In an update on the Boneyard Match between The Undertaker and AJ Styles on Night 1 of the WrestleMania 36 event, Jeremy Borash was one of the names heavily involved in the production aspect of the match.

Meanwhile, according to a report from What Culture, the match was taped over eight hours, from 9pm Eastern on Wednesday, March 25th to 5am Eastern on Thursday, March 26th in a location in Florida that was not near to the WWE Performance Center and that the company contracted an outside production company to create the set, which took five days in total.

The report adds that the company wanted to use an abandoned ditch, a bridge and roadside for The Undertaker’s biker entrance, which would have still included Metallica’s Now That We’re Dead single, however they did not have the time to secure a permit to film there since it was city property.

The trash talk that took place during the match, such as The Undertaker calling AJ Styles once again by his real name, as well as Michelle McCool’s name being mentioned, was not part of the original script, however The Undertaker and AJ Styles requested to improvise dialogue during the segment, which Triple H was happy to oblige and encouraged both men to do as much talking as they wanted.

Additionally, AJ Styles’ hand that poked up out of the grave was a prop, as Triple H and Michael Hayes found the hand on-location and were trying to figure out a way to use it when The Undertaker suggested that the hand would poke up out of the grave after Styles was buried, similar to when he was buried at the WWF In Your House: Buried Alive event back in October 1996.