Current:Home > NewsBecky Lynch talks life in a WWE family, why 'it's more fun to be the bad guy' -NextFrontier Finance
Becky Lynch talks life in a WWE family, why 'it's more fun to be the bad guy'
View
Date:2025-04-17 06:02:39
Colleen Hoover and Stephen King have sold millions of books, but neither has ever used one of their tomes as a weapon in a pro wrestling match. In that regard, BeckyLynch is already breaking new ground in book publicity.
“I was like, 'Let me just sneak one under the ring for safekeeping and also maybe I could use it for things like paper cuts but also just standard bashing,'” says the WWE star born Rebecca Quin about busting out a copy of her new memoir “Becky Lynch: The Man: Not Your Average Average Girl” (in stores now) last week during a “last woman standing” match on “Monday Night Raw.” (For the record, she walloped opponent Nia Jax with her book – the hardcover edition, natch – as well as a kendo stick and a fire extinguisher.)
The biography chronicles her journey from growing up in Dublin, Ireland, a wrestling-loving dreamer to signing up with WWE in 2013 to ultimately main-eventing WrestleMania. She also offers a no-holds-barred introduction to the business for new fans, with tales of in-ring friends and foes as well as her big loves – these days, that’s husband/co-worker Colby Lopez (aka WWE world heavyweight champion Seth Rollins) and their 3-year-old daughter, Roux.
“I just tried to be honest with myself,” Quin says, adding author to her resume alongside wrestler, actor and former flight attendant. “You have to really reflect and go, ‘When were you lying to yourself?’ Because there's lots of times in life that we lie to ourselves but we don't realize until afterward."
Quin begins a book tour this week, recently hung out with President Joe Biden and soon wrestles Rhea Ripley for the women’s world championship at WrestleMania XL (April 6-7). She talks with USA TODAY a couple of days after her "Raw" appearance about the new memoir and her wrestling life.
Check out: USA TODAY's weekly Best-selling Booklist
Question: What was the writing process like for “The Man”?
Rebecca Quin: I really just stole time from things. Like if my daughter wanted to watch “Toy Story,” I would be sitting there writing. I didn't have any process where it was like, “Let me get up at 9 a.m. and seal myself off.” It was like, where can I write? And it didn't matter what kind of distractions were going on. I would be backstage at live events, just writing. Oftentimes I kind of liked that a little bit more. It was the white noise of everything and maybe I'd hear something that would spark some inspiration.
Congratulations are in order since you officially became an American citizen last week. You write about first visiting here as a kid with your mom, but has that been something you’ve wanted for a while?
Yeah, absolutely. I've always looked at America as, it's such a cliche but, look, the land of opportunity, and it's gifted me that. And more than anything, it's given me my family: I have an American daughter and I have an American husband. So I wanted to be part of that immediate American family and then the communal American family.
You’re 48 hours removed from your book-bashing brawl, where you won after jumping off a ladder and leg-dropping a woman through a table. Are you still sore at this point or have the butt callouses built up really nice over the years?
You definitely become calloused as a wrestler. After having my daughter and coming back, I remember hitting the ropes for the first time in a year or whatever it was, and my body just felt like it was going to crumple into dust, which thankfully it did not. But after having that match, oh yeah, I'm sore. My daughter wants to play and she has all these games. She loves to play Scar and Mufasa. I brought her to Broadway to see “The Lion King” on stage and she constantly wants to reenact when Scar goes, “Long live the king” and throws him off. I'm Mufasa and I have to fall off the bed, and I'm just like, “Oh, my neck, my back.” It hurts but you just get on with it.
What does Roux think of what her mom and dad do for a living?
She's confused by it. Her dad had a boo-boo, and she's like, “Where'd you get that boo-boo?” And he's like, “I got it working. He pushed me and I fell over.” And she was like, “Does everybody get boo-boos working?” And it's like, “No, see, some people work in an office, some people work on a computer,” so she doesn't understand that all working isn't fighting. I think she's getting worried. He brought her on TV for an entrance shot, and she was like, “Are people going to hurt me?” “No, no, no, baby, no!” Trying to get her to understand that is difficult at 3.
Your character’s currently a heroic babyface but you’ve worked before as a villainous heel, and even been a heel who, thanks to fans, becomes a mega-babyface. What’s your favorite to do?
It's more fun to be the bad guy. You can do no wrong. If people hate you, good, that's your job. If people love you, well, I'm just so good at my job that they love me. (Laughs) It's a lot easier. I remember seeing this meme back in like 2017, the 10 hardest jobs in the world in no particular order. It was a deep sea fisherman and all these just chaotic jobs, and then it was like a WWE babyface. It is quite difficult especially when you go from underdog to being top dog, because people resonate with the journey and the scrappiness.
You write in the book about the backstage meta idiosyncrasies of pro wrestling, including avoiding story lines with Colby. So you’re likely to not get involved now when he and Dwayne Johnson are having a war of words?
No, probably not. And what's a tricky part is me and the Rock are friends. Whenever (Lopez) has feuds, for the most part to add to them, I will often echo his sentiment. In a marriage, obviously you’ve got to be a team. You’ve got to be on on the same side of things. And I always am, he's always No. 1 to me. Then it becomes complicated when it's against people that you have your own friendships and bonds with. But in terms of just our characters, I think our heel characters probably would've meshed a bit better than necessarily the babyface ones.
veryGood! (72224)
Related
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Some 350,000 people applied for asylum in Germany in 2023, up 51% in a year
- Reese Witherspoon, Heidi Klum bring kids Deacon, Leni to Vanity Fair event
- Arizona faces a $1 billion deficit as the state Legislature opens the 2024 session
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Deputy defense secretary not told of Lloyd Austin hospitalization when she assumed his duties, officials confirm
- Golden Globe Awards 2024 Winners: The Complete List
- Jennifer Lawrence and Lenny Kravitz’s Hunger Games Reunion Proves the Odds Are in Our Favor
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Golden Globe Awards 2024 Winners: The Complete List
Ranking
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Eagles vs. Buccaneers wild-card weekend playoff preview: Tampa Bay hosts faltering Philly
- Norwegian mass killer begins second attempt to sue state for alleged breach of human rights
- Mega Millions jackpot at $140 million for January 5 drawing; See winning numbers
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- North Korea’s Kim turns 40. But there are no public celebrations of his birthday
- Jennifer Aniston's Golden Globes Haircut Is the New Rachel From Friends
- Halle Bailey and boyfriend DDG welcome first child
Recommendation
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
Report: Another jaguar sighting in southern Arizona, 8th different one in southwestern US since 1996
Who's hosting the 2024 Golden Globes? All about comedian Jo Koy
Keltie Knight Lost Her 4-Carat Diamond on the 2024 Golden Globes Red Carpet and Could Use a Little Help
Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
Tyre Nichols’ family to gather for vigil 1 year after police brutally beat him
Rapper-turned-country singer Jelly Roll on his journey from jail to the biggest stages in the world
Mario Zagallo funeral: Brazil pays its last respects to World Cup great