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Suge D On Who Owns the Pineapple Pete Name: “I Put The Trademark In For It”

October 5, 2020 | Posted by Joseph Lee
Suge D Impact Xplosion Sugar Dunkerton Suge D Pineapple Pete

In an interview with Wrestling Inc, Suge D spoke about the Pineapple Pete name, which he used in AEW. Suge also had a recent appearance in WWE, so it posed the question of who actually owns the name that gained him notoriety. As he notes, he filed to trademark the name back in August. Here are highlights:

On the differences between WWE and AEW backstage: “I haven’t been back to WWE since some time, so they definitely loosened up on some stuff since returning. It’s just one of those cases where I’m looking at it and the atmosphere is just a little bit more, it’s hectic, don’t get me wrong. There’s always something going on, but it’s gotten a little bit more chill and just the way that their dealings with extras and all that other stuff like that, just chill man. Before, it kind of used to be one of those things where it was like don’t talk to anybody, just stay off in this little corner over here and everything like that, but now, everything is easy. You just be where you’re supposed to be. Of course, you show up in your suit, all the other good stuff like that.

AEW is just casual. They do the thing [where] it’s just a bunch of dudes getting together to make some wrestling. At the end of the day, it’s all corporate wrestling though, so I don’t think anybody should get it twisted that it’s like, ‘oh my god, it’s just so much more chill over on this side.’ It’s chill, but it’s still a TV wrestling product. So there’s still stuff that goes on that’s high pressure, and it’s the same thing over with that other side. It’s a little bit more hectic because they’ve been doing it longer. They got more people to answer to etc., but at the end of the day, it’s all TV wrestling and coming from a guy that just had a match at a fare show last weekend and was at American Foreign Legion before that, there’s differences. There’s always going to be differences when it’s all said and done. When you’re in those positions, you just got to be ready to work. You got to be ready to show out. You got to be ready to just take the little and make more of it because I think people notice that. I think people pay attention to that.”

On who owns the Pineapple Pete name: “As far as everything goes, I put the trademark in for it. It could change as of you asking this question, but I put the trademark in for it. Nobody’s contested it. So for right now, it’s me. So if I get the cease and desist letter and you see like Guava Gary or something like that come out, then yeah. Nah, I ain’t going out like that. If it’s just one of those cases where it gets come for or whatever, just have it. I got a million more I can come up with something different. That’s like an independent spirit, plus I just like Suge D anyway.”

On if he was helped by the ‘COVID push’: “Bro, if you’re gonna call me on that, you’d be calling people that have deals and don’t have deals on that because let’s be realistic, when AEW was on the road before the pandemic stuff was happening, they were supposed to be in Rochester. They had Blood and Guts, so they had a heavy schedule man. They were moving super heavy, and you know how that was with Dark around that time. It was like, you might get one or two indie guys to show. They got the rest of their full roster at their disposal. I don’t think people were like, ‘yo, you know what, Suge is like a blue chip prospect. Let’s check for him.’ I don’t think it was ever anything like that, but because of the scenario, yeah, it makes wrestlers from Florida and Georgia and the surrounding areas just a little bit more attractive. They needed bodies. I was a body, and the opportunity went. I’m that type of dude [where] I call a thing a thing.”

article topics :

Pineapple Pete, Suge D, Joseph Lee