Ted DiBiase Sr., the legendary Million Dollar Man, has been reflecting on one of professional wrestling’s most seismic cultural shifts — the death of kayfabe — and his own place in that history.
DiBiase expressed the belief that he was part of the last generation of performers who genuinely experienced the business with kayfabe fully intact and protected. In his view, the art of keeping the business’s secrets from the public has essentially become a relic, and today’s wrestling landscape is a fundamentally different world than the one he worked in.
It’s hard to argue with that assessment. Behind-the-scenes programming like WWE Unreal and AEW All Access have pulled back the curtain further than ever before, giving mainstream audiences an unprecedented look at the inner workings of professional wrestling — something that would have been unthinkable in DiBiase’s prime years during the 1980s. Back then, wrestlers traveled separately, stayed in character in public, and guarded the industry’s secrets with an almost religious devotion.
DiBiase himself was one of the most effective heels of the era, a man whose Million Dollar Man character felt genuinely real to audiences precisely because kayfabe was enforced at every level. His comments carry the weight of someone who lived that reality firsthand, not just studied it.
The conversation speaks to a generational divide that wrestling continues to grapple with — whether the transparency of the modern era has enriched the product or stripped away something that can never be fully recovered.
Source: Fightful