logo
Hulk Hogan's former manager Jimmy Hart opens up about his last moments with wrestling icon

Hulk Hogan's former manager Jimmy Hart opens up about his last moments with wrestling icon

New York Post3 days ago
Jimmy Hart's still in shock at the death of his friend, Hulk Hogan.
The transformative and controversial WWE legend Hogan died Thursday at the age of 71 at his home in Clearwater, Florida.
Hulk Hogan with Jimmy Hart along side address the crowd during RAW at Intuit Dome on January 6, 2025 in Inglewood, California.
WWE via Getty Images
Advertisement
Not long before Hogan's passing, Hart — a longtime manager and close friend — had publicly insisted the WWE Hall of Famer was doing better than had been reported.
'He was great,' The 'Mouth of the South' told People on Friday about seeing Hogan for the final time about a month ago. 'He had great food to eat that night. He was talking with the fans. He was just phenomenal.'
Hart revealed his shock when he learned of the wrestling icon's passing.
Advertisement
'I called [Hogan] on Wednesday night, and then Thursday morning is when everything took place,' Hart said Friday. 'So just…just overnight it all happened, but it was so positive the day before.'
Hart added that when he called Hogan this week, he didn't get to speak to him.
Wrestler Hulk Hogan (L) and wrestling manager Jimmy 'the Mouth of the South' Hart attend the Licensing Expo 2015 at the Mandalay Bay Convention Center on June 10, 2015 in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Getty Images
Instead, he spoke with Hogan's assistant, who merely sent a message saying that the former six-time WWE Champion was 'doing great.'
Advertisement
'Well, tell him I love him,' Hart said he told Hogan's assistant.
He indicated that he felt encouraged by the response, thinking 'this is great' news, People reported.
'It just hits so fast,' Hart said about his reaction upon learning of Hogan's death. 'It was like, 'Oh my God.' We thought he was doing so well, you know? We didn't go to see him at the house and didn't go to see him at the hospital, because we wanted to make sure that he didn't get any infections or anything else, like if anybody had a cold or brought anything in. So, that's what we all did.'
Hart had a decades-long friendship with Hogan, going back to their early Memphis days through WWE and later WCW and TNA.
Advertisement
Hogan, a 12-time world champion — six in the WWE and six in WCE — was a two-time WWE Hall of Famer, being inducted in 2005 as an individual and in 2020 as a member of the New World Order.
Hart was also inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame in 2005 and is regarded as one of the greatest professional wrestling managers of all time.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Christie Brinkley Says This 1 Factor Doomed Her Relationship With Billy Joel
Christie Brinkley Says This 1 Factor Doomed Her Relationship With Billy Joel

Buzz Feed

time3 minutes ago

  • Buzz Feed

Christie Brinkley Says This 1 Factor Doomed Her Relationship With Billy Joel

Christie Brinkley opened up about her rocky marriage to Billy Joel in a new documentary about the iconic musician's life. The model married Joel in 1985, and the two welcomed their only child, Alexa, later that year. Brinkley said that she tried to make her relationship with Joel work, but there was one thing that got in the way. 'I don't think it's a secret that his drinking got pretty bad,' Brinkley said in Part 2 of the musician's new HBO documentary, Billy Joel: And So It Goes. She said that the singer 'couldn't really remember what he did when he was drinking, and so he didn't really know how he could hurt people.' During a particularly stressful period of financial turmoil and touring for Joel, Brinkley said that 'there was too much unraveling in his life.' She would call bars to find out where Joel was, and would pretend to be sleeping when he would come in some nights, so she could avoid seeing him 'in that condition.' 'Our relationship went from lots of fun and really, totally enjoying each other and everything, to his work consuming him,' the model shared. Brinkley said she didn't know what to do, but she decided she couldn't 'be lonely.' It was just her 'and Alexa in this big old house that was supposed to be so full of life and love and music and laughter and all of that,' Brinkley said as she started to tear up. The model said that 'things were starting to deteriorate' and then one fight sealed the deal. 'One night, we had an argument and I said, 'I really can't take this anymore, and I'm just gonna take Alexa back up to New York and leave,'' she recalled. 'And he said, 'Yeah, fine ― go.'' The two divorced in 1994, and Joel revealed what he took away from the end of their marriage. 'I realized love is not concrete,' the musician said. 'You know, you feel like it is, but there are things eating away at it. And, in the end, it all catches up. And it's hard. And I was so devastated.' Brinkley has spoken about Joel's drinking before in her recently published memoir, Uptown Girl. 'The drinking was bigger than the both of us. Booze was the other woman and it was beginning to seem that he preferred to be with her rather than me,' she said. The 71-year-old told Page Six in April that 'leaving Billy wasn't easy for me to do.' 'He's the father of my firstborn and we spent such great formative years together. And I'll love him forever,' Brinkley shared. 'Things just reached a point where I knew I couldn't live with him.' Ron Galella, Ltd. / Getty Images

'WWE: Unreal' cracks open a door the wrestling world has kept closed — until now
'WWE: Unreal' cracks open a door the wrestling world has kept closed — until now

Yahoo

time32 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

'WWE: Unreal' cracks open a door the wrestling world has kept closed — until now

As John Cena embraced Cody Rhodes in Toronto at the conclusion of WWE's Elimination Chamber event in March, "WWE: Unreal" director Chris Weaver knew what was coming next. Cena had just punched his ticket into the main event of his final WrestleMania appearance, and his heel turn against Rhodes was about to rock the entire landscape of professional wrestling. Twenty years of hustle, loyalty and respect had flown out the window, and in its place was Cena standing alongside The Rock and Travis Scott in wholly unfamiliar territory. The move was something fans had waited years to happen, and when it finally came to fruition as Cena embarked on the final run of his WWE career, the fallout was dramatic. With the wrestling community's attention gripped by the heel turn heard around the world, speculation and reports outlining how everything came together ran rampant. Detailed in depth for the first time as part of the "WWE: Unreal" series on Netflix, Weaver — who's also a Senior Producer at NFL Films — was tasked with pulling back the curtain on WWE's holistic build to WrestleMania 41. Featured in the five-part series is an episode entirely dedicated to Cena's heel turn. Weaver walks fans through how The Rock was brought in to be part of the show and the process for WWE to land on the monumental creative decision that would disrupt Cena's legacy. 'WWE kept a tight circle,' Weaver tells Uncrowned. 'I didn't find out about the heel turn until minutes before it was going to happen. And when I found out, my immediate reaction was, 'S***, we don't have a lot of coverage on this.'' Weaver says to help unpack the story, he interviewed WWE Executive Director Bruce Pritchard, writer Ed Koskey and Chief Creative Officer Paul Levesque. The plan from there would be to use the interviews to help drive the story, offering their own perspectives on how everything came together within the tight circle. In an exclusive clip shared with Uncrowned before "WWE: Unreal" premieres Tuesday, Levesque details how the creative decision was relayed to WWE President Nick Khan, The Rock, Travis Scott, Rhodes and Cena, in that order. More than a year ago, before WWE embarked on this project, the promotion unveiled 'WrestleMania XL: Behind the Curtain,' detailing the chaotic build to Rhodes finishing his story against the Bloodline and winning his first WWE title. Weaver speculates that the documentary was a good testing ground for WWE to gauge the response fans would have from getting a rare picture into what goes on behind the scenes. The reaction was enormous, garnering 5 million views over the span of the past year ahead of the official launch of "WWE: Unreal." 'My opinion is, I think it certainly helped them get to the point where they're like, 'Alright, let's go ahead — and not just pull back the curtain, let's tear it down,' so to speak,' Weaver says. The wheels started turning for Weaver's involvement around October 2024, when he and his team were brought to Stamford, Connecticut, to meet with WWE. By early December, plans were set in place around how Weaver's team would capture content, beginning with placing robotic cameras in the WWE writer's room. 'I think the first frame NFL Films shot was robotic cameras in the writer's room. And that was the first time I was struck by what we were about to go into, meaning how much access we were going to have,' Weaver says. 'The cameras start rolling and we see the whiteboards in the room and it's got their season laid out on it. And I was immediately struck, 'Holy cow, this is what the world's never seen before.' I knew it was going to be special. When I saw those whiteboards in the room on our cameras, I knew we were onto something.' Weaver, who says he was not much of a wrestling fan coming into the project, was methodical with how he partnered with his team, Netflix, and the WWE in structuring the series. With nearly 25 years of experience across NFL projects that included "Hard Knocks" and "Peyton's Places," Weaver says his outlook featured fresh eyes and a fresh perspective alongside showrunner Erik Powers, who is a "tremendous WWE fan.' Weaver says he knew 'virtually nothing going in about the roster and storylines.' Powers, on the other hand, 'had a constant finger on the pulse of WWE. He was very highly aware of how the wrestling world and the dirt sheets and just the whole culture of wrestling might view the show, what they would be interested in, what might move the needle for them,' Weaver says. The dynamic between Weaver and Powers opened discussions and debates around their approach, identifying what was too far into the weeds and how they could balance appeasing both the wrestling world but also welcoming others from outside of the core wrestling audience. 'You can't satisfy everybody,' Weaver says. 'I would say you want the fans to enjoy it, so you don't want to dumb it down so much that they are put off by it. But at the same time, you don't want to alienate the newcomer.' The end result is an intentional focus on not just dropping fans into a ton of writer's meetings. Rather, the series finds a perfect balance between introducing how WWE marches toward its tentpole events, while digging far enough behind the scenes to appease the diehards. The five-episode series has an emphasis on the human side of wrestling and all the excitement, anxiety, and stress that comes with it. Fans will meet Phil Brooks, aka CM Punk, the man who's overcome with emotion in Gorilla position before fulfilling his dream of main-eventing WrestleMania. They'll hear from Ashley Fliehr, aka Charlotte Flair, and will see how she navigated a difficult build to her WrestleMania match against Tiffany Stratton. Weaver and his team weigh personal stories with wide-reaching moments, offering a zoomed-out view of the storylines that consumed the build from the Royal Rumble 2025 through WrestleMania 41. He compares the structure of the series to "Hard Knocks" blended with Netflix's "Quarterback," with a deep dive into the characters that make WWE thrive, while showing the behind-the-scenes moments that build to major storylines. As fans embark on this journey, further behind the scenes in pro wrestling than many have ever ventured, Weaver is struck by how much thought and detail goes into the shows. Ultimately, what he hopes fans take away is that the series strikes an emotion with the audience and offers a new respect for the work that goes into a sports league with no offseason. 'The amount of thought that they put into this product and these weekly shows is amazing,' Weaver says. 'There's a lot that goes into this. And when you can see it, I think it gives you a whole other respect for the product and the entertainment and what it is. I hope audiences will see that, 'WWE: Unreal' audiences will see that and feel that, because I certainly did.'

Joe Exotic says he will die in prison unless Trump pardons him
Joe Exotic says he will die in prison unless Trump pardons him

New York Post

time33 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Joe Exotic says he will die in prison unless Trump pardons him

Would-be killer and ex-'Tiger King' star Joe Exotic claims he is now riddled with cancer and will die in prison unless President Trump pardons him — insisting to The Post, 'I will not make it another five years.' The 62-year-old felon — who is in federal lockup in Fort Worth, Texas, for a murder-for-hire plot against his rival — said he fears he won't even make it to his parole eligibility in 2030 because his cancer tumors just keep growing. 'I'm not gonna make it. I'm gonna die,' the ex-Netflix star said in an exclusive phone interview Monday while serving a 21-year sentence for plotting to kill big-cat arch-rival Carole Baskin and for violating federal wildlife laws. Advertisement 5 'Tiger King' star Joe Exotic told The Post he will likely die of cancer in prison — unless he is pardoned by President Trump. Netflix US/AFP via Getty Images 5 Exotic is serving a 21-year prison sentence for plotting to kill his rival Carole Baskin. Santa Rosa County Jail via AP, File 'My earliest out day right now is Oct. 30, 2030. And that's why I plead to President Trump so hard. … With the cancer that I have, let me get out and find some real medical care instead of the taxpayers paying for half-assed medical care. Advertisement 'Try going through that [chemo] for a year, puking your ass off by yourself in a concrete room,' he added. Exotic, whose real name is Joseph Allen Maldonado-Passage, announced he'd been diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2021. The incarcerated former zookeeper now says the cancer has spread to his lungs — and doubled in size. 5 Exotic has been battling prostate cancer behind bars since 2021. AP Advertisement 5 Exotic is pleading with Trump to release him from prison so he can receive 'real medical care' for his cancer. Getty Images Exotic — who starred in Netflix's 2020 'Tiger King' true-crime series about his life and dark slide while caring for exotic big cats at his zoo in Oklahoma — insisted his health woes have only worsened due partly to the stress of his husband, Jorge Flores Maldonado, being deported to Mexico from the US earlier this year. 'I'm dealing with prostate cancer, lung cancer. I'm waiting for a [positron emission tomography] scan because I think the prostate cancer is in my ribs now,' Exotic said. 'And the stress of [Jorge] being in Mexico with nothing. He's living like a homeless person right now, and there's nothing I can do to help because I'm stuck in here.' Advertisement 5 Exotic's husband Jorge Flores Maldonado was deported to Mexico. Obtained by the New York Post The fallen star's migrant hubby was booted from the US by ICE in May after getting busted late last year for allegedly driving a car loaded with six other undocumented immigrants across the US-Mexican border. The pair met and fell in love while in prison when Maldonado was there on immigration raps. Exotic, betting Trump to step in and spring him early from the pokey, told The Post: 'Let me get up and pay my own bills and work and try and make it the next five years so I can bring Jorge back to America.' But he also suggested he has come to terms with the fact he'll likely die behind bars. 'I've already got my will done. So everything goes to Jorge so he can at least move on,' he said. 'I have nothing, absolutely nothing. So, you know at this point right now, I wish cancer would hurry up and take me before I have to endure five more years of hell in America.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store