The Philippine Star

John Cena makes time for wrestling, Hollywood

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With a wave of his hand in front of his face, John Cena built a WWE career trash talking his opponents by telling each one, “You Can’t See Me.” Can’t see Cena? The 45-yearold ubiquitous Hollywood heavyweigh­t can be spotted pretty much everywhere these days, from studio lots to the squared circle.

Cena just wrapped a role in Peter Farrelly’s new comedy, Ricky Stanicky, played the flawed DC Comics superhero in the Peacemaker series and will voice the brutish rhinoceros Rocksteady in the upcoming Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles film.

Wearing his trademark jorts, Cena hasn’t forgotten his wrestling roots. He returns to fight WWE United States champion Austin Theory next month at WrestleMan­ia at SoFi Stadium and can be seen — and played — as the cover boy for various editions of the WWE 2K23 game, with the WWE 2K23 Deluxe Edition and Icon Edition out Tuesday and the standard edition and Cross-Gen on Friday.

What’s a wrestling game without a shocking twist? Cena guides gamers in the You Can’t Beat Me 2K Showcase mode through some of the biggest losses of his career to wrestlers such as Rob Van Dam and Kurt Angle, rather than highlighti­ng all his championsh­ip wins.

“Perseveran­ce is a core value of mine,” he said. “Never give up is written on all my stuff. I like the fact that it walks you through my toughest opponents, my toughest losses. That’s very much a personal touch of mine and I’m glad 2K was very receptive to that.”

Cena, not much of a gamer, calls the cover “a tip of the cap” from 2K for building a game around his 20year body of work. “There’s been some very important moments where I didn’t live up to the hype,” Cena said.

In a recent phone interview with The Associated Press from Georgia, where he was filming Grand Death Lotto, the Hollywood heavyweigh­t discusses wrestling retirement, his starring role in the WWE 2K23 video game and his relationsh­ip with embattled WWE boss Vince McMahon. Answers have been shortened for clarity and brevity.

What did you mean in your tweet after your return to WWE last week when you wrote, “it might be the last time.” Are you nearing the end of your WWE career?

“I tried to put it in words in Twitter. I guess I didn’t explain myself correctly. It was the first time I came out into the arena knowing that this has a definitive end. Normally, you come out, you get all excited, OK, this is the next one and I’m waiting for the next one. I’m not done, of course. I made that statement accepting a match at WrestleMan­ia, so I know I have at least one more in front of me. But what I was trying to convey was, that was the first time I looked at all that excitement and energy and realized this is the twilight of that journey.”

Is it tough to reconcile the feelings you have toward Vince McMahon with the sexual misconduct accusation­s made against him?

“No. I mean, everyone has the right to have their perspectiv­e. I have the right to have mine. When you love somebody, you take them as imperfectl­y perfect as they are. We all make mistakes, we all have poor decisions. Lord knows I’ve made my collection of poor choices. That doesn’t mean I’m not going to love somebody. There’s no way I can go on record and say I don’t love Vince McMahon.”

You have WrestleMan­ia coming up and a slew of acting projects including Grand Death Lotto. Has the pace of your schedule ever become too much?

“I’m feeling my age, so to speak. I could use a little bit of rest, but all my choice. These are wonderful things to be a part of. This one I’m really excited for because this movie does not stop. It is going to be action from the opening credits. We have a great team that mixes action and comedy. I’m also trying to do my best to, I hate the term work-life balance, but I’m trying to do my best to not fall into the trap of workaholis­m where I just hide in my work and I’m not a fully open, vulnerable human being to the people around me, the people that I love. I haven’t yet sacrificed my relationsh­ips for my work. I’m at a pretty good pace right now where I can hit on all cylinders.”

 ?? – AP PHOTO ?? The 45-year-old ubiquitous Hollywood heavyweigh­t can be spotted pretty much everywhere these days, from studio lots to the squared circle.
– AP PHOTO The 45-year-old ubiquitous Hollywood heavyweigh­t can be spotted pretty much everywhere these days, from studio lots to the squared circle.

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