Hulk Hogan, Gawker Media
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LGBTQ Nation on MSNRemember when Hulk Hogan helped Peter Thiel bankrupt a media empire after it outed Thiel as gay?Iconic pro-wrestler and MAGA supporter Hulk Hogan (aka Terry Gene Bollea) died today at the age of 71, amid reports of a possible heart attack. While many remember Bollea for his wrestling persona and his support of the current president at the 2024 Republican National Convention,
Kiwi billionaire Peter Thiel secretly bankrolled Hulk Hogan’s lawsuit against an online US news site after it published a sex tape of the former wrestling star. Hogan, otherwise known as Terry Bollea,
Hulk Hogan's successful lawsuit against Gawker, stemming from the publication of a sex tape, led to the media outlet's bankruptcy. Tech billionaire Peter Thiel secretly funded the legal battle, seeking retribution for being outed by Gawker years prior.
It's hard to overstate just how violent and commie-hating American pop culture was in the 1980s. The late wrestler was among its biggest stars.
Terry Gene Bollea, better known by his stage name, Hulk Hogan, died Thursday at the age of 71. For wrestling fans, he will be remembered as the man who, along with Vince McMahon, was responsible for turning professional wrestling into a popular mainstream sport and a franchise worth billions.
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Hulk Hogan, who died early Thursday at 71 of apparent cardiac arrest, was one of the greatest professional wrestlers of all time. Even now—decades removed from his apex as a performer—Hogan remains the art form’s single most iconic cultural presence.
The death of Hulk Hogan at the age of 71 on Thursday has led many people to ask about someone who was closely associated with him, though for the wrong
It was the week after Gawker was finally forced to close in August 2016 that I first started editing Kotaku on the weekends. As a newcomer, that frustrating, outrageous, and absurd chapter in the site’s history was already starting to feel like a painful but distant memory. Little did I know that the aftershocks were still on their way.
It's hard to overstate just how violent and commie-hating American pop culture was in the 1980s. The late wrestler was among its biggest stars.