Anthony Joshua rap battles with Louis Theroux and opens up on pressure of living up to expectations
Former two-time world heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua still lives with his mother, is tired of living up to other people's expectation of him and once took on six men in a single fight.
These are just a few of the things the Olympic champion revealed during his interview with Louis Theroux on BBC iPlayer.
The 34-year-old Watford warrior met with journalist Theroux at his first gym in Finchley after previously inviting him along to his comeback fight against Jermaine Franklin last April.
There is a must be seen to be believed rap battle between the fighter and the film-maker, but also a candid interview where Joshua shares his desire to reclaim a world championship.
He is also keenly aware he cannot live up to everyone's expectations of him.
"Are we going to dissect everything I say and use it as a narrative to create a story? That's why I keep myself to myself," Joshua says.
"You put all this pressure on yourself to come and be this big star and be perfect.
"I'm telling you, they'll pull you down. The higher you are, the bigger the drop."
'Femi' to his family, AJ takes Theroux to visit Watford's Meriden estate, where he grew up in, and meet with his aunt.
The boxer is known to the wider world as Joshua or 'AJ', but he explains that only began when he started boxing.
"All of a sudden it's like 'this is Anthony Joshua', [but] everyone [here] knows me as 'Femi'," he says.
"Anthony Oluwafemi Olaseni Joshua [is my full name]. But everyone called me 'Femi'."
Joshua says he is able to "separate the two", and his aunt says Anthony is the boxer while 'Femi' is the man.
"'Femi' is my nephew, my son," she says. "[For] people in the world, it's Anthony the boxer. 'Femi' comes first."
So often tight-lipped about his younger years, Joshua opens up more in the episode, explaining to Theroux how some of his knuckles came to be scarred.
"I used to get in fights a lot when I was younger," he says.
"My skin doesn't heal too well. This knuckle, I went to get chicken one evening and I ended up fighting six guys on my own."
Later on, Joshua says he is aware of the damage boxing can leave on a fighter and suggests that could be why he has changed his fighting style to a more considered approach.
"There's this stigma that 'AJ can't take a punch, AJ's afraid of getting hit'," he acknowledges. "My goal is to not get knocked out. My goal is to knock out my opponents. Because I'll never shut my brain down for the love of the sport.
"No way, because I know the sport won't love you back."
It is well documented that Joshua got himself into trouble when he was younger and was even briefly kicked off the GB Olympic team in 2011 when police found cannabis in his car.
He was charged with possession with intent to supply a class B drug and received a non-custodial sentence of 100 hours of unpaid work and a 12-month community order.
Joshua explains how boxing helped him focus his energies into fulfilling the promise he showed in the ring.
He says he started smoking marijuana when he was just 13 and was smoking six times a day.
"If you can't get the distractions out of your life, you can't get your full attention on improving as an athlete," he says.
"For me, when I stopped smoking I was able to progress."
Despite earning millions from his boxing career, Joshua says he is still a family man at heart.
"I still live with my mum. In our culture, we grew up in our own family home, we support our parents. Why am I going to move out and leave my mum by herself, for some girl?" he says.
"Family is the most important thing. When a girl gets with me, she ain't just marrying me, she's marrying my family."
Joshua reacted furiously to his loss to Oleksandr Usyk in their rematch last year. The heavyweight threw the world titles out of the ring and broke down in tears in the post-fight news conference.
Theroux questions Joshua about the incident, clearly hitting a nerve.
"That was an ego and pride thing coming out. I brought this heavyweight division back – that was in me. Right or wrong, probably wrong," Joshua says before Theroux interrupts him.
"Probably wrong. I don't think anyone says it was the right thing to do," Theroux says.
"You asked me a question and I'm answering it," Joshua replies.
"So I threw [the belts] because that's what I felt like. I grabbed the mic, I addressed the crowd. Could I have done it better? Of course I could have.
"I had finished a 12-round fight. I felt frustrated and annoyed. I knew I was out of the title race.
"The questions started. 'What is he like, where's his head at?' All this 'can he be three-time champion of the world?'
"People create this narrative and put pressure on me. It's too much. Gone are the days where it was for the fun. When you're just doing it for the passion, you're a prospect."
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