20 Dumbest Wrestler Names EVER (...That We Absolutely LOVE)

6. Mr. Ass

Billy Gunn Mr. Ass
WWE

Billy Gunn made a sizeable chunk of change talking about his rear end and being self-obsessed with it, so fair play. He's been continuing that trend over in AEW as ‘Daddy Ass’, thus showing that there's still a market for wrestlers who hype up their own bottoms harder than Tony Khan can push tickets for All Elite's next stadium show in London, England.

D-Generation X had '2 words for ya', but Billy had 4: "Check out my ass". He was initially known as 'Badass/Bad Ass' Billy Gunn following a flimsy stretch as Rockabilly (don't ask). Teaming with the similarly-struggling Road Dogg saved both men's careers, and they'd ironically turn into one of the WWF's hottest packages despite being shunted together because creative had nothing else for them individually.

The New Age Outlaws wrote themselves into the history books, then Gunn started spinning off into his own, butt-centric world. In a way, he was an unintentional retread of WCW's Booty Man (Brutus 'Barber' Beefcake' admired his own cheeks first, and don't let anyone forget it) from 1995-1996. However, there's no denying that Billy took the Mr. Ass concept further than Booty.

So to speak.

His infamous theme tune simultaneously corpsed and embarrassed millions of wrestling fans during the 'Attitude Era'. Amongst other things, it revealed how Gunn loved to love 'em, he loved to kick 'em, shove 'em, stick 'em, flaunt 'em and even pick 'em (yuck).

Outing the fact that you like picking your own anus on live wrestling TV is certainly brave, but it led to monstrous merch sales. Someone's uncle 100% had a shirt that said, "Check out my ass" on it.

Contributor

Lifelong wrestling, video game, music and sports obsessive who has been writing about his passions since childhood. Jamie started writing for WhatCulture in 2013, and has contributed thousands of articles and YouTube videos since then. He cut his teeth penning published pieces for top UK and European wrestling read Fighting Spirit Magazine (FSM), and also has extensive experience working within the wrestling biz as a manager and commentator for promotions like ICW on WWE Network and WCPW/Defiant since 2010. Further, Jamie also hosted the old Ministry Of Slam podcast, and has interviewed everyone from Steve Austin and Shawn Michaels to Bret Hart and Trish Stratus.