If you still use 'admin' as a username on your blog, change it.

If you have a fantastic idea you're really passionate about and are making $100,000 in your job, if you can set aside some of that to invest in servers or contractors or other folks, that's actually the best way to start a business in my opinion.

I hope that people have more to say than 140 characters will allow them in their life.

It turns out that social networks drive a heck of a lot of traffic to blogs.

If you were building a real-time game like one of Zynga's games, the WordPress model wouldn't work well for that.

Automattic's mission has always been very aligned with WordPress itself, which is to democratise publishing.

Immunity to obsolescence is the only obsolescent-immune conceit of the past millennium.

I learned a ton of things during my time in CNET.

My job is such that I get to run new things every day, and I get to run new markets and new technologies. I enjoy that quite a bit.

Twitter is the ultimate service for the mobile age - its simplification and constraint of the publishing medium to 140 characters is perfectly complementary to a mobile experience.

The more money Automattic makes, the more we invest into Free and Open Source software that belongs to everybody and services to make that software sing.

While I personally believe strongly in the philosophy and ideology of the Free Software movement, you can't win people over just on philosophy; you have to have a better product, too.

The center of gravity for an organization should be as close to what they make as possible. If you make cars, you need people in the factory. If you breed horses, be in the stable. If you make the Internet, live on the Internet, and use all the freedom and power it gives you.

My parents told me if I wanted to fight, they wouldn't support me.

I'm about great competition. That's why I can have a great smile beforehand and connect with the crowd, and then, when I get in the ring, I flip that switch.

Any match with Keith Lee is definitely circled on my calendar.

I like wrestling the bigger guys, personally, because I can lay into them harder, and they can dish it back out.

I know I'm skilled - I know my background - and the people who are familiar with my credentials know better than to try me.

I love working with new guys, especially MMA guys.

I am me. I've always been a character, and my character's story lives into pro wrestling.

In pro wrestling, if somebody throws a move, it's my job not to get hurt but also to sell the move and make it look like I'm dying.

Even when you're on top in the UFC, you only get paid a couple times a year.

I'm just tired of the unethical people, the scumbags, all that. Maybe that's how all businesses are run, but in MMA, I've been in the UFC, Legacy, and Bellator. The UFC was the best, and even they didn't treat you that well.

Take into consideration I get to play-fight in my underwear every week, and I get paid very well to do it.

MMA is like the Colosseum in Rome: the fans want to see violence.

I'm a shark, and I swam in a lot of different ponds, but I'm ready for the ocean.

When I started doing pro wrestling, it wasn't the physical aspect doing the moves or taking the moves that was hard: it was interacting with the crowd, body movement, selling, getting that emotional attachment with people so they're invested in a match. That was the hard part.

My goal is to make wrestling more like mixed martial arts.

If I do make WWE - because in my head, until it's official, it's not a thing - I think if they brought me in, it would be very short lived at NXT, and I'd be on main roster extremely quick.

In sports entertainment, you can be larger than life.

I'll be honest, when I first started pro wrestling, everybody else did clotheslines better than me. They did everything about pro wrestling better than me. But when it comes to fighting, getting nitty and gritty, I'm the man.

Not only do I have fun in the ring, but I have fun walking out to the ring. I have fun walking away from the ring.

There's nothing worse than a bunch of toothless, ignorant people yelling at you. It's horrible.

Wrestling is one of the hardest things, and it has nothing to do with the extremely hard physical part of it. It has to do with the psychological part of it.

I'm usually just so laid back most of the times.

Growing up, my family wasn't really into sports, so we didn't really watch sports, and then one day I stumbled across the TV: pro wrestling.

I like to hit hard, I like to be hit hard, and I like really competitive matches. That's my take on pro wrestling.

Growing up, I was always a fan of wrestling, but I was also a fan of MMA and stuff.

I have to say, running in flip-flops through the airport can be pretty tricky.

My goal isn't just to make wrestling into a bigger show and make good money, but it's also to evolve pro wrestling to where I think it belongs.

I'm always learning, always trying new things, because you have to to stay fresh.

Living in my parents' house is pretty sweet. It's not like they're rich or anything, but they're pretty nice to me, so it was pretty good living there, too, and all I did was jujitsu. I was just like a stallion, just living on my parents' couch. It wasn't terrible.

It doesn't matter if you're the best wrestler in the world and can do every move perfectly; if you don't connect with the crowd or sell well or have good promos, nobody cares.

The first time I was in a ring with William Regal, I called him 'Bro,' and from there, everyone just kept saying 'Bro' to me. I kept saying 'Bro,' and before I knew it, I was deemed The King of Bros.

I feel like I started with wrestling, and a love of pro wrestling, that lead me to MMA and the UFC. And now it's come full circle back to pro wrestling.

My goal isn't to be one of the best; it's to change the game, to change the way things work.

I'm down to fight anybody at any given time, anywhere.

Pro wrestling fans love what they watch, and they go out to enjoy and have fun.

When I was in the UFC, I would get tickets for a fight, and then what I would do is go in the crowds and watch the rest of the fights. A lot of times, I would end up taking pictures and signing people's books. I didn't care if I got any money or anything. I was just there enjoying my time and watching the fights.

Crowds are always different, but I know I have hardcore fans who watch everything I do online, so I have to make sure every match is different.