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Dark Side Of The Ring S06 E02 - April 6th 2025 Full Show | WWE Dark Side Of The Ring Season 6 - Episode 2

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00:00the look and the presence he had was world-class
00:11he was big he was tall he was muscular he was a real-life badass but the reason why we're doing
00:20this television program now is not because he was a great wrestler that was a standout for years but
00:26because he was in wrestling and then did some other batshit stuff wrestler tony hallmay aka
00:33ludwig borga the hellraiser from helsinki lived the life of controversy he made people around him
00:41uncomfortable but not in a good way and crime you don't know that story he got deported from this
00:46country for weapons tony hallman epäillään syyllistyneen ammuskeluun varhain tänä aamuna
00:54driven by a desire for fame tony took his strongman persona to the extreme
01:03he wanted to be the person that people would could you believe he said that could you believe
01:08he did that and into the corridors of political power that guy's going to be an elected official
01:14he wanted to be famous so that's how he was going to do that in finland
01:18a little racist talk about that direction until his relentless pursuit of the spotlight led to
01:24infamy and ended in tragedy upper to wake up downers to go to sleep and now you gotta have something
01:30to make you feel alive during the day what more did he have to live for the dream was over the image he had
01:41created for himself became impossible to maintain he looked like a villain he sounded like a villain but
01:47unfortunately in real life he was a villain
01:59this man is a powerhouse ludwig borga
02:02in the summer of 1993 wrestling fans witnessed the debut of ludwig borga an arrogant new
02:11villain from finland this guy's a tough dude the foreign heel in professional wrestling has been a
02:19standby since the turn of the 20th century they were exotic they were mysterious they were not like us
02:26you ain't from around here are you boy i'm jim cornett and i was working for the wwf when tony
02:34holm aka ludwig borga made his brief but spectacular run the fans could take their animosity out by booing
02:43the anti-american maybe you're saying that russia national anthem just one time too many vince mcmahon
02:50loved the foreign heel concept so much that if we didn't have a problem with a country he would
02:57figure one out from helsinki ludwig borga
03:04so suddenly you get this guy named ludwig borga from finland and because he had an accent that was
03:13close enough for vincent man i can do something with this guy usa stand for in my continent you
03:20stink a lot he's going to get a great push because it was easy to position him as a villain
03:28i'm jim ross and i was an on-air talent in 1993 for the wwe one way you get a villain notice is you have
03:37an america streak and tatanka had a winning streak being the native american representing america the
03:47fans just connected right to me i'm tatanka an official legend of wwe
03:56i was running on an undefeated street for two years when the office came to me they said we're really
04:04looking to do something big with luvik borga
04:10in our business it's called rubbing
04:14you get out there you rub shoulders with hulk hogan that stardom rubs off on you
04:23they had a tremendous opportunity
04:28the best thing for you to do is sell it and he wanted me to sell it
04:32so luvik threw me in the ring and then pinned me with one finger
04:42by beating me it instantly puts luvik right at the top of the ladder
04:48now in hindsight knowing what we know now do you still think that he was the right guy to end
04:53uh now looking at it no
04:59the power of that wwf tv is tremendous having a fan base that buys your action figures and sells them
05:07out but remember we're on there with 300 days a year so you're in the locker room a lot you know
05:14they want guys who are going to be in there friendly with everybody because now you can do business
05:18together but luvik was never that guy not that the guys had anything against him he just never allowed
05:26the guys to get close to him let's put it that way morgan had a great look but he was a miserable
05:34human being people didn't want to work with him he made people around him uncomfortable and then when
05:40we finally realized he had the ss tattoo on his calf things started going downhill from there
05:47for the kids out there who weren't around the ss was hitler's private army that committed
05:55many of the atrocities at hitler's behest in nazi germany you can't show something like that
06:01on television in 1990 something in america so they said cover that up
06:06one of the boys if they would have seen that i guarantee you someone would have said something
06:12so obviously it was kept undercover we made a mistake in hiring him he slipped by us
06:24it wasn't done on purpose
06:29we just didn't do a good job of vetting him you can imagine how that some of the jewish talents in
06:34the locker room reacted to him it's not right to impose upon them such negativity we needed to get
06:41rid of him the fact that he had it to begin with indicated that probably something was going on up
06:46there that maybe we didn't want to delve into much deeper drop it come on rap tony hall may's childhood
06:55was defined by bitterness brawls and resentment one thing to know about tony is that he came from a broken
07:04home home his parents divorced when tony was just two years old his father had a problem with alcohol
07:11and it seems like his mother did too i'm mikko martinen a journalist and a writer of tony hallmes biography
07:21the other important thing to know about tony is that he kind of struggled between two language
07:26communities his mother was originally a swedish speaker and decided to put the boys into a swedish
07:34speaking school this made tony feel like an outsider from very early on in his life
07:43if we were a swedish speaker and said to have a
08:05I'm Trister Marcus as Tony Halmeen, a child.
08:10When I was in the 13-14 year old, he was a alcoholic man than me.
08:16Then I went home from 14 to 15.
08:20Tony moved to us, look at me, my own home.
08:25He was more nervous, and he started to lift up his feet and wanted to feed him.
08:32He learned for respect.
08:34He felt that he was looked down upon because of his poverty.
08:41Years before he ever stepped into a wrestling ring,
08:44Tony constructed a new ultra-masculine persona for himself,
08:48which he referred to as the Viking.
08:51As soon as Tony stepped out to the street, he became the Viking.
08:55He had the word Viking with a helmet tattooed on his arm.
09:05He started to talk tough, rubbed the paw, and getting into street fights.
09:11In the newspaper archives I found a very old item.
09:17It says that two karate guys were just beating up everybody in a bar.
09:23It turns out those karate guys were Tony and his best friend Trister.
09:35Tony was fascinated with movies.
09:37One movie that really made an influence on him was Taxi Driver.
09:43Maybe Tony saw him as the same kind of outsider as Robert De Niro.
09:48And when he saw that movie, he decided that he will move to the United States someday.
09:54In 1986, Tony heads to Los Angeles searching for fame, fortune, and a new direction.
10:03He wanted people to like him.
10:04People like you because you're famous.
10:07And I think that was a shield for a lot of insecurities that he had.
10:12My name is Dee Dee and I was once married to Tony Hollomay.
10:19Size-wise and personality-wise, Tony was larger than life.
10:24I fell in love with him pretty quickly.
10:27When we got married, he wanted the music to be God Bless America.
10:34He wanted to be famous in America.
10:37He wanted to be a movie star in America.
10:39And he heard about Gold's Gym in Venice Beach.
10:43He attempted to be a bodybuilder, but he just didn't have the shape of a bodybuilder.
10:48He had a big belly. He was a big guy everywhere.
10:52It became almost like an obsession for him to be as big as possible.
10:57And steroids helped.
11:00He had a shoebox and it had steroids from Russia.
11:04It was clearly nefarious.
11:08I'll never forget one of the packages was for horses.
11:15His ambitions were to be a star, whatever way that came to him.
11:20He got some small roles for Little Caesars.
11:24Tip.
11:25He was in an S1 ad, in some beer commercials.
11:28Get back to work!
11:30And eventually some small roles on TV as well.
11:34No one argues with curling.
11:35Hanging in the Gold's Gym, a lot of people told him that you should go into wrestling.
11:44You could really earn some money with this and they got Tony interested.
11:48He did some wrestling shows with Herb Abrams, UWF.
11:52He had a costume made and it was Tony as the Viking.
12:01I told you I'm going to hurt every pencil neck, every pig squeak who steps in my way.
12:06There's only one way they're going to leave the ring.
12:08It's on the stretcher. Hurt.
12:10I think UWF should start to sell life insurance too.
12:14It was silly. It was very silly.
12:17Japan was probably his first big wrestling shows that he did.
12:20Tony told everybody that he was a successful boxer in Finland.
12:27None of this was true. He had never had a boxing fight in Finland.
12:31But New Japan made his gimmick about that.
12:35Tony Holm had become a star in wrestling in Japan,
12:42where they liked big guys, giant monsters battling it out.
12:47King Kong and Godzilla.
12:48The Japanese wrestling circuit is really tough.
12:53It was very punishing for the rest of his body.
12:56And Tony was very candid about starting to use strong painkillers during his time in Japan.
13:03It really became a habit for him.
13:05Somewhere along the lines, Tony's opportunities in Japan started to dwindle a little bit.
13:11His attitude was not great.
13:14When I met Tony, the way that he spoke to you made you understand that he really held himself to be somebody.
13:22But you have to know who else is in the room.
13:26My name is Michael Magellati, alias The Rebel Starbuck.
13:31I'm the pioneer of Finnish professional wrestling.
13:34Tony would wrestle tags alongside guys like Scott Norton against the Japanese contingents.
13:40From what I've heard, Tony Holm may rub some people the wrong way, ethnically.
13:47He had sympathies towards the White Brotherhood.
13:51He had a lot of friends who were skinheads and whatever else.
13:53And the wrong thing came out of his mouth.
13:57And a fight broke up between Scott Norton and Tony Holm may at the bar.
14:02I think that enough was enough.
14:05And now, it was judgment day.
14:11Tony had a very famous incident with Scott Norton, an American wrestler.
14:17Some people say that Tony kind of sacrificed Scott Norton.
14:20Then again, Scott Norton says that he cleaned Tony Holm may's clock.
14:25This was a problem from New Japan.
14:27The two of their foreign stars were not getting along.
14:43And that was the end of Tony in Japan.
14:45With Tony back in California, his wife rethinks their three-year marriage.
14:53There were a lot of things going on at the time that I overlooked.
14:58But it wasn't until he cheated on me that I knew what kind of person I was married to.
15:08As much as I didn't want to be with him anymore, you know, I still loved him.
15:13And at the point that I decided I needed to divorce him, he got very emotional.
15:20And, oh my God, I'm so sorry I did this to you.
15:23And I'm going to take my truck and drive off the pier.
15:25And I just said, I can't do this anymore.
15:29I woke up to a lot of things that he lied about.
15:35But I never imagined that he would turn into the person he turned into.
15:41As soon as we split up, that's when he became Ludwig Borga.
15:45In 1993, Tony joins the World Wrestling Federation as a main event villain.
15:58But his run with the company lasts less than a year.
16:01After they gave him that push of defeating me, they were building him up for Lex Luger.
16:08But the fans never got behind him.
16:13They were giving him all the vignettes and all those interviews and bringing him into TV.
16:18But his interviews were just like, blah.
16:21This time is going to be hard and tough.
16:24And I'm going to finish this American so-called hero once and for all.
16:28Sometimes he's speaking Finnish to the cameras.
16:33He says things like,
16:35Which is Finnish for like, I'll rip your ass off or something like that.
16:40You heard that, didn't you?
16:42Whatever you say.
16:44Most people in the US don't even know where Finland resides on the world map.
16:48So why should anybody feel threatened by who you are?
16:51American stinks.
16:53Lex Luger stinks.
16:54So Americans choke on this.
16:59He lacked the ability to connect with the audience.
17:03The nuances of being a pro wrestler he did not possess.
17:07And then we saw the SS tattoos on his calf and understood his philosophies.
17:12They were not very healthy.
17:15How do you justify it?
17:19How do you justify an SS tattoo based on what that stood for?
17:24And still to this day.
17:26I think the reason he got the tattoo on his leg was because he got attention for being fascinated by the Nazi thing.
17:33I remember he spent some time in Russia and he came back with all kinds of military memorabilia that was used by, I guess Nazis or I don't know.
17:48But one of the things was this creamer pitcher and on the bottom it had a swastika on it.
17:56And it was dated like 1941.
17:59And I had used it as a flower pot in our house.
18:03I didn't know that they were Nazi material.
18:05I was just a young, naive person.
18:09I didn't know shit from Shinola at that age.
18:16But why would somebody get an exit only tattoo on their rear end?
18:21Why?
18:22What the f**k would propel a man to tattoo exit only above his asshole?
18:32Especially when you're the size he is and look like that.
18:35Do you really need to have written instructions for people not to f**k you in the ass?
18:40Does there have to be a written warning?
18:43What the f**k's going on with that?
18:45And who are you making that statement to when you're walking down the street?
18:48You're so anti-homosexual that you have exit only tattooed above your asshole.
18:53Who's going to know?
18:55Ah, don't f**k him in the ass.
19:01While wrestling at Madison Square Garden, Tony injures his ankle in a match.
19:07With Tony being injured, he was unceremoniously dropped and I don't know if any of the audience really missed him either.
19:16Whatever the reason became was good to get rid of him.
19:23I'm glad he did get hurt on my watch.
19:27And he pretty much self-destructed once he left WWE.
19:30So if WWE is no longer an option, where do you go from here?
19:40So Tony is looking for work and he gets signed to fight in UFC.
19:45And now he tries to make the transition to the UFC.
19:49And Tony doesn't take the training very seriously.
19:51First, I'm going to hit him as hard as I can.
19:54If I miss that one, I rip his arms off the socket or his legs off the socket.
19:58So...
19:59His opponents ends up being Randy Couture, who will become a legend of the sport.
20:04Two first timers to the UFC.
20:07And we're looking at a big size difference here.
20:11Prior to the fight, he had said, I will never tap out.
20:14I would rather get out of there dead.
20:17But, you know, as soon as the choke is on...
20:23He ends up losing in one minute.
20:26That's the end of his MMA career.
20:31Tony went back to LA.
20:32He was getting married again, this time with a Finnish woman.
20:36The police came and raided their house.
20:40The SWAT team and guns and bulletproof vests and shields.
20:48Tony was charged with trafficking control substances, which were steroids.
20:54And was the son of a legal firearm, an Uzi.
20:58When we were together, Tony liked to shoot guns.
21:01Because they gave him power.
21:03I never imagined that he would become a guy that got in trouble with guns.
21:10He told me that there was a shark tank in LA County Jail.
21:16It was a cold moment.
21:19And there was the Aryan Brothers.
21:23He was a new guy.
21:25Look, Ludwig Borger.
21:28Not defensive innocent.
21:30The laws were very clear.
21:31If you had been convicted of a firearm felony in the United States, you should be deported.
21:37And that's what they did.
21:39And he could never go back to the United States again.
21:42He went back to Finland to chase the big and famous dream.
21:46Tony's quest for fame in America is cut short, forcing him back to Finland to pursue his dream once more.
21:59I think it was a really hard blow for Tony to be forced to leave the United States.
22:07He wants to be famous.
22:08He's a showman.
22:09So he's ready to try everything.
22:12He was the Finnish heavyweight professional boxing champion.
22:15And all of us kids loved his character.
22:18In the Finnish version of the TV show Gladiators.
22:21Gladiators.
22:22Yes.
22:23Everyone knows the world of Gladiators.
22:26His role was the villain of the Viking.
22:31Hello, I'm Marianne.
22:32And then Tony gets his segment in the Finnish talk show, where he record a single.
22:59Where he, in a very comical way, brags about how manly he is.
23:08It sells very well, and eventually he will record a whole record.
23:18At this point, Tony Halme is one of the most famous people in Finland, in fact.
23:22Everything Tony touches, it goes.
23:24Good Viking team!
23:27To the Finnish people, he really was superhuman.
23:31He achieved something.
23:33He was in Hollywood.
23:35He went to do Die Hard 3.
23:37Wait, wait, Jesus, don't open it, it's a bomb.
23:39Even though it was a side role, he was a goon.
23:41That broke the news barrier as far as making Tony Halme a household name.
23:46He had learned in wrestling how to sell his character, and he decides to write another biographical book.
23:55Almost like a political manifest.
23:58It's Tony's life story, with a lot of violence, a lot of sex, but a lot of it's made up and embales.
24:06A lot of those stories are offensive to many people.
24:12He uses the N-word a lot.
24:14He's very traditional when it comes to the roles of men and women.
24:18There's a lot of people who hate him, but there's certainly a big segment of Finnish population that really looks up to him.
24:25Tony's polarizing infamy attracts Finnish power brokers, eager to cash in on his natural charisma and headline grabbing antics.
24:34Jotkut rakastivat ja jotkut vihasivat, ja sellanhan tietenkin myy hyvin.
24:41Nimeni on Veikko Vallin ja tutustuin Tonyin 2000-luvun alussa.
24:46Esimerkiksi kerran tapasin Tonin henkilökohtaisesti, kun minun yritys aloitti proteiinijuoman kehittämisen isoille miehille tarkoitetun.
24:56Meidän piti löytää siihen sitten sopiva henkilö, promoamaan sitä.
25:00Ajatus siitä, että Tony lähtee politiikka, se oli aluksi niin kuin vitsi.
25:08Sitten kun pohdimme sitä, että mikä puolue olisi hyvä, Tony sitten ehdotti jotain tällaista natsipuoluetta.
25:15Ei Suomessa ole sellaiselle aatteelle mitään kannatusta.
25:18They contact Timo Soini, who is the leader of the Very Small True Finns Party, which is really struggling at that time.
25:26He joined the political party in Finland that were the troublemakers, and he was a troublemaker.
25:33No joo, me tehtiin Tonille sitten oma verkkosivu, siis kun sä tulit sille sivulle, niin siinä tuli nyrkkiänsi ja se kuvaruutu heilahti.
25:42But let's say the SS tattoo. How it didn't play into his political career is, I think it's a question of timing.
25:53During that time, Finland changed in a number of ways.
25:57The Cold War ended, we joined the European Union, the immigration began rising.
26:03And this coincided with an economic recession.
26:06As you can guess, a lot of these immigrants became scapegoats for the troubles that people had.
26:11I think that a lot of Finns were very proud of being Finnish, so when you do away with national identity, a lot of people saw it as a threat.
26:24So that's why I believe that he was forgiven. Let's take care of our own before we take care of anybody else.
26:29We weren't as liberal then as a nation as we are now.
26:34And he had charisma, especially for the Finnish people, for the Finnish audience, they understood him.
26:39The closest equivalent to Tony Halmi as a politician is Donald Trump.
26:43The feelings they evoke in their audience are much more important than facts.
26:49And if you look at it, so many parallels in pro-wrestling and politics.
26:55It's all about how to manipulate people's emotions.
26:58Tony said what he thought, and he didn't have any regard for political correctness.
27:08He also didn't care if the things that he said were true or not.
27:11Didn't he say that Tarja Hallonen, our president at the time, didn't he say that she was a lesbian?
27:14Tony antoi sen haastattelu ja sitten, että mä kysyin häneltä, että mihin sä annoit ton haastattelu?
27:21Tony sanoi, että no se oli joku radiokadava, mutta kai ennen sen leikkaa pois?
27:26No se oli suora lähetys.
27:28Kaduttaako sinua?
27:30En edelleenkään. Mähän sanoinkin, että mua kaduttaa se, että enintään se, että monet Suomen naiset siitä otti itteensä.
27:37He talks about immigration in a way that is actually extremely offensive and racist.
27:44Rikostilastot rumennavat samaa tahtia kuin ulkomaalaisten määräkäs maassamme kasvaa.
27:51Kun hän huomasi, että ne vähän rasistiset vitsit uppoavat siihen hänen yleisönsä.
27:58Hän ajatteli, että no vedetään.
28:00Mutta hänellä taas oli bingo pango ja apu babu, jotain tällaisia.
28:04Mikä on halventava?
28:07Silloin mä voin ehkä joskus käännistää, että mä en muista mikään sen pavien nimi, joka haastatteli mut.
28:12Se on mun tapa, mutta edelleenkin mä uskon tähän demokratiaan.
28:16En mä suutani siilu, koska ihmiset äänesti Toni Viikinkin halmeen.
28:21Kusteli toimittajat keskusteli, että pitäisikö Tonista kirjoittaa ollenkaan mitään.
28:26Pitäisikö se vaijeta kokonaan, että onko se vaarallinen henkilö suomalaiselle yhteiskunnalle.
28:31Voiko häntä päästä televisioon ollenkaan?
28:34Että onks nää liian radikaaleja, nää mielipiteitä?
28:38Sitten se vaalipäivänä näkyy, että kehen ihmiset luottaa.
28:45Ehkä yksi viera suurempi ääniharava yllätys oli Toni Halme, joka Helsingissä valittiin perussuomalaisten listoilta eduskuntaan.
28:53Kaikki meni hyvin, kunnes sitten Toni valitti eduskuntaan.
28:57Setaa Kalmäki.
28:58Kaikki.
28:59Kaikki.
29:00Kaikki.
29:01Kaikki.
29:03Kaikki.
29:04Kaikki.
29:05Kaikki.
29:06Kaikki.
29:07Kaikki.
29:08Kaikki.
29:09Kaikki.
29:10Kaikki.
29:11Kaikki.
29:12Kaikki.
29:13Kaikki.
29:14Kaikki.
29:15Paikki.
29:16Kaikki.
29:17Kaikki.
29:18Kaikki.
29:19Kaikki.
29:20They got their voices all over Finland.
29:24I have probably been a big impression
29:27of the Finnish people who haven't heard me.
29:50Tony escalates his divisive rhetoric.
30:20A lot of people hold Tony Hallme to be a, I guess a white supremacist would be the correct term.
30:50Tosessi kyllä.
30:52Matti, se on pikkasen eri, kun mä haluan ottaa unhommaksi.
30:55Mä oon aivan varma, että ikinä niistä 99-vuotalaista on mieluummin luollut jonkun perseen kunnon, jos se on kautta, jos se on kysytty.
31:05Itse huomasin, kun olin siellä eduskunnassa hänen kanssa samassa huoneessa, niin ne tarinat vaihtuivat viikoittain.
31:11No joo, ei sitä aina muista, mitä sitä on tullut sanottua.
31:16Se oli koko ajan se fakta ja fiktio, meni hänellä.
31:20At this point he had already developed
31:50a serious alcoholism problem on top of his drug addiction.
32:15By 2003 Tony's increasing substance abuse
32:19becomes impossible to ignore.
32:21Tony had promised to have an exhibition match.
32:23Tony had promised to have an exhibition match against his old friends.
32:25Sparring partner.
32:27The fight became quite brutal.
32:29Especially for Tony.
32:31Who really got a beating in that fight.
32:33After the fight.
32:35Tony starts drinking.
32:37He goes.
32:39He goes to Tampere where he has some friends.
32:41He keeps on drinking.
32:43After about two weeks of this fight.
32:45After about two weeks of this binge.
32:47He finally returns.
32:49He finally returns home to his wife.
32:51They develop an argument.
32:52He has an argument.
32:53To have an exhibition match against his old friend and sparring partner.
32:55The fight became quite brutal.
32:57Especially for Tony.
32:59Who really got a beating in that fight.
33:01And he says he'd like many times.
33:02After he helps to meet.
33:03His wife.
33:04And he grabs the town right away.
33:06And he tries to see a lot of things.
33:07And he brings the coffee.
33:08To have two identified.
33:10And he goes to Tampere where he has some friends.
33:13And he keeps on drinking.
33:14After about two weeks of this binge.
33:15He finally returns home to his wife.
33:17They develop an argument.
33:20The wife says, we're true, I've had enough of your drinking.
33:24Tony grabs a handful of medicine, swallows them.
33:29The wife, of course, wants to call the 911.
33:33At some point, Tony gets hold of a gun.
33:37The wife tries to grab the gun away from Tony.
33:41And during the struggle, the gun goes off.
33:47To this day, we're not sure whose finger was on the trigger.
33:53But the wife flees the apartment, calls 911.
33:58She goes back inside the apartment and she finds that Tony is unconscious.
34:04He has swallowed some of his own puke and doesn't really show any signs of life really.
34:12Kansanedustaja Tony Halmeyn epäillään syyllistyneen ammuskeluun varhain tänä aamuna.
34:17Poliisin mukaan kukaan ei loukkaantunut välikohtauksessa.
34:20Silminnäkijät kuitenkin kertovat, että Halme vietiin tapahtuman jälkeen pois paikalta ambulanssilla.
34:26At this point, Tony is in a coma.
34:29There are all kinds of infections and he has suffered from lack of oxygen so it's in a pretty critical condition.
34:36Poliisi on ollut tänään yhteydessä Halmetta hoitaviin lääkäreihin, joiden mukaan Halme on yhä heikossa kunnossa.
34:44He really struggles for his life for the first couple of weeks.
34:49Eventually they manage to revive him.
34:53But by this point it's clear that he has suffered some serious brain damage.
34:59He can only talk like one word at a time and he starts this slow process of recuperating.
35:07When he comes to the dark, there are a lot of things in the dark.
35:12I don't remember the events of the day.
35:15Or the other day.
35:16Or the events of the day.
35:17Or three times of the day.
35:18So that he's out of the dark.
35:20But he's never back to his old colorful quick-thinking self.
35:26People could see that he was not the old Tony at all.
35:31His marriage ended and made things only worse.
35:35He was impressed.
36:05Yes, that's true.
36:12Tony resigns from parliament and receives a four-month suspended sentence.
36:17Now on disability, his health struggles push him deeper into isolation.
36:22He probably had a problem with how things went.
36:27The Viking Imako started to fall.
36:30Things were getting bleaker all the time.
36:36He was seriously addicted to painkillers.
36:40He used a lot of alcohol.
36:42He continued to do steroids as well.
36:45But obviously they don't help you if you cannot do the training.
36:50Is there a big rauta?
36:52Yes, it does.
36:54How many painkillers go?
36:5650 maybe.
36:58Tony said that there is a Viking.
37:02And if they leave the rauta, they don't have to worry about it.
37:10The rauta of the rauta of the rauta of the rauta of the rauta of the rauta of the rauta of the rauta of the rauta.
37:17He kept doing these appearances in little bars around Finland.
37:22And that was the only really thing that got him out of the house at that point.
37:27It appears that he got in debt also because of the drugs he had to buy from the black market.
37:48from the black market.
38:06You've been to the mountaintop and you have to come down because there's nowhere else to go.
38:11For a lot of people I think it's too much. You'd rather end it than become nobody again.
38:18When I was born like a girlfriend, I had to invite my husband to the home.
38:31I will sing in the room of the house.
38:36I want to sing out an inside of my house.
38:42I ring for police.
38:45It was a black hole.
38:49It was a black hole.
38:51All the holes were there.
38:53He had to breathe.
38:56I'm crying.
38:57You're crying.
38:58He was crying.
38:59I'm crying.
39:00I'm crying.
39:01I'm crying.
39:03I'm crying.
39:04I'm crying.
39:05I'm crying.
39:08I'm crying.
39:15On January 10th, 2010, Tony Halme is found dead by suicide, bringing a sudden end to his turbulent life.
39:36Halme was 47 years old.
39:39Why did he arrive to that decision?
39:42Obviously, we can only speculate.
39:43But it must have been very hard for him to see himself in the condition that he was, which was so far removed from the idea that he always held, of a big, strong man.
40:10Not surprised.
40:11Didn't shed a tear.
40:15What does a person do to another person where you don't even get emotional about that?
40:24Because he was a piece of shit and he burned the bridges.
40:28You know, he treated people horribly.
40:31You know, he had to be a piece, that he was a piece of shit.
40:32You know, his motivation was a piece like that.
40:33I'm not sure if he didn't get emotional about it.
40:33The motivation to train in the room was the same as me.
40:40The motivation was the same as me.
40:45And then when we go to the right direction, what Tony said,
40:50that he had been a treasured for his life,
40:53what happened to him,
40:56that he had been able to do it.
40:58At the same time, I saw a little boy,
41:03who took care of her and her love.
41:07Maybe a little bit of a loss and a lot of envy.
41:13I'm sure that his trauma has been made for him,
41:18but if he doesn't have it,
41:21the envy of his life is the same way,
41:24so that the person will eventually kill himself.
41:28When the man hates him like this man,
41:30you're not going to beat this man.
41:33So, what is his legacy?
41:37Here comes Borga!
41:41Ludwig Borga stumbles a bit!
41:44He was best known as Ludwig Borga,
41:47a nondescript heel from Finland
41:52who never really connected with the audience.
41:54I was ringside.
41:57Can you remember a Ludwig Borga match?
41:59Because he just didn't stand out in that environment.
42:05He was an asshole.
42:07And that's where I leave it.
42:09Tony brought everything that he had learned in the American show business
42:12and wrestling to Finland at the right time.
42:14And really revolutionized Finnish politics in a lot of the same ways
42:18that Donald Trump changed politics in the United States.
42:22And this really paved the way for a lot of politicians that ran on anti-immigration teams everywhere in Europe
42:36during the next couple of decades.
42:38you thought he beat him over the season half of Formula since트를 coldest and making social momentum all over the world.
42:42And so he's meeting him like that.
42:43And that's where I acknowledge all the unions
42:48and my beliefs.
42:49He's solutions.
42:50Like you just move on.
42:52He's listening to the terminar of the panel –
42:54I hope he can win for yourself this you have a thousand Reidz!
42:56And so far and your partner can win for you!
42:58And eventually winning –
42:59many wins are still the most important part of his hierarchy and plays then
43:01the самого and experts of the association of the citizens of Central purposes..
43:03Please appreciate it!
43:04Thanks, let's pass up!
43:05I want people to know that there was a good side to this person, you know, and I wouldn't
43:19have fallen in love with somebody that was a complete monster the way that we know of
43:23him now. But I think he destroyed himself in every way that a person could do that.

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