Mark Henry embraces WWE’s ‘nepo babies’ as second generation stars emerge: ‘Why would you not emphasize it?’

SPORTIVO
Article arrow_drop_down

An online witch hunt for nepo babies is happening in entertainment. If a rising actor or musician has industry ties in their family, the public will be quick to point it out and say that person only got the chance because of who they are related to. Professional wrestling is unique in that it’s long been a family business. Even now, as a multi-billion-dollar industry, family legacy is celebrated. Mark Henry was the first in his family to jump into pro wrestling, but he isn’t the last.

Earlier this month, WWE unveiled its fifth class for its Next In Line (NIL) program. Among the 12 athletes were Mark’s son, Jacob Henry, and Brock Rechsteiner, the son of former world champion Scott Steiner. The program focuses exclusively on early development for collegiate athletes. By contrast, the WWE ID program specializes as a pipeline for active independent wrestlers. Henry, without criticism, describes this program as a nepotism factory, though it doesn’t exclusively target athletes with industry connections.

“Those are the nepo babies,” Henry, a WWE Hall of Famer and CEO of All Caribbean Wrestling, told CBS Sports. “Those are the kids who have come from the world of wrestling… They have the potential to be a quality wrestler in the future. They have size, good looks, education, experience and love for pro wrestling.”

Pro wrestling is a unique storytelling medium. For performers with long careers, their characters’ stories play out over decades. A rich family lineage can stretch the story further. Cody Rhodes winning the undisputed WWE championship at WrestleMania 40 was the culmination of his family’s world championship ambitions, starting with his father, “The American Dream” Dusty Rhodes, in 1967. Charlotte Flair, a 14-time world champ, might eventually tie the 16 title reigns her dad, “The Nature Boy” Ric Flair, achieved.

49ers star George Kittle ‘would love to’ join WWE in some capacity once he retires from NFL

Shakiel Mahjouri

49ers star George Kittle 'would love to' join WWE in some capacity once he retires from NFL

“Why would you not emphasize what’s expected of you in pro wrestling?” Henry asked. “Those are the people who will be on their best behavior because of where they’ve come from, and not wanting to put a stain on the family name. You have people who are willing to sacrifice and do the right thing. 

“That’s the most important part of nepotism in wrestling. The name means more than you do. You want to make sure you uplift that name, so the next one that has it will have a quality footing in the wrestling industry if they choose to.”

WWE’s current roster is full of family ties. Randy Orton is a third-generation pro wrestler, intercontinental champion Dominik Mysterio is the son of legendary luchador Rey Mysterio and Bron Breakker, son of Rick Steiner, is tabbed as a future main eventer. Then there’s The Bloodline. The faction — representing the talent-rich Anoa’i family — is home to Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, Roman Reigns, Jey Uso, Jacob Fatu and more.

Generally, nepotism only gets you so far in this business. Pro wrestling fans are vocal. The audience will inform the talent and the promotion if they don’t like something. Recently, Ron Killings was released from WWE and brought back after severe fan backlash.

“For every one that I named [that made it], there are probably 50 that I could name that didn’t make it,” Henry said.

Henry signed a new contract with WWE back in March. The contract, which he described as a “nostalgia contract” differing from a Legends contract, primarily allows WWE to use his likeness. That freedom allows him to keep hosting SiriusXM’s “Busted Open Radio” and run All Caribbean Wrestling. Though he described NIL as a “nepo baby funnel,” Henry insists his March signing was unrelated to his son’s June signing.

Jacob is currently involved with football and amateur wrestling at the University of Oklahoma. Mark Henry is very optimistic about his son’s future, describing him as a “student” of pro wrestling, a committed athlete and stage performer.

“His love for pro wrestling has been there since he was a little kid,” Henry said. “He would grab my titles, he had every action figure known to man… Every wrestler would say the same thing, ‘Do I win?’ He’d say, ‘Yes!’ I’d say, ‘No, you don’t.’ It was a prerequisite at my house that I had to win, except if it were against John Cena or Cody Rhodes. Those were his favorites.”

Wrestling’s family business extends far beyond the ring. Look closely and you’ll find family connections at every pillar. Wrestlers’ relatives work as executives, referees and producers.

“Our industry is tailor-made for us,” Henry said. “When you see someone come into wrestling and they didn’t have a leg up to get in and they succeed, they worked their rear-end off.”

Now, Henry hopes to extend the same opportunity often reserved for family to those historically left out. Henry scouted several Black companies before joining All Caribbean Wrestling as its CEO. ACW hosts Baha Bash 2 on Saturday in conjunction with WWE ID. The show — taking place in the Bahamas and featuring WWE alums JTG and Elijah Burke — allows Henry to create jobs in an underserved and ravenous wrestling community.

“I was blessed to get into the room in athletics and business,” Henry said. “Many people who look like me don’t get into the room. They never have an opportunity. They never see a representation of themselves. I’m trying to get a statue before I die. I want a street named after me.” 

Henry is a two-time Olympian, inaugural Arnold Strongman Classic winner and two-time pro wrestling world champion. He doesn’t seek acknowledgment for those things.

“I want it because I gave back to the business that I love, and I helped people who were less fortunate and underserved,” Henry said. “That would make my life and existence a bonus.”]

Check out the full interview with Mark Henry below. 

The 29-year wrestling veteran hosts Mark Henry Strong Kids on Friday in association with Baha Bash 2. Henry launched the initiative in 2016, building off his lifelong desire to help children through athletics. Mark Henry Strong Kids seeks to help bullied children by teaching his philosophy for competition.

“There’s winning and losing. You have to be taught to do both of them with grace,” Henry said. “Don’t win and beat your chest too much. I believe you should show out a little bit, but don’t be a pest.

“When you lose, some people will cry. In Strong Kids, we pick them up and say, ‘Now you need to get better. You know where you need work. You learned something.’ That’s something that’s important in my eyes. You don’t just go to a community and take. You leave something behind.”

This news was originally published on this post .

About the author

About the author call_made

SPORTIVO

More posts

trending_flat
Deontay Wilder scores stoppage knockout of Tyrrell Herndon for first win in three years

Deontay Wilder is back in the win column. After losing back-to-back fights and four of five, the former WBC heavyweight champion returned to the ring in Wichita, Kansas to stop Tyrrell Herndon in the seventh round on Friday.Wilder was much more aggressive in the opening round than he was against Joseph Parker and Zhilei Zhang, pushing forward behind the jab. Herndon did little beyond circling away and looking to avoid contact, which he did well, avoiding most of Wilder's fire. Wilder continued to pressure in the second round and scored his first knockdown with a cuffing left hook that caught Herndon off balance and sent him stumbling to the canvas. Not particularly hurt by the shot, Herndon survived the round. As the rounds ticked by, Herndon tried to find small spots to unload big punches, and when he threw, Wilder […]

trending_flat
The legacy of Lionel Messi’s underwhelming time as a Paris Saint-Germain player

May 2023 proved to be a watershed month for Paris Saint-Germain.Up to that point, the French giants’ sporting project seemed to be faltering, certainly in relation to their ultimate goal of lifting the Champions League. Serial winners domestically, PSG had reached the point where only success in Europe’s premier club competition could bring them the validation they craved.AdvertisementThe problem they had was that nothing they did seemed to bring them closer. Even the signing of one of the world’s greatest players in Lionel Messi, who joined on a free transfer in August 2021, had not sufficiently moved the dial. If anything, adding the Argentinian to a front line already containing fellow stars Kylian Mbappe and Neymar only served to create additional layers of complexity and dysfunction.Two years on, they are finally European champions thanks to a 5-0 rout of Inter […]

trending_flat
Club World Cup prize money rankings: How much has each team earned so far?

Forty-eight games down, 15 to go.FIFA’s new, engorged Club World Cup has completed its group stage, 16 clubs are on their way home and, over the next fortnight, the remaining 16 will tussle to lift a trophy so gaudy even Louis XIV might have turned his nose up at it.Alongside that (notably heavy) trinket, whoever runs out victorious in East Rutherford in mid-July will also bank themselves a hefty cash prize. The winners of this summer’s tournament will earn a further $74.1million (£54m), including $40m from the final alone, on top of what they have already pocketed from the competition — and much of FIFA’s $1billion prize pot has now been allocated.AdvertisementEven before the round of 16 begins, we already know where nearly three-quarters of the money will go: $525m in participation fees were doled out before a ball was […]

trending_flat
Have Club World Cup attendances really been that bad?

The group stage of the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup has concluded and 48 of the tournament’s 63 matches have now taken place.The competition, which is being hosted in the United States, drew plenty of criticism in the build-up — including for how many games were being held in large, out-of-town stadiums in cities traditionally lacking in football (or soccer) fandom.AdvertisementSo what have attendances actually been like? How many stadiums have come close to filling all of their seats? How have crowd sizes compared to the American-hosted 1994 men’s World Cup and previous Club World Cups? And which have been the most and least-watched teams and groups at the tournament?Here, The Athletic dives into the numbers and lays out the facts surrounding the attendances so far.Firstly, this is what the attendance has been at each game so far at the […]

trending_flat
‘Long and slow’: For stagnant Wild, let’s hope Day 2 of the NHL Draft is more eventful than Day 1

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Well, just like Bill Guerin said it would be, that sure was boring.The Minnesota Wild didn’t have a first-round pick Friday for Day 1 of the NHL Draft after their trade with the Columbus Blue Jackets last November to acquire David Jiricek, the 21-year-old defenseman and No. 6 pick in the 2022 NHL Draft.AdvertisementIn the locker room of the Wild’s practice facility, the team created a remote war room draped with Wild sweaters in the background, including a special one with the nameplate “SHERO,” which, unfortunately for them, never saw the light of day on the big screen at Peacock Theater in Los Angeles.The camera and Internet connection were set up in case the Wild somehow regained a first-round pick and could welcome a new player virtually.But instead, for more than four hours during what felt […]

trending_flat
‘Long and slow’: For stagnant Wild, let’s hope Day 2 of the NHL Draft is more eventful than Day 1

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Well, just like Bill Guerin said it would be, that sure was boring.The Minnesota Wild didn’t have a first-round pick Friday for Day 1 of the NHL Draft after their trade with the Columbus Blue Jackets last November to acquire David Jiricek, the 21-year-old defenseman and No. 6 pick in the 2022 NHL Draft.AdvertisementIn the locker room of the Wild’s practice facility, the team created a remote war room draped with Wild sweaters in the background, including a special one with the nameplate “SHERO,” which, unfortunately for them, never saw the light of day on the big screen at Peacock Theater in Los Angeles.The camera and Internet connection were set up in case the Wild somehow regained a first-round pick and could welcome a new player virtually.But instead, for more than four hours during what felt […]

Related

trending_flat
Deontay Wilder scores stoppage knockout of Tyrrell Herndon for first win in three years

Deontay Wilder is back in the win column. After losing back-to-back fights and four of five, the former WBC heavyweight champion returned to the ring in Wichita, Kansas to stop Tyrrell Herndon in the seventh round on Friday.Wilder was much more aggressive in the opening round than he was against Joseph Parker and Zhilei Zhang, pushing forward behind the jab. Herndon did little beyond circling away and looking to avoid contact, which he did well, avoiding most of Wilder's fire. Wilder continued to pressure in the second round and scored his first knockdown with a cuffing left hook that caught Herndon off balance and sent him stumbling to the canvas. Not particularly hurt by the shot, Herndon survived the round. As the rounds ticked by, Herndon tried to find small spots to unload big punches, and when he threw, Wilder […]

trending_flat
The legacy of Lionel Messi’s underwhelming time as a Paris Saint-Germain player

May 2023 proved to be a watershed month for Paris Saint-Germain.Up to that point, the French giants’ sporting project seemed to be faltering, certainly in relation to their ultimate goal of lifting the Champions League. Serial winners domestically, PSG had reached the point where only success in Europe’s premier club competition could bring them the validation they craved.AdvertisementThe problem they had was that nothing they did seemed to bring them closer. Even the signing of one of the world’s greatest players in Lionel Messi, who joined on a free transfer in August 2021, had not sufficiently moved the dial. If anything, adding the Argentinian to a front line already containing fellow stars Kylian Mbappe and Neymar only served to create additional layers of complexity and dysfunction.Two years on, they are finally European champions thanks to a 5-0 rout of Inter […]

trending_flat
Club World Cup prize money rankings: How much has each team earned so far?

Forty-eight games down, 15 to go.FIFA’s new, engorged Club World Cup has completed its group stage, 16 clubs are on their way home and, over the next fortnight, the remaining 16 will tussle to lift a trophy so gaudy even Louis XIV might have turned his nose up at it.Alongside that (notably heavy) trinket, whoever runs out victorious in East Rutherford in mid-July will also bank themselves a hefty cash prize. The winners of this summer’s tournament will earn a further $74.1million (£54m), including $40m from the final alone, on top of what they have already pocketed from the competition — and much of FIFA’s $1billion prize pot has now been allocated.AdvertisementEven before the round of 16 begins, we already know where nearly three-quarters of the money will go: $525m in participation fees were doled out before a ball was […]

trending_flat
Have Club World Cup attendances really been that bad?

The group stage of the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup has concluded and 48 of the tournament’s 63 matches have now taken place.The competition, which is being hosted in the United States, drew plenty of criticism in the build-up — including for how many games were being held in large, out-of-town stadiums in cities traditionally lacking in football (or soccer) fandom.AdvertisementSo what have attendances actually been like? How many stadiums have come close to filling all of their seats? How have crowd sizes compared to the American-hosted 1994 men’s World Cup and previous Club World Cups? And which have been the most and least-watched teams and groups at the tournament?Here, The Athletic dives into the numbers and lays out the facts surrounding the attendances so far.Firstly, this is what the attendance has been at each game so far at the […]

trending_flat
‘Long and slow’: For stagnant Wild, let’s hope Day 2 of the NHL Draft is more eventful than Day 1

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Well, just like Bill Guerin said it would be, that sure was boring.The Minnesota Wild didn’t have a first-round pick Friday for Day 1 of the NHL Draft after their trade with the Columbus Blue Jackets last November to acquire David Jiricek, the 21-year-old defenseman and No. 6 pick in the 2022 NHL Draft.AdvertisementIn the locker room of the Wild’s practice facility, the team created a remote war room draped with Wild sweaters in the background, including a special one with the nameplate “SHERO,” which, unfortunately for them, never saw the light of day on the big screen at Peacock Theater in Los Angeles.The camera and Internet connection were set up in case the Wild somehow regained a first-round pick and could welcome a new player virtually.But instead, for more than four hours during what felt […]

trending_flat
‘Long and slow’: For stagnant Wild, let’s hope Day 2 of the NHL Draft is more eventful than Day 1

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Well, just like Bill Guerin said it would be, that sure was boring.The Minnesota Wild didn’t have a first-round pick Friday for Day 1 of the NHL Draft after their trade with the Columbus Blue Jackets last November to acquire David Jiricek, the 21-year-old defenseman and No. 6 pick in the 2022 NHL Draft.AdvertisementIn the locker room of the Wild’s practice facility, the team created a remote war room draped with Wild sweaters in the background, including a special one with the nameplate “SHERO,” which, unfortunately for them, never saw the light of day on the big screen at Peacock Theater in Los Angeles.The camera and Internet connection were set up in case the Wild somehow regained a first-round pick and could welcome a new player virtually.But instead, for more than four hours during what felt […]

Be the first to leave a comment

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sportivo bridges the gap between talent and opportunity.

About SPORTIVO

Sportivo Network is a dedicated social platform for sports enthusiasts, athletes, and scouts. Whether you’re an aspiring athlete looking for opportunities, a coach searching for talent, or simply a sports lover wanting to connect with like-minded people, Sportivo is your go-to network. With features like direct messaging, profile showcasing, and talent scouting, Sportivo bridges the gap between talent and opportunity. Here, you can share your achievements, interact with professionals, and open doors to the next level in your sports journey. Join Sportivo Network – because every great athlete deserves to be discovered!
Copyright © 2025 SPORTIVO News. and SPORTIVO Network. All rights reserved.

Login to enjoy full advantages

Please login or subscribe to continue.

Go Premium!

Enjoy the full advantage of the premium access.

Stop following

Unfollow Cancel

Cancel subscription

Are you sure you want to cancel your subscription? You will lose your Premium access and stored playlists.

Go back Confirm cancellation