Los Angeles Times

Tyson still exploring the highs of life

His latest act features entertainm­ent and marijuana ventures, plus a comeback fight.

- By Manouk Akopyan

Idle hands are the devil’s workshop — the saying can ring true especially during a pandemic. There are few people in the world who’ve let their hands go more ferociousl­y, or had more divisive dates with the devil, than Mike Tyson.

Tyson has journeyed through his roller coaster of a ride called life in the public eye since he became boxing’s youngest heavyweigh­t champion in 1986. His wild moments have been chronicled exhaustive­ly. The stories and scenes transcend age, race and language, and he’s still one of the most recognizab­le names in the world.

Tyson has been knocked down far too many times in life to count. Whether it be surviving a broken home, being arrested 38 times by age 13, serving a prison sentence for rape, losing hundreds of millions en route to bankruptcy, battling drug addiction, tragically losing a child or an unhealthy buffet of volatile behavior, the setbacks outside the ring have been more prolific than his losses inside it.

No matter the magnitude of the blows, however, “The Baddest Man on the Planet” always has gotten back up. It’s what f ighters do. Iron Mike has an iron spirit and more than just a puncher’s chance at anything he tries.

Although he has painfully detailed his successes and shortcomin­gs in a oneman Broadway show and autobiogra­phy, Tyson still is adding to his story, turning the page and starring in his latest act at age 54.

“I can’t reintroduc­e myself. I don’t know who I am either. You have to accept what you perceive from me,” Tyson said.

During spring lockdown, idle hands led Tyson to exercise a lot more. He’d already knocked out a weight problem but still was sporting a paunch. Fifteen- minute treadmill runs at home evolved into two- hour sessions. Then suddenly, a ring reentered the picture, and Tyson took the internet and social media by storm when he released a series of explosive workout videos viciously hitting mitts and mauling heavy bags with the same force as in his prime.

In parallel, TV networks aired Tyson f ight reruns and scored significan­t ratings. Sports- starved fans started wondering if Tyson would contemplat­e a comeback.

It turned out Tyson was wondering as well; his ego was reignited and, as he framed it, the gods of war revived him and asked for more.

Fifteen years after a faded Tyson quit on his stool against little- known journeyman Kevin McBride and retired, he announced his return to the ring against Roy Jones Jr. in an eight- round exhibition match Saturday at Staples Center on pay- per- view.

Everybody has a plan until they get punched in the mouth, Tyson once famously proclaimed.

Tyson has rolled with the punches in life, and now he’ll get punched in public for the f irst time since 2005 — only this time as a graying former boxer turned businessma­n looking to extend his commercial brand.

As with many of his ventures, Tyson has paired the pugilistic resuscitat­ion with a business plan. The f ight against Jones is the f lagship event of his newly launched Legends Only League, a sports startup designed to bring back the stars of yesteryear and engage them in competitio­n in whatever ways their bodies will allow.

He’s also adamant that part of his $ 10- million payday will be donated to charities, including Mike Tyson Cares, Standing United and My Yellow Shirt.

“Life is all about giving. We can’t die with wealth. It’s about spreading it,” Tyson said.

Tyson says his newfound demeanor is about living self lessly and using his power and platform to change lives. This is the sentiment he repeatedly shares while burning through mounds of marijuana.

Recently, the Brownsvill­e, N. Y.- bred and now Newport Beach- based Tyson has been steadily growing his cannabis company and Tyson Ranch brand from its El Segundo headquarte­rs.

Tyson is now evenkeeled and mild- mannered. He once unnecessar­ily apologized during our 2019 interview, a far cry from his self- destructiv­e days when he could blow up and berate anyone sitting across from him.

He previously detailed how he’d gone sour on the sweet science, and how he got hives and sweats anytime he was near a boxing gym.

“I was always a nobody and boxing made me somebody,” Tyson said. “I feared myself, because I wanted to live up to that fake image.”

Tyson and Jones both insist their f ight won’t be some sham or ballyhooed ballet peppering shots and looking busy. They both are promising a real f ight, although the California State Athletic Commission has told them to engage in a friendly and glorified sparring session using 12- ounce gloves over two- minute rounds to limit damage to the quinquagen­arians.

Tyson says f ighting and competitio­n still give him a twinkle, and many still are willing to pay $ 50 to see what he has left in the tank.

“When I’m on that stage, my subconscio­us hates that person,” Tyson said. “I have to ask my wife and people what I was like in my 20s and 30s.

“I don’t really even remember my boxing career, or how I felt in particular f ights. In my conscience and my ego, maybe I have shamed myself from that profession, so I blacked that out. I have guilt from that particular f ield that I was in.”

For the purpose of this f ight, Tyson has abstained from marijuana, but the business opportunit­ies that come with his associatio­n in the industry are burning brightly.

Tyson already licenses his likeness on cannabis strains such as Purple Punch and KO Kush, and he’s welcoming discovery platform Weedmaps to be one of the main sponsors of the f ight, hoping to help pave a path for other cannabis companies to partner with major sporting events.

Tyson also is reintroduc­ing himself to the public and portraying his evolution through scripted entertainm­ent.

In the coming year, he will star in the TV series “Rolling With the Punches,” in which he’ll show what it’s like to manage a marijuana farm, all while trying to replicate the acting gravitas he showed in the “Hangover” franchise in a “Curb Your Enthusiasm”- like role.

There’s also a biopic in the works starring Jamie Foxx, and a handful of other original content series.

But the granddaddy of them all is set to be Tyson Ranch, a 1,400- acre marijuana- themed resort near Desert Hot Springs, scheduled to open by the end of 2023.

The space is designed to be replete with hotels, restaurant­s, concerts, lazy rivers and even a marijuana university, so that the “disenfranc­hised can unite and be the amalgamati­on of just one love,” Tyson said.

“This is a company that I am really high about,” Tyson said.

“It looks like it’s going to be a massive success. My ego says ‘ I want world domination. I want to be the best cannabis company ever. No one can be in my league. They’ll get crushed’ … but that’s the guy I don’t want to be.”

Boxing gave Tyson everything he had but it took it back.

“If my ego left, I could never reinvent myself,” Tyson said. “If I was steering my ship, I wouldn’t be here [ and alive today]. I’m not smart enough to live in this universe on my own free will.

“Young Mike believed he was God, and old Mike asks God to have mercy on his soul.”

 ?? Donald Kravitz Getty I mages ?? MIKE TYSON performs his one- man show in March. As the former heavyweigh­t champion, now 54, reintroduc­es himself, he’ll f ight another former champion, Roy Jones Jr., on Saturday at Staples Center.
Donald Kravitz Getty I mages MIKE TYSON performs his one- man show in March. As the former heavyweigh­t champion, now 54, reintroduc­es himself, he’ll f ight another former champion, Roy Jones Jr., on Saturday at Staples Center.

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