Hulk Hogan, Wrestling Icon and WWE Legend, Dies at 71
4 mins read

Hulk Hogan, Wrestling Icon and WWE Legend, Dies at 71

The world just lost one of the loudest voices in the room, and it’ll never sound the same again.

TMZ broke the news that Hulk Hogan, the larger-than-life wrestling icon and face of an entire generation’s worth of body slams and bandanas, died Thursday morning at the age of 71 after suffering a cardiac arrest at his Clearwater, Florida home. Medics were called just before 10 a.m., and Hogan was rushed to a nearby hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

It’s hard to overstate just how much Terry Bollea, the man behind the Hulkamania, meant to not only professional wrestling but to American pop culture. Hogan didn’t just step into the ring. He kicked down the door and made wrestling a spectacle that families across the country tuned into together, cheering or jeering with equal enthusiasm. He didn’t follow the moment. He was the moment.

The headband. The mustache. The 24-inch pythons. That rip-off shirt move. And of course, the immortal words: “Whatcha gonna do when Hulkamania runs wild on you?”

His 1984 championship win over The Iron Sheik set the fuse for what became a cultural explosion. Hogan carried WWE, then WWF, on his back and turned it from a sideshow for hardcore fans into a global empire. He was the reason millions tuned into the first WrestleMania, where he tag-teamed with Mr. T to take on Rowdy Roddy Piper and Paul Orndorff. That was more than a wrestling match. It was a full-blown pop culture lightning strike.

And the man never slowed down. When the ’90s came calling and the squeaky-clean hero routine wore thin, Hogan flipped the script and gave us Hollywood Hogan and the NWO. The man knew how to evolve. He didn’t just stay relevant. He owned every era he walked through. From taking on Andre the Giant at WrestleMania III to battling The Rock in a torch-passing epic at WrestleMania X8, Hogan’s legacy in the squared circle is untouchable.

But Hogan wasn’t content with just dominating the ring. He stormed into Hollywood with roles in Rocky III, Suburban Commando, and Mr. Nanny. His reality show Hogan Knows Best turned him into a household name all over again. He became the crossover superstar wrestling didn’t know it needed until it had one.

Even in the final stretch of his life, Hogan was still swinging. Just weeks ago, he was making headlines at the 2024 Republican National Convention. And before that, he was launching Real American Freestyle, an amateur wrestling league set to debut this August. The man just didn’t quit.

He did it all while dealing with the literal and figurative scars of decades in the ring. Countless surgeries. No original body parts left, by his own admission. And yet, the fire never went out. Hulk Hogan kept walking into the storm, even when the storm came from inside his own chest.

His personal life had its twists and turns. Marriages, divorces, scandals, lawsuits. But through it all, the myth of Hulk Hogan endured. Because for a certain slice of America, he wasn’t just a wrestler. He was a superhero with a mullet. A warrior with a grin. A legend who somehow made red and yellow look cool.

WWE confirmed his passing with a statement honoring him as “one of pop culture’s most recognizable figures,” and that’s no exaggeration. Hulk Hogan was wrestling. And for millions of fans, he always will be.

So today, somewhere in that big arena in the sky, there’s entrance music blasting and a crowd on its feet. Because Hulk Hogan just made his final entrance, and he’s still running wild.