Following the MJF promo on AEW Dynamite, police are receiving phone calls

MJF seemed to namedrop WWE Superstar Liv Morgan while attempting to deliver a message to Bryan Danielson, but the cops have already intervened.

MJF in a file photo [Image-Twitter]
By Blesson Daniel | Feb 10, 2023 | 3 Min Read follow icon Follow Us

Over the years, AEW World Champion MJF has captivated fans with his microphone talents, but very few of his promos have been given in the aftermath of a gory match. Following his triumph over Konosuke Takeshita on the newest edition of “AEW Dynamite” in El Paso, Texas, a blood-soaked MJF filmed a promo that left spectators in both wonder and disbelief. Speaking from his locker room, MJF would recount a childhood story that, according to the guy himself, turned him into the “scumbag” he became as an adult.

“A man does not know what he is truly made of until he’s met with adversity,” MJF said, as he began recounting a story from the night of his junior prom. “I was a speed demon, I loved whipping around my blue Camaro, and I just kept getting speed tickets. I was one point away from having my license revoked, and it was time for junior prom.”

MJF then recounted being charmed by a lady at his junior prom, whom he referred to as “Liv” “for legal reasons.”

“The most infectious smile you’ve ever seen, she was perfect,” MJF continued. “We hopped into my blue Camaro, I got to driving and she got to [oral sex hand gesture] work and distracted me. Once she was done, I put the pedal to the metal, but it was, unfortunately, raining like cats and dogs. We then hydroplaned and went spinning off the road; I panicked and hit the accelerator instead of the brake. At 90 miles per hour, we hit a telephone pole.”

READ MORE: “MJF will not have a lot of freedom in WWE” – Chris Jericho

Update On Police Receiving Phone Calls over MJF promo

Following MJF’s controversial promo on this week’s “AEW Dynamite,” various sources claimed that the Nassau Police Department was “flooded with over 300 phone calls” and had to verify the validity of the narrative told by the AEW World Champion. However, ESPN’s Marc Raimondi later debunked the allegations, alleging that fan fury over the substance of MJF’s promo was grossly overstated.

“Not to break kayfabe, but I contacted the Nassau County (N.Y.) PD and reports that hundreds of people have called about the MJF promo from AEW don’t seem to be true,” Raimondi wrote on Twitter. “The public information officer didn’t know what I was talking about and said such calls would go to his office.”

In a subsequent tweet, Raimondi stated that “several people” verified to him that there was “truth to the original story,” but that the claim that hundreds of fans were bombarding cops with phone calls was false.

Later that day, The Wrestling Observer’s Bryan Alvarez stated that the police did get calls in response to MJF’s promo.

Alvarez went on to say that 80% of MJF’s promo was “true,” and that the wrestler was involved in a “serious car accident” with his football mates while he was in junior high.

“He changed the end,” Alvarez said of MJF’s story. “He wanted to make people think he was a horrible person [by claiming he switched seats with his girlfriend following the crash]. It wasn’t a story he made up. Almost 80% of it is true, but 20% is fake. He did spin out with his football buddies and smash into a tree. It was a serious, serious car accident.”

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