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Liv Morgan Dominik Mysterio interview
Liv Morgan Dominik Mysterio interview (Photo by Michael Marques/WWE via Getty Images)
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Liv Morgan And Dominik Mysterio Talk Music, WrestleMania And Post Malone

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WrestleMania season is always busy, but Liv Morgan and Dominik Mysterio took a breather to talk music, memories, and the kind of pop culture curveballs you don’t expect from WWE’s most chaotic on screen duo.

Ahead of WrestleMania 42, Morgan and Mysterio sat down with Billboard, stepping away from storyline madness to reflect on where they came from and what’s still blasting in their headphones.

For Morgan, that meant heading back to New Jersey roots, where Fetty Wap wasn’t just a hitmaker, he was local legend status before the rest of the world caught up.

“We were the first to get him, though,” Morgan says. “He was right next door in Paterson. We had ‘Trap Queen’ before everyone else.”

Mysterio’s soundtrack was a different beast entirely, shaped by West Coast staples.

“Being a West Coast kid, I grew up on 2Pac, Ice Cube, and N.W.A. Now, it’s Kendrick [Lamar], Game and a lot of the new West Coast sound. In high school, it felt like a little bit of everything.”

Check out their Billboard playlist below:

A chaotic mix that somehow works

On screen, the pairing feels like a trainwreck you can’t look away from, Morgan’s unpredictable energy paired with Mysterio’s smug, antagonistic streak has turned them into one of WWE’s most effective heel combinations.

Off screen, that chemistry spills into music taste, the pair built out a playlist jumping from Lil Wayne to 50 Cent, even pulling in unexpected names like Abbey Romeo, it’s messy, broad, and completely on brand.

Morgan also hinted at stepping further into music herself, teasing her single ‘Trouble’, which is set to debut through Billboard.

From the ring to the playlist

The conversation didn’t just stick to music, the duo revisited their first WrestleMania moments, title wins, and the kind of milestones that define a WWE career.

There’s also a sense that both are leaning into the crossover potential, wrestling and music have always shared DNA, spectacle, attitude, and personality doing most of the heavy lifting.

And if you’re wondering how far that crossover could go, they even threw out the idea of Post Malone stepping into a heel role, it sounds ridiculous, until you realise wrestling has built entire empires on ideas just like that.

Be sure to check out the full interview here (it’s a fun one).

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