logo
The night WWE legend Scott Hall killed a man

The night WWE legend Scott Hall killed a man

Yahoo23-06-2025
"Say Hello to the Bad Guys: How Professional Wrestling's New World Order Changed America," the upcoming book written by Marc Raimondi which documents the rise of the legendary nWo faction and the impact it had on the broader world, publishes on Tuesday, June 24. The following is an excerpt detailing the rise of Scott Hall, aka two-time WWE Hall of Fame inductee Razor Ramon, who emerged as a central figure in wrestling's New World Order.
Scott Hall was at work the night of January 15, 1983, tending bar at the strip club Thee Dollhouse in Orlando, Florida. He was bracing himself. Hall knew an altercation — 'of course it was over a girl' — was imminent.
Advertisement
It was early in his shift when Hall got word that the husband of the woman he had been seeing was outside in the parking lot. The man had busted all the windows out of Hall's car, and was fixing to get a piece of Hall next.
Hall, a well-built, 6-foot-5 bodybuilder, went outside to confront the man and knocked him down immediately with one punch. The man, named Rodney Perry Turner, reached for a firearm and a struggle ensued.
Hall took hold of the gun first — and shot Perry Turner in the head. He died instantly. Hall, then just 24 years old, was charged with second-degree murder. The case against him was later dismissed when sworn testimony was not enough to prosecute.
'I drilled him, and he went down, and his shirt went up and he was reaching for the gun, so I reached for it, too,' Hall recalled.
Advertisement
A bar employee told the Orlando Sentinel at the time Perry Turner had threatened to kill both Hall and Perry Turner's wife, Carol, when he found out Hall and Carol were dating.
Two months earlier, Perry Turner had fatally shot another man. Perry Turner claimed he was attacked after the man made a pass at Carol. Perry Turner was never charged, as the killing was ruled justifiable.
'I should have sought counseling right then, but I didn't know anything,' Hall said. 'I was a kid.'
Hall was raised in a military family. He has referred to his father as a 'big shot' in the U.S. Army. Hall's parents and grandparents had issues with alcohol, an addiction that definitely did not skip a generation.
Advertisement
'We come from a long line of hard-drinking rednecks,' Hall said.
Hall went to high school in Germany where his dad was stationed and moved just about every year before his family settled in Florida when he was a teen. Hall's father was a pro-wrestling fan, and Hall himself wanted to be a wrestler ever since he was eight years old when his dad took him to a hair-versus-hair match. Hall took a piece of the losing wrestler's hair home with him.
'And I just was hooked since then,' Hall said.
Hall had spent time working the regional circuit as a wrestler in the 1980s, including a stint in the AWA like Hulk Hogan. Hall had a run with Curt 'Mr. Perfect' Hennig as the AWA tag-team champions, and Verne Gagne then wanted to position Hall as his No. 1 babyface. Hall absolutely looked the part. He was tall and handsome with light brown hair and a bushy mustache. With a wide chest, big arms, and bulging trapezius muscles, Hall looked kind of like a jacked-up Tom Selleck.
Razor Ramon makes his entrance at WWF Wrestlemania X8.
(George Pimentel via Getty Images)
'When Verne started pushing him to be his top guy, I know other people were going like, 'Oh man, same size as Hogan, better body, better-looking,'' Wrestling Observer Newsletter's Dave Meltzer said. 'But when it didn't work, it was kind of like, 'Oh, he doesn't have charisma.''
Advertisement
Things just didn't click for Hall as a generic good guy. The fans didn't get behind him. After taking a hiatus from wrestling, Hall found his way to WCW in 1991. He knew he had to change things up, because regular old Scott Hall, as impressive as he looked with his shirt off, wasn't working.
And Hall really committed to changing things up. His new character was called The Diamond Studd. He was a cocky ladies' man with slicked-back black hair, a toothpick between his teeth, and dark sunglasses. The bushy hair and mustache were long gone. The Diamond Studd wore a five o'clock shadow and didn't skip trips to the tanning bed. The leaner Studd looked nothing like 'Big' Scott Hall from the AWA.
The Diamond Studd was managed on screen by Diamond Dallas Page, who previously had accompanied the very popular Fabulous Freebirds to the ring. Like Hall, Page had a background in the nightlife industry, managing several Florida clubs. Hall and Page got along well, in the ring and outside of it. And Hall started to have some success in WCW with Page by his side.
Hall had size, good looks, and could work an entertaining match in the ring. There might not be a blueprint for wrestling stardom, but he checked a lot of boxes. Still, Hall wasn't being positioned past the early matches on WCW cards. The main event wasn't even in sight.
Advertisement
That didn't matter to Hall so much. He was grateful just to have the job of his dreams. But Hall and his wife, Dana, had just had their first child, Cody. Making more money to support his growing family would have been nice. So Hall started having conversations with Pat Patterson, McMahon's right-hand man.
nWo members Kevin Nash, Scott Hall and Hulk Hogan face off with Lex Luger, The Giant and Booker T during WCW Monday Nitro in February 1997.
(WWE via Getty Images)
'Some guys were higher up [in WWF], but everybody was a star,' Hall said. 'So I said, 'I don't have to be a main eventer, I still want to wrestle.' Because even the lower-paid wrestlers are getting paid, and I had no education. So I thought, this is what I still want to do for a living. If I have to be a bottom guy, I'd rather do it for the best company.'
'Bottom guys' in wrestling — or low carders and midcarders — are kind of like the fighters you see on the preliminaries of boxing or UFC events. They're talented enough and have a big enough following to earn a spot on the event, but don't have the skill level or star quality to make the main event. Their main role is to lose to wrestlers tabbed as stars as those would-be stars make their way to a headlining role.
Advertisement
Hall would never be a 'bottom guy' again. He was pushed near the top of the card immediately in the WWF with a new character: Razor Ramon.
Hall, as Ramon, became an arrogant, well-dressed, and villainous Cuban American from Miami. It was basically a rip-off of Al Pacino's suave but brutally violent Tony Montana character in "Scarface," which had gained a renewed cult following a decade after its release. McMahon had never seen the movie and when Hall came to him with the idea, he thought Hall was a genius.
For weeks on WWF television there were taped vignettes trumping up his arrival. Hall wore gold chains with an open, button-down shirt revealing his chest hair. He spoke with a fake Cuban accent, called people 'chico,' and borrowed phrases from "Scarface," adding his own spin, like 'say hello to the Bad Guy.'
Hall was neither Cuban nor even Hispanic, just like Hogan wasn't actually Irish. In wrestling, everything is about the performance. And Hall was more than believable enough as Razor Ramon.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ozzy Osbourne died of a heart attack, death certificate shows
Ozzy Osbourne died of a heart attack, death certificate shows

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Ozzy Osbourne died of a heart attack, death certificate shows

Legendary Black Sabbath frontman Ozzy Osbourne's cause of death was a heart attack, his death certificate shows. The heavy metal icon died on July 22 at age 76, at Harefield Hospital in the United Kingdom. Other factors listed on the certificate, obtained by CBS News, were Parkinson's disease, which Osbourne was diagnosed with in 2020, and coronary artery disease. Osbourne postponed all of his performances back in 2019 after falling at his home in Los Angeles, before sharing his Parkinson's diagnosis and announcing in 2023 that he would retire from touring. He performed his final concert just a few weeks before his death with the original Black Sabbath lineup for what Osborne said would be his final concert. The certificate, signed by his daughter, Aimee, listed her father's occupation as "Songwriter, Performer and Rock Legend." Osbourne sprang onto the world stage with the release of Black Sabbath's 1969 self-titled debut LP — and never left. Osbourne was twice inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame: once with Sabbath in 2006 and again in 2024 as a solo artist. Many fans, however, know him as a sweet and silly father from his time on his hit reality show, "The Osbournes." The show, which aired from 2002 to 2005, followed the lives of Osbourne, his wife Sharon, and two of their three children as they went about their lives in their Beverly Hills mansion. Fans of Osbourne paid their respects to the rock icon last week as a funeral procession made its way through Birmingham, England, the city where he had been born. Sharon Osborne, his wife of 43 years, and his three children joined the procession as fans turned out to honor the singer sometimes known as the Prince of Darkness. Amanda Summers, a 37-year-old singer from Bolton, England, told Reuters that she was glad to be there with others who adored Osbourne. "Been a Black Sabbath fan for a long time, watched 'The Osbournes' on the TV, so we've grown up with these being in our homes, so they're like our family, you know?" she said. Trump doubles down on decision to fire labor statistics chief Crime decreased in every category in 2024, FBI report shows Trump sounds off on lowering U.S. drug prices, threatens steep tariffs on pharmaceuticals

Reason Gen Z Woman Wants Future Daughter To See Her Eating Pizza Melts Hearts
Reason Gen Z Woman Wants Future Daughter To See Her Eating Pizza Melts Hearts

Newsweek

time3 days ago

  • Newsweek

Reason Gen Z Woman Wants Future Daughter To See Her Eating Pizza Melts Hearts

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A Gen Z mom's public service announcement on why she wants her future daughters to see her eating pizza is going viral. Madison Hall (@madiinoelle), 22, posted a clip on TikTok enjoying a pizza with the text overlay: "Eating the pizza now because my daughter will not watch her mom count calories or be obsessed with the shape of her stomach." For Hall, the decision to eat the pizza was symbolic and personal. Growing up with a mom who was aware of how her body looked, she often heard comments around weight. "That definitely shaped my awareness at a young age," Hall told Newsweek. "She never pushed those thoughts on me—she actually encouraged confidence—but the culture around me spoke even louder." Madison Hall, in a striped vest, eats pizza and holds it up to the camera. Madison Hall, in a striped vest, eats pizza and holds it up to the camera. @madiinoelle Social media, discussions around body image and constant exposure to unrealistic beauty standards shaped how Hall saw herself. The impact was profound. "It made me hyperaware of my body way too early," Hall said. "I remember noticing my stomach and legs as young as 10," she said. "By high school, I was waking up at 6 a.m. to work out before school, not out of passion, but out of pressure to look a certain way." Although Hall isn't a mother yet, it is one of her biggest dreams—and one she has thought about since she was very young. "I want to raise kids—especially daughters—who are free in their bodies," Hall said. "In a world obsessed with aesthetics and perfection, I want my girls to feel peace in having a normal, healthy body. To eat real food, laugh in their bikinis and not overthink every bite or bloated moment. That kind of freedom feels radical now, but that's what I hope to pass down." Hall's clip has clocked up over 231,000 views and a further 52,000 likes. Dozens of women resonated with her message in the comments. "I feel this on such a high level, hope all of our little ones never have to experience those thoughts," one user wrote. "This is so important, thank you," another added. Now in her adulthood, Hall has spent years unlearning those pressures and rethinking what health and body image should really mean. "I feel so blessed to use my platform to talk about health in a balanced way, where hormones, nourishment and body awareness matter, but there's also a freedom to be normal, eat normal, have occasional bloat and acne," Hall said. The online reaction has been emotional for her. "So many women shared how early the pressure started for them, and how much it still affects them," Hall said. "The hardest part is hearing from girls who feel they'll never be free. I get it, but I do believe full healing and a renewed mind is possible."

Jared Allen tears pants while doing his sack celebration at Hall of Fame induction
Jared Allen tears pants while doing his sack celebration at Hall of Fame induction

New York Post

time3 days ago

  • New York Post

Jared Allen tears pants while doing his sack celebration at Hall of Fame induction

Jared Allen ripped his pants while being inducted into the Hall of Fame over the weekend. At the Pro Football Hall of Fame induction ceremony on Saturday, the former star defensive end celebrated his enshrinement with a wardrobe malfunction. After receiving his gold jacket, Allen performed his signature 'calf-roping' sack dance while on stage with his family. 4 Jared Allen rips his suit pants as he does the 'calf-roping' sack celebration while being inducted into the Hall of Fame. X @MySportsUpdate This was often performed as a sack celebration on the football field. In the midst of his celebration, Allen tore the pants of his suit. 4 Jared Allen feels the rip in his suit pants at the Hall of Fame Gold Jacket ceremony. X @MySportsUpdate The Vikings' X account captured the moment, sharing a video of Allen executing the dance in his gold jacket, followed by the wardrobe mishap. Allen walked off the incident, but — of course — it was caught on camera. 4 Jared Allen speaks during the 2025 Pro Football Hall of Fame Enshrinement Ceremony at Tom Benson Hall of Fame Stadium on August 2, 2025 in Canton, Ohio. Getty Images 4 Jared Allen smiles on the bench after returning an interception for a touchdown while playing the Detroit Lions at Ford Field on January 2, 2011 in Detroit, Michigan. Getty Images After being selected in the fourth round of the 2004 NFL Draft, Allen became an immedaite impact player on the Chiefs, with whom he spent his first four seasons. Allen spent the bulk of his prestigious career with the Vikings, with whom he played from 2008-13 before rounding out his NFL tenure with shorts stints for the Bears and Panthers. Allen retired following the 2015 season. The Idaho State alum recorded 136 career sacks, which is officially 12th all-time in NFL history, although he was in the top 10 at the time of his retirement. The four enshrined members of the 2025 Pro Football Hall of Fame class were Allen, Eric Allen, Antonio Gates and Sterling Sharpe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store