USA TODAY International Edition

‘ Young Rock’ grapples with its own truth

- Erin Jensen

Is Dwayne Johnson’s new autobiogra­phical NBC sitcom “Young Rock” any match for his real life? h The former wrestler- turned action movie star, who has topped Forbes’ list of highest- paid actors for the last two years, mines his upbringing for the new half- hour sitcom premiering Tuesday ( 8 EST/ PST). Three actors portray the pioneer of the People’s Eyebrow at different stages of his life: Adrian Groulx ( Johnson as a kid living in Hawaii), Bradley Constant ( as a teen in Pennsylvan­ia who shoplifted designer goods) and Uli Latukefu ( as a University of Miami football player).

Johnson also appears in the series, bookending each episode in mock interviews with a journalist ( Randall Park) as he reflects on his life while campaignin­g for president in 2032.

Johnson, 48, sources storylines from time spent with his dad, wrestler Rocky “Soul Man” Johnson’s pals, including André the Giant, and his family’s financial struggles. He applauds series creator Nahnatchka Khan for tackling the portrayal of his “wildly Forrest Gump- ian life that I have been lucky enough to have, ( which) was complex and awesome and crazy and unbelievab­le,” he says in an interview.

Johnson also welcomes the chance to “look back on that stuff and laugh and deliver it to the audiences in a way that will make them smile and make them laugh.”

Tuesday’s premiere features all three versions of the onscreen Johnson, bouncing among the different actors and stages of his life. Future episodes will focus on one part of his life at a time. Johnson insists the stories are all true ( or at least trueish).

“The fun thing about ‘ Young Rock’ is everything that people see in this first episode and throughout the season, everything happened,” says Johnson. “Now, what we do is,

maybe it happened in a different year, maybe it happened in a different city.”

The series has to make an entertaini­ng show that’s suitable for network television.

At one point in the premiere, 10- yearold Dwayne ( then also known as “Dewey”) offends a group of wrestlers by calling the sport “fake.” In response, Andre ( Matthew Willig) lifts the young boy by his shoulders so they are at eye level and directs him to “never use the F word.” Then the two hug. Johnson describes this TV moment as “the family version” of the incident.

“Honestly, what would happen is when I stepped out of line like that, I would be brought into the ring,” he says. “Their way of discipline was to take me in the ring. And beat my a-- in a way that I learned actually how not fake wrestling is.”

In the “Young Rock” premiere, the teenage Johnson buys a car to gain some independen­ce. And while it was a bargain at $ 103, it came with a couple of unexpected occupants. In his real life, Johnson remembers driving down the highway in the first car he purchased “from a crackhead” when “I had to swerve off into the shoulder because another crackhead popped up from the back. And then I pulled over and I had to kick him out, and I said, ‘ This is my car now.’ So that actually happened.”

Does that dedication to presenting the truth mean Johnson wants to preside over the Oval Office? In 2017, the actor said he was “seriously considerin­g” a run, and still hasn’t ruled out the possibilit­y.

“I would consider a presidenti­al run in the future if that’s what the people wanted,” he says. “Truly I mean that, and I’m not flippant in any way with my answer. That would be up to the people... So I would wait, and I would listen. I would have my finger on the pulse, my ear to the ground.”

 ?? PROVIDED BY MARK TAYLOR/ NBC ?? Andre the Giant ( Matthew Willig) lifts Dwayne Johnson ( Adrian Groulx) in the premiere episode of “Young Rock.”
PROVIDED BY MARK TAYLOR/ NBC Andre the Giant ( Matthew Willig) lifts Dwayne Johnson ( Adrian Groulx) in the premiere episode of “Young Rock.”
 ?? PROVIDED BY FRANK MASI/ NBC ?? Dwayne Johnson is running for president in “Young Rock,” a sitcom inspired by his upbringing.
PROVIDED BY FRANK MASI/ NBC Dwayne Johnson is running for president in “Young Rock,” a sitcom inspired by his upbringing.
 ?? TITAN SPORTS INC. ?? Dwayne Johnson flexes the People's Eyebrow as “The Rock” in 1999.
TITAN SPORTS INC. Dwayne Johnson flexes the People's Eyebrow as “The Rock” in 1999.

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