The Million Dollar Man was to professional wrestling what Ebenezer Scrooge is to Christmas. He was like a rich... — Ted DiBiase Sr.

The Million Dollar Man was to professional wrestling what Ebenezer Scrooge is to Christmas. He was like a rich bully. He bullied everybody with his money, and his motto was 'Everybody's got a price.'

Author: Ted DiBiase Sr.

Insight: There's something almost philosophical buried in this wrestling quote about how money corrupts everything it touches. Ted DiBiase wasn't just playing a character—he was dramatizing something people actually feel: the way wealth can turn someone into a different kind of person, less bound by normal rules and more willing to use whatever advantage they have over others. The Scrooge comparison is the real insight here. Scrooge didn't just have money; his money had him. It became the lens through which he saw every human interaction, every relationship, every moral decision. DiBiase's character worked because audiences recognized that particular flavor of arrogance—the person who's genuinely confused why anyone would turn down a bribe, who can't imagine a value system that isn't denominated in dollars. It's comical until you realize you probably know someone like this, or catch yourself thinking like this in moments you'd rather not admit. What makes the quote age well is that it captures something about power more broadly. It's not really about wrestling or even wealth specifically. It's about how any significant advantage—money, status, connections—can calcify someone's heart if they let it. The real warning isn't "don't be rich." It's "don't let whatever power you have become your whole personality."

Money makes monsters of us

The Million Dollar Man was to professional wrestling what Ebenezer Scrooge is to Christmas. He was like a rich bully. He bullied everybody with his money, and his motto was 'Everybody's got a price.'

There's something almost philosophical buried in this wrestling quote about how money corrupts everything it touches. Ted DiBiase wasn't just playing a character—he was dramatizing something people actually feel: the way wealth can turn someone into a different kind of person, less bound by normal rules and more willing to use whatever advantage they have over others.

The Scrooge comparison is the real insight here. Scrooge didn't just have money; his money had him. It became the lens through which he saw every human interaction, every relationship, every moral decision. DiBiase's character worked because audiences recognized that particular flavor of arrogance—the person who's genuinely confused why anyone would turn down a bribe, who can't imagine a value system that isn't denominated in dollars. It's comical until you realize you probably know someone like this, or catch yourself thinking like this in moments you'd rather not admit.

What makes the quote age well is that it captures something about power more broadly. It's not really about wrestling or even wealth specifically. It's about how any significant advantage—money, status, connections—can calcify someone's heart if they let it. The real warning isn't "don't be rich." It's "don't let whatever power you have become your whole personality."

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Ted DiBiase Sr.

Ted DiBiase Sr. is a retired American professional wrestler and wrestling promoter, best known for his time in the WWE during the 1980s and 1990s. He gained fame as "The Million Dollar Man," a character known for his wealth and arrogance, and was a key figure in several notable storylines. Beyond wrestling, DiBiase is also an ordained minister and has focused on charitable work, promoting a message of faith and inspiration.

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