Early years (1977–1979) Jack and Geraldo Brisco got Hogan connected with
Hiro Matsuda—the man who trained wrestlers working for
Championship Wrestling from Florida (CWF)—to make him a potential trainee. During the first session in training, Matsuda broke Hogan's leg. After 10 weeks of rehab, Hogan returned to train with Matsuda and blocked him when he tried to break his leg again. In Hogan's professional wrestling debut, CWF promoter
Eddie Graham booked him against
Brian Blair in
Fort Myers, Florida, on August 10, 1977. A short time later, Hogan donned a mask and assumed the persona of "The Super Destroyer", a hooded character previously played by
Don Jardine and subsequently used by other wrestlers. After a brief career hiatus, Hogan wrestled for the Alabama-based promotion
Gulf Coast Championship Wrestling (GCCW) in 1978. He formed a tag team with
Ed Leslie known as The Boulder Brothers under the names Terry and Ed Boulder. During his time in Alabama, Hogan had early encounters with
André the Giant, including two matches and a televised arm-wrestling contest that generated significant local interest. On May 24, 1979, Hogan wrestled his first world championship match against
NWA World Heavyweight Champion Harley Race at Rip Hewes Sports Complex in Dothan, Alabama. Hogan pinned Race during the match and was briefly announced as the new champion on GCCW television. However, the NWA later overturned the decision, declaring a disqualification and nullifying the title change. Hogan went on to win the Southeastern Heavyweight Championship twice later in the year; first defeating
Ox Baker, then again after regaining it from
Professor Tanaka, following a brief loss to
Austin Idol. Later that year, Hogan and Leslie joined
Jerry Jarrett's Memphis-based promotion
Continental Wrestling Association (CWA). While in Memphis, Hogan made a talk show appearance alongside actor
Lou Ferrigno, star of the television series
The Incredible Hulk. The host commented that Hogan, standing 6 ft 7 in (201 cm) and weighing 295 lbs (134 kg) with biceps, dwarfed Ferrigno. Inspired by this, Mary Jarrett suggested the nickname "The Hulk," resulting in Hogan wrestling as Terry "The Hulk" Boulder. He also occasionally performed under the name Sterling Golden. However this claim is disputed, with some wrestling historians crediting
Terry Funk with recommending Hogan to McMahon Sr., having recognized his potential during Hogan's early matches. Funk, who previously appeared in the 1978
Sylvester Stallone film
Paradise Alley, would also later recommend Hogan to Stallone for the role of Thunderlips in
Rocky III. McMahon, impressed with Bollea's charisma and physical stature, offered him a spot on the WWWF roster as an opponent for André the Giant. McMahon, who wanted to use an Irish name, gave him the last name Hogan, and suggested he dye his hair red. Hogan, whose hair was already thinning, declined, quipping, "I'll be a blond Irishman." Hogan wrestled his first match in the WWWF under the ring name "Hulk Hogan" by defeating Harry Valdez on the November 17 episode of
Championship Wrestling. He was presented as a
villain in the WWWF, and was managed by
"Classy" Freddie Blassie. The next year, Hogan began a high-profile feud with
André the Giant. On August 9, 1980, at
Showdown at Shea, André defeated Hogan in a match. However, Hogan notably body-slammed André during the bout, an early version of the iconic moment that would later be immortalized at WrestleMania III. They faced off again on August 30, 1980, at Madison Square Garden in a televised match with
Gorilla Monsoon serving as special guest referee. Once again, Hogan managed to body-slam André, but was unsuccessful in ultimately defeating him.
New Japan Pro-Wrestling (1980–1985) during the Superdome Showdown professional wrestling event on August 2, 1980, in New Orleans In 1980, Hulk Hogan began wrestling for New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW), where he was nicknamed . by Japanese fans. He made his debut on May 13, 1980, while still under contract with the WWF, and continued to tour Japan occasionally over the next few years. During his time in NJPW, Hogan used a more technical wrestling style than the power-based approach he used in the United States. He also used the
Axe Bomber, a
crooked arm lariat, as his finisher in Japan instead of the
running leg drop. While still appearing for the WWF, including wrestling
Pedro Morales for the
Intercontinental Championship on March 26, 1981, Hogan achieved major success in Japan. On June 2, 1983, he won the inaugural
International Wrestling Grand Prix (IWGP) tournament by defeating
Antonio Inoki by knockout, becoming the first holder of the original version of the
IWGP Heavyweight Championship. Hogan also teamed with Inoki to win the MSG Tag League tournament in both 1982 and 1983. In 1984, Hogan returned to NJPW to defend the IWGP title against Inoki, who had earned a title shot by winning that year's
IWGP League. His official turn to a
hero occurred in mid-1981 during a televised segment where he saved
Brad Rheingans from an attack by
Jerry Blackwell. This sparked a feud with Blackwell, which Hogan eventually won, leading to his first title matches against Bockwinkel by the end of the year. Hogan introduced the term "Hulkamania" during a May 15, 1982, appearance on
The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. Following his role in
Rocky III, "Hulkamania" gained widespread popularity. It was also during his time in the AWA that Hogan would first claim "Hulkamania is running wild," a recurring catchphrase of his over his career. Despite his growing popularity, Gagne resisted making Hogan the AWA World Champion, personally preferring traditional
technical and
mat wrestling over Hogan's muscle-bound, flamboyant, entertainment-driven style, and remaining firm about having the AWA being built around one of its best technical wrestlers. Gagne later agreed to have Hogan win the title at AWA's
Super Sunday event on April 24, 1983, but only if Hogan gave him the majority share of his merchandise and earnings in New Japan Pro-Wrestling. Hogan declined, offering only a 50/50 split, and Gagne withheld the championship. However he returned on July 31, 1983, wearing an "American Made" shirt and focusing on a new feud with
Masa Saito. Later that year, Vince McMahon Jr. secretly visited Hogan in Minneapolis and offered him a leading role in the WWF. Hogan accepted and abruptly left the AWA in November 1983, reportedly sending his resignation by telegram. Gagne initially believed it was a prank until he realized Hogan was not showing up for AWA shows.
Return to WWF (1983–1993) Rise of Hulkamania (1983–1984) , December 1983 After purchasing the WWF from his father in 1982,
Vincent K. McMahon planned to expand the company into a nationally and selected Hulk Hogan as its top star, citing his charisma and widespread recognition. Hogan returned to the WWF at a television taping in
St. Louis, Missouri, on December 27, 1983, defeating Bill Dixon. On the January 7, 1984, episode of
Championship Wrestling, Hogan solidified his status as a fan favorite by rescuing
Bob Backlund from an attack by the
Wild Samoans. On January 23, 1984, Hogan won his first WWF World Heavyweight Championship by defeating
The Iron Sheik at
Madison Square Garden, becoming the first wrestler to escape the Sheik's finishing move, the
camel clutch, in the process. Following his victory, commentator Gorilla Monsoon famously declared, "Hulkamania is here!" Hogan quickly became the face of the WWF, referring to his fans as "Hulkamaniacs" and promoting his "three demandments": training, saying prayers, and eating vitamins. A fourth, "believing in yourself," was later added during his 1990 feud with
Earthquake. Hogan's ring attire adopted a red-and-yellow color scheme, and his entrances featured him tearing his shirt, posing, and encouraging the crowd to cheer. His matches during this period often followed a formula: after an initial offense, he would appear to be on the verge of defeat after being beaten down by his opponent, before "Hulking up" drawing on crowd energy to make a sudden comeback. This would be then followed by his signature sequence of moves: finger-pointing, punches, an
Irish whip, the
big boot and
running leg drop to secure victory.
International renown (1985–1989) Over the following year, Hulk Hogan became the face of professional wrestling as Vince McMahon expanded the WWF into mainstream pop culture through
the Rock 'n' Wrestling Connection on
MTV. This period saw large increases in attendance, television ratings, and pay-per-view buys. Hogan was the main attraction at the first
WrestleMania, held on March 31, 1985, where he teamed with actor and wrestler
Mr. T to defeat
"Rowdy" Roddy Piper and
"Mr. Wonderful" Paul Orndorff. He later faced Piper again at
The Wrestling Classic in November 1985. Throughout 1986, Hogan made multiple successful title defenses, including against
King Kong Bundy at
WrestleMania 2 and Orndorff at
The Big Event and ''
Saturday Night's Main Event IX''. In the fall he occasionally wrestled in
tag team matches with
The Machines as Hulk Machine under a mask copied from NJPW's
gimmick "
Super Strong Machine". At
WrestleMania III in 1987, Hogan defended his title against André the Giant, promoted as undefeated for 15 years. André turned heel by aligning with manager Bobby Heenan in the lead-up to a match at WrestleMania III, which was billed as one of the biggest matches in wrestling history. At the event, Hogan successfully defended the title by body-slamming André, winning the match with a leg drop. However, he went on to lose the championship to André on
The Main Event I in February 1988, after a setup involving
Ted DiBiase and referee
Earl Hebner, who had replaced
his twin brother, the assigned official. André then gave the title to DiBiase, leading WWF President
Jack Tunney to vacate it. At
WrestleMania IV, Hogan was eliminated from a tournament to determine a new champion after a match with André ended in a double disqualification. After this, he formed a partnership with the winner of the tournament,
Randy Savage, known as
The Mega Powers. The duo feuded with
The Mega Bucks and the
Twin Towers throughout the rest of 1988. However, by the end of 1988, the alliance had begun to fall apart after the storyline saw Savage grow jealous of Hogan and begin to suspect romantic tension between Hogan and his wife and manager,
Miss Elizabeth, leading to a break-up at
The Main Event II. This culminated at
WrestleMania V, where Hogan defeated Savage to win his second WWF World Heavyweight Championship.
Further WWF Championship reigns (1989–1993) in March 1989 During Hogan's second reign as champion, he starred in the film
No Holds Barred, which was the inspiration of a feud with Hogan's co-star
Tom Lister, Jr., who appeared at wrestling events as his film character Zeus. The duo would fight multiple times across the country during late 1989, including tag team matches at
SummerSlam and at the
No Holds Barred pay-per-view, with Hogan winning each match. He also won the
1990 Royal Rumble match, during which he encountered
the Ultimate Warrior for the first time. Their brief interaction in the match led to a feud between the pair, culminating in Hogan losing his championship to the Warrior in a title vs title match at
WrestleMania VI. In the months following his WrestleMania VI defeat, he teased retiring after being attacked by
Earthquake in a sneak attack on
The Brother Love Show, but returned by
SummerSlam and defeated Earthquake in a series of matches across the country. Hogan became the first wrestler to win two Royal Rumble matches in a row after winning the
1991 Royal Rumble match. He subsequently defeated
Sgt. Slaughter at
WrestleMania VII, and lost the title to
The Undertaker at
Survivor Series later that year following interference from
Ric Flair. The championship was later declared vacant due to two succeeding controversial title changes. It was decided that the vacant WWF Championship would be decided in the
1992 Royal Rumble match. During the match, Hogan was eliminated by
Sid Justice, who in turn Hogan helped Flair to eliminate, leading to Flair's victory. Hogan and Flair subsequently faced each other at several live events leading up to
WrestleMania VIII, although the two were never featured in a major televised WWF match. Instead, Hogan defeated Sid via disqualification at WrestleMania after interference by Sid's manager
Harvey Wippleman. During this time, news sources began to allege that
George Zahorian, a doctor for the Pennsylvania State Athletic Commission, had been selling steroids illegally to WWF wrestlers, including Hogan. Amidst public scrutiny, Hogan took a leave of absence from the company in late 1992. Hogan returned to the WWF in February 1993, helping his friend Brutus Beefcake in his feud with
Money Inc. and taking on
Jimmy Hart, who had recently turned face, as his manager. Hogan reportedly used his influence to have the finish of WrestleMania changed the weekend of the event so he would be champion during an upcoming international and de facto farewell tour. WWF Official
Bruce Prichard has said in interviews Hogan was made champion to help ticket sales for a WWF tour of Europe. At the first annual
King of the Ring pay-per-view on June 13, Hogan lost the WWF Championship to Yokozuna after Hogan was blinded by a fireball shot by Harvey Wippleman disguised as a "Japanese photographer". This was Hogan's last WWF pay-per-view appearance until 2002; after continuing his feud on the international house show circuit with Yokozuna until August 1993, Hogan sat out the rest of his contract which expired later that year.
Departure In 1993, Hogan opted to leave the WWF in order to distance himself from the ongoing
steroid scandal surrounding Vince McMahon. By November 1993, Hogan had ended his affiliation with the WWF and was now focusing on filming his television series
Thunder in Paradise. On the February 10, 2026 episode of his YouTube show "Something to Talk About with Bruce Prichard," longtime WWE official Bruce Prichard acknowledged to
Conrad Thompson that like other employees who left around the time, Hogan's decision to join
World Championship Wrestling (WCW) after leaving the WWF was in fact on his own terms, with Hogan cutting off ties to the WWF after being offered a lucrative deal for more money, which WCW overall owner
Ted Turner could easily provide. However, Prichard also stated that Vince in fact "made excuses" for Hogan with regards to Hogan's decision to end ties with him, putting more blame on Ted Turner and Hogan's ties to Turner's
company which he got through
Thunder in Paradise. however, the Disney-MGM Studios was also at the time being used for WCW
tapings.
Return to NJPW (1993–1994) On May 3, 1993, Hogan returned to NJPW as WWF Champion and defeated IWGP Heavyweight Champion
The Great Muta at
Wrestling Dontaku. Hogan also wrestled
The Hell Raisers with Muta and
Masahiro Chono as his tag team partners. His last match in Japan was on January 4, 1994, at
Battlefield, when he defeated Tatsumi Fujinami.
World Championship Wrestling (1994–2000) World Heavyweight Champion and feud with Alliance to End Hulkamania (1994–1996) in 1994 Starting in March 1994, Hogan began making appearances on
World Championship Wrestling (WCW) television, with interviewer
Gene Okerlund visiting him on the set of
Thunder in Paradise episodes. On June 11, 1994, Hogan officially signed with WCW in a ceremony that was held at
Disney-MGM Studios.
Jimmy Hart remained Hogan's manager. The next month, Hogan made his in-ring debut at
Bash at the Beach defeating
Ric Flair to win the
WCW World Heavyweight Championship. Hogan's arrival was seen as a turning point for the company, bringing mainstream attention, increased pay-per-view sales, and new sponsorships. Afterwards, Hogan continued feuding with Flair and later faced other top stars like
The Butcher and
Vader over the WCW World Heavyweight Championship. Hogan also reunited with Randy Savage, reforming
the Mega Powers in WCW. In September 1995, Hogan headlined the
debut episode of WCW Monday Nitro, marking the beginning of the
Monday Night Wars with the WWF. Hogan feuded with
The Dungeon of Doom, leading to a
WarGames match at
Fall Brawl where Hogan's team claimed victory. As the feud continued afterwards, Hogan began wearing all black and claimed he had crossed over to "the dark side." Hogan's 469-day title reign, the longest in the title's history, ended at
Halloween Havoc after a disqualification loss to
The Giant. During the event, Jimmy Hart also turned on Hogan and aligned himself with The Dungeon of Doom. On November 8, 1995, of
Nitro, it was revealed that the title was allowed to change hands under such circumstances due to Hart secretly putting in an agreed contract clause, but the controversy led to the title being vacated. Hogan would have afterwards only have one more title shot during this period in his WCW run, against Ric Flair on the January 1, 1996, of
Nitro, but would be unsuccessful in taking the belt from Flair due to Flair being disqualified; In early 1996, Hogan and Savage formed a team to battle The Alliance to End Hulkamania, defeating them at
Uncensored in a
Doomsday Cage match.
New World Order and final years in WCW (1996–2000) At
Bash at the Beach 1996, Hulk Hogan turned heel for the first time in nearly fifteen years by attacking Randy Savage and aligning with
The Outsiders (
Kevin Nash and
Scott Hall), cutting a promo afterwards in which he announced the formation of the
New World Order (nWo). He briefly lost the title to
Lex Luger on the August 4, 1997, episode of
Nitro, only to regain it five days later at
Road Wild. Meanwhile, a lengthy storyline between Sting and the nWo reached its pinnacle at
Starrcade on December 28, where Sting defeated Hogan to win the championship in a controversial finish. A feud with fellow nWo members Randy Savage and Kevin Nash led to the group's split into "nWo Hollywood" led by Hogan and "nWo Wolfpac" led by Nash; Hogan defeated Savage to win his fourth WCW World Heavyweight Championship on the April 20, 1998, episode of
Nitro. He lost the title to the
then-undefeated Bill Goldberg on the July 6, 1998, episode of
Nitro. After this, he spent the rest of 1998 feuding with
Diamond Dallas Page in high-profile celebrity matches at various WCW PPVs, involving the likes of
Dennis Rodman,
Karl Malone (
Bash at the Beach), and
Jay Leno (
Road Wild). and then
The Warrior. Hogan would have a critically panned rematch with The Warrior at
Halloween Havoc on October 25, where his nephew
Horace aided his victory. In late 1998, he announced a presidential run and retirement from wrestling, which were later revealed as publicity stunts derived from professional wrestler
Jesse Ventura's recent
Minnesota gubernatorial win. The incident is widely seen as a key factor in WCW's decline in ratings and popularity. Later that year in March, he lost the title to Ric Flair at
Uncensored, and returned as a babyface in July, defeating Savage to win his sixth and final WCW World Heavyweight Championship on the July 12 episode of
Nitro. On August 9, Hogan defeated Nash at
Road Wild to retain the championship. At
Fall Brawl, Hogan lost the title to Sting. In the rematch at
Halloween Havoc, Hogan came to the ring in street clothes, laid down for the pin, and left the ring. Hogan was convinced shortly after by head booker
Vince Russo to take time off. At
Bash at the Beach on July 9, 2000, Hogan was involved in a controversial segment. Hogan was scheduled to challenge
Jeff Jarrett for the WCW World Heavyweight Championship, however before the match, there was a backstage dispute between Hogan and Russo. The match ending was changed to a
worked shoot where Jarrett laid down for Hogan, with Hogan after winning, disparaging Russo and the company on the microphone. Moments later, Russo came to the ring and said this would be "the last time fans would ever see that piece of shit in a WCW ring" while revealing Hogan's creative control clause in his contract. which was eventually dismissed in 2002. Russo claims the entire incident was a work, and Hogan claimed that Russo had turned it into a shoot when Russo went into the ring. WCW President
Eric Bischoff agreed with Hogan's side of the story, saying he and Hogan celebrated after the event over the success of the
angle, but that Russo coming out to fire Hogan was unplanned. Regardless, the incident marked Hogan's final appearance in WCW. and cost
Stone Cold Steve Austin a chance at becoming the
Undisputed WWF Champion, which led to them feuding with both Austin and The Rock. This resulted in a match between Hogan and The Rock at
WrestleMania X8 on March 17. Although Hogan entered as a heel, the WrestleMania crowd supported him and cheered him heavily. After losing the match, Hogan shook hands with The Rock and turned face, distancing himself from the nWo. Following WrestleMania X8, Hogan revived his red and yellow "Hulkamania" persona, though he initially kept elements of his "Hollywood" character such as his blonde mustache and black beard combination. On the March 25 episode of
Raw, Hogan was drafted to the
SmackDown! brand, where he began a feud with
Triple H. Hogan defeated Triple H at
Backlash on April 21 to win the Undisputed WWF Championship, becoming the final WWF Champion before the company was renamed WWE in May 2002. Hogan lost the title to
The Undertaker at
Judgment Day on May 19. Hogan later feuded with
Kurt Angle, losing to him by submission at
King of the Ring on June 23; notably the first time Hogan had lost by submission in WWE. On the July 4 episode of
SmackDown!, Hogan teamed with
Edge to defeat
Billy and Chuck to win the
WWE Tag Team Championship, before losing the titles to
The Un-Americans (
Christian and
Lance Storm) at
Vengeance on July 21. Hogan was also notably defeated by
Brock Lesnar by technical submission on the August 8 episode of
SmackDown!. on
Mr. McMahon at
WrestleMania XIX After his loss to Lesnar, Hogan went on a brief hiatus before returning on the January 23, 2003, episode of
SmackDown!, dropping the remaining components of his "Hollywood" persona. Hogan faced The Rock again at
No Way Out on February 23, losing the match. At
WrestleMania XIX on March 30, Hogan defeated Vince McMahon in a
street fight billed as "20 years in the making". After WrestleMania XIX, Hogan adopted a masked alter ego named Mr. America, Mr. America's final appearance was on the June 26 episode of
SmackDown! in a six-man tag team match, as he teamed with Brock Lesnar and Kurt Angle against
Big Show and
The World's Greatest Tag Team (
Charlie Haas and
Shelton Benjamin) in a losing effort. The following week, Hogan quit WWE due to creative frustrations, unhappy with the payoffs for his matches after his comeback under the Mr. America gimmick. On the July 3 episode of
SmackDown!, McMahon aired footage of Hogan unmasking after the June 26 episode of
SmackDown! and "fired" him on-screen, although Hogan had already left the company.
Third return to WWE (2005–2007) , Hulk Hogan and
John Cena On April 2, 2005, Hulk Hogan was inducted into the
WWE Hall of Fame class of 2005 by
Sylvester Stallone. The following night at
WrestleMania 21, Hogan made a surprise appearance to save
Eugene from an attack from
Muhammad Hassan and
Khosrow Daivari. The lead-up to his induction and WrestleMania appearance was featured in the first season of
Hogan Knows Best. At
Backlash, Hogan teamed with
Shawn Michaels to defeat Hassan and Daivari. Hogan and Michaels were later victorious in a match on the July 4 episode of
Raw against
Carlito and Kurt Angle, after which Michaels turned on Hogan. This led to a match at
SummerSlam on August 21, where Hogan defeated Michaels. The two made up after the match, shaking hands. in 2005 Before
WrestleMania 22 in 2006, Hogan inducted
Gene Okerlund into the
WWE Hall of Fame. He returned at ''
Saturday Night's Main Event XXXIII'' alongside Brooke Hogan, where he was attacked by Randy Orton. Hogan later defeated Orton at
SummerSlam. This marked Hogan's final WWE match, despite later talks of a potential bout with
John Cena at
WrestleMania 25 which ultimately fell through.
Independent circuit (2007, 2009) on the Hulkamania Tour During this time Hogan was invited to join
Memphis Wrestling to face
Jerry Lawler. Although the match had been promoted for months, contractual obligations prevented Lawler from participating, and he was replaced by Paul Wight. Throughout November 2009, Hogan performed in an independent wrestling tour across Australia titled
Hulkamania: Let The Battle Begin. The main event of each show was a rematch between Hogan and Ric Flair, with Hogan winning each match.
Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (2009–2013) On October 27, 2009, it was announced that Hogan had signed with
Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA). Hogan debuted on the
January 4, 2010, episode of Impact! alongside Eric Bischoff in an executive role. Over the next few weeks, Hogan began an on-screen mentorship with
Abyss, and the two teamed to defeat
A.J. Styles and Ric Flair in Hogan's first TNA match on the March 8 episode of
Impact!. At
Lockdown on April 18, Team Hogan (Abyss, Jeff Jarrett,
Jeff Hardy and
Rob Van Dam) defeated Team Flair (Sting,
Desmond Wolfe,
Robert Roode and
James Storm) in a
Lethal Lockdown match. After months of storylines involving speculation about a secretive controlling force in TNA, Hogan turned heel by helping Hardy win the
TNA World Heavyweight Championship at
Bound for Glory on October 10, forming
Immortal with Hardy, Bischoff, Abyss and Jarrett. As part of the angle, it was revealed on the October 14 episode of
Impact! that Bischoff had tricked TNA President
Dixie Carter into signing paperwork to turn the company over to him and Hogan. The storyline concluded at
Bound for Glory on October 16, 2011, when Hogan lost to Sting in a match that returned control of TNA to Carter. After the match, Hogan aided Sting during a post-match attack by members of Immortal, marking his return to a fan favorite role. addresses Hogan in
Wembley, England in January 2013 Hogan wrestled his final matches during TNA's tour of the United Kingdom, on January 26 and 27, 2012, at
house shows in
Nottingham and
Manchester, where he, James Storm and Sting defeated Bobby Roode,
Bully Ray and Kurt Angle in a six-man tag team main event at both events. Two months later, Hogan assumed the role of TNA's on-screen
general manager. His last major storyline in TNA was with the mysterious masked group
Aces & Eights; the storyline included an angle where Bully Ray was in a relationship with his daughter Brooke, culminating at
Lockdown on March 10, 2013, where Ray was revealed to be the leader of Aces & Eights. Hogan left TNA in October 2013 upon the expiration of his contract. His final appearance was on the October 3 episode of
Impact Wrestling.
Fourth return to WWE (2014–2015) and
The Rock at
WrestleMania XXX in April 2014 Hogan returned to WWE in early 2014, appearing on
Raw to promote the
WWE Network on February 24, and alongside
Arnold Schwarzenegger and
Joe Manganiello on March 24. During
WrestleMania XXX, Hogan served as the host, making several appearances throughout the night. WWE honored Hogan's career during a live event at Madison Square Garden dubbed "Hulk Hogan Appreciation Night" with a special commemorative banner hanging from the rafters on February 27, 2015. The following month, he appeared on the March 23 episode of
Raw in a segment with
Snoop Dogg and
Curtis Axel. Hogan posthumously inducted "Macho Man" Randy Savage into the WWE Hall of Fame
class of 2015 three days later. The next night at
WrestleMania 31, Hogan, Scott Hall and Kevin Nash, representing the nWo, interfered in the Sting–Triple H match on behalf of Sting, where they battled
D-Generation X (DX) members
Billy Gunn,
X-Pac,
Road Dogg, and Shawn Michaels.
Racism scandal and departure In July 2015,
National Enquirer and
Radar Online publicized an
anti-black rant made by Hogan on a leaked
sex tape recorded in 2007. In the recording, he is heard expressing disgust with the notion of his daughter dating a black man, referenced by repeated use of the racial slur "
nigger". Hogan also said that he was "a racist, to a point".
Radar Online later reported that Hogan had also used
homophobic slurs on the leaked sex tape. It was also reported that Hogan had used racist language in a 2008 call to his then-imprisoned son, Nick, and also said that he hoped they would not be reincarnated as black males. On July 24, WWE terminated their contract with Hogan; however, Hogan's lawyer said Hogan chose to resign.
Mattel halted production of his action figures, and retailers including
Target,
Toys "R" Us, and
Walmart pulled his merchandise from their online stores. Hogan gave an interview with
Good Morning America on August 31 in which he pleaded forgiveness for his racist comments, attributing these to a racial bias inherited from his neighborhood while growing up. Hogan said that the term "nigger" was used liberally among friends in Tampa; former neighbors disputed this.
Reaction from African-American wrestlers The scandal spurred a range of responses from across the professional wrestling industry. Hogan received some support from his African-American peers.
Virgil,
Dennis Rodman and
Kamala each spoke positively about their experiences with Hogan and did not believe he was racist. Other black wrestlers working in the WWE made more critical comments, including
Mark Henry, who said he was pleased by WWE's "no tolerance approach to racism" response and that he was hurt and offended by Hogan's manner and tone.
Booker T said he was shocked and called the statements unfortunate. In the time that followed, numerous African-Americans associated with wrestling expressed some level of support for Hogan including: Rodman,
The Rock, Booker T Kamala, Virgil, Mr. T, Henry, and
Big E. Hogan returned to the WWE in 2018, and apologized to WWE wrestlers in a backstage statement. Several African-American wrestlers, including
The New Day,
Titus O'Neil, Mark Henry,
Shelton Benjamin and
JTG doubted the sincerity of Hogan's apology, due to Hogan warning wrestlers to be "mindful about being recorded without their knowledge" during his apology instead of addressing his comments.
Fifth return to WWE (2018–2025) On July 15, 2018, Hogan was reinstated into the WWE Hall of Fame. Vince McMahon stated, "I knew he wasn't racist. ... He said some racist things. He should pay for that, and he did." Hogan made his on-screen return on November 2, 2018, as the host of
Crown Jewel. On January 7, 2019, Hogan returned to
Raw to present a tribute to Gene Okerlund, who had died five days prior. During the following years, Hogan appeared on several WWE events, like the
2019 and
2020 Hall of Fame ceremonies, where he inducted
Brutus Beefcake in 2019 and was inducted for a second time as part of the New World Order (with Scott Hall, Kevin Nash and Sean Waltman) in 2020. He also hosted the
35th and
37th editions of WrestleMania, along with Alexa Bliss and Titus O'Neil respectively. He also participated at
Crown Jewel 2019, where he was the captain of a team opposing Ric Flair's team. On January 23, 2023, Hogan appeared on
RAW's 30th anniversary show. On January 6, 2025, Hogan made his final appearance at a professional wrestling event during the
Raw debut on Netflix, where alongside Jimmy Hart he cut a promo advertising his
Real American Beer. Hogan was heavily booed by the crowd, which received widespread coverage in the media. == Endorsements and business ventures ==