Hulk Hogan remembered by wrestling world
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This week, wrestling icon Hulk Hogan passed away aged 71. We revisit one of the strangest stories involving the Hulkster, which included the world's biggest metal band
In an interview, Hulk Hogan revealed that he tried to audition to play bass for Metallica and The Rolling Stones.
In a separate interview with The Sun, Hogan went further, claiming he had been friends with drummer Lars Ulrich and was asked to join the band in its early days. Metallica, however, remembers it differently. Ulrich flatly denied the story, and frontman James Hetfield told Metal Injection, "I don't remember him… Definitely not."
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Jacobin on MSNHulk Hogan Was a Very Bad ManHulk Hogan, an absolute trainwreck of a human being and the most important professional wrestler who ever lived, has died at seventy-one. Let’s get that second part out of the way, because while most of the world knows that it’s true,
Hulk Hogan died Thursday at the age of 71. Here are the famed wrestler's biggest controversies during his story career.
As Hogan became one of the biggest names in New Japan Pro Wrestling, he continued his musical pursuits with a group called Itch-Band. Hulk Hogan & Itch-Ban released an objectively horrible album in 1983, on which Hogan is credited on vocals and bass, though musician Masayoshi Kabe is also credited on bass.
Are you an expert on the most well-known wrestlers in history? Think about it again! These seven amazing facts about Hulk Hogan might even surprise his biggest fans.
Again, that is not the Magic Marker scribbling of a bored and horny junior high boy circa 1996, but rather a real movie—much like The Wrestler—that Hulk Hogan was offered and turned down, as ...
The charismatic strongman who helped form WWE into the multibillion-dollar juggernaut it is today, and whose later life was marred by controversy, has passed away at 71, writes Ryan Coogan
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Hulk Hogan, a wrestling icon of the 1980s, captivated audiences with his larger-than-life persona. Known for his patriotic image and electrifying performances, Hogan became a symbol of American culture.