Wait, Roddy Piper Didn’t Invent the Bubblegum Line from “They Live”???

I hate to disparage a legend, and make no mistake, “Rowdy” Roddy Piper was and forever will be a legend. 

He was one of the most indelible personalities in the history of professional wrestling, and arguably its single greatest villain.

Roddy was the most despicable “heel” in the business at a time when it was literally dangerous to be the bad guy.  A lot of people still believed wrestling was real back then, and to those folks, Roddy’s words and actions weren’t just antisocial, they were criminal.

These fans wanted to see Roddy get hurt in the ring, but they also wanted to hurt him themselves.  And when they managed to get close enough to him they tried.  Sometimes they succeeded.  It took real grit and guts to be the heavy in those days, and Roddy was the heaviest of them all.

To conclude this point, if a Mt. Rushmore of wrestling is ever carved, Piper’s leering mug better be up there.  I’ll let the rest of you argue about the other three.

That being said, one of Roddy’s greatest pop culture achievements might not have been solely his.  I’m talking about his famous line from the 1988 sci-fi classic “They Live”:

“I have come here to chew bubblegum and kick ass.  And I’m all outta bubblegum.”

Full credit for that line has always gone to Piper.  Even writer-director John Carpenter concedes it, saying it came from a notebook Piper kept of ideas for his wrestling promos.

But it turns out he’s not the first person to use that line . . . or at least a variation of it . . . on film.

In 1973, amid a wave of “blaxploitation” films like “Superfly”, “Coffy”, and “The Mack”, there came a little movie called “Five on the Black Hand Side”; a good-natured comedy that celebrated black culture in a way that those violent, drug-and-pimp flicks did not.

The film spends a good amount of time in a barbershop, and in one scene, a character named Fun Loving, having just received a haircut, launches into a rap that includes this little adage:

“I ain’t givin’ up nothin’ but bubblegum and hard times, and I’m fresh outta bubblegum.”

Not exactly the same, but way too similar to ignore.

Roddy may have come up with the exact wording he used in “They Live”, but the fact that a similar iteration existed at least 15 earlier suggests that it didn’t travel directly from God’s lips to his ears.  I have to conclude that Roddy heard the expression . . . or something like it . . . somewhere in his travels and borrowed it.

That’s not to say he gets no credit.  After all, he’s the one who turned it into a pop culture phenomenon, which is a feat in and of itself.

The fact is, Roddy knew a great line when he heard it, whether it sprang from someone else’s imagination or his own.

Yet another reason why his legend lives on.

Macho Man Randy Savage Died in 2011, But His Three-Legged Cat is Still Alive!

Pro wrestling legend The Macho Man Randy Savage died at the far-too-young age of 58, after suffering a heart attack behind the wheel and crashing into a tree.

That was in 2011, 14 years ago.

But about six months before he died, Randy adopted a cat. A three-legged cat. Or, as his brother, fellow wrestler Lanny Poffo called it, a one-armed cat.

Randy named it Junkyard Cat, in honor of his late friend and fellow grappler The Junkyard Dog.

And that cat, we have just learned, is still kicking.

Randy’s estate recently posted a picture of Junkyard Cat, still alive in 2025.

Kenan Thompson of “Saturday Night Live” fame is working on a Randy Savage biopic. There’s no word if Junkyard Cat will make a cameo.

Junkyard Dog died in 1998. “Leapin'” Lanny Poffo passed in 2023.

Jelly Roll Is Stepping Into the Ring at WWE SummerSlam

Country star Jelly Roll has been dropping pounds like a champ—but now he’s about to throw them around. The Grammy-nominated singer is officially headed to the WWE SummerSlam ring next month, and it’s not just a quick cameo. He’s set to tag-team against none other than Logan Paul.

Let that sink in for a second: Jelly Roll. In a WWE ring. Throwing punches.

It all started Friday night in Nashville during an episode of WWE SmackDown, where Jelly was on hand to kick things off with a live performance of his #1 hit, “Liar”. But before he could even finish the first verse, Logan Paul stormed in and stole the spotlight—classic Logan move.

Paul wasn’t exactly subtle. He told Jelly, “Everyone is here to see real WWE superstars… this ring is sacred… you belong on a stage, not a WWE ring.”

Then came the cherry on top: “I’m disgusted by celebrities leeching off our success in this industry.” Bold words from a guy who entered the WWE as a celebrity influencer.

To be fair, Logan’s proven himself inside the ropes. Since debuting in 2021, he’s been surprisingly good—athletic, committed, and occasionally even respected by fans. But to many diehards, he’s still an outsider. Which is why this feud has legs.

After the verbal sparring, WWE legend Randy Orton hit the scene to confront Paul. Then chaos broke out: Drew McIntyre ambushed Orton, Logan joined in, and Jelly Roll—yes, Jelly again—yanked Logan off Orton. Bad move. Logan retaliated by trashing Jelly’s music setup.

So now it’s official: At WWE SummerSlam on August 2nd and 3rd, we’ll see Jelly Roll and Randy Orton team up to take on Logan Paul and Drew McIntyre.

It’s part music-meets-mayhem, part revenge tour, and 100% made for viral moments.

Jelly Roll’s been on a transformative journey lately—shedding weight, topping charts, and now trading jabs with WWE’s most controversial star. Is he ready for the squared circle?

ATLANTA, GEORGIA – JULY 12: Jelly Roll enters the ring during Saturday Night’s Main Event at State Farm Arena on July 12, 2025 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Georgiana Dallas/WWE via Getty Images)
ATLANTA, GEORGIA – JULY 12: Jelly Roll in action against Logan Paul during Saturday Night’s Main Event at State Farm Arena on July 12, 2025 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Craig Melvin/WWE via Getty Images)
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