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Loose Cannon
12-15-2010, 04:28 PM
His look in All Japan

http://www.prowrestlingscoops.com/newpws/wp-content/gallery/dupreelook/001.jpg

http://www.prowrestlingscoops.com/newpws/wp-content/gallery/dupreelook/003.jpg

http://www.prowrestlingscoops.com/newpws/wp-content/gallery/dupreelook/007.jpg

Rammsteinmad
12-15-2010, 04:29 PM
Yes it is.

Lock Jaw
12-15-2010, 04:31 PM
Armoire tattoo.

The Naitch
12-15-2010, 04:35 PM
sick

Loose Cannon
12-15-2010, 04:36 PM
I like how he's throwing up gang signs in the first pic.

The Naitch
12-15-2010, 04:36 PM
that's what they do in hell

Lake of fire represent

Savio
12-15-2010, 05:32 PM
Wish he stayed with the WWE

Sixx
12-15-2010, 05:36 PM
Satan paints his nails, too.

CSL
12-15-2010, 05:37 PM
Wish he stayed with the WWE

He's only 26-27 remember, made his TV debut at 19 or something daft and he's been all over the world for prolonged periods of time since leaving, which can only mean he's improved. And he apparently asked to leave instead of being given the boot so I'd wouldn't be at all surprised to see him go back at some point.

Ultra Mantis
12-15-2010, 05:56 PM
http://www.prowrestlingscoops.com/newpws/wp-content/gallery/dupreelook/001.jpg


He looks like a creation of Sacha Baron Cohen.

CSL
12-15-2010, 05:58 PM
lol he really does, Rene the French Wrestler.

The Naitch
12-15-2010, 06:02 PM
OWWWW MY HERNIA!!!!!

RiX1024
12-15-2010, 06:18 PM
He looks like a creation of Sacha Baron Cohen.

Beat me to it. Dang.

SOCCER LEGS
12-15-2010, 06:54 PM
with god awful tattoos like those, it's safe to say we'll never see him in a WWE ring again.

DLVH84
12-15-2010, 07:01 PM
From an interview on Canada's Slam website, Rene said he'll never work for Vince again. And this is no new gimmick, as he's had it for at least a year or two. He's part of a group called VooDoo Murderers in All Japan Pro Wrestling.

KIRA
12-15-2010, 08:05 PM
I say he looks like a roided up Voltaire

Sixx
12-15-2010, 08:44 PM
I say he looks like a roided up Voltaire

Really?

http://www.memo.fr/Media/Voltaire.jpg

Tom Guycott
12-15-2010, 10:01 PM
His look in All Japan

http://www.prowrestlingscoops.com/newpws/wp-content/gallery/dupreelook/007.jpg

Jeff Hardy jokes aside about that first pic, the last one caught my attention

Actually, he looks less like "Satan", and more like Mr. Satan!

http://images2.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20100805053524/dragonball/images/3/30/Mr.SatanCellGamesDebut.png

Nightwing
12-16-2010, 06:13 PM
His look in All Japan

http://www.prowrestlingscoops.com/newpws/wp-content/gallery/dupreelook/001.jpg




So hes doing a "Borat discovered Hot Topic" gimmick?

MoFo
12-16-2010, 07:06 PM
Needs a racist gimmick.

KIRA
12-31-2010, 12:35 AM
\Really?

http://www.memo.fr/Media/Voltaire.jpg




Not that Voltaire this one http://uberkristen.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/voltaire.jpg

The Pope
12-31-2010, 12:14 PM
Those tattoos better be air brushed on because they are terrible.

The Naitch
01-01-2011, 02:44 AM
Rene Dupree's passion lies in Japan, Europe

Having recently gotten married to a Japanese woman and moved up to the All Japan roster, Rene Dupree has a message for fans in North America: Don't look for him any time soon.

"The only thing I miss, honest to God, is the crowds," Dupree recently admitted to SLAM! Wrestling from his home in Tokyo, Japan. "I have no urge, I have no passion to ever go back to America to wrestle."

That certainly doesn't mean that Dupree doesn't have any passion for wrestling.

"My life is wrestling. I eat, sleep, breathe, live wrestling 24/7. That's my life. I'm in it for the long haul," said Rene Goguen, better known to WWE fans as Rene Dupree, part of the championship tag team La Resistance.

"Wrestling is my life, it's all I know, and I know it very well. And I know it better than anybody else today. And that's the bottom line. I'm not trying to be egotistical. It's the truth."

Rene's father, Emile Goguen wrestled as "Golden Boy" Dupree (or Dupre), debuting in 1956, and traveling the world. But the Maritimes always called him home, and Emile promoted there for decades. Like most promoters, the expanding World Wrestling Federation of 1983-84 hurt business, and he eventually called it a day -- though Atlantic Grand Prix Wrestling did return for shorter summer tours over the years. It was there that Rene started training at the age of 13, helping set up the ring and working out; he would debut at 14.

The history between his father and Vince McMahon is just one reason that Rene doesn't see himself returning to North America to work.

"I don't care how much money Vince McMahon has, Vince McMahon put my father out of business, for a lot of people. That was a very, very hard time in my life. That is very hard to forgive, very hard to forgive," he said.

Dupree's loyalty is very much to Japan these days.

Calling it a dream he's had since he was five years old, Dupree said that he loves "everything" about being in Japan.

"The culture, the fact that it's pure wrestling, it's not bullshit sports entertainment, where you have to talk in front of a fucking camera and have writers. It's pure wrestling. I was miserable the last three years I was in WWE, I was miserable, I hated it, because it's all politics. You have to kiss ass.

"In Japan, all you've got to do, is you've got to work hard, you've got to look good, and that's it. And that's what wrestling is all about. It's about the performance. It's not about how big you are, or how good of a promo you can cut. It's about if you can deliver in the ring. And that's pure wrestling."

Even in the more comedic promotion, HUSTLE, Dupree saw some positives. "HUSTLE was doing good, good money, but it was hokey, it was real stupid. All-Japan is never going to go away," he said. In HUSTLE, Dupree was known as René Bonaparte and under a mask, he was Dina Sharp . "It's a great company to work for, great guys, great women, they work hard. It's stiff, it's hard-hitting, it's painful, but that's the pro wrestling that I love."

He also appreciates the respect that the Japanese show to the past and the current wrestlers. When Lance Cade passed recently at the age of 29, he was a regular with All-Japan. The Japanese company gave him a 10-bell salute in the ring, whereas WWE did not. Dupree laid out his feelings in a Facebook posting: "cant sleep missing my friend lance, he was an awesome talent, a great father and the best tag partner ive ever had i love you like a brother lance i know you`re in heave lacing your boots!!!"

For a young man who is only 26, Dupree has had quite the career already.

"My first dream was to make it into WWE. Got there, and it wasn't what I expected it to be. Now I'm here in Japan, and you know what? I'm going to stay here for as long as they want me. Bottom line, look at Stan Hansen, look at Abdullah the Butcher -- he's 73 years old and he still comes over here almost every month."

Another name from the past is Masahiro Chono.

"The only Japanese wrestler that ever worked for my father was Masahiro Chono, and at the time he was called Tokyo Chono," Dupree said. "We used to play soccer together. Now I'm actually going to get a chance to work with him in Taiwan, coming up in November. Everything happens for a reason. It's a dream of mine to be able to work with Masahiro Chono, and I'm going to be able to."

Chono is a key player in one of Dupree's other plans -- bringing Japanese wrestling back to Europe, where it was once very popular. He recently met with representatives at EuroSport, the major sports channel.

"In Europe, Japanese wrestling was the highest-rated show. I'm going to bring the Japanese wrestling back to Europe," he said. "I'm going to get Japanese wrestling back on European television, and they're going to dominate, just like they always have. ... The Japanese wrestling is far superior to anything Vince McMahon or that bullshit TNA can put out."

Dupree is already popular in Europe -- France in particular, where he is the AWR champion and hugely over. "I was basically the Hulk Hogan and Steve Austin of France, okay?" he laughed. November will be his fifth tour of France, and it will be a reunion with Sylvain Grenier. Dupree has also worked often in the United Kingdom.

In Japan, he is settling in to a routine. He married his wife, Kanako, on October 14, 2009, and is learning the language. "My wife gives me one word a day," he said.

"I've been here for 10 months. I've just got my one-year spousal visa, and I'm going to apply for my three-year spousal visa. I don't plan on going home. I'll be honest with you. That two-and-a-half hour flight from Moncton to Toronto, and a 13-hour from from Toyko to Toronto. No thank you. I don't want to do it."

In a decade or so, though, he can perhaps see himself running a dojo in the Maritimes for Japanese wrestlers to further their North American wrestling skills.

Bridging the gap between continents is made easier with a good phone plan and the Internet. If you run across Dupree on Facebook, rest assured it really is him.

"Honestly, my wife works a lot and I'm really bored because I don't have American television, so I can't understand a goddamn word going on on TV. I'm on the Internet a lot, YouTube stuff, I Facebook with my friends," he said. His website, www.renedupree.net, is run by a British man, Rod Dixon, that Dupree has never even met. "He's on the ball, he's a great guy, and he's helped me out a lot."

Another aspect of Dupree's foresight are his tattoos.

"It's called marketability, my friend. I'm an independent contractor. It's kind of hard to just put 'Rene Dupree' on a T-shirt, and for it to sell," he said. He is an admirer of the Ed Hardy line of T-shirts, and uses them as an example of what he is going for.

"I have these tattoos on my forearms, on my calves, and on my back. Now if you print out a T-shirt, and you put your face on the T-shirt, that's not going to sell. But, if you have a long-sleeved T-shirt with the tattoos, as I have, on a T-shirt, that makes for a cool-looking shirt -- not just a wrestling shirt, but a cool-looking shirt.

"I've always wanted tattoos, ever since I was a little kid. Mind you, when I was 18 and I signed with WWE, and they had a strict policy, 'Oh no, you can't have tattoos without permission. Oh no, you can't do this, you can't do that.' Basically, when you sign a contract with WWE, you sell your soul. You can't take a shit without asking their permission. That's the bottom line, that's the truth. The hell with that shit. No. Here in Japan, I get a new tattoo, and the boys are like, 'Oh, sugoi (which means awesome), new tattoo.'"

http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Wrestling/2010/08/09/dupreeback.jpg