The Mike Vilardi Show
On the latest episode of The Mike Vilardi Show, Mike Vilardi and Neil Haley welcome actor, boxer, writer, and storyteller Brendan Kelly for a wide-ranging conversation that travels from the boxing ring to Hollywood film sets to the gritty streets of Hell's Kitchen. At the center of it all is his upcoming book, Occupation Gangster, a story inspired by New York City's infamous Irish gang, The Westies. Brendan begins with the book itself, now heading to print after extensive editing and revision. Occupation Gangster follows Jimmy Coonan, Mickey Featherstone, and the rise and fall of The Westies as they battle rivals, internal conflicts, and the changing landscape of New York organized crime. The title has a perfect origin story: it comes straight from Jimmy Coonan's arrest paperwork, where the line for occupation simply read "Gangster." Brendan knew instantly it was the ideal name for both a novel and a film. Unlike glamorous mafia tales, he portrays The Westies as men shaped by poverty, violence, and circumstance, defined by working-class roots, loyalty, betrayal, and the brutal arithmetic of survival. The discussion widens into New York's broader crime world, touching on Paul Castellano, John Gotti, the Gambino family, and the Sparks Steak House assassination, with Brendan explaining how The Westies interacted with the Italian crime families. He describes his approach not as historical fiction but as "faction," a blend of real people, documented crimes, personal observation, and creative storytelling inspired by Truman Capote. Then comes the boxing. Before writing or acting, Brendan spent years as a competitive fighter, representing Ireland internationally, competing across Europe and New York, and logging over 200 amateur fights. One of the episode's most entertaining stretches is his account of sparring with Mike Tyson, an experience he says completely reshaped his understanding of the sport and what elite competition truly demands. From the ring, the conversation moves to Hollywood, where Brendan appeared in films like The Rock and Con Air and the series Oz, among other projects. Yet he is refreshingly candid: he never quite saw himself as a traditional actor, and writing has become his far more fulfilling creative outlet. He reflects honestly on auditions, industry politics, and his preference for storytelling over chasing roles. Some of the richest material centers on early mixed martial arts and the legendary Raw Gym, a hub for real American wrestling, elite training, and early UFC fighters that became a breeding ground for future champions. That leads to Brendan's next major project, a book about Rico Ciparelli that he calls "Moneyball for MMA," exploring how Olympic-level wrestlers transformed the sport forever. The wrestling thread continues with stories featuring Thunderbolt Patterson, Bruiser Brody, Andre the Giant, Gene LeBell, and Rowdy Roddy Piper, and Brendan reveals he has a screenplay in the works centered on Thunderbolt Patterson and wrestling's golden era. Throughout, Brendan reflects on a life packed with travel and adventure, joking that he sometimes has to dig through old passports and journals just to remember where he's been. He also opens up about the craft of writing, the importance of editing, the power of simplicity, the necessity of structure, and the trap of chasing perfection. Eventually, he says, every writer has to stop revising and simply publish.
94 episodes
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