guy was a scumbag and used to terrorize us come over and beat on our door. I was scared that guy yelling at my mother, that was the day that should all change. I said, you ever fucking stick your head over this wall again and say anything to us, I'm gonna beat the shit out of you. But when you talk about fighters, a lot of these guys would have been
dead or in jail. They got to live a life they would have never even dreamed up because of what they were capable of doing with their hands only because these people are not wired the way that we are wired. I hear a lot of people say I feel sorry for them that they have to do that. They feel sorry for you. They you sit in the car and bumper to bumper traffic every day and you go sit in your fucking cubicle, you get yelled at by some fucking 22 year old who just fucking graduated college.
My guest today is incredible Dana White. For last 23 years Dan has been the president of the UFC, the leading mixed martial arts company in the world. During these 23 years, Dana has transformed the UFC from an unwanted unloved, on successful company heavily indebted into one of the greatest and largest sports franchises in history. And he's viewed by many as the greatest sports promoter in
history. He is also the founder and owner of power slap a fast growing slap promotion company, which we're going to talk about later in the show. Dan, it's great to be with you. It's great to see you again. Thanks for being on my show. Thanks for having me. So you were born in Connecticut. You were raised in Massachusetts, your parents divorced when you were young. Your dad was an alcoholic? Can you tell us about you going to see Beverly Hills Cop with your dad?
Yeah, I mean, there were a lot of wherever we were nine years old, there were a lot of Beverly Hills cops moment, moments with my dad, you know, my dad, would I had one of those dads. It's weird. You're asking me this question. Because I was literally thinking about this this morning. It's like, you know, you ever see these people that are like, Oh, I had no role models growing up, and I didn't. Everybody has role
models. Yeah, they're not necessarily the good role model that you think you know, but we all grow up with role models. And you can either choose to be like somebody, or you can choose to not be like somebody. And I think that are there were a lot of things in my upbringing, I wouldn't change one thing about the way that I grew up, I love the way that I grew up. I learned a lot from both of my parents on, you know, what I didn't want to be and what I did want to be as a parent, and life
and things like that. I think that my dad, you know, wasted a lot of good time. And I think my dad wasted a lot of talent on alcohol. There was another incident when you were 15 years old, with a neighbor and a dog that also influenced your life forever. What happened there and what were the lessons you learned?
Well, that's one of the things about, you know, when you grow up in a house, and you're like the man of the house, no matter how old you are, and those, those this guy who live behind us in our neighborhood, and he knew that it was a single mom with two little kids. And this guy was a scumbag and used to terrorize us, like all the time, come over and beat on our doors and shit, you know, and I was scared. And then one day I was sitting at the kitchen table. I was 15 years old. I remember
just like it was yesterday. And I hear that somebody's yelling. And I realize it's that guy yelling at my mother over the back fence. And that was the day that should all changed. I literally jumped up from the kitchen table ran out back, jumped up on the wall. I said you ever fucking stick your head over this wall again and say anything to us? I'm gonna beat the shit out of you.
And the coward that this guy was the 15 year old kid who finally challenged him we never heard a word from that guy ever again. And that was the day that everything changed for me as a you know as a human I would say so let's go back to when you were five years old your your grandmother's house holy shit what do you investigate my whole life here? What did I do when I was five? Oh you and your five year your grandmother's house and and you saw your first
fight? And tell me what you remember about that fight who was in it? And what what did you recall on that on that day? I don't remember if I was five when I got my first fight I don't remember the age that I actually was but I got in a fight with the two twins. Not not your first fight but the first fight you saw on TV. Oh, I thought you're talking about the first fight I got into us and say that was the twins next door. Well tell us about the twins the twins. Don't ever fight twins.
Let me tell you that. When I got the fight with one of the twins, I started winning. And the other twin hit me in the face with a snow shovel and mess my face up knocked my teeth out did a bunch of stuff to beat. Yeah, don't fight twins. Remember that everybody? First lesson I ever saw. Yeah, I was a young kid. And I was at my grandmother's house and all my uncles were there and it was an ollie fight. And I just remember the energy in the room and the buzz and how everybody was reacting to this
fight. And I loved it. I loved every minute of it. And that's what started to give me you know, sort of the direction that I wanted to go in and life I knew that I love fighting and I loved everything about it. And
by the time I was 19, I knew that that was exactly what I wanted to do forever. Right? So let's go back. What were you like, as a person or as a kid? We all know what you're like today. You're pretty famous guy. We all see your social media. You're tough. You're funny, great promoter. But what were you like between five and 15? Well, thank you.
Five and 15. I don't know if I'd said, I'm not going. Were you popular? I mean, yeah, I had lots of friends. And I was very outgoing. And it's like, I don't know if you've ever experienced this before. But I, when I got older. I talked to some people that I grew up with and went to high school with, and they talked about how bad they hated high school. I hated high school because I hated school. Right? I didn't like school. Yeah, high school wise, but we weren't talking about
that in a minute. Right. But school, school is fun. I love school. You know, you learn so much in school, forget about the knowledge side of it, you know, people and personalities and, and things like that. My school experience was incredible. I talked to these people that I felt, had the same type of they were my friends. And I felt that they have the tapes, same type of school experience that I did. And I find out that that wasn't true.
It's like today, we were just talking about this the other night at dinner, me and my buddies. So there was this. There was this guy named Barry Bogart. I don't know, whatever happened to Barry. But he was a football player. He was a year older than me. Now, me and Barry. Both grew up in families that didn't have money. And we went to Bishop Gorman here in Las Vegas. And it's a it's a wealthy school, a lot of wealthy kids went to
school. And you know, it's one of those schools if you didn't have the right clothes, or the right car, and all that kind of stuff. You felt I never felt that way. That shit never bothered me. But Barry Bogart, you know, I don't know how this works. But you know, to pay for school. He had to work in the kitchen. Right? So think about that. Think about how that must feel to be a kid and have to work in the kitchen and serve your other classmates. While
you're at school, right? The balls it takes the heart to you know, to get up every day and do that embarrassing shit. Exactly. Right. And Barry Bogart did that. So, you know, we're kids, we're punks. We're stupid. So we're at the table one day and the guys eat his fries. And there's a Harris fry. And I said, Oh, Barry Barger is probably you know, in your fries. So I'm walking down the
hallway. And when you think about this story, if this was today, right, Barry Bogart, his parents would get called and he'd get kicked out of school, whatever. Barry Bogart comes out of nowhere, grabs me by the neck, slams me against the lockers and says, If I ever hear you talking shit about me again, right? And while he's saying this, he's on belt, buckling my belt and unbutton my pants. Remember the old school ketchup
bottles. He literally pulls on goes and empties that thing right in my fucking underwear. Right? And I'm like, I'll never say another fucking thing about you again. I go to the bathroom. Fucking take my shit off, throw him away. And go back to fucking school. You know what I didn't do? I didn't tell my mother. I didn't tell the teacher. I didn't tell the story to like fucking three days ago. But that's how you handle shit back then, you know, today, it would be considered bullying. No, you
know what? I opened my mouth and talk shit about a guy who could have fucking murdered me. Right? And he came over and handed you know what, and props to Barry Bogart, because Barry Bogart could have kicked the shit out of me. But he didn't kick the shit out of me. Gave me a little fucking humiliation, and sent me on my way and said Don't ever do this again. And guess what I never did again. I never said a fucking word. I didn't even mention baribeau God's name again until like three days ago.
So I don't even know how we got on the story. But yeah, very bow. God, I hope you're doing well out there, buddy. So when you empty ketchup in someone's pants, I mean, how do you get the route? I certainly like you don't go robos underwear away. It's like one chapter decor and put your pants back on and you finish your fucking day and you keep your mouth shut. That's what you do. You know what I
mean? If you're acting like a punk, and you're talking shit about a kid who has the heart to go in there every day and do what he did to have to go to that school and play football at that school. Not to mention the fact that he was a big, tough fucking football player. Right? Yeah. Keep your fucking mouth shut. Or God knows what he's gonna do to you next. Right? That's how that's how justice was served back in the 80s. So you're a boxing fan. What happened to fucking Barry Bogart today if
that happened? That was in the school. He'd have to go through psych evaluation and they'd have to fucking be kicked out of school. You're arrested. Yeah.
they'd probably get sued. You know what I mean? That's what's wrong with society today. We need more baribeau guards. You love boxing. You loved it as a kid. You saw Muhammad Ali and 17 years old. You're a senior in high school. He got marvelous Marvin Hagler 36, two and two record. You've got sugar 135 and one. You said it was a life changing moment. And you said, You've watched that fight a million times? What was so great about that fight? How can you really watch a fight
a million times? Yes, because I taped it. Watch it a million times. I mean, I take it on VHS. Because it was so good. I loved everything about that fight. Sugar Ray Leonard walked out to I can feel it Coming in the air tonight.
And the buzz and the electricity around the fight. And then the fight itself. I mean, you know, Marvin Hagler is trying to take his head off. Sugar Ray is doing what Sugar Ray does hitting him with combinations stealing the end of every round with flurries. It was it was a it was one of those matchups where you had the two absolute best in the world. And that the fight the fight that all the fans wanted to say everything
about that fight was amazing. I from Detroit, Tommy Hearns was the guy and we all wanted to see Tommy against both these guys. We did Tommy lost every fight.
Unfortunate as a Detroit but Hager was amazing. Love Hagler he was he was an absolute savage. He was like, he was like the smaller version of Mike Tyson before Mike Tyson. You know what I mean? He was mean, he was nasty. People were afraid of them. And, yeah, I was on a flight from Detroit. It's a long time ago, maybe 20 years ago. And I'm in coach, right. I'm in law school. I'm a coach. And it's a red, I hate red eyes.
And Tommy Hearns is sitting next to me and coach, which I thought, gosh, you know, the demise of one of the greatest fighters of all time, as no money, I assume, because he's he's sitting in a coach. And he was in the middle seat, I actually had the aisle. And I thought, gosh, that's really interesting. And what I noticed is his hands were twitching. I thought, gosh, that's, that was
really sad to me to see. I mean, obviously, people get sick head injuries, but I just thought, gosh, you know, this was my idol, one of them growing up. And, you know, here he is sitting next to me on a plane, right on the red eye. And I think a lot of us, I mean, we when you see guys like that, that were that we grew up in idolized and
but when you talk about fighters, that's, that's you don't realize what the sport of fighting takes a lot of these people away from a lot of these guys early on, would have been dead or in jail, if it wasn't for fighting. So they got to live a life that they they would have never even dreamed of, because of how they were built, and mentally, how tough they were and what they were capable of doing with their hands. And the same thing applies today.
To MMA and other combat sports, it's, it's it's funny, because these people are not wired, the way that we are wired. They are very special. Human beings. They're so different. It's like I hear a lot of people say, I feel sorry for them that they have to do that. So it's fucking funny because they feel sorry for you, that you sit in the car and bumper to bumper traffic every day, and you go sit in your fucking cubicle, and get yelled at by some fucking 22 year old who just fucking graduated
college and you're 42. And you know, the list goes on and on. But these guys, they go in, they fight, they get paid a chunk of money, and then they go off and do whatever they want to do, until they have to fight again and make more money. It's actually a very fascinating psyche and lifestyle and just the way that they're they're built. Right Mike Tyson was on my show. And I know, you know, Mike, and the story there is incredible. I mean, there's a lot about Mike that people don't
know he's gone broke. He said more times than he could possibly count is very interesting. Now, you know, see, he's got a big fight coming up. And what do you think about that fight? And why is he doing it for the money? And he, he listened. He's definitely doing it for the money. But he doesn't need the money. Everybody thinks that Mike needs needs. Mike's doing very well. Yeah, we become I've become super tight with his wife, Kiki. They're amazing
people, amazing people. And Kiki is one of the greatest things that ever happened to Mike No. And by the way, when they met he had $80 in the bank, which a lot of people don't know. Yeah. Kiki is amazing. It's one of the best things that ever happen to him. And, you know, they do very well. And Mike did a great job of sort of rebuilding himself. You know. The thing that I love the most about Mike Tyson is his brutal
honesty. You ask him a question, and it could be something it you probably wouldn't tell anybody. He'll lay it all right out there man, he is one of the most honest human beings ever. And when it comes to fighting his fight IQ is off the charts. And I love everything about Mike Tyson now. So we'll talk about Mike now a little bit. You're an entrepreneur, I'm an
entrepreneur. And I think when we think about starting new businesses, or buying new businesses, we think about alright, this thing hasn't come out yet, or I can make something a lot better. So boxing for a long time sucked. And there are a lot of things that you didn't like about it growing up, tell us why didn't like about it, HBO and your good friend, Larry Merchant and, and what you were thinking at that time and, and did what you saw, then did you think Alright, someday, I want
to make this better? Yes. There were a lot of things. If you look at HBO, which was the gold standard boxing at the time, the only thing that really had changed in 30 years was HD. I mean, it was all the same shit. Saying even the same announcers
same everything. And I never loved boxing's announcing because you always had these guys that, first of all, I'm not buying the pay per view, for the commentary, buying the pay per view for the stars, buying the pay per view for the fighters, I'm buying the pay per view for the fight. And you got these guys on there that are just talking shit the entire time about these fighters and speaking negatively about them.
Whether it was Larry Merchant, you know, jumping in the ring and getting into an argument with Floyd Mayweather and saying, if I was 30 years younger, I kick your ass, I can't see that one. This type of stuff used to drive me crazy. So when I would watch HBO boxing, I would mute the commentary and just watch the fight. So that obviously production was a huge, huge part of it, too.
Yeah, but there were a lot of things about but but there were obviously a lot of things about boxing that I love to like the way that when we when guys walk in, through the bowels of the of the arena for the main event, and then come through the tunnel. And that's that's 100% boxing. And I've never changed that we kind of goofed around with some fireworks and shit back in the old days. But that's goofy. And I don't even know why I tried that. But I did.
And then I just settled with the traditional old style boxing walkouts, I love them the best they give you goosebumps. And when you get that energy of a big fight, and you're waiting for them, you know, the Read is dark and you're waiting for the first guy to walk and then all of a sudden he pops up on the screen from the back of the arena. Place goes nuts, and then they go nuts again, when he walks through the tunnel and then they get the last pop. When they get up onto the Octagon and
walk into the cage. It's just fucking beautiful, electrifying. Beautiful. I absolutely love it.
Sir, this fancy high school and you got kicked out twice before you graduated. You tried college Quincy College UMass. UMass, you dropped out after a semester you worked as an Asphalt Paver. A Bellman you worked as a doorman, a doorman and a bouncer. Bouncer Yeah, was about your bouncer at the Black Rose bar. Wow, man.
Did your homework and then you were a doorman at the Four Seasons Hotel. So tell us about your top cider shoes and what your friend who has another doorman told you that day. The doorman? I was a doorman, a Bellman at the Boston Harbor hotel and the doorman was from the Boston hotels kid named Joe calf, who was actually now a promoter and in Boston, but I literally was standing in the lobby one day,
you know? It was you better these hotels, you walk into the hotel, and the guys are standing up against the marble like this all day. And can I help you with your bag, sir? And, you know, standing in there one day, and I'm literally going What the fuck am I doing here? What and I'm, I'm 19 years old. I make great money cash every day. Plus you get a paycheck. Let's walk away. What was great money back then. Like what's great? Well, you could leave with 150 bucks a
day. And cash. Yeah, in 1988. That's gonna mean 150 A day in cash. Plus you made minimum wage, which was like, fucking four bucks or whatever it was back then. Right? And you got health insurance 401 K, dental, all the other stuff that you think everybody wants for the rest of their life? And it just wasn't for me, I I didn't want to do it. And I said, I'm 19 I got nothing to lose, right? If I go out and try this, the worst thing that can happen is I fail. And I'm back
in here carrying bags again. I mean, I can do this when I'm when I'm fucking 40 I might as well go for it now. So there was So you know, and back then especially in the 80s, where do you go? You don't go to college for this, right? So I sought out this kid named Peter Walsh, who is a legend fighting legend in Boston. And this wasn't a guy he went looking for. Let's just put it that way. So I went out, started looking for Peter, I find him and I said, Hey, I know this is crazy.
But I want to work for you. I want to learn, I want you to teach me everything about the fight game, and I'll work for free. Now, South Boston at this time, was fucking crazy. I mean, this place was a crazy place. His wife thought I was a Fed, his wife thought I was a fucking federal agent. So like, What guy comes out of nowhere, right? asked you to do this and says, uh, work for free. None of this makes sense. Guys. Gotta be fucking FBI. And he took me in
and the rest is history. I think it's an interesting strategy. I'm in venture capital business, the investment business, I have a small firm, we hire amazing people, it's hard to get a job with us. I think a great strategy for young people is to do exactly that. I work for free. You don't have to pay me
take a chance on me. And let me prove yourself is that your advice to people even who want to come work with you because I know young kid who wants to work for you and is working with you that one summer, and I think he gave that pitch to someone at your company. I would never let anybody work for me for free. But what we do is we have probably one of the greatest intern programs in all sports, when you come work for us, you
work on real shit. Like we don't have you running coffee and making copies and shit like that. You come in and you work on real things, like kids who come into the legal department are working on real legal stuff. You know, production, kids are working on real production, social media, the list goes on and on. And and I meet as soon as you come into the intern program, you start by a meet, you have a meeting with me, the whole team, we talk and
everything else. And then when you exit, they all do a meeting with me, it is one of my favorite things I love meeting with these young kids from different parts of of the country, from different schools, listening to what their goals are, and what their dreams aren't, and listening to their questions. And the other thing that I like to do if you're not in college, like lots of people will hit me up. And like, Hey,
this is my product. And um, you know, and I tried to help them and you know, whether it's posting something or giving them advice or money, whatever it might be, I love giving back and trying to help these young kids that want to be entrepreneurs.
You know, make it I'm, we have a summer intern program as well. It's 36 kids. It's a 12 week formal program, I spend 60 to 90 minutes a day with the interns talking about lessons how I did it. Spend more time talking about my failures than successes because I believe we learned more from our failures and successes, we got 2000 applications this summer. So far. It's 4000 applications so far, or we got 4000 applications so far. These guys run the program, but it's life
changing. There needs to be more things like this for kids and more opportunities to learn and
yeah, I love that kind of stuff. Man. I love trying to help these young kids in this society that we're in now with all this woke bullshit and all these fucking you know what, I can't stand this whole you know, these companies letting people stay home and work at home. Yeah, doesn't work. You get Yeah, does not work. And the the people that the employees that are staying at home, they get fucking nothing, you get nothing
out of it. So today, I was late to this podcast, you know, I was late to this podcast, because this is what happens to me every fucking day. I go to work. And I've listed shit that needs to be done that day. Right? You know how much stuff pops up that is not on the list that we we take on head to head and we sit in a room with stuff that we didn't expect to happen. Everybody comes up with ideas. And every day, it just gets bigger and it gets better.
Because when you're in the office everyday grind with like minded people that love what they do as much as you do. Great Shit happens. Now when you're at home, you have nothing but distractions you're not get you're not getting the best out of yourself. You're not delivering the best of you to the company, and the company isn't delivering the best of them to you. Nobody fucking wins
when you're at home. And every time I say this, you get all these these fucking jerk offs on the internet going, Oh, that's bullshit. You don't know what you're talking about. I know exactly what I'm talking talking about. And if you're from if you're if you have a company where everybody's working at home, God fucking bless you. Okay? You're not making as much money as you could. Your employees aren't gonna make as much money as they could. And it's not a good thing
for anybody. Right? You can't build a successful company. You need the DNA of your team. I mean, everyone needs to be there. My team. We have a small team. Everyone needs to be there small office. It's it's critical to our efficiency and our success as well. 100% and share
out to Matt Hickerson and Lucas Martin. They came right out of my intern program superstars. So super super pumped to have them on my team. That's awesome. I got a bunch of interns that work for me too. Now it's it's the best. I love it. That's awesome. So you're doing well in Boston? You open a couple of gyms and then what happened? Why did you move out to Vegas?
Um, crazy fucking story by the way. Yeah. Listen, I got stuck. I got some people always ask me. Why don't you write a book? I said, because if I wrote a book, people wouldn't believe half the fucking shit in the book to be honest with you. But yeah, I had a run in with, with why these guys? And why do you have for people who don't know? Yeah. Why do balls are one of the one of the biggest gangsters of all time in American history. Ran South Boston and other parts of Boston
for many, many years. in cahoots with the FBI. Right. And that's why his wife paid his wife thought I was fed, because they, you know, that kind of stuff was going on in Boston at that time. And, yeah, I had a run in with these guys. And basically, they said, You know, I owe the money. I didn't know money. And they gave me the they basically said, I got a call at my house one day, and he said, You got till tomorrow at like one o'clock to pay us. I said, What are you going to find
out. And I literally hung up the phone, picked it back up called delta and flew back to Vegas. And the craziest thing about that story is, and you know this better than anybody, everything in life is about timing. And had that not happened. I probably wouldn't have gone back to Vegas. When I did. Then I come back. And you just you start to put the pieces of the puzzle together of the series of events that lead you to sitting in the chair right now talking to you.
And it's crazy. When you start to break it down and think about it me and Lorenzo Fertitta have sat around and had a few drinks some nights and talked about all the things that align to get us together again, and to do the things that we've done. I mean, those buddy of mine named Adam Corrigan, that I went to school with here. He had money, I didn't have money. Here's a really good kid. Fucking picked me up and drove me to school every day. Now, I had a blanket policy, you know, when you're like
25 to 30. Everybody knows starts getting married. I went to nobody's wedding. blanket policy, don't give a shit who you are not going to your wedding. I'm busy. I'm building the business. I got shit to do. There's no fucking way that I wasn't gonna go down on Corrigan's wedding. This kid drove me to school every day. Love them. So my wife had something else going on. She couldn't go the only thing worse than going into a fucking wedding is going to a wedding by yourself. Okay, so I
go to his wedding. And I run into Frank and Lorenzo. You hadn't seen him for like four years, right? No, I hadn't seen him since. I'd seen him since 1987. And this is 1996. So almost 10 years, okay. And I run into them at the wedding. I would have never ran into them anywhere else. We talked that day or during the boxing this that we'd love to train with you. We've been together ever since that night. So I've literally been together ever since that night so I don't go to that
wedding. That doesn't happen. Timing is everything. Timing is everything. So one night you're out with these guys. You're the Hard Rock Hotel. You haven't drinks for them. You see Tito Ortiz and John Lewis? No, we see John Lewis. Oh, you see John Lewis? Yep. Okay, what happened next? So it's me and Frank Fertitta. See John Lewis. Frank Fertitta goes That's that ultimate fighting guy. I said, Yeah, I know. He says, I've always wanted to learn ground fighting. I said, Well, let's
go. I'll introduce him. We go over we start talking to John. We set up a lesson for Monday. And we tell Lorenzo Lorenzo comes and does the lesson with us. That's it. We become addicted to jujitsu. We start training for three, four days a week, John Lewis starts to bring fighters in that we start to train with, we start to realize, Wow, these guys are pretty smart. And they're this and they're that and we start to fall in love with the sport and
that's a wrap. We ended up we ended up buying the UFC just off that night out at the Hard Rock again, timing. The fact that me and Frank out of all the places to go in Las Vegas. We ended up with the Hard Rock. John Lewis is at the Hard Rock the same time we are Frank says Samba John Lewis I know it's just when you start to put all this shit together. It's crazy. UCS first fight November 12 1994. About this. These guys start coming in and training with us and for
whatever fucking reason. Chuck Liddell and Tito Ortiz asked me to be their managers and I start managing them. So when I start managing them, the old UFC had done some shit to Tito. I get into a huge contract battle with the old owner of the UFC by meyerwitz. Finally, Bob meyerwitz flips out on me and says, You know what, there is no more fucking money, okay, there's no money. I don't even know if I have enough money to put on the next event. I said, got it.
There you go hung up the phone, take the backup called the Renzo, he was in Florida. I said, I just fucking hung up with Bob Meyers from the UFC. They're going out of fucking business man. I betcha we could buy this thing. And I think we should fucking odds of that. I mean, all these little things that you string together. And you know, it's crazy. But if I didn't manage, Tito and Chuck would never happen. So first fight of USC, November 12 1993. As you said, it wasn't doing
well. It was kind of not kind of it wasn't the shedder people didn't really like the sport. You bought it? For $2 million
to 90%. You on 10%, you're 33 years old, and they put you in charge. You'd never built anything of scale. You'd never really run anything. What was it that they saw in you where they say, Dana, it's yours to run? Well, I ran.
You know, I ran gyms and small time businesses never at a level of the amount of money that we were dealing with. But Frank Lorenzo and I had never produced anything. We knew nothing about production whatsoever. We'd never put on a live event. We'd never done anything to ship. But we were hardcore fans, and we knew what we liked. We knew what we wanted. We knew what we wanted
to see. Now it was just about, you know, learning all these different pieces of the puzzle, and then building the right team. What were you what were they paying you at the time when you started this thing? I own 10% of the UFC I was making 100,000 a year.
So enough to live? Yeah. I was taking a pay cut from the job that the business that I owned before that. So there were so many problems with the UFC when you bought it first was the stigma, right? People thought that the fighters were despicable, terrible human beings, but tell us and the sport was dismissed and the sports and tell us about the reality and tell us about Chuck Liddell and actually what his background was. So Chuck Liddell
was one of the guys that I managed. And what's crazy as the UFC didn't want him. I was trying to get Chuck Liddell back in the UFC, but they weren't interested in him. And he ended up becoming one of our all time biggest stars. And, but Chuck Liddell, you know, he looked like a, like an Axe Murderer, you know, afraid and Mohawk and the Chinese writing on his head and the mustache and beard. And, but he was he graduated from Cal Poly, with a degree in accounting. with honors. Yeah, with honors.
That's right. And that was the case with most of these guys. Most of these guys were college educated, because they came from wrestling. And the other thing about these guys was if you were in martial arts, when you were a kid, your family had money you came from from well to do family, because martial arts wasn't cheap to put your kids into. So the original owners had basically marketed this thing as the brutal, most bloody violent sport in the world. To men under
the cage. One man leaves that type of marketing work for them for a little while, but it ended up backfiring, because Senator John McCain went after him and got him ripped off cable. And when we bought the company, when you think about this, right, you as a grown adult, didn't have the option to go on Pay Per View and buy this Porn was on pay per view. But UFC was not allowed. And when we bought this thing, that's why everybody thought we
were insane. Our goal was to get this thing on free television when it wasn't allowed on Pay Per View. So when you really look at it, when people say, Oh, you got it for 2 million. That's incredible. Yeah. People hated this thing. And nobody thought this would work. We were the redheaded stepchild of the Fertitta portfolio, all the guys that ran the you know, the business side of the Fertitta family funding, hated the UFC, hated it, and knew it was never going to work. When he knew is
in trouble. You call them you said, Hey, I think there's something here. We should look at this. So is it a good idea to base business decisions, career decisions based on your gut? 100% 100% That's all guys. Listen, that's different than what most people would say. 100% Listen, Frank and funny. We're talking about this now too. There are people out there that have graduated from big schools, right? Smart people that were involved in the UFC.
That really had little to do with the UFC success they were part of the ones that are running around using those credentials now like they, you know, that they had something to do with the UFC. A lot of these guys that are you know, that have these unbelievable college credentials. couldn't run a fucking lemonade stand. Okay, let's This is a fucking fact.
And It's all about gut, listen, you got to, I didn't go to college and you know, bring me into the fucking the budget meeting and have me rip through the numbers and do all this shit. We're in big fucking trouble, okay? But if you have the vision, you know what you know what you're looking for and you know what you want to do, you take a guy like me, right, and you build a fucking team around yourself that can handle the things that you
aren't capable of doing. But to be honest, that you're not capable of doing I am the vision for the fucking sport, um, the vision for the fucking brand. And as long as you get people on board with you, that understand what your vision is, and believe in the vision like you do, then you just get in there every day and you fucking grind until it happens. But you don't have to be most of the guys. Most of the guys that are super successful that I've seen in life have the same
story. They fucking hate in school, hated school for one reason or another whatever it was the structure of school, or school itself or the classes that they had to take that were bullshit, for whatever reason, a lot of successful guys hate school. And, you know, there's an argument there. That school, in many ways teaches you to work for somebody else. You know what I mean? And
I hate it fucking school. For me. My schooling was my ticket to something else. I figured if I do well in college, which I did University of Michigan greatest school on Earth, and I went to law school at Northwestern, I got I'm going to graduate, make $70,000 a year. This is 1993. I'm 55 years old, I was all the money in the world. There's nothing I can't do. I'm gonna save. I'm gonna save and save and save live well beneath my means I live next to the jack in the box. He's to smell that shit
all day long. And I'm going to save I'm going to bet on myself. But I needed to have the money to bet on myself. I didn't have another plan beforehand. So I think schooling is valuable. I think it's one of the most important investments we can make within ourselves. But I think you're right. I think a lot of people don't love school. I like college. It was fun. I was a shy kid came out of my shell became more personable and
a lot more popular. I was a very nerdy kid when I was younger, and then law school I fucking hated Northwestern is a great school. I'm on the board today. I have only great things to say about it, man, I fucking hate it what I learned that it was just a drag after read that shit every day read boring case law thing and kind of the last thing in the world I want to do is be a lawyer.
So my oldest son goes to USD, he graduates this year. He's devastated that he's graduating this year, he loves college so much. Yeah. So you know, there are different types of people that like different and he's gonna go to grad school, he's gonna come back here and work for a year, he's probably gonna go to grad school, and he's sort of still figuring out who he is and what he wants to do for the rest of his life. But I think right now, he'd love to be a professional college
student. I call him Tommy boys want to fucking leave college. But, you know, he's having a blast down there. Kids got a great life, I would probably stay down there too. Yeah, but, you know, different people are wired different ways. And one of the things about me is, I never really, I was never really good at working for somebody else. I fucking I didn't like it. I didn't like, like, like the hotel business. These are things but these were good learning experiences for me
too. And the way that not only the stuff that I told you about the type of father I am to my kids, but also the type of leader I am at the job used to drive me crazy as work started. And I would say your nine to five guy, right? You got to be to work at nine. If you showed up at fucking 903 You're getting written up. And you're getting you know, I hated that shit. For somebody to talk to you like that, and treat you like that. And the other thing that they did in the hotel
business I hated. It was like, if you don't like it, there's 15 other guys waiting behind you for your fucking job. Really? That's how important I am to this fucking company. There's 15 Guys right behind me. They're waiting for my job. Fuck you. So that never worked for me. At the UFC, you're an adult. You're a fucking grown up. And since you work here, you made it through a very extensive hiring process. So you got to be one of the best in the world right? You know what you have to do? You
know what needs to be done? We do fights every single week every Saturday we got a fight going on right? You know what your job is? And you know what your work is? And you know what I don't want you to do. I don't want you to miss one fucking kids practice. I don't want you to miss one of your kids games. I don't want you to miss a play any of that shit. If you got to come in if works at nine I'm in there every day at fucking nine
o'clock right? If I'm in there and I but you got wanting to fucking do get shit done, and then come in and get your job done. That's it. Don't treat people with disrespect. And don't treat people like the fucking little kids, you know. And in the hotel business, you'd always have these kids that just graduated college and 2324 hour fucking old, y'all went to graduate college coming in, and they would get in this
management program. And you'd have these guys that have been there 15 years, and some new kids coming in over them and, you know, treating them like shit, and acting like if you don't like it, then we'll get somebody else to fill your job. How do you ever get anybody to jump out of bed in the morning
and be excited to go to fucking work when that's what you're walking into? You know, I don't like that shit. Let's go back to the UFC and some of the struggles because I think it's so important. One of the goals of my podcast is to motivate, inspire people. And we all have so many challenges that we have to get through. We've talked about some of yours, and I want to talk about some of the struggles that the league had. There are some bad dudes
involved. When you bought the company, you had sports promoters, blowing up cars. You personally had some crazy guy calling you a punk motherfucker, who was threatening to kill you every single day? How did you clean all that stuff up? And where are you scared for your life. And this dude's calling you he must be psycho. He's calling you every day. Ya know, he was a psycho.
There was a company called affliction. They did clothing and they got into the fight business. And this guy's name was Todd beard. And he would get drunk or drugged up or whatever the hell this guy did every night, and would start texting me, you know, you know, threatening to kill me and all this stuff. He was a competitor. And then the other one you're talking about with these guys.
And like Amsterdam, who were rival promoters, they were like bombing each other and shooting each other and doing all this crazy shit. But the fight business has always been that type of a business. There's always been gangsters and, you know, those type of people involved in the fight business. And yeah, I mean, from day one, everything we did was by the book. And we basically turned it into an absolutely legitimate business where everything we do is, is aboveboard by the book.
And, you know, there's also in boxing, if you ever notice everybody's always suing everybody, every 10 minutes, you know,
we do very well in lawsuits, because everything that we do is, is by the book. So many successful businesses go through near death experiences, our technology company went from $345 A share down to 49 cents a share. So I think that's we lost 99.988% of our market value went from 35 billion down to 49 million at some point. You also had a near death experience there for Tito's had to pump in another $40 million after they bought the company. Tell us about a conversation you had
with Lorenzo. How you almost died. Spike TV, and then the Ultimate Fighter Hail Mary.
Yeah, so one point, at this one, I don't remember what we were 30 something million in the hole. And basically Lorenzo calls me one day is like, I can't keep doing this, you know, with my family's money. You know, it's me and my brother funding this thing. And they have a lot of money. But still $40 million is a shit ton of money to anybody. Yeah, no matter how much money you have. And at that time, I mean, the teachers weren't. It's not like
they were they were hurting. But you know, they didn't have the kind of money that they have. Now, station casinos was the company that they owned. Yep. And it was a very big casino at the time. And over the last 25 years, him and his brother have been building this thing into what it is today. I mean, I want to say, back then with the UFC, they had probably, I don't know, maybe four or five casinos at the time, it might have been less. And you know, they were just in the middle of
this building phase. So he calls me one day and says, you know, go out there and see what you can get for this thing. So I make all these calls. And the end of the night I call them and I said 678 million, you know, we're 30 Something in the hole. From who?
There was a guy there were a couple of different guys at the time, but one of them was Dan Lambert, this guy, Dan Lambert, who basically is he's just wealthy guy down in Florida, who is an incredible human being who has literally done more for people in the sport than fucking I don't know who man than us. I mean, other than us. Nobody's probably done more for people in this sport than Dan Lambert. without
expecting a penny back. He's just he's super passionate about the sport, but he was definitely one of the guys that I was talking to, to buy it. And you know, the Runza says, okay, and we hang up in the next morning, Lorenzo calls me and basically says, fuck it. Let's keep going. So that whole night, I thought this is that it's a wrap, you know, probably end up looking trying to sell this thing to Dan or somebody else and, you know, Spike TV, and the guys in the truck and a
change in management. So what's that? And the change in management, the Spike TV toggle talk about what what happened, oh, man, this can't be happening. So we start realizing we got to get on to free TV. And the way to do that would be a reality show because reality shows just started to take off and people were into them. So it was a great way for us to, I always call it the Trojan horse like
fighting is on TV. But you know, it's wrapped up in a package like reality, and the fights wouldn't be live, they would be taped, because the network was obviously terrified of live fights and what could possibly happen. So we, this new network, again, everything's about timing, this new network, the network for men, Spike TV launches, we're like, this is perfect for us. So we go down, we pitch them, they hated it. They didn't like it. And these guys couldn't get out
of the room fast enough. We were in LA. And they were going to a Dodgers baseball game, they couldn't get out of the room fast enough to go to the game. So they don't like it, whatever, we go back to them and said, Well, what if we pay for it, the for TVs put up the 10 million bucks for the show. They liked that idea a lot better. So we ended up filming the first season of The Ultimate Fighter, we got all these promises in
place and whatever. And the President of the network at the time, I'll be hacked, gets fired halfway through our season, our seasons going like this. Normally, when you have a season, like we were having, you're on fucking buses, billboards, it's everywhere. We were fucking nowhere. And, you know, I didn't even know they were even going to commit to the stuff for the finale that they had said they were going to commit to, I keep flying back to New York, they won't even meet
with me. It was an absolute disaster. Then the finale happens. And when forrest and Stefan fought as soon as that fight was over, I was like, I don't even give a shit. If we do a new deal with these guys. We made it we're gonna end up somewhere now. We ended up going out in the alley with Spike TV and literally did the deal for the next season and our television deal on a napkin and the alley because of the fight. Talk about the fight what happened and what was so unusual about that fight?
Well, I mean, the fight at the time on Spike TV, and you're talking about probably the peak for cable, then, you know, cable television. And when these two started fighting, the place was going crazy. They were stomping their feet. And that was before social media. So people were calling people going to you watching this fucking fight right now. And the number grew at a point during that fight. It Out rated the Masters on CBS. So it was huge. And it became viral for what viral
meant for that day and age. Of all the struggles when you're building that thing. It's amazing success story. What was the darkest moment? The darkest, I don't know if I ever had a darkest moment. I mean, you know, we had moments like Lorenzo calling and saying, Hey, see, we can sell this thing for we had. You know, we had battles like the in New York, the Las Vegas culinary union was keeping us out of New York with a corrupt politician in New York. I mean, we had to deal with all this
kind of shit. Anyway, I was kind of used to it. But I love that type of shit. I love adversity. I love negativity. I love people coming at you every day and trying to, you know, fucking take you out. I live for that shit. So it was I was built for this. I loved every minute of it. And I would never say there was ever a dark moment. Because if you want to talk about the darkest moment we ever had, it would have to be COVID. Right? Going through COVID Nobody can run their fucking business.
COVID never made sense to me. Wait a minute. If this is fucking deadly, as they say it is fucking dead anyway. We're dead. We're gonna hide in the house and then fucking put a mask on. And that's it. And that's makes no sense to me. And go in and take my mask off and eat around all these other people and then put it back on and walk out. But we're all right. Come on, man. None of this should ever made sense to me. So my thing was we're going
through fucking COVID Right. And what was amazing was if my hatred for the media wasn't bad enough going into COVID it multiplied by 1000 going through and coming out of COVID we would literally sit in the office for hours and get all these plans in place. Right? Me and my lawyer. By the time I would leave I live to Only minutes from the office. By the time I would pull in my fucking driveway, my lawyer would call me and say the whole thing just fucking fell apart. How's that even possible? It's
been 20 minutes. And these media members, whenever we were announced, we were doing something, they would all flood that state with calls, saying how can you fund me like trying to disrupt it? So it got to a point where when I got a deal done, and we were going to announce a fight, I would announce the fight. And they would say, Well, where is it? I'd say it's on ESPN. That's where it is. You can't fucking go anyway. Don't worry about where it is. You don't need to
know where it is. It's going to be on ESPN live. That's all you need to know. And then I had the New York Times, every fucking week just coming after me. And all these other guys. It's, it's like, I don't know, man. It was it was very, very weird. You want to talk about dark? Nothing darker than the whole COVID Bullshit. But you you were the only league who who fought during it. I mean, people were grateful for
you. And that example for everybody rolled over, everybody rolled over and everybody was willing to say, okay, everything that we worked so hard for our whole lives, and we're willing to lay off fucking massive percentages of their fucking companies, people who've been with them for fucking years, people who miss kids practices Miss kids plays to help build this fucking business. You just become a number on a fucking spreadsheet that has to go away.
It's just yeah, it's just everything about that's the only dark period I can ever think about. But they're gonna help you because you're the only game in town at that point. They're like, Oh, UFC. Jeez, they're the only people there crazy. Yeah, we we came out of it. We came out of the great and it all worked out our fan base grew 68% fights that should have done 300,000 Pay Per View buys, we're
doing a million. I mean, the list goes on and on of how the company excelled and grew, didn't lay off one person didn't do any of that shit. But when you really look at what happened during that time, the lies that were told, the people that were pointing fingers, the people that were trying to shame people, the doctors that were destroyed, the fucking it was it was just, it's probably one of the darkest times in American history to be honest with you. It's, it's
absolutely fucking gross. And not to mention the fact that at the end of the day, the way I look at it is we're fucking Americans. Man, this this country was built off fucking people just going, you know, doing what people say couldn't be done. And working together, no matter what, where you're from, or what race you are, what color you are, or what religion you are. This is a place where we just fucking grind and we do it together this melting pot of
humans. And it felt like during that era, all of that stuff was trying to be stripped from us and ripped apart and division and infighting in America. And I feel like we're at a place right now where we're starting to pull out of that. It's also the people are starting to fucking wake up even the the nuttiest of the nutty are starting to wake up. Thanks for listening to part one of my amazing show with Dana
White, the president of USC. Be sure to tune in next week to part two of my incredible interview with Dana