Perhaps Mike Tyson forgot in the moment that he was talking to a kid?
You never know what type of answer you might get from [autotag]Mike Tyson[/autotag] if you ask him a question, and it doesn’t matter how old you are. A kid interviewer found out in an all-too-real way this week.
The child, who appears to be no older than 13, got some on-on-one time with Tyson on Wednesday either before or after the press conference to promote his Netflix boxing match with Jake Paul. What could’ve (and even should’ve) been a fun and light interview took an unexpected dark turn when she asked Tyson about his legacy. Things got a little too deep for a kid her age!
Here’s her question:“In your return to the ring for this fight, you are setting a monumental opportunity for kids my age to see the legend Mike Tyson in the ring for the first time. What type of legacy would you like to leave behind when it’s all said and done?”
Whoever got Tyson to agree to this interview, there’s no way they expected it to go like THAT. Talking about death and dropping F-bombs in an interview with a little girl? Yikes!
Perhaps Tyson forgot in the moment that he was talking to a kid.
“For better or worse, this is who we are. And for better or worse, Netflix and Jake Paul are just the latest who figured out how to benefit.”
IRVING, Texas — In another year, maybe even in another week, the spectacle and absurdity of this might have felt different. What are you supposed to say about a 58-year-old sports icon on a slickly-lit stage with a 27-year-old “content creator,” on the brink of a boxing match whose only relevance is the curiosity of a country with an insatiable appetite for spectacle and a media platform willing to pay massive amounts of money to help us scratch the itch?
What are you supposed to think? What are you supposed to see?
Friday’s fight between [autotag]Mike Tyson[/autotag] and [autotag]Jake Paul[/autotag] is a circus. It is also America.
That may not have seemed so clear if this fight had taken place when it was originally scheduled back in July. Now, a little more than a week after a presidential election that has put Donald Trump into power for a second time, it is undeniable.
Whatever side of the political divide you occupy, there is no mistaking the cross-currents that helped elect him for a second time reflect a society that has changed in many of the same ways that are turning an exhibition boxing match between two people who are not really professional boxers into the most culturally relevant boxing event of the past decade.
This fight isn’t merely happening outside the rules and norms of a sport with a wide berth for lawlessness and corruption, it’s happening expressly because the cult of absurdity that occurs daily on social media is now the most powerful and lucrative force in American life.
“A lot of fighters go in there and have boring-ass fights, like Floyd Mayweather,” Paul said Wednesday at the official pre-fight press conference, referring to the all-time great who went 50-0 as a professional and won 15 major world championship belts across multiple weight classes.
“I’ve brought a lot of excitement to the sport going against the biggest names and making matchups fans want to see. I’m going to continue to do the biggest fights, biggest pay-per-views, biggest streams across the board, and I think people resonate with my content and promotional ability.”
What’s more preposterous? That a YouTube stunt man who only started boxing a few years ago would believe — perhaps correctly — that he is the future of a sport that once belonged to Muhammad Ali, Joe Louis and Mayweather? Or that Tyson, several years closer to being eligible for Social Security than to his last official fight in 2005, has legitimate reasons to get in the ring Friday aside from a big payday and publicity for his cannabis ventures?
“I’m not gonna lose,” Tyson said in a press conference where he offered few words but plenty of nostalgic glares for a few thousand fans holding their cell phones high above their heads to snap pictures of a man whose legend is ingrained in memories of their youth.
We know we are being played. Millions of us aren’t going to care.
In the days leading up to and following the presidential election, one of the major themes that emerged was the salience of the so-called influencers, people ranging from comedians to conspiracy theorists to a woman who literally became famous and now hosts a high-profile podcast because she made a funny reference to oral sex during a woman-on-the-street-style interview that blew up on social media.
That presidential candidates were climbing over each other to appear alongside and answer questions from these types of “influencers” would have been considered evidence of a fundamentally unserious society less than a generation ago. Now, political pundits call it meeting the voters where they are.
The consequences of that change in how Americans engage with civic life are not yet clear, but if politics aren’t immune from an attention economy that elevates narrative and storytelling over tradition and expertise, then sports won’t be either.
And it’s why the ramifications of Friday night and the success it’s likely to have should be taken seriously across the entire sports industry.
What’s happening here isn’t just a fight. It’s a test to see whether Netflix and one of the most famous social media influencers on the planet can create the veneer of legitimacy out of something that by any traditional measure would be illegitimate. What is a big-time boxing match without a belt, without being sanctioned by one of those well-known organizations with three letters, without traditional rules, without even the ability to bet on it in at least six states that otherwise allow gambling?
It’s nothing. But it’s everything.
For half a decade, sports leagues have pondered how the migration of viewers from cable and network television to native streaming platforms might change both the economics and the possibilities of their business model.
So far, they have merely dabbled. The NFL and NBA have struck smaller deals with Amazon while keeping the bulk of their product on linear television.
Netflix has largely eschewed live sports and focused on its highly successful sports documentaries, citing the high costs of bidding for those rights. But this year, Netflix has dipped its toe into live broadcasts, including a crossover golf match involving F1 drivers and PGA Tour players, an exhibition tennis match in Las Vegas between Carlos Alcaraz and Rafael Nadal and a three-year deal with the NFL to broadcast games on Christmas Day.
The so-called “Netflix Slam” event with Nadal and Alcaraz was interesting. Tennis exhibitions are notoriously non-competitive, but this one was slickly presented with professional announcers, high-level production values, lots of celebrities in the audience and a trophy ceremony that looked like a Grand Slam final. If you didn’t know any better, you’d have thought you were watching the best the sport had to offer — only without commercials.
The data on how many people watched is opaque. Netflix hasn’t, and probably won’t, release the numbers.
But what it showed is that you can create a high-profile sporting event that can hook millions of people on streaming without being tied to a traditional tournament like the US Open. And in this case, Netflix and Paul have created the boxing match of the decade on a platform that has gone around the pay-per-view model simply by pitting him against an aging cultural icon who hasn’t been a real professional boxer in decades.
“No one has had a boxing career like mine,” Paul said, in one of the rare moments Wednesday that didn’t seem like hyperbole. “It’ll be studied and judged, but I’ve risen to the top because I’ve taken risks.”
It is incredibly audacious. It is also genius.
What’s very clear in the wake of Trump’s second election is that many Americans, and maybe even a slight majority, do not have misgivings about the fungibility of our institutions. If that is true of the U.S. government, it is undeniably going to be true for sports as entities peck away at the way things have always been presented to the public.
Does that mean the NFL, NBA, Major League Baseball or the International Olympic Committee are on the verge of being replaced by whatever absurdity the next influencer is cooking up?
Of course not. But millions of people have followed Paul’s evolution from someone they grew up laughing at on YouTube to someone who has reinvented himself into a plausible pro athlete.
To deny the allure and efficacy of a famous person going around the system to create an entirely new reality is to deny what we have seen American voters lean into now twice in the last decade.
For better or worse, this is who we are. And for better or worse, Netflix and Jake Paul are just the latest who figured out how to benefit.
What are the chances 58-year-old Mike Tyson actually gets the job done against Jake Paul? Here are the MMA Junkie staff picks.
Like it or not, [autotag]Jake Paul[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Mike Tyson[/autotag] is happening, folks.
After one cancellation and several months of buildup, Paul and Tyson will step into the ring Friday night at the Dallas Cowboys’ AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, as they headline the first boxing event promoted by streaming giant Netflix.
Paul vs. Tyson has been sanctioned as a fully professional bout by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation, despite the massive age gap with Tyson, 58, 31 years older than Paul, 27. They will compete in a heavyweight bout scheduled for eight, 2-minute rounds, and the result will count against their records.
Who will win this one-of-a-kind showdown? Check out below for our MMA Junkie staff picks:
Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson predictions, expert picks
‘It’s going to be Jake Paul’s night’
One of these guys is the best ever, the most brutal and vicious and most ruthless champion there’s ever been. The other one is Mike Tyson (just kidding). But seriously, I can’t bring myself to pick a 58-year-old man to beat someone under 30. It’s going to be Jake Paul’s night, and we’ll likely all be watching through our fingers as it unfolds.
– Mike Bohn
Pick is Jake Paul, but also a wish
There’s no way I’ll get the ending that would be most satisfying, so the tl;dr pick is Jake Paul. But you’re jonesin’ to know the satisfying ending, aren’t ya? Remember what Zach Galifianakis looks like, lights out, after Mike Tyson KOs him in “The Hangover”? The satisfying ending would be both – the one with the bad deodorant and the one with the bad weed – just like that: Double knockout, and we never speak of this weird, mostly gross cash grab again. Then my Netflix screen can go back to being dominated by “The Great British Bake Off.”
– Matt Erickson
Mike Tyson could be trouble for Jake Paul, probably won’t be
They say the last thing to go is a fighter’s power. Tyson throws combos from odd angles that Jake isn’t used to defending. I can see the world-class experience and terror that Mike Tyson carries into this fight being troublesome for a young, inexperienced fighter like a Jake Paul. That being said, almost 20 years ago we were all saying Tyson didn’t have it anymore. I give Mike Tyson one to two rounds to find his mark. If he can’t get it done early, “The Problem Child” walks away with the win.
– Brian “Goze” Garcia
A Mike Tyson punch-out for the win!
Mike Tyson will hit Jake Paul so hard early in the fight, Paul will forget the game plan (and possibly his own name) and go into panic mode. I think Tyson can get it done within the first four rounds, but I’m zeroing in on Round 2. Even though Paul slows down in the later rounds, I don’t see Tyson wanting to drag this out any longer than he needs to. He’s showing up to put someone to sleep. Even “Glass Joe” will be giggling at home as they peel Jake Paul off the canvas.
– “Gorgeous” George Garcia
Mike Tyson’s age isn’t just a number
Despite being a legendary former heavyweight champion, Mike Tyson is 58 and has had health issues of late. I find it hard to believe that he’ll be able to handle the pace of the fight against someone who’s been far more active and more than 30 years younger in Paul.
– Farah Hannoun
Spoiler alert: We’ve seen this before
While Mike Tyson doesn’t have many losses on his resume, Father Time is undefeated. The years between Paul and Tyson’s ages are greater than Paul’s age. Obviously that bodes poorly for Tyson. While many see the 8 x 2 structure to potentially favor Tyson, it also means Paul can afford to be more explosive, as well. Vitor Belfort vs. Evander Holyfield is living in my brain, as well. I feel like we’ve seen the old vs. young experiment before. The ending has already been spoiled.
– Nolan King
Don’t get it twisted because of Mike Tyson’s past
If you think Mike Tyson is going to beat Jake Paul because of the things he accomplished well before Paul was born, you’re out of your mind. Fifty-eight is still 31 years older than 27 the last time I checked, and 58 is way down the road from your prime. And whether you love him or hate him, the fact is that Paul has been at this taking his boxing training seriously for the past five years. He has skills, he has youth on his side in spades, and Father Time will remain undefeated.
– Simon Samano
Just hope Mike Tyson doesn’t get seriously hurt
We’re looking at the ugly side of combat sports. Mike Tyson, decades removed from his prime, is fighting Jake Paul – a big, athletic, powerful 27-year-old who’s exceeded everyone’s expectations as a boxer. Yet, somehow this got sanctioned into a professional fight. At 58, Tyson shouldn’t be fighting anyone. I’m just hoping for him not to get hurt for his sake and also the sport’s, given it’ll be streamed on one of the biggest platforms today in Netflix.
– Danny Segura
Jake Paul will stop Mike Tyson one way or the other
Two things are true here: 1) Mike Tyson is an absolute legend in boxing. 2) Mike Tyson is 58 years old. The YouTube-to-boxing circus continues, and Jake Paul will have the biggest name on his resume yet. It will look impressive on paper if you ignore all the context. Expect Paul to wear down Tyson with movement and find a stoppage by straight-up knockout or TKO corner stoppage after a few rounds.
Boxing analyst Teddy Atlas explains how Jake Paul needs to be careful ahead of his Mike Tyson boxing match.
[autotag]Teddy Atlas[/autotag] warns [autotag]Jake Paul[/autotag] of [autotag]Mike Tyson[/autotag]’s quick start.
Tyson (50-6, 44 KOs) meets Paul (10-1, 7 KOs) in a Netflix special event Friday at the Dallas Cowboys’ AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. The bout is scheduled for eight, two-minute rounds.
The 58-year-old boxing legend threw up blood when he suffered an ulcer medical emergency which caused his initial booking with Paul to shift from July to November. Atlas says if Tyson’s team gave the green light to compete, he’d like to think he’s healthy.
“Obviously he’s OK, and that’s good,” Atlas said in an interview with Pro Boxing Fans. “That’s his choice, his family’s choice. He knows if he can come back. Obviously, it’s something that he overcame physically. It wasn’t that serious. Obviously, he’s of good health.
“The people around him believe he’s of good health. I have to believe he’s of good health. He’s 58-years old. Not too many guys who would be getting in the ring at 58, but it’s not a normal professional fight. The circumstances are a little different.”
Despite Tyson’s age and the question marks surrounding his current state of health, Atlas still believes his power could pose problems for Paul early – even though he casts doubts on the legitimacy of this fight.
“I tell you one thing, early on, Jake better be alert the first couple of rounds,” Atlas continued. “Because one thing that a former great fighter like Tyson can do is still punch. The power is the last thing to leave you. The power is the last thing to leave you, and if Jake gets careless early on – if it’s real.
“If there’s not an agreement in place. I don’t know, I don’t know. If it’s not pre-scripted, if this isn’t pre-scripted for Netflix, and it’s real, and Tyson comes out there firing the way that he used to fire, and he can do it for a couple of rounds, it could be interesting.”
Sean Strickland does not approve of Jake Paul’s boxing match with Mike Tyson.
[autotag]Sean Strickland[/autotag] does not approve of [autotag]Jake Paul[/autotag]’s boxing match with [autotag]Mike Tyson[/autotag].
Paul (10-1, 7 KOs) takes on 58-year-old boxing legend Tyson (50-6, 44 KOs) in a Netflix special event Friday at the Dallas Cowboys’ AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.
Former UFC middleweight champion Strickland is outraged at Paul for going after a fight with Tyson.
“@jakepaul is a clown Your ability to make money off stupid people is impressive but being rich won’t buy you dignity You’re fighting a 60 year old man who is just trying to make a dollar by risking his life.. scum bag….
Your ability to make money off stupid people is impressive but being rich won't buy you dignity
You're fighting a 60 year old man who is just trying to make a dollar by risking his life.. scum bag….@Robzsafar << here ya go.. jk you don't fight boxers
“It’s odd to me that this woke cesspool would peddle a 60 year old getting abused…. But again Netflix does love when kids mutilate themselves for the trans cause so I’m not that surprised that you have no dignity”
It's odd to me that this woke cesspool would peddle a 60 year old getting abused….
But again Netflix does love when kids mutilate themselves for the trans cause so I'm not that surprised that you have no dignity https://t.co/vgc3ajH6PV
“You’re fighting a 60 year old….. are you a f*cking idiot?? This should be illegal……. The man had a medical emergency a month before this because he’s too f*cking old.. f*cking clown.”
You're fighting a 60 year old….. are you a fucking idiot?? This should be illegal……. The man had a medical emergency a month before this because he's too fucking old.. fucking clown
It’s natural to wonder if Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson is a real fight given it’s a 27-year-old vs. a 58-year-old.
Ever since [autotag]Jake Paul[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Mike Tyson[/autotag] was announced the first time early this year, there have been plenty of questions surrounding this fight on Friday at the Dallas Cowboys’ AT&T Stadium that also serves as streaming giant Netflix’s first foray into combat sports.
Chief among them: Is Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson a real fight?
And chief among the reasons why people would wonder about this is their age difference. Tyson is 58 years old and a legend of the fight game, while Paul is 27 and a YouTuber-turned-professional-boxer of the post-pandemic era.
While that might complicate things for the average viewer, the easiest answer to the question is: Yes, Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson is a real fight.
Paul vs. Tyson rules breakdown
Paul vs. Tyson is not an exhibition fight. What makes it a real fight is the fact that it’s been sanctioned by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation as a fully professional bout. However, the rules stray from the norm in this regard.
Paul vs. Tyson is scheduled for eight, 2-minute rounds, and the two combatants will use 14-ounce gloves. Under normal circumstances, a men’s professional heavyweight boxing match would take place with rounds lasting 3 minutes and gloves weighing 10 ounces.
The use of shorter rounds and lighter gloves were requested by Tyson, who figures to benefit from shorter rounds and more glove cushion given his age and general health. Paul has said he was happy to oblige these requests to make the fight happen.
The TDLR has said there was no issue sanctioning this as a professional (or “real”) fight under these rules given both combatants agreed.
Paul vs. Tyson date, time, location, how to watch
Date: Friday, November 15
Time: Preliminary card begins at 5:30 p.m. ET; main card begins at 8 p.m. ET; Paul and Tyson are expected to walk out to the ring at approximately 10:45 p.m. ET.
Location: AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas
How to watch: Prelims will stream on the Netflix Sports YouTube channel; main card will stream on Netflix, and anyone with a Netflix plan can watch.
Check out these photos from the Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson ceremonial weigh-ins, where Tyson slapped Paul in the face during their final staredown.
Check out these photos from the [autotag]Jake Paul[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Mike Tyson[/autotag] ceremonial weigh-ins in Irving, Texas, where Tyson slapped Paul in the face during their final staredown. (Photos by Kevin Jairaj/Imagn Images and Timothy A. Clary/Getty Images )
All that’s left for Jake Paul and Mike Tyson is the fighting after a wild final faceoff at the ceremonial weigh-ins.
IRVING, Texas – Slap!
All that’s left for [autotag]Jake Paul[/autotag] and [autotag]Mike Tyson[/autotag] is the fighting after the two men stepped on the scale and faced off Thursday at the ceremonial weigh-ins ahead of their boxing match.
Tyson, 58, weighed in at 228.4 pounds for the heavyweight bout. Paul tipped the scale at 227.2. Afterward, Paul and Tyson faced off one last time, and things certainly popped off when Tyson slapped Paul in the face, prompting members of each man’s team to intervene.
Moments later, Tyson only had this to say: “Talk is over.”
Paul took the slap in stride, but it also seemed to light a fire in him.
“I didn’t even feel it. He’s angry. He’s an angry little elf,” Paul said. “Mike Tyson, I thought that was a cute slap, buddy, but tomorrow you’re getting knocked the f*ck out. … It’s personal now! He must die!”
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You can watch Paul and Tyson step on the scale and stare each other down in the video above.
Paul vs. Tyson, which has been months in the making after one cancellation, will headline a Netflix boxing event Friday at the Dallas Cowboys’ AT&T Stadium in Arlington. The card is co-headlined by a highly anticipated rematch between Katie Taylor and Amanda Serrano.
The Paul vs. Tyson preliminary card begins at 5:30 p.m. ET, with the main card kicking off at 8 p.m. ET. Anyone with a Netflix subscription can watch the event.
For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for Paul vs. Tyson.
Watch as Jake Paul, Mike Tyson and the undercard step on the scale and faceoff for the final time ahead of Friday’s boxing event on Netflix.
IRVING, Texas – Ceremonial weigh-ins for the [autotag]Jake Paul[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Mike Tyson[/autotag] card take place Thursday, and you can watch a live stream of the proceedings here on MMA Junkie at 7 p.m. ET (4 p.m. PT).
The ceremonial weigh-ins take place at Toyota Music Factory in Irving, Texas. AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, the home of the Dallas Cowboys, hosts Friday’s fight card (Netflix).
UFC CEO Dana White hopes friend and boxing legend Mike Tyson makes it out of the Jake Paul fight without injuries.
UFC CEO [autotag]Dana White[/autotag] has been good friends with [autotag]Mike Tyson[/autotag] for a long time and is concerned for his health ahead of his return to the boxing ring.
Friday, Tyson (50-6) will step through the ropes at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, to take on YouTuber-turned-boxer [autotag]Jake Paul[/autotag] in an eight-round professional bout, which serves as the main event of the first live sporting event to stream on Netflix.
The matchup has drawn criticism due to the age difference, as Tyson, who is 58, will square off with a much younger Paul (10-1), who is 27. When asked about the fight, White refrained from talking down on the fight and instead offered concerns about Tyson’s health.
“I will not say anything bad about this fight because I love Mike Tyson,” White said on “The Jim Rome Show.” “The only thing that I hope is that Mike comes out of this fight healthy.
“… I just hope he does. At 58 years old, I mean, I’m 55, and obviously, I’ve never been the level of athlete that Mike Tyson is, but 27 vs. 58? It’s hard to consistently work out at that age just for health purposes and not get hurt. To train for something like this? It’s just – I love Mike. I hope he makes a bunch of money on Friday, and I hope he comes out healthy.”
Tyson was last in action four years ago in an exhibition boxing bout against fellow legend Roy Jones Jr. It was a fight in which clearly both fighters were not trying to hurt each other that resulted in a draw. Tyson’s last professional bout was in June 2005 against Kevin McBride. Tyson lost the fight by TKO in the sixth round.
In the late 1980s, Tyson became a legendary force in the world of boxing as the WBC and IBF heavyweight champion. He was a crossover superstar who created viral moments way before the existence of social media. However, the days of Tyson’s prime in the ring are well behind him, and White understands why it would be difficult to turn down a lucrative offer to fight Paul.
“When you’ve accomplished what Mike Tyson has accomplished, and that type of money is offered to you, it’s hard to not,” White said. “It’s about Mike having money issues or anything like that. Mike does fine. Mike does well, but when you have that type of money waved in front of you – I’ve told this story, it’s been told a million times. When Mike was going to fight before, I said, ‘Mike, don’t do this.’ So, I put him on Shark Week. I get a deal done for him to do Shark Week. He’s like, ‘Oh you care about me? I’ve been fighting since I was 12, but you want to throw me in the water with sharks? You’re an idiot.’ And I can’t disagree with him. He’s absolutely right.
“… At the end of the day, it’s none of our business, it’s Mike Tyson’s business. He’s a grown man, he does what he wants to do, and I love him and I just want the best for him.”
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For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for Paul vs. Tyson.