English.

My dad also had a PhD
in theater and English.

- They were very cultured,
his parents,

and very smart.

Being surrounded
in that environment

helped boost
what was inside of him.

- My parents were both so smart.

I didn't inherit
any of their genes.

I'm adopted, so

I don't really know
where my genes came from,

but I didn't inherit theirs.

But it wasn't
from lack of effort.

I had every opportunity
to be a well-educated kid,

but just a guy
who just looked out the window.

They called it
daydreaming back then.

I guess they call it
A.D.D. now.

- When did you
first start drinking?

- 15.

Regularly.

Without a 18-year-old ID,

you could drink beer back then.

I had a fake ID
and drank beer all the time.

I was...

Playing strip poker...

Shit like that.

I mean, if it was available,

I was doing it.

- He was drinking
at a young age.

He was conforting with females
at a very young age,

and, you know, this was
a source of endless distress

to his parents,
because it was unthinkable

in that family
that they would have a child

that was that rambunctious.

- I was just so different.

I was just wild as a kid.

So they made the decision
to put me in a private school.

I went to Wayland Academy
my freshman year.

All the people in that school

came from very wealthy families,

huge backgrounds,

and my friends were all...
At school, it was full of,

like, family that owned
the Blackhawks

in all of Chicago,

Campbell soups,

I mean, OshKosh B'gosh jeans,
name it.

That school was loaded with
family with a lot of money.

So I saw the lifestyle I wanted.

I just had to figure out
how to afford it.

I was a state champion wrestler,

all-state in football.

All I wanted to do
was play football.

I mean, that was what I knew

I wanted to do in college.

I ended up going
to University of Minnesota.

Back then, they helped you
a lot with your academics...

Like, just go to class,
and you'll pass.

But I was just there for fun.

I didn't give a damn
about school.

I lived in a fraternity
That was the year after...

After I flunked out.

My parents didn't know.

- How did your parents react

when you told 'em
you'd flunked out?

- Uh, they weren't shocked.

They weren't shocked.

I sold life insurance
for a year after that.

I never got my license,
but I made 40 grand,

'cause I just introduced
all the general agents

to my friends around town.

I never actually
passed the test.

- In 1971, Richard Fliehr

did make a major life decision.

He got married
for the first time.

- Leslie.
She's a wonderful lady.

We get along to this day.

- The next year,
they had their first daughter,

Megan.

Now a father, Ric was trying
to find his way,

searching
for his life's purpose.

He found it
in a likely location:

a bar.

- Ric Flair was working
as a bouncer

in the Minneapolis area.

- So I'm bouncing,

and I'm sitting here
with my elbow

on the cigarette machine,
on a stool, right?

And in walks this guy,
and I look...

"Holy fuck."

He's smoking a Salem cigarette

and sits down
and orders a double vodka

and a soda.

I said,
"Fuck, that's Ken Patera."

- Ken Patera was

a very fabled
Olympic weightlifter,

and this Olympian
starts engaging Ric Flair

in conversation.

- I walk over, and I say,
"You Ken Patera?"

He said, "Yeah.
What's your name?"

I said, "Ric.
Ric Fliehr."

He goes, "How ya doing?
You know this town very well?"

I said,
"Yeah, know it real well."

- Before you know it,
Ric Flair and Ken Patera

are living together,

and this Olympian,
who was actually training

for the professional
wrestling world,

was being sponsored
by Verne Gagne.

- Here's wrestling champion
Verne Gagne.

- Well, here I am.
What's up?

- Verne Gagne was the promoter

for the American
Wrestling Association, or AWA,

which was
a Minneapolis-based promotion.

Every year,
Verne Gagne would put

a class of trainees together.

- You still have the same shock
that you had

the first time
someone threw you down,

but you're building up
a tolerance to it.

- Well, I went to the camp,
enthusiastic as possible,

but I had no idea what I was
getting myself into.

That... two months
with those guys,

legs were chafed.
I couldn't walk.

I mean, Gagne, you know,
came over and got me,

slapped me across the face.

- You don't just walk out there,

pick him up and lay him down.
We wanna see some action,

wanna see what you can do.

I trained him.

I'd start 'em out

with just knee bends,

and we'd do 50

to 100 knee bends.

Well, the guys... you know, at 50,

they fell on their face.

- Ugh, it was brutal.

That was a...
I mean, first of all,

I was 300 pounds.
I mean, to this day,

you take a good athlete
and tell him to do

500 free squats,
250 push-ups, 200 crunches.

- 200.

- And run two miles.

How many good athletes
can do that right now?

Like 1%?
Think about it.

And we're doing this
in 30-degree weather outside.

- Come on, dig, dig, dig, dig!

- He was training hard
to become a pro wrestler,

but step one
in Fliehr's metamorphosis

into the character
began with a new name...

Ric Flair.
- Mm-hmm.

- Where did the name come from?

- Verne.

I was so enamored

with Dusty Rhodes.

I said I wanted to call myself
Rambling Ricky Rhodes.

He got up,
threw his glasses down,

and said,
"Rambling Ricky Rhodes?

"What is it with you
and Dusty Rhodes?

"Your name is Ric Flair.
That's fucking cool as shit...

Ric Flair."

I said, "It is?"
He said, "Yeah,

just call yourself Ric Flair.
Change the spot."

I had my first match,
Minneapolis Auditorium,

ten minute draw,

longest ten minutes of my life.

I was excited about it, but I
didn't know what I was doing.

- What did you make
for your first match?

- 50 bucks.

I spent it coming home.

Man, I have driven 3,000 miles
for $210.

I would drive to Winnipeg,
500 each way,

drive back, get home
at 5:00 in the morning, right,

and get up at noon
and leave for Des Moines, Iowa.

- In front of crowds
of how many?

- Oh, probably... in Winnipeg,
it was almost always sold out,

but everything else was, like,
50 and 100, maybe 150,

but never...

I just barely... we lived,
basically, off Leslie.

She was a dental hygienist.

I didn't have the experience.

But once I got rolling,
I mean, I liked it so much

that I... when I wasn't booked,

I would travel with Dusty Rhodes

and Dick Murdoch, just be
their driver.

I drove Andre for two years

when he was Jean Ferre.

He actually broke in

the same time I was breaking in,

and I drove him everywhere,

and when he'd get
to the building, he'd go,

"Boss, get me wine."

One day, David Crockett said,

"No, no, no wine
till after the match."

"Boss, there be no match.
Wine."

Naw, there was that night

he drank 106 beers
at The Downtowner.

Verne had me drive him.
It was great.

- Hanging out
with Andre the Giant,

riding with Dusty Rhodes,

Ric Flair was traveling
with the best in the business.

- So this is 1974.

So I get invited to go
to the Carolinas, right?

And I'm married at this point,
and we had just had Megan.

So I go to my dad.

I said, "Can I have $400
to go down there?"

So I flew down there
in April of '74

with 200 bucks in my pocket.

Left Leslie 200 bucks.

And I'd met this guy in a bar.

He said, "You're Ric Flair?"
And I said, "Yeah."

He said, "You guys ever
thought about flying?

I hear you drive everywhere."
I said,

"Yeah, I thought about it.
Why?"

He said, "Well, I got a plane."

I said, "You got a plane?"

So I said, you know,
"What are you talking about?"

He said,
"Well, there's five of you.

I can carry five of you,
only charge you $100 apiece."

I said,
"Only $100 apiece to fly?"

I said, "How fast does it go?"

He said, "250 miles an hour."

I said, "You're kidding me.
$100 apiece?"

So bingo.

I got five people,
like, right away.

- So Ric Flair
and some of the other guys

decided that they were
gonna pool their money

and hire a Vietnam veteran
who is a pilot

to transport them

around the Charlotte
wrestling territory,

and this guy would load up
his plane with talent,

and these were big dudes,
and it was a small plane.

So now he had to compensate
for the extra weight,

and he did that by dumping

some of the fuel from the plane.

- We were in
a six-passenger Cessna 310.

We were flying to Wilmington

for a night show on Sunday.

So we got to what's called
"the point of no return,"

which I've learned.

In other words, he should've
refueled in Raleigh.

We were 1,400 pounds over gross,

and so he compensated for that
by carrying less fuel.

All of a sudden,
we're at 6,000 feet,

and we're just starting
to descend, and, uh,

all of a sudden,
the right engine,

it went boop-boop-boop.

I mean, it pinned.
Bingo.

Within ten seconds,
it was dead, boom.

Then he reached down...
I saw him grab...

He pulled the reserve tanks,

forgetting he didn't have
any reserve fuel.

So the left one
just went broop, boom,

and man, we're, you know,

I would say
between 5,500 and 6,000 feet.

I remember looking at it.

- And at this point,
there was real panic going on.

The pilot began to freak out,

and the great Johnny Valentine

was sitting next to the pilot,

and he, being a wrestler,

he figured, "Well,
I'll slap some sense into him,"

and he started
slapping the pilot

to try to get him to focus.

- We were going so fast,

probably over 300 miles an hour,

that normally,
when you hit a tree orchard,

a small plane... it would
cartwheel a small plane.

We mowed the tree orchard down.

- I think they barely missed
the water tower,

and they might have
even landed safely

had there not been
some electric lines there.

But because
of the circumstances,

they ended up crashing.

- And stuck
in a railroad embankment

one... or maybe 300 yards
on the runway.

- It was truly a calamity.

- Next thing I knew,
I was getting put

in one of these
old military ambulances,

and so the guy goes...

"I think you better hurry.
I think we're losing this one."

Well, I'm sure
we all thought the same thing.

I thought
he was talking about me,

and actually, it was the pilot.

- The pilot was in a coma

and lingered there
for about a year.

Johnny Valentine was paralyzed

from the waist down
for the rest of his life,

and Ric Flair ended up
breaking his back

in several places.

- I broke my back
in three places

and tore my stomach apart...

Compression fracture.
I used to be 6'2".

So the vertebrae
about this far apart,

normally, in your back.

So I had three of them

that were all crunched together,

so maybe two inches shorter.

- What were you told,
initially, in the hospital

about your future?

- Oh, I'd never wrestle again,
never.

- What was your first thought
when you heard that?

- "I'm screwed.

"What am I gonna do?

I got a wife and kid."

I mean, I can remember
me and my daughter Megan

walking up and down
the street in my back brace,

and then on that, laid on...
All I could do for rehab

was I would lay on my stomach
and do...

Arch up.
That's all I could do.

That's the only rehab
you could do.

- 1975, the plane crash

severely damaged
Ric Flair's body.

His back was broken
and his injuries extensive.

He says he lost
nearly 100 pounds.

Flair had been wrestling
for three years by then,

and his career was in question.

But Flair refused to quit.

He worked harder,
building back his strength,

and within six months,

Richard Fliehr had become
Ric Flair once again.

He was back in the ring.

That is when
he created the persona

that would define him.

The Nature Boy.

- The Ric Flair
who we all have in our mind

came in steps.

When he started training,

he was kind of
a chunky brown-haired guy.

- Flair did have a couple
matches under his belt,

but yet he was a rookie,

and a rookie is gonna make
mistakes.

- And then "Superstar"
Billy Graham's wife

dyed his hair blond.

And ultimately,
while he was working there,

somebody said
that he reminded them

of the original Nature Boy,
Buddy Rogers.

- And started
to fly off the ropes

but checked himself,

and look at that
Buddy Rogers strut.

- When the good Lord made me,
He threw the mold away

when it comes
to the wrestling business.

- Who was Buddy Rogers?

- The first Nature Boy,

and he was cut,

handsome,

really good physique,

tan all the time.

I thought he was cool.

- But there's one thing
I want everybody to know.

And that is, to a nicer guy,

it couldn't happen.

- That's part of where I got
the clothing gig... from him.

He was always
dressed immaculately.

I got that from him
and Joe Namath.

That's what I grew up on... Joe,

and when I met him...
And I told him.

I got a lot
of attitude from him.

Here I am, looking better
than any man alive,

the most gorgeous human being
on the face of this earth.

The great one,

the golden-maned stallion,

the new Ric Flair.

- How did the character

begin to evolve, Ric?

- Uh, I don't know.
Every day, it just got better.

I just got more natural,

and I... I felt much better
about myself being 240

than I did when I was heavier,

and it really helped
my work too.

The more extravagant I was,

the more attention I got.

The first robe was $3,000...

That butterfly robe,
the white one?

And then I started going.

I think the last one
I paid for was, like,

20 grand.
You can buy these

anytime you want
for about $10,000, $11,000.

I got 15 of 'em.

I bought the governor's
limousine in 1978

and paid a guy 25 bucks.

I got him late every night

to drive me around
in a limousine.

You have just begun

to find out what it's all about

to tangle with the new

Mid-Atlantic Tag Team Champions.

Woo!

Woo!

Jerry Lee Lewis,
"Great Balls of Fire"...

Driving at night, that's all
we do, is listen to music.

"Goodness, gracious,
great balls of fire, woo."

That's where I got it from.

- Ric "Nature Boy" Flair!

By '78, '79,
I was really feeling it.

Woo, yeah!

- He was just loud and could
talk and was exciting,

and every match
he had was amazing.

- Well, at first, they hate you,

but after a while, if you're
just good at what you do,

they can't hate you,

or you entertain 'em so much,

they can't hate you.

- Come on, Ric!

A or B.
In my case, it was both.

- Ric Flair has won

the World Heavyweight
Championship.

- Ric Flair defended his title

in New Zealand,

in Singapore,

in Australia,

in Japan,

and when Ric Flair stepped

in front
of an audience somewhere,

they felt it was like
Muhammad Ali coming there.

- When my name's
on the marquee, baby,

you know
you seen the best there is.

- This dude had you magnetized

just from looking
into the camera

and talking to you
with his shades on.

- Ric Flair is the stuff!

- And he could, you know,
talk his shit,

and he can back it up,
which was the coolest part.

- He talked major shit.

He was talking like that
before anybody.

Nobody was talking shit
like him.

- When you're
the World Champion,

you just don't talk the talk!

You walk the walk!

And the feuds with...

Who didn't he feud with?

- Dusty Rhodes, my friend,
if you get in my way...

Wap!
You're gonna get one of those!

- Now is the time
that the talking stops

and the fighting begins!

- Steamboat,
where are you, punk?

I'm right here, baby doll.

- I despise everything
that you like,

everything that you do,

and what you represent
National Wrestling Alliance

as a champion.

- I take 'em all on,

and brother,
when I'm done with 'em,

they're all history.

- In the early 1980s,

Ric Flair had become
an attraction

across the globe,

living his life
on jets and runways.

The man
who survived a plane crash

just a few years earlier

had another moment
that can only be described

as cheating death once again.

Ric, you're the only person

I think
I'll ever meet in my life

about whom I can ask
the following question

and have it be marginal,

as opposed to utterly central,
to your story.

When were you
struck by lightning?

- Well, here's the story.

It's a very unusual story.

Getting out the plane
in Richmond, Virginia,

to wrestle Ricky Steamboat.
It was '83.

So I got out of the plane.
I was, like, second.

The guy behind me,
maybe 10 feet behind me,

and all of a sudden,
my umbrella went on.

I was like, "What's going on?"

'Cause I'm carrying my robe,
right?

And I'm trying to carry
the umbrella and my briefcase,

and all of a sudden,
I just went like this,

and man,
I dropped the briefcase,

and my thing shot up,

literally, you know,
50 feet in the air,

and I went, "What the fu..."

And everybody starts screaming,

and I turn around,
the guy behind me...

It hit my umbrella,
it hit the top of mine...

Hit him right in the eye
and killed him.

I just froze.
I was embarrassed.

Everybody running out there
to save the guy,

I just stood there, frozen,
looking at him.

People ask me all the time.
They're like,

"Are you fucking still alive?"

I say, "Yeah, motherfucker,
very much."

Woo!

- Alive and thriving.

- Styling and profiling!

Tearing it all up!

- By the mid-'80s,
Flair was increasingly

spending money to raise
the profile of his character

and getting lost
in the Nature Boy lifestyle.

- When I started earning,
I started spending.

I spend more money
on spilt liquor

in bars from one side
of this world to the other

than you made
in the last six months!

I was living large.

I wanted people to know

that I wasn't
fucking dicking around.

I have to fulfill

all the dreams, the desires,

and the lusts

of thousands of young women
all throughout!

Diamond ring-wearing,
kiss-stealing...

Woo... wheeling, dealing,

limousine-riding, jet-flying

son of a gun!

And I'm having a hard time

holding these alligators down.

Woo!

- The suits, the Rolex,

the ladies, the cars,

the lifestyle...

He was just
unbelievably captivating,

and there just wasn't
anything about him

that didn't ooze
charisma and fun.

- I got the biggest house
on the biggest hill

on the biggest side of town!

Every time I heard "no,"

I proved "yes."

So this realtor said to me,

"Your credit is
never gonna be able

to afford a $2 million house."

I said, "Really?"

I got a realtor
and bought the house.

I... and I borrowed 200 grand
from my dad to help do it,

because it was called, um...

Original, right?

And I paid him back,
and he went,

"I'm really proud of you,"
'cause I borrowed money

from him over the years
and hadn't paid him back.

And then, my parents came down
from Minneapolis.

My dad walked in the house
and said, "Really?

You need all this?"

- They didn't really see
the importance in that.

- What's the point of the air
through here?

- That's the gimmick, Dad.

- I think that he never
felt good enough.

- I don't know
if they ever got it.

They were very conservative.

Me, not so much.

- How many pairs of shoes?

- Oh, in my lifetime?

About 200 pairs
of alligator leather shoes...

Skin shoes.

I know it's hard to believe,

but I didn't want to ever wear
the same thing on TV twice,

and if you look back on tapes,

you're gonna see
very few things I wore twice.

We taped once a week.

So I probably bought
four suits a week

for 36 years.

- He believed
in looking the part

and dressing for who you were
and where you were going,

as opposed
to where you had come from.

- Styling

and profiling!

- Why is it necessary?

- 'Cause I'm Ric Flair!

Woo!

I wanted to set the bar

so high,
nobody could ever get it.

I represent
the American way of life!

I lived the gimmick
and didn't understand

the word "moderation."

- How did you afford this?

- Because I wasn't paying
my taxes.

I mean, I didn't...
I just didn't slow down.

Totally my fault.
Irresponsible.

Woo!

- The money, made and wasted,

only added to his legend.
- Woo!

- Fame became his barometer.

- Flair, Ric Flair.

Now, like, a flight attendant
me how to spell it,

I go, "F-A-M-O-U-S."

As Ric Flair's name
shined brightly in lights,

the man once known
as Richard Fliehr

was nowhere to be found.

The thin line separating life
inside and outside the ring

was no longer clear,

and that only increased

when Flair's
next chapter exploded...

nationwide.

- We're talking
about the cream of the crop,

the most successful group
of wrestlers

anywhere in the world.

- The Four Horsemen
were a faction

that kind of came together

rather spontaneously.

You had Ric Flair associate

with Arn Anderson

and Ole Anderson.

Then you add Tully Blanchard,

and they became

the most charismatic faction
of their generation.

- We are the Horsemen.

- The origin story
of how you guys came together?

- Arn just said it one day,

just off the top of his head.

You know, it wasn't planned.

Arn just said,
"This is the apocalypse.

We're The Four Horsemen,"

and next week, there were guys
in suits on...

I mean, it was crazy.

It was insane,
and all because Arn did this.

- We're a unit!

The Four Horsemen
are not four individuals!

- We are the studs
in professional wrestling!

- We'd go into the ring,

the whole front row
dressed up in suits and ties.

And they're yelling,
"Horsemen."

- So whether you like it or not,

learn to love it,
because we're gonna be here

for a long, long time.

- He'd have a match,
stay all night,

make the plane to the next city,

get out, and then he'd go
to the gym with me.

Sometimes, literally,
he and I would go

three, four days at a time

without sleeping,
and wrestling in the night

and go to the gym every day.

- We walked into a bar
that's in Chicago.

Ric had walked in first,

and he would take
his credit card

and slap it on the bar,

and the bartender
would pick the card up and...

"You don't need that in here."

He said,
"You see all those credit cards

sitting behind me on the..."

he said, "Those are the fans

because you said
you were coming in here."

- I come from the nightclub
business, where I drank a lot.

Nothing compared to him...

Every single night.

- A thousand times,
I had to wheel Ric in

on the baggage cart to his room,

whether he was naked
or just completely drunk,

passed out.

- We are throwing a party!

In other words, JJ Dillon
has rented

the whole top of the hotel!

- Ric Flair lives like Ric Flair

every day of the year.

- The Four Horsemen faction
pushed Flair to the pinnacle.

The persona was revered

and was eclipsing the person.

Flair was the living symbol
of the rockstar lifestyle...

nonstop and nationwide.

Constant drink
and countless women,

and Flair was telling
the world all about it

on television,

- I wanna inform the tourists,

especially all the young ladies,

you don't have to go
to Disney World

to find Space Mountain.

It's right here.

- When Ric Flair would go on TV

and say
where he was staying in town,

and "Meet me in the penthouse
at the Marriott,"

that was real!

- "I'll be at the Marriott...

"18 to 28, no boyfriends,
no husbands,

you can ride Space Mountain
all night long."

You know, I... I've been plugging
Marriotts my whole life.

My wife would say,
"Why do you keep saying

we're gonna be
at the Marriott?"

I said, "Oh, they give us
a discount on that.

Some of them don't
even charge us... free drinks."

"Why aren't you wearing
your wedding ring?"

"I can't wear that on TV.
That's not my gimmick."

When you get on Space Mountain,
you'll be like this!

- How would you characterize...

- Women?
- Yes.

- I have a disease.
I love women.

Listen, look.

You know... hey.

I love women.

To this day, I love 'em.

Damn it.

I have four or five women
every day of my life!

I don't buy their love,

but I know how to talk to 'em.

Even at 73, I can be Slick Ric.

- Everybody fantasizes
about the cars,

and you're usually seen
with attractive women

on either arm.
Is that really the life,

or is that the gimmick?

- Um, well, I think,
aside from the fact

that my wife is... will be
watching this program...

- Oh, I did not know that.
Oh...

- How many times
have you been married?

- Four.

My first wife, Leslie...
Great woman.

I still talk to her today.

She just said,
"I can't live like this."

- By the mid-1980s,

Richard Fliehr had two children,

a son and daughter,

and his family life
was collapsing.

For whatever
was missing at home,

Flair went all in at work,

building the Ric Flair
character without limits.

Life on the road was a fantasy.

Life at home

was real.

So he escaped whenever he could.

- You know, it was just me
and my mom and David.

We didn't live in a fancy house,

and we didn't drive fancy cars.

So it was...

You know,
my mom worked two jobs,

and it was almost
like you felt abandoned...

Would maybe be the best word,

and it wasn't by choice.

We just never had
that one-on-one time.

- I got so wrapped up in being
Ric Flair the last ten years

that I probably neglected
my family a little bit,

but it's been successful for me
in promoting myself

and making me successful
in professional wrestling.

- His occupation has made it
difficult at times

to have a family.

Now he is in the final weeks
of an expensive divorce.

- They grew up
on their own without me.

It was horrible.

And I missed the shit.

Megan, I mean,
we laugh about it now.

We don't laugh about it,
but she...

I told her I'd be
at a basketball game,

and I didn't make it.

And she had never
forgotten that.

- He spent more time
being Ric Flair

than he did Richard Fliehr,

and so even when he would
come home off the road,

it was people reaching out
for autographs

or, "Can we do this?
Can we do that?"

- I'm conscious of the fans,

and I'm conscious
of their support,

and I'm conscious
of what they've made possible

for me in my life.

- What kind of father
do you think you are?

- When I was there,
as good as could be.

But how often was I there?

So how can I... not even a fair...

I can't be judged on what I...
Something I didn't do.

I wasn't there.

If you're Ric Flair for so long,

how do you ever go back
to being Richard Fliehr?

I don't wanna be Richard Fliehr.

Maybe when I'm dead.

- I don't think he knows
who Richard Fliehr is.

I think that was lost
a long time ago.

- They get a glimpse
of Richard when he cries,

when he's emotional around 'em,

but it doesn't last long.

He's Ric Flair.

He wants the world
to always know who he is.

- You can't have a family
and be a pro wrestler.

You can be married,
but you're never home,

and if you're
the World Champion like I was...

365, twice on Saturday,
twice on Sunday

for ten consecutive years.

- Back in the day, when there
were more than two dozen

professional wrestling
territories

that were under the umbrella

of National Wrestling Alliance,

being the traveling champion
meant he was expected to be

in different parts
of the world every day,

and sometimes,
different cities, twice a day.

- Hello, everyone.

Welcome to
"Championship Wrestling."

At ringside,
this is Vince McMahon

along with Mean Gene Okerlund,

and this week...

- Vince McMahon saw
an opportunity

with cable television

to promote the entire country

off of

one or two television shows.

- Welcome to WrestleMania!

- He was looking to expand,
and did.

At the end, it was pretty much
just WWE and Jim Crockett

out of Charlotte,
North Carolina.

Ted Turner ended up buying

what Jim Crockett had, the NWA,

and turned it into
World Championship Wrestling,

and they became, pretty much,

the last two standing

of any prominence

in the business.

- WWE was a family business,

and people who came
from the McMahon family

were making
the decisions in WWE.

WCW was part
of a larger corporate entity,

and so you had executives,

who didn't necessarily have
wrestling backgrounds,

making decisions that impacted
the lives of the talent,

and I believe that Ric
was a bit hurt by this.

- It was frustrating for him,
because, I mean, obviously,

you're a wrestling organization
producing TV,

and the next day,
you're a TV organization

producing wrestling.

Things were changing.

- Having new people come in

and Jim Herd not knowing
anything about the business...

They just tried
to change my character.

They wanted
to call me Spartacus.

They cut my hair.

I didn't even know
who I was anymore.

- You know, they just kept
trying to reinvent the wheel,

and this was a guy that was
kind of a proven entity,

and it was just, like...
To him, it was baffling.

It's just like, "Well,
I'm the Nature Boy, Ric Flair."

Like, "What are you doing?"

- He was asked
to take a pay cut.

This deeply hurt Ric Flair,

and I think
he actually experienced

legitimate anxiety.

He was having panic attacks.

He couldn't believe that
he was being treated like this.

- I cut my hair.

I walked
into the Charlotte airport.

Nobody knew me.

I didn't know myself.
I mean, it just...

It killed me.
That was it.

I lost all
my self-confidence that day.

I mean, I was...

I... I literally... I...

I fell out that day

because I gave in
to a fucking idiot.

I was lost.

I was... I was just lost.

- He couldn't be Ric Flair

or the Ric Flair
that he wanted to be

in WCW anymore

and felt
he needed to go elsewhere,

and there was only one place,
really, for him to go,

and that was WWE.

- Well,
it was the only alternative,

and I... you know, I got
to talk to Vince on the phone

and said, "I'm not crying wolf.

I will come if you want me."

He said, "I don't believe you."

I said, "I got the belt."

He said, "Send it,
and I'll believe you."

I overnighted it to him.

- Everything's gonna run
smooth tonight.

The real World Champion,
Ric Flair's on my show.

The real World Champion,
you got it?

Let's go.

- Why don't we start
from the top?

First of all,

I'm Ric Flair!

The real
World's Heavyweight Champion.

Woo!

- I remember feeling chills.

Like, Ric Flair has actually
come to the competition.

The man who was the symbol

of everything
that was supposed to be

the counterpoint to WWE

was now part of WWE.

- I didn't have any guarantees
from Vince on anything.

I just was Ric Flair.

He took me the way I was,

and I'm lucky.

Exact words, he goes,

"Everybody knows who you are.

You don't need
to impress anybody."

- 1991, behind the scenes,

Flair the man had been
experiencing self-doubt.

At age 42, Flair joined

the largest
sports entertainment company

in the world, WWE.

Now a father of four,
he was poised for his apex,

his self-proclaimed
greatest moment in his life.

- It's time to rumble!

It's time for the Royal Rumble!

- Welcome to the jam-packed
Knickerbocker Arena!

- 1992, the WWE Championship
is suspended,

and it's determined
that a new titlist will emerge

from the Royal Rumble.

- The Royal Rumble is a match
where it starts out

with two competitors
in the ring,

and then another competitor
joins every 90 seconds.

- Tell me, Mr. Flair,
how did you fare

in the Royal Rumble draw?

- Lord Alfred,
I drew number three.

That means I'll be in there
close to an hour.

It makes no difference.

- He has to go through
so many more competitors.

Can he really go that long?

- Oh, yes!
It's Ric Flair!

No one ever, in the history
of the Royal Rumble,

has drawn
numbers one through five

and been there at the end!

Oh, yes, yes!

The new World Wrestling
Entertainment Champion,

Ric Flair!

- With a tear in my eye,

this is the greatest moment

in my life.

Oh, I just said,
"Without a doubt,

this is the greatest day
of my life."

You know,
winning that thing that night,

and the next day, you know,
being their champion,

I mean, I was a new man.

I don't know why.
I'm lucky they chose me,

but I don't think
but a few people understand

how much that impacted my life.

Woo!
- You did it!

I was never so impressed with...

- To some people,
it was a big deal.

But to the WWE audience,

Ric wasn't that big of a deal.

Because it was an audience
that only knew WWE.

To the WWE fan,

WCW was an inferior product.

Ric is an unbelievable performer

and one of the top ever
in the world.

But at that time,
he hadn't proven himself

to the WWE audience,

and it was too much,
too fast, I think.

Ric had impact, but I don't know

that he had as big of an impact

as those inside the business
thought it would be.

Ric thought he was gonna
come in and be the top guy,

and he just wasn't.

- During this period,
there was what WWE

was marketing
as a youth movement.

And that meant that

some of the more
established superstars

were not going to be
spotlighted anymore.

- Vince said that
he was gonna go younger,

and I think I was, like, 43 then

or something like that, 44,

and I said, "Yeah."

He said,
"They want you back in WCW."

'Cause they never stopped
calling from the day I left.

They wanted me to come back.

He said, "You can stay.
I'll have to, you know,

push you down the card,
or you can leave on top,"

and I said, "I'll go back.
I appreciate the opportunity,"

and left on good terms,

and I was out of there.

- The Nature Boy is back
to rock and to roll!

- Well, Tony,
they're on their feet!

They're standing here
in Charlotte!

- One, two, three!

He won!

- I don't mind telling you

this locker room
is absolutely ecstatic.

Nature Boy here
with your family...

Beth, good seeing you.
Happy holidays,

and what a happy holiday
it turned out to be.

You, uh... you really...

- In 1993, Flair won
the WCW title once again,

but this time, it was different,

as his family
was there to see it.

This rare backstage moment

was not the Ric Flair
character talking.

It was Richard Fliehr
as a husband and father

of four children.

- Well, I'm kind of taken
by the moment, obviously,

but I... I was, um,

really overwhelmed
by the support,

and, uh, you know, first,

I never had my family on TV,
so it's a big deal for me,

and thank you.
- Woo!

- I'm the middle child.

My oldest sibling
is my sister, Megan,

then my big brother, David,

then my little brother, Reid.

He had Reid and I later on
in his career.

So he was home a lot more
for Reid and I

than my sister
and my older brother.

He had a different relationship

with all four of his kids.

The relationship we have

is different than the one
he has with my sister.

The one he had
with my little brother

is different
than he has with me.

- Dad would leave
and go out of town.

You know, I'd wanna be with him.

I'd wanna go
out of town with him,

you know, 30 days.

If my mom would've let me,
I would have.

- Come here, boy.
- Good luck, Daddy.

- Okay.
- Mm-hmm.

- I'm gonna miss you guys.

- He's my role model,
I guess you could say.

I'd love to... I'd love to do

everything just like him

if I could.

He loved me.

You couldn't scare Reid.
He was tougher than shit.

On top of that, he was
a real good amateur wrestler.

- Yes! Yes!
- Whoo!

- I won the gold medal, wee!

- Reid won the gold medal...
State championship, AAU.

Can I show a nervous daddy?

- You're doing so good.

- He's got all
the athletic ability.

He just keeps moving.
He never stops.

Keep your head
on your shoulders, buddy,

you'll go a long way...
Reid Fliehr.

- There's a mountain.
Who wants to go

this winter, kids, to ski
up and down the mountain

right there.
- Dad, move your hand.

- Isn't this fun?
- Yeah.

- Ric Flair was back in WCW

as a main-eventer.

He was a box-office star
once again,

working with legends
Randy Savage,

Rowdy Roddy Piper,

and Hulk Hogan.

- In the mid-'90s,
Eric Bischoff was put in charge

of WCW, which meant he was
making creative decisions,

booking decisions, and
business decisions as well.

- I mean, some of the best times

I've ever had in this industry

has been with Ric Flair
when he was the Nature Boy.

- Woo!
- Some of the worst times

I've ever had in this business

were with Richard Fliehr.

- Hulkamania lives

in World Championship Wrestling!

- Ric Flair was instrumental
in Hulk Hogan coming in,

and then once Hulk got there,

of course,
we had the first match

with Ric Flair and Hulk Hogan.

- They are standing.

They are jammed to the rafters

at Orlando's Arena, awaiting
the match of a lifetime.

- You know,
I kind of stacked the deck

and brought Shaq in with me,

and I had a bunch of celebrities

kind of come in when I wrestled
Ric that first night.

And Ric put me over, which
gave us

that huge shot in the arm
we needed.

- Ric was ecstatic.

He couldn't have been happier.

But '96 comes around,

and this nWo thing
starts catching fire,

and...

that's where
all of the attention went.

- The new World order
is taking over

professional wrestling!

- That was
the new bright, shiny object

that was really,
really working well.

All of a sudden, the focus goes
from Ric Flair to the nWo,

and Ric Flair's character
becomes a victim.

- It's tough
when you're the man,

and you go by "the man,"

and then you're not the guy?

Tough to swallow sometimes.

- He took one for the team.

You know, spray-painting Ric

or spray-painting his hair

or whatever chicanery
we were doing.

He helped get
that nWo thing going,

because to punk out
a big star like that,

you know, it was just
a setup for us... whoa.

I'll get you too!

- Ric was on the wrong side
of that equation

at that particular time.

Everybody was getting punked.
Everybody was getting beat.

Everybody was
being disrespected.

- This is our show!

We're doing it our way!

- I wish I would've been better
and more aware

of how talent is sometimes
affected by certain things,

because to me,
it was just all business.

- The nWo, not finished
making a statement right here

to Ric Flair.

- He couldn't think
of enough ways

to fuck me around.

That's all he did.

- Now they're shaving
Ric Flair's head!

- What is the deal with,
you know, shaving my head?

What did that accomplish?

- Well, what do you mean

you don't want
to get your head shaved,

spray-painted black,

drug through town
on the back of a pickup truck,

beat with sticks?
What do you mean

you don't wanna do that?

That's money.
That's a story!

Of course you wanna do that.

No.

Sometimes he didn't,

and there were
a number of occasions

where we went too far.

Ric, in particular,
took it real hard,

and it took its toll on Ric,

did some...
Did some damage there.

I didn't know it at the time.

I wish...
I really wish I would have.

- In 1998,
Ric Flair did something

he hadn't often done before.

He chose his family

over the professional
wrestling business.

On a spring night,
Flair didn't show up

to a WCW show, and instead,

went to his son Reid's
amateur wrestling match.

- Ric and I got
into a little bit of a debate.

He wanted some time off.

He, to this day,
swears he requested it.

Everybody on my side
of the equation said...

"Didn't hear anything

about this request."

Anyway,
he just took the time off.

It escalated,
and it got out of control.

- I am taking my son
to an AAU national tournament

in Detroit.
Of course, once I got there,

they decided
I didn't have the time off.

Oh, it was a nightmare.

I've never been
more fucked in my life

than Bischoff fucking me.

- I basically said,
"Ric, either you show up,

"or I'm gonna sue you
for breach of contract,

and I'm gonna sue you
for every dollar you have."

- He fucked me out of millions.

One guy
fucking your whole life up.

I mean, really...

Cost me a fortune.

- There were stories

in "The Atlanta
Journal-Constitution"

about it, you know?

Everybody knew it.

Decided, "Okay, well,
we can either pretend

"it didn't happen

"and hope people forget,

or..."

"We can turn this
into some money,"

and we both decided
to go with it

with a storyline.

- This is real!

This is not bought and paid for!

It's a real-life situation!

- It was some of the best work...

Not the best...
But some of the best work

that Ric's ever done,
because it was real.

- You suck!

You, I hate your guts!

- Now, granted, we shook hands,

we put it behind us,
and we agreed to make it

a part of a storyline,
but the emotion didn't go away.

You're history!

- You are a liar!

You're a cheat!

You're a scam!

You are a no-good...
- You're history!

- Son of a bitch!

- Why'd he sue me for going,

and try to bankrupt me

for going to a wrestling
tournament with my son?

Think about it.

You don't forget
about shit like that.

- I know who this is.

Being a friend of Ric Flair,
I know exactly who this is.

It's his youngest son, Reid.

- Since he's been the center
of all this controversy...

Would like to tell you
why we're here.

Tell 'em, Reid.

- Since I heard you
been cracking on my dad,

me and my uncle Arn
came down here

so I can hit him
with that light work.

- Wh...

- In 2001,
due to WCW's poor ratings,

questionable booking decisions,

as well as the AOL merger,

Turner sells WCW
to Vince McMahon and WWE.

WCW was going out of business.

- When WWE finally
purchased WCW in 2001,

the final "Nitro" took place,

and the decision was made

to have the two legends of WCW,

Ric Flair and Sting,
get in the ring together.

Woo!

- Thing was that cosmetically,

Ric Flair didn't even feel
like he should be in the ring.

Ric Flair kept his T-shirt on

because he didn't think
he looked good enough,

and he didn't feel like
he was even close to 100%.

- Sting defeats Ric Flair here

on the final telecast
of "WCW Monday Nitro"!

- When WCW closed,
I was flat out.

I thought it was over.

I started...

They call it day drinking.

Warner left WCW,

and then WWE
didn't hire me for a year.

And then Vince
called me and said,

"You wanna go back to work?"
I said, "Oh, please.

"Absolutely.
When and where?

"I'd been waiting for a year,
motherfucker.

Where've you been?"

- Welcome, ladies and gentlemen

around the world,

to WrestleMania!

- When Ric came back to the WWE,

Ric was a shell of the man
that he was before.

- I remember Vince
coming to me and saying,

"Who do you wanna work with?
You wanna work with this guy,

or you wanna work
with Ric Flair?"

And I was like, "I wanna work
with Ric Flair.

Are you kidding me?"

- "'Taker wants to work
with you at WrestleMania."

I said, "You're kidding me."

He said,
"No, so what do you think?"

I said, "I don't know.
Do you think I can do it?"

He said, "I know you can do it.

"You can do anything
you wanna do.

You're the only one
who doesn't get it."

Actually, when I got out there,

it turned out
to be a hell of a match.

But you couldn't tell me that
getting out there.

Self-confidence is such
a big part of life in general.

- It was later on
in Ric's career,

and I was like,
"That's a no-brainer."

I mean, how many more
opportunities am I gonna get

to work with Ric Flair,
you know?

So that... I mean,
that was special

for a whole 'nother reason.

- Not a Tombstone... no!
- Ooh!

- 2002, WrestleMania X8.

Undertaker pinned the Nature Boy

in front of nearly 70,000 fans

at the Toronto SkyDome.

Not a headliner
as much as a legend,

Ric Flair still needed
the spotlight.

WWE had gone global,

and even at age 53,

Flair was traveling
around the world once again.

- When he returned to WWE
for this run,

he was a bit older,

and he was scared
that he couldn't live up

to the standard people expected.

No, you fucking loser!

You big fucking loser!

You're a loser!
Go home!

- Go home!

- Perhaps this goes back
to his birth.

- He always kind of felt like

he wasn't worthy of something.

- When he came in the door here,

it was a different Ric Flair,

very, very unsure of himself,

unconfident.

I had no idea
how much of a fragile

true ego that Ric had

and what a fragile
human being he was,

that a lot
of the Ric Flair persona was,

you know, a persona that he put
in front

of being this really sensitive
and anxious

and everything-else guy

that he truly is.

- If you don't have it here,
nothing else works.

It just doesn't connect.

I had it here,

never lost it.

But if this
isn't connected to this...

And this connects to everything.

So many times since
I lost my self-confidence,

walking back up the ramp,
I'm going,

"God, this is the coolest
thing in the world,

"but why couldn't I just

be me, be better?"

- I just wanted to help him
and try to get him back

to being what he could be,
you know?

I used to say to him
all the time,

"You're the only guy here that
doesn't know you're Ric Flair.

What's the matter with you?"

- It's the truth.
He said it to me all the time,

and I said,
"You can tell me that

all day long.
I still don't."

I mean, that's five solid years
of Eric just pounding me.

- Well, I guess being around
the business when I was young,

just listening to my...

Like, hearing my mom and dad's
conversations,

like, yeah, he was pretty not...

Didn't feel like
the man anymore.

- I think Ric Flair
is the barometer

of the greatest World Champion
of all time.

You are Ric Flair,
16-time World Champion,

and I respect that.

You know, it's hard to look
at a guy like that

and think that there could be
anything wrong with him,

because you kind of put him
on a pedestal.

- He had so much, still,
to give to the business,

and then, you know,
when you're around him,

you can see guys
wanting to pick his brain,

and guys wanting
to work with him,

but he didn't have
his confidence to help them,

and so it just started
as something as simple

as me thinking, "Well, if we
took a couple of young guys,

"and put us all together
as a group, made a faction,

it can be incredibly good."

And what you see
in this ring before you

is the greatest example
of evolution you will ever see.

- Triple H says
that his entourage

is the evolution
of our business.

- That was
a very unique quartet.

You had Ric Flair,
who represented legacy.

Then you had Triple H,
who was the present,

and then you had the future.

You had Randy Orton

and Batista...
Future Hollywood star.

I picked those guys' brains.

I was like that annoying
little kid in the back seat.

I never rode up front.

I was always in the back seat.

- Wow, you got
something special.

- I can tell you
with complete honesty,

if I hadn't had access
to their brains,

I never would have made it
to the level that I did...

Not a chance.

- We are the best of the best.

Woo!

- I was young, and I didn't know

what it was to be champion.

You know, it got thrust upon me,

and I had a lot of learning
on the job,

but I was around the best guys
in the business for that.

- No fear, man.
Let's go.

- I would stand in the backstage

with Richard Fliehr,

but when the curtain opened up,
and we walked through,

I was with Ric Flair,

and he could feel it.

He just couldn't carry it
all the time then.

But it was definitely...
As time went on,

he was definitely becoming
the Nature Boy again.

- I'm 55 years old,
and I'm in Evolution,

and I'm walking down the aisle.

It was almost like a rib
with Hunter, Dave, and Randy...

You know, immaculate,

and I'm physically,

I mean,
"Please, this is a joke."

I just wore my robe
as much as possible.

I never got it back totally.

It gave me life again.

It gave me life,

and I was ready.

- Flair's done it!
Flair's done it!

The Nature Boy is
the Intercontinental Champion!

- Where are we going?

Woo!
It's LA, Vince.

We're going down to the strip.

It's a party!
Woo!

With the champ!

- It was easy to assume
that at that time,

there just couldn't be that
much gas left in the tank,

and yet, man,

it turned into a special
next six, seven years

with so many memorable moments.

- And I love being
the Nature Boy!

- I don't remember
the actual circumstances,

but, you know,
it was getting to a point

where, you know, Evolution
had kind of run its course,

and he was still kind of doing
the things he was doing,

but I think he was getting
to a point where people were

starting to worry
about him in the ring.

- Ah, shit!

- I'm not sure he was fully,

in his mind, ready to retire.

I think Vince sort of broached

the subject with him.

Vince was like,
"Look, there's a reason

"they put a jockey
on a racehorse.

"Somebody's gotta
pull the reins,

or they will run
until they die."

So the decision was made.

Like, we'll put you
in the Hall of Fame,

and then do your last match,

but that was tough for Ric.

Everything about Ric
is the Nature Boy Ric Flair.

- It's at a moment like this

when guys like me...

Say to themselves
for all we've done wrong,

we must've done something right.

So I can't tell you how much

all this means to me.

I just wanted everybody
to know along the way,

people in my life...
And I've had a long life,

a lot of people
say "thank you."

Shawn Michaels,

I want to wrestle you
at WrestleMania.

- I think anybody that commits
their life to something,

um, no matter
what line of work it is,

but certainly, I think,

in the athletic field,
it's a big and major decision.

I honestly wanted
to honor all of that

in that last match.

- It would be my honor

to wrestle you at WrestleMania.

- Woo!

- Programs!

- Woo!

- My life is one incredible
happening after another.

You know, it's like I said...
For all I've done wrong,

I must've done something right
somewhere to get all this.

It's hard
to say goodbye and leave

something
you've done for so long.

- The decision for Ric to retire

may have been more Vince's
than it was Ric's.

But also, at the same time,

I don't remember Ric fighting
it too vigorously either.

Vince looked at it as,

"You've had a hell of a career,

"but you don't need to be
taking bumps anymore.

"You don't need to be
in the ring anymore,

"and let's give you the send-off

that's worthy of your career."

- 2008, WrestleMania XXIV.

After 36 years of wrestling,

the WWE ending for Ric Flair
was upon him:

retirement,

and his family was ringside
to see it all.

- He is the best
at what he does,

and the word "proud"
doesn't even describe,

you know, I guess,

how any of us feel in the family

about what he's done.

- He'll go down in history

as the greatest wrestler
of all time.

- It's a great feeling to know
that you have someone

that's in your family
that's appreciated

by more than just you.

I mean, he's appreciated
by so many people.

Woo!

- Ric Flair, baby!
- Woo!

- Woo!

- He'll be happy,
but at the same time,

you know, sad, remorseful

that, you know,
what he's done his whole life,

it's coming to an end.

- I'm in Orlando, getting
ready to wrestle Shawn,

and I was just nervous

and insecure
as I've ever been in my life.

- It was something
that I really took seriously:

his image and his legacy,
all of those things.

I understood and appreciated

how important those things
were to him,

and I honestly wanted
to honor all of that

in that last match.

- He said, "Just shut up
and listen to me tonight.

Don't say a word."

I went, "Well, okay."

No wrestler's
ever said that to me.

And we... we're standing there,
and he said, "Let's do this."

Woo!

- Went out there and made music.

Woo!

People were going crazy.

I started crying
on the way down.

- I really don't think
I realized

how important my dad was
to the wrestling world

until he retired.

To see 70,000 people crying

over this man was incredible.

- Woo!

- Everybody's eyes watered up.

It is still
one of those hallmark moments

that everybody who watches it

went back to where I went to,

which is being that
15-year-old wrestling fan.

- Woo!

Vintage Flair.

Vintage Nature Boy!

Oh, look out!

Flair wanted to be in the ring
with the best.

- And now Flair
climbing to the top!

- Look at this!

- To me, it was mostly
trying to stay focused

and relatively unemotional.

- Uh-oh.
- Oh!

- I know how much
that match meant to Shawn,

'cause he felt the same way,

growing up,
about Ric that I did.

I usually don't have the chance

to watch other matches
at WrestleMania.

I watched every second
of that match.

- Michaels said
that he was gonna

take Flair out behind the barn

and put him out of his misery,

but in the heart
of Shawn Michaels,

can he do it?

- What does Shawn say to you

before the match concludes?

- "I'm sorry."

"I love you."

- It is real, raw emotion,

and in a line of work

where we're all
a bunch of grown freaking men

that are paid, sometimes,
to put up walls and act tough,

that was just me,
Shawn Hickenbottom,

telling Richard Fliehr,

"I think the world of you."

- Man, that reception...

I couldn't believe the response.

I looked to my right,
and there's my family.

- It was the first time
that my siblings

had all been together
in a long time,

and seeing my dad wrestle...

Just what
an emotional roller coaster,

and just seeing my little
brother just, like, bawling

and my dad kissing him, and...

Like, I don't think
many wrestlers

get to have
a farewell like that.

- My heart just hurt for him.

I mean, I was so proud of him,

but knowing how he's dealt
with some insecurities

about himself, it's like,

"First of all, I'm already
older and doing this,

and what do I do now?"

It's like... it was just sad.

It was like the end of a movie.

- Over 70,000 fans
paying their respects

to the greatest
to ever lace a pair of boots.

- After three decades
in the business,

Ric Flair celebrated
with his family,

who were sitting ringside,

embracing him as he reflected

on his hall-of-fame career.

It was an ending,
but also the beginning,

as Richard Fliehr
poured more of his time

into his son's
career aspirations.

- Reid's goal was
to be in the WWE.

That was his goal.

- He just had the character.

He just had
the perfect character for it.

Like, he was just built for it.

I feel like he was
just made for it.

- I put him
in a private prep school.

When you go to a place

like Blair Academy...
It's in New Jersey...

21 national championships...

And prep-school wrestling

is tougher
than high-school wrestling.

He wanted to do
pro wrestling right away.

- I know Ric felt like
he had a lot of potential,

but Ric was going to make him
earn it, so to speak,

um, and not just hand
everything over to him.

- Thank you.
Thank you so much.

He's a good boy.
- Thank you.

- Very good boy, yeah.

- He was doing
a real, real, real good job

with the Shin Nippon
Pro Wrestling,

New Japan Pro Wrestling.

If you can do a good job there,

believe me,
you can wrestle anywhere.

- Second-generation wrestler
Reid Flair.

If he's gonna follow
in his father's footsteps,

though, he's got
some big shoes to fill.

- I know I'm gonna
have to work harder.

People are gonna be
looking at me.

You know, they're gonna,
I guess, expect a lot more

from me, in coming
from this background,

but also at the same time,
you know,

I've been around it
my whole life.

I feel like it gives me
an extra edge.

- Here comes Reid Flair!

- He had it.
He's tough.

He's good-looking.

Girls love him...

Ton of personality.

He'll nail it.

- He is the son
of the Nature Boy, Ric Flair,

but make no mistake about it,

he is his own man.

- As Reid entered his 20s,

he wanted to be like his father,

who had crossed over
from the wrestling world

to pop culture.

- Ric Flair is unquestionably

one of the greatest
entertainers of all time.

- I think he did a good job
of keeping up with the times,

keeping his name relevant.

- He made a lot of people happy.

He made me happy,

and he made people
all over the world happy.

- Everything about him said,

"I'm here to make sure
you are entertained."

- He made appearances
on TV shows.

- You can't do that.

- Oh, little lady,
that's where you're wrong.

I'm the Nature Boy.

- Cartoons.

- Woo, woo, woo, woo!

- Video games.

- Looks to me like a trainee

who could use a few pointers.

- Even in Hollywood.

For Reid,
his father was his hero.

- Ric liked to have Reid
around all the time,

but that also meant
if you're with Ric

all the time,

you've got to deal
with the persona,

and Reid wanted to be Ric Flair.

- The Figure Four,

just like his daddy
always taught him.

- For Reid,
there was some big push for him

to get him into WWE,
I think, at that time.

- Reid was like,
"We can do this together.

You've gotta do this."

I had no prior
wrestling experience.

I don't know
what made me say "okay"...

Whether it was
all Reid's encouragement,

whether I thought
that Reid and I were

gonna do this together...

I do believe
he had a tryout prior to this

to be in the WWE.

- But, you know,

Reid had flunked
two or three drug tests,

so they couldn't take him.

He had to sit home for a year.

- He was really, really close

with my daughter, Morgan,

but he would start showing up
to things

after using whatever it was
he had used that day,

and he just... she... she just
couldn't be around him.

I kind of just
had to draw the line.

I had to set up boundaries.

- He had been out
of every rehab center.

I mean, I could...
Every six months,

he would have
a meltdown and go off.

As I'm saying it,
you come to realize

it's not a addiction.

It's a disease.

You know when I finally
realized how bad it was?

All he ever wanted was
to wear my dad's Rolex watch,

which I had
in a safety deposit box

for him.
Actually, his mom did.

And he goes,
"Dad, I... I," you know,

"I'm responsible enough now."

When he sold that to buy drugs,

I knew how bad it was.

We were leaving the next day
for WrestleMania.

He went back to the hotel,

and you know,
he had his own room.

- Reid had called me and said,
"Come into town.

"I'll meet you
at the restaurant.

My dad will be there.
Let's just all go together."

- He was there,
and he wasn't drinking.

He was drinking water,

but a bag of pills
fell out of his pocket.

So I picked up the pills,

and I just put 'em in my pocket.

- He was eating next to me,

and he just was out of it.
He was not feeling good.

He said,
"I'ma go back to the room."

Before he left the restaurant,

when he stood up, he said,

"Wendy, do me one favor."

I said, "What's that?"
And he goes,

"Please take care
of my father."

- I went back, and there he was.

Um, I knock on the door,

and he was laid back like this,

like I've seen him
a thousand times.

So I just picked him up,
laid him down on bed,

and I just had made up my mind...

"I'm just not even gonna
wake him up in the morning.

I have to finally do what
they've been telling me to do."

They call it
kicking him to the curb,

where you just cut 'em off.

- I stayed back, and I wish
I would've gone in the room,

because then I would've saw
the needle on the floor.

- The next day, my dad met
my daughter and I at Starbucks,

and he was so mad at Reid.

He's like,
"He got messed up last night."

- Ric was mad, and he was like,

"We gotta get going.
Reid's not up.

"You know,
if he doesn't get going,

we're gonna leave him."

- I said, "I'm just gonna go
see what he's doing,"

and I walked in,
and he was purple,

and I...

- And that's when
Ric started screaming.

Ric knew right away.
He knew.

- I just...
The guy came in and said,

"Ric, you need to leave
the room for a minute,"

you know?

And the guy walked out,
and he said,

"Ric, he didn't make it."

I walked down the stairs
to the lobby and bar.

I walked behind the bar,

and I threw a six pack down,

and I... I didn't stop.

- A professional-wrestling
legend's world

shattered today,
after police confirmed

Ric Flair's 25-year-old son

was found dead
at this SouthPark hotel.

Reid Flair was found dead
inside a room

at the Residence Inn
around 10:30 this morning.

- My dad called me
that Reid passed away.

Like, part of me
kind of always knew,

like, maybe that was his fate.

Like, maybe I was in shock.

Maybe I didn't know how to...

I... I don't know.
I gu...

Even to this day, I still
think I put it in a drawer,

and I just closed the drawer.

Like, how do you...

Your brother, right?

- I'm always gonna feel guilty

that I didn't call
the ambulance that night.

You can't ever forgive yourself.

Shit, he was...

He may have been my best friend.

I've come back to Charlotte.

It's really hard to go see Reid.

This will be the first time

since I went with Megan, um...

four years ago.

You know,
I used to go all the time,

but I just...

It brings back so many memories.

It seems like a long time ago,

but it wasn't.

- My dad was still
in Charlotte, where I was,

and, um,

he was bad.

- I don't know how he survived

all the things
he was going through.

I think what he did was
just go back into Ric Flair...

Be a persona, be a character,

so he didn't have to feel.

And when...

Reid passed away,

there were never any doubts

whether I was
gonna keep doing it.

My focus was,
"I'm gonna do this."

I don't know how, but I will.

- Because of Reid.

She's all there for Reid.

- I had started to make friends,

figure out,

like, "Oh, I really like this.

"I fit in.

This is really cool,"
but at the same time,

like, this is everything
that he wanted to be doing.

I'll make you proud.
- And you always do.

- Charlotte Flair has
furthered her father's legacy.

He had the Figure Four.

She did him one better,
and she does the Figure 8.

She has the beautiful robes,

and she has that charisma.

There is nobody
who wants to miss

Charlotte Flair's ring entrance,

because no one
ever wanted to miss

Ric Flair's ring entrance.

- This is
how you make an entrance.

- I think there's a little bit
of a guilt for her with that,

because that was something

Reid wanted so, so, so bad,

and she got it.

- I'm living his dream,
and he never got to be there.

That is very hard at the time

to not think about those things.

I just think it put
certain things in my mind

in motion that maybe hadn't

necessarily been there before.

Like, now I'm not
just fighting for myself.

I'm fighting for him.

- So excited for her.

I love it...

The greatest honor
a father could ever have.

- Woo!
- Woo!

- Woo!
- Woo!

- Woo!

Whoa!
- Ah!

- My dad... and this is where
he spent his whole life.

You know,
he had two boys that wrestled.

So I don't think that
he pictured, you know,

walking out at WrestleMania
with his daughter,

and my robe tonight
has pieces of his last robe

that he retired in... in it.

Like, this is from his
WrestleMania XXIV robe.

This is what he...

You know,
this is what he lived for...

And I get to be
an extension of that.

- 2016...

Dallas, Texas.

30-year-old
Ashley "Charlotte" Fliehr

WrestleMania.

Ric was there, in his mid-'60s,

by his daughter's side,
mentoring her

on a rise to superstardom.

He was back on the road.

- The life on the road
for Ric Flair was tough,

and it was filled
with some demons too.

- Ric was going through a lot
that time.

He had lost his son,

and we...
From the outside looking in,

we don't know what that's like.

A parent losing a kid
has to be the hardest thing

you could ever imagine.

I watched Ric.

He put himself through hell,

um, after that.

It was almost like
he wanted to die.

It was almost like
he wanted to just end it all.

- If I drank a lot
before my son died,

I drank wa...

I drank 10:00 a.m.
to 2:00 a.m...

every day...

10:00 a.m. to 2:00 a.m.

I didn't work out.
I didn't do anything.

- The only way he really knew
how to deal with it

was to drown himself in liquor

and just get to the point

where he didn't
have to think about it.

- I've never seen
anything like it.

He, uh,

you know, enjoys drinking.

Um, but at this point,

it was from the time he woke up

to the time he went to bed.

He was just
in a really bad place.

Like, he was not even
taking care of himself.

He wasn't showering.

I mean, I just was like,

"I don't even know
who this man is."

- I ended up calling WWE
and reporting him,

and Hunter called me and said,

"Do we need to help him?"
I said, "Yes."

- Hunter calls me, and he goes,

"Hey, where are you?"

I said, "In my car."

"Turn around,
and go back to the airport."

"For what?"
Does he want...

I'm thinking
he wanted me to go to "Raw"

or something, right?

"You're going to rehab."

I said, "No, I'm not.

I'm not going to rehab."
He said, "Yes, you are.

You're gonna go to rehab,
or never work here again."

I go, "Oh, boy."

I got a six-pack
to go back to the airport...

Drank it before I got there.

I had three hours
before the flight left.

I went into a bar there,

and I drank

ten double tequila
cranberry and soda...

Ten doubles.

Right?

Got on airplane
and drank eight Bloody Marys

to Tampa,

got off the plane
and drank a six-pack,

and, uh, pulled into this place

at 2:00 in the morning.

I called Hunter and said,
"I don't need to be here."

He said, "Don't call me again.
Take his cell phone."

And so...

- How long were you there?

- 35 days.

I got the coin.
I walked across the street...

And walked into a bar,

put it on a corner and said,

"I know
you won't take this for a beer,

so I'll give you 10 bucks."

Had a Miller Lite
less than a block away.

Fuck you guys.

Screw this shit.

- Hey, guys.

Thank you for having me.

I'm honored to be here
in Shenzhen,

and, um, I'm ready to do it
with flair in China.

I was in China.
Wendy called and was like,

"Your dad's sick.
You need to go home."

- I get a call.
I had my phone there,

and he's downstairs.
He's like,

"Wendy, something's not...
Something's wrong."

Um, you know,
"We gotta go to the hospital."

I'm like,
"What are you talking about?"

He's like, "I don't feel good.
Something's not right,"

and he's just, like, vomiting,

like, green stuff.

- They took me to the hospital,

and no matter what they did,

Wendy said
they could hear me screaming.

I don't remember any of it.

- They immediately
take him back,

and they say
it's his intestines,

but then they go,
"Wait a minute.

His heart's failing.
His kidneys are failing."

Like, all of a sudden, his
whole body was shutting down,

and he's in severe pain.

Like, we're, like,
talking massive pain,

and Ric never feels pain.

So I'm thinking,
"There's something wrong."

- Ruptured intestine,
pneumonia...

Septic was the worst part...

Total kidney failure,

and, uh, respiratory failure

all at once.

- The doctors come in,
and they said,

"He's slipping into a coma.

We're gonna have
to do surgery right away."

I called Hunter,
Ashley, Megan, and David.

- I drove,
and it was about four hours,

and when I got there,
he was not intubated yet.

So he... I don't know.

I maybe got five minutes
with him.

- The nurses were explaining

to me, my sister,
and my brother,

you know,
that my dad might not make it.

Again, you go into, like,

self-preservation.

You go into survival mode.

I could not, like,
mentally process that.

They gave us, like,
all an opportunity

to say goodbye to him.

- They said, "There's probably

about 15% chance he's gonna
make it through this,"

and they wheeled him away.

- I just sat on the floor
outside the ICU room

and just sat there crying.

- Everybody was worried.

You're talking about trending
number one worldwide.

Everyone was prayers up
for Ric Flair.

- We wanna pass on our best

to former pro wrestler
Ric Flair,

who remains
in critical condition.

- The 68-year-old's agent said
he does have a long road

to recovery.

- He was in a coma.

I was with him for 31 days,
just sitting there.

They set me up
a little corner bed,

and I just... that was my home.

He, um, came out of the coma.

He was delusional.

- He was out of it.

He didn't recognize people.

He was, like, telling me
to go to Taco Bell,

and telling Ashley to go.

I mean,
it was just really random.

- In the hospital, he was
going through massive detox...

Shaking...
I mean, violently shaking.

We're talking a man
who was drinking

about 30 or 40 vodkas a day.

- I mean,
he's had other health issues,

really minor health issues,

but nothing
that would've led to... to that.

So it's just kind of all...

It's from drinking.

- It was a tough room.

You know, this one dude's
in one corner,

and his daughter's
in the other, and...

I was sitting there,
just holding his hand,

just, you know, talking to him.

And...

he would open his eyes,
looked up, and he went,

"Hogan, Hogan,

go get me a six-pack."

And I looked at him, and I said,

"Are you out of your mind?"

- How long were you
in the hospital?

- 32 days, ICU,

and then I was
in a rehab facility

for another 30 days,

learning how to walk.

I'd gone from 240 to 202.

I lost 40 pounds.

I had no strength at all.

I could not pop a top
off a Diet Coke.

Isn't that amazing?

They thought that was
because of drinking.

It wasn't at all...

Because of bowel obstruction.

- And it's an amazing thing

to be able to ask
somebody this question

multiple seasons
and moments in his life.

Why did you survive?

- I don't know.

Why am I here?

Strange.

But like I said,

after you've gone
through something like that,

you just need...
It's very important,

I think, to let people
that you care about

know how much
you care about 'em.

- What did it mean to you
that your daughters were there?

- Everything.

Ashley came from China.

It took her 22 hours
to get there.

Between Ashley
and Megan and Wendy,

how do I ever forget that?

- We have good news tonight.

WWE star and Atlanta favorite
Ric Flair

is out of the hospital.

- How's he doing?
- He's doing much better.

To be honest, it's a miracle.

- Hey, to all my fans out there,

let it be known worldwide
that Nature Boy...

Woo!
Is back up and running,

looking as only I can look.

I wanna tell
all my fans out there,

thank you
for all the love, support,

and I will see you

in the very, very, very,
very, very, very

near future.

Woo!

- When Ric got out of ICU,
it took about 18 months

from ICU on, where he started

to feel like he wanted
to be the life of the party.

- Given what you'd been through,

why drink?

- Because I enjoy it.

Why play golf?

Why drive my boat?

After I work out,
there's nothing to do...

Just waiting for 5:00.

I'm on a time frame.
5:00,

Ultra... Michelob Ultra
till 7:00.

Vodka, Ketel One soda,

cranberry, and a lime,

and at 8:00, red wine

till 10:00...
Upstairs to bed.

Sometimes alone,

sometimes with...

company.

I'm a guy that's gonna go
over and...

meet somebody
and have fun again tonight.

- In his late 60s,

he'd somehow
cheated death yet again.

The Nature Boy character
had become his legacy,

and it began impacting
the music industry.

There were songs
written about him.

The lifestyle,
the bling, the drip...

It was pervasive.

Singers, musicians,
the rap world...

They couldn't seem to get enough

of Ric Flair.

- Ladies and gentlemen...
- Capture this on film.

- To the great Post Malone!

Took the time
out of his very busy schedule

to come out to my home
with my wife and her children

to visit me...
- Woo!

- When I had just gotten out
of the hospital.

I couldn't drink then,
but I'm drinking now.

Post Malone, my man!

- Always.
- Woo!

Woo!

- He's just the coolest dude

that you'll ever meet
in your life.

Ric Flair transcending
into, like, pop culture,

hip-hop culture,

he's always been
the coolest motherfucker

in the room.

- Ric Flair is probably

the swaggiest of them all.

He... he transcended to this era.

- Woo!

- I was a fan, you know?

You know, who did I look up to?

You know,
limousine-riding, jet...

I wanted to be that too.

Ric Flair lived
a superstar life.

Man, it's that Ric Flair drip...

Limousine-riding, jet-flying.

Ric Flair was talking about
that before any of these guys.

- They all wanna be... woo!

Like the Nature Boy,

but there can only be one.

- People are gonna look
at Ric and say

he was a trendsetter.

He's also a business guy.

He knows what he's doing
and very sharp on his feet.

He's a marketing genius.

People know that,

and they... they wanna be
a part of that.

Just one time.

- Woo!
- Woo!

- There you go.

- He just hit a nerve, man,
with mainstream society.

I've always said that
Hulkamania would live forever,

but it's more, woo!

Ric Flair's gonna live forever.

- Woo!

- Ric Flair drip, I would say
a Shakespearean swagger.

It's a very...
A very elegant gown.

You got no shirt on...

Chains...

Chains, rangs, thangs.

I guess the Ric Flair drip
is confidence.

- I think every time
you hear the name "Ric Flair,"

like, everyone's like,
"I think I need a Rolex."

Like, "Why do I not have
a Rolex watch on right now?

Like, I mean,
I think all of sports,

to an extent,
are affected by Ric.

- And the whole crowd
of 18,000 going...

- Woo!

- Ric Flair!

Ric Flair!

- You can go
into an NFL locker room

or an NBA locker room right now,

and folks can quote Ric Flair.

Woo!
And I'm having a hard time

holding these alligators down!

- And even if you're not
a wrestling fan,

like myself,
you know who Ric Flair is,

so, um, I think
that says it all right there.

- Ric Flair!

- Woo!

Like Snoop said,

I was bling
before bling was bling.

You gotta look
at the total influence

that Ric Flair has.

- He's kind of become a, uh,

multicultural cat.

- Go 49ers!
Woo!

Woo!

- Looking at his schedule,
I'm going,

"How the hell
is he doing this?"

- Styling and profiling...
Blinging,

private jet-flying.

Woo!

- You know,
he's at the Rose Bowl.

He's at the Super Bowl game.

He's here.
He's there.

He's wrestling.
He's on car commercials.

- Woo!

- The guy's pushing
just as hard as he ever did.

So he's not done yet.

- I've certainly had
my problems along the way,

but I'm on my feet now,

and, uh,
probably in the best position

I've ever been in...

Still the man.

Woo!

Woo!

- Red Raiders!

- Time.

- 2022...

Ric Flair has lived a life

most can only dream of...

And shows no signs
of slowing down.

- Five, six, seven,

eight, nine, a hundred.

- Working and grinding,

styling and profiling.

At age 73, he still proclaims

diamonds are forever,

and so is Ric Flair.

- Nature Boy... can you
fix my hair a little bit?

- This is a man
who can never stop,

um, doing what he does.

-It's a weird job,
and weird people do this.

It either gets ahold of you,
or it doesn't,

and it's... it's sometimes hard
to walk away from it.

- We did two Monday nights,

and then I found out I'm going
to Saudi again in four weeks.

- It's hard to walk away,
because some of us...

This is our life.
It's in our blood.

- Father Time or Mother Nature
is undefeated,

and that's hard,

because you wanna hold on.

It's not even to the noise
of the crowd.

It's to the youth
that came along with it.

But it doesn't matter
how old he gets.

Whatever that is,
that it that he has,

that umph... it never leaves him.

- Oh!

Woo!

Woo!

- It's so inspiring.

It's so mind-blowing.

But on the other hand,

I hope, deep down,

that he doesn't feel like

he has anything left to prove.

- Ric's whole life
is about proving himself

and earning respect.

I think, in some ways,

um, in his life story,

it was constantly
about earning that respect,

and then he gets
into the business,

and everything about him

is about earning
everybody's respect.

- It's tough being a legend.

It's tough being a folk hero.

It's tough making
a million dollars a year!

- What is Ric Flair's legacy?

Two words...

The man.

- Woo!

- Simple.

- The 16-time World Champion,

the greatest of all time.

- He will be the greatest
wrestler of all time,

because he is.

There's nobody else.

- I don't know that he'll
ever, you know, truly grasp

and appreciate
the influence that he's had.

But I think he understands it

far better now than he once did.

- Thank you for everything.
- Thank you.

- I do a lot
of public speaking now.

I can be even in a big church,

and I'll just mention the name,
"Ric Flair,"

and they all go, "Woo!"

All those deacons in front row
at church,

with their suit and ties on,

they're wooing.

I just mention Ric's name.

- There is no one
in this entire industry

that is more respected
than Ric Flair.

- Richard Fliehr, the man...
He's more caring.

He's more of a kind person,

and he wants to be loved

and cared for and taken care of,

and everybody just sucks him out

to be this, like, character.

They won't allow him
to be a normal, good person.

- I didn't feel good
last week...

and Wendy said,
"You've got anxiety

about going to 'Raw.'"

I said, "No, I have anxiety
about being alive."

People keep reminding me
that I should be dead.

- He has a great relationship
with his granddaughter.

He spoils her.

I think she was, like, ten,
and he bought her a cell phone,

and I was like, "Dad, she..."
he's like,

"Well, I need a way to call her.

"I'm gonna call her.
She needs to call her papa

"when she needs him.

She's calling her papa."

- Is there a person
that isn't Ric Flair?

Well, yes, Dad,

but Dad still...

Has Ric Flair-isms.

Like, he still woos
at the end of the phone call.

- Woo!

I don't look at it as Ric Flair.

I look at it as Dad,

like, and how's he wired,

and what makes him him.

- How is your health overall?

- Phenomenal.

Phenomenal.

I don't hurt anywhere.

I don't hurt anywhere...

No knees, back, nothing.

Who would've ever thought
I'd be sitting here again?

- How would you define
"identity"?

- I would say
identifying yourself

as waking up in the morning

and...

And... and
feeling good about yourself,

which hasn't happened to me

in my whole life.

- Why?

- Um,

I don't know.

Because I... I definitely
am aware of the fact

I made some bad choices in life,

and, uh...

But I've never done anything

to intentionally hurt anybody.

I've lived in a world
of embellishment

for my whole life.

But when I'm telling...
Everything I've told you today

is the God-honest truth.

It doesn't mean I can explain
how it happened or what,

but everything I'm telling you
is the God-honest truth.

Woo!

- Who is Richard Fliehr?

- I don't know.

The luckiest... he's
the luckiest guy in the world,

who had been raised
by his mom and dad,

and who had a chance
to become Ric Flair

for good or for bad.

From the lightning
to the plane crash,

being on top of the business,

that's who Richard Fliehr was:

the luckiest
son of a bitch alive.

Everything I said on TV,
I lived.

I mean,

that's why
it probably comes across

and why it's so memorable now.

It's because I was doing it.

I'm doing it now.

I'm sitting here and wearing
a $6,000-custom-made suit

just for you, for the interview.

Who does that?
Ric Flair.

- There's a Richard,

and there's a Ric.

Who are you?

- How are you
with being retired?

- Terrible.

I could work every weekend.

- Rolex-wearing,
diamond-ring-wearing,

limousine-riding,
private-jet-flying,

kiss-stealing,
wheeling, dealing,

son of a gun...

Woo!

- Gold around my neck,

Rolex watch around my wrist,

looking so fine!

I'm a multimillionaire!

Like Snoop said,

I was bling
before bling was bling.

This sport coat cost $800,
and that cost $200!

And I don't know what that cost!

I'd be ashamed to wear it!

- Hey, he just rifled
a Gucci shoe.

- Woo!

Woo!

Thank you very much.

- I appreciate you.

- Oh, thank you.
- Thank you for doing this.

- Ladies, we better be off.

We don't wanna keep 'em
waiting in that next city.

Take care now.

Remember one thing:

diamonds are forever.