On the latest episode of Six Feet Under, Jake Roberts was a special guest who recounted his unique experiences working with Andre The Giant. He shared vivid memories that capture both the intensity and the unexpected humor of wrestling with one of the sport's most legendary figures. Roberts recounted his initial doubts about how a match with such a colossal opponent could possibly work out, stating, “You know, I thought that there was just no way in hell I could make that match work. Because you look at Andre boy, and no matter what you think, you’re not even close. 500 pounds is 500 fking pounds, brother, and he’s a huge son of a bitch. Beyond huge. There’s nobody like him. There never will be. And I’m thinking to myself, ‘How in the hell are we going to make this believable?’ Well, if not for Andre selling that snake the way he did, it would not have been believable. And to show you just how far that can go, we were in Grand Rapids, Michigan and Andre got me in a headlock, guzzling my ass. Shows you how good this guy was. He’s guzzling me, and all of a sudden, he is gone. He’s let go of me. He’s gotten outside the ring, and he’s, ‘Whoa!’ Doing this st. I’m like, ‘What the fk?’ You know?”
He went on to describe an incident that was both shocking and hilarious, saying, “And I roll over and look. And here’s this girl, about 11 or 12 years old has gotten the snake out and coming across the ring after Andre. Most guys would have went, ‘Get that bitch out of the ring.’ You know? I’d have probably done the same thing because I wasn’t a thinker. Andre was a thinker. He saw that as a perfect moment to get out of the ring. He gets out of the ring. Now he’s got to get his heat back, right? Because he just chickened out, right? Gets the microphone: ‘Arrest her! Arrest her! Get her out of the ring!’ Well fk, Andre says, ‘Do something,’ people do st. The cops came in and grabbed the girl. She’s crying her eyes out. Andre is laughing. ‘Ha ha ha, I show you!’ What fking heat he had. That’s how good that guy was. He can make st work. When they told me that I was going to be wrestling Andre, I was like, ‘Oh my God, that’s either the kiss of death or whatever,’ because I just didn’t see it working at first. But he made it work.”
Later, Roberts reflected on the personal bond that grew outside the ring, recalling, “My connection with him was playing motherfking cards. Cribbage. Yeah, we loved playing cribbage, and he loved it. And we’d play cribbage every night. So I was there to see the presents brought to him from different guys. Warrior coming in with a case of f**king wine every night.” These engaging anecdotes offer an intimate glimpse into the camaraderie and the unpredictable world of professional wrestling, where moments of sheer brilliance and genuine friendship often shine through.