Posted on 12/30/125 by Phil Johnson

In an exclusive interview with PWMania.com, former WWE NXT
star “Big Body Javi” / Javier Bernal (Randy Beidelschies)
spoke candidly with David Joseph about identity,
authenticity, fan culture, and the physical toll of
professional wrestling. You can read the entire interview by
clicking below.
Here are some highlights:
On moving beyond the “Big Body Javi” character:
“For sure. Obviously, ‘Big Body Javi’ was very much the
opposite of who I am, which is what made it fun. Now on the
indies, just going by Javi, it’s much more me. I’m someone
who listens to metalcore, vibes with emo kids, kids who are
bullied, kids who feel like outsiders. I wear that on my
heart.
I saw a comment the other day calling it ‘virtual signaling
BS,’ and it just made me laugh. People hide behind social
media. They forget we’re real people. The ‘core kid’ thing
came from being at shows where fans would say, ‘I didn’t
know you listened to this kind of music.’ That’s when I
realized — these are my people, and they don’t really have
representation.
The music talks about mental health, struggle, emotion —
real stuff people go through daily. Big Body Javi was fun,
but now I want to sink my teeth into something that actually
matters to me.”
On growing up as a wrestling fan and entering the business:
“I loved wrestling growing up. I had No Mercy on N64, got in
trouble trying moves on my brother during the Attitude Era.
Wrestling and football were my first loves.
After playing arena football, I called every indie promotion
in Minnesota offering to build rings, do anything. I
actually became a promoter before I ever stepped in the
ring. WWE eventually scooped me up before I even had a full
indie run.
I trained with Ken Anderson and Kate Diamond, worked
Ironheart Pro Wrestling — that’s home for me. You have to
love wrestling to survive in this business. People who don’t
love it get weeded out quickly.”
On the physical reality of wrestling:
“I shattered my foot catching someone on a dive. Multiple
knee surgeries. Wrestling hurts. If you don’t love it, the
grind will destroy you.
At NXT, we bumped every day. Lifted every day. Took flights
sick, throwing up, still went out there and had matches. You
have to want it.”
Javier Bernal also discussed WWE lessons, creative freedom,
and legacy. You can check out the complete interview at this
link.
https://www.pwmania.com/javier-bernal-on-life-after-wwe-the-
indie-grind-creative-freedom-whats-next