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Hulk Hogan's cause of death revealed
Hulk Hogan's cause of death revealed

Express Tribune

time31-07-2025

  • Health
  • Express Tribune

Hulk Hogan's cause of death revealed

Hulk Hogan's official cause of death has now been confirmed, revealing shocking health issues the wrestling icon had kept hidden. The 71-year-old WWE legend, real name Terry Bollea, died on 24 July at his Florida home after going into cardiac arrest. He was taken to Morton Plant Hospital by ambulance but was pronounced dead shortly after arriving. According to newly released documents from the Pinellas County Forensic Science Centre, Hogan died of acute myocardial infarction, a sudden and severe heart attack. However, the medical report also uncovered private health battles the star had never disclosed publicly. Hogan had reportedly been living with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL), a form of blood cancer that affects white blood cells. In addition, he suffered from atrial fibrillation, a serious heart rhythm disorder that can lead to complications such as strokes or heart failure. These revelations contradict the public messaging from Hogan's inner circle. Just weeks before his death, his wife Sky Daily had taken to social media to deny rumours of declining health. At the time, she insisted that Hogan was recovering from major spinal surgery and was in no critical danger. 'He's healing and we're taking it one day at a time with love, strength, and patience,' she wrote. Hogan had undergone a four-level Anterior Cervical Discectomy and Fusion (ACDF) in May, a complex neck operation. While there had been speculation about his health post-surgery, fans were led to believe he was recovering well. The news of his cancer diagnosis has come as a shock to the public, who now view his final weeks in a very different light. Hogan's death has been ruled as due to natural causes, but the hidden illnesses paint a more tragic picture of his final days.

'Recipes for Broken Hearts': How an ancient Uzbek city will be the world's new cultural table
'Recipes for Broken Hearts': How an ancient Uzbek city will be the world's new cultural table

Yahoo

time27-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

'Recipes for Broken Hearts': How an ancient Uzbek city will be the world's new cultural table

From 5 September to 20 November 2025, this UNESCO Creative City will host the inaugural Bukhara Biennial, a ten-week journey of contemporary art, communal rituals, and culinary storytelling. Titled 'Recipes for Broken Hearts', the Biennial transforms a city of legends into a living stage where grief, memory and joy are reimagined through food, music, poetry and craft. Curated by international art figure Diana Campbell and commissioned by Gayane Umerova, Chairperson of the Uzbekistan Art and Culture Development Foundation (ACDF), the Biennial features over 70 commissions created in Uzbekistan, activating centuries-old madrasas and caravanserais in ways Bukhara has never seen. 'Bukhara has shaped the world before: through knowledge, craft, and exchange,' says Umerova. 'This Biennial is a way of giving it the tools to do so again, through creativity and dialogue'. Not just an exhibition. A sensory ritual. Rather than opening with a red carpet or gallery wall, the Biennial begins with the aroma of fermentation. At Cafe Oshqozon, Buddhist monk and chef Jeong Kwan will prepare kimchi on the first day — only to unearth it again ten weeks later for a final meal, ripened by time and silence. It is a metaphor for the event itself. 'Recipes for Broken Hearts' explores how time, tradition, and care can heal. Every element – from food to sculpture, textiles to sound is part of a broader experiment in emotional repair. Diana Campbell, known for her work at the Dhaka Art Summit, calls it a 'multi-sensory feast rooted in Bukhara's spirit of hospitality and intellectual depth'. She adds, 'You don't just look at the art. You smell it, taste it, feel it in your hands and bones'. From salt and sugar to clay and code The artworks span disciplines and geographies. Egyptian-born food artist Laila Gohar conjures memories through Navat, a traditional sugar crystal made from saffron and grape juice. Colombian artist Delcy Morelos constructs a dome from earth, sand, and spices. Uzbek artist Oyjon Khayrullaeva, working with ceramicist Abdurauf Taxirov, builds mosaic organs - a stomach over the cafe entrance, lungs and hearts tucked across the city connecting venues as parts of one collective body. And then there's Subodh Gupta, who repurposes enamel dishes from traditional kitchens into a towering dome, inside which guests dine on dishes connecting India and Uzbekistan. 'It's about collapsing distance — between countries, between disciplines, between people,' he says. All works are made in Uzbekistan, many in collaboration with local artisans. 'This was non-negotiable,' says Umerova. 'We didn't want an art fair. We wanted something that speaks from here, even when it reaches the world'. This Biennial is a way of giving it the tools to do so again, through creativity and dialogue At the centre of the Biennial is the House of Softness, a transformation of the 16th century Gavkushon Madrasa into a space for public programmes, children's workshops, and storytelling. Artist and architect Suchi Reddy has designed a protective canopy inspired by Uzbek ikat casting patterns of healing across the courtyard. Here, a three-day symposium titled 'The Craft of Mending' will bring together thinkers, historians and artists to explore repair as both a physical and political act. 'Erasure is a form of heartbreak,' says Aziza Izamova, an Uzbek scholar at Harvard leading the event. 'And so, to repair to remember - is an act of resistance'. Young curators from across Asia will also gather in Bukhara for a workshop on how to commission work that does not yet exist. It is a fitting lesson for a city reshaping its own future. Music, too, flows through the Biennial's veins. Each full moon will be marked by a ceremonial karnay ritual – the long Uzbek horn used in weddings to symbolically summon water to the desert. These performances, led by Himali Singh Soin and David Soin Tappeser, fuse local tradition with global environmental consciousness. Elsewhere, the Bukhara Philharmonic will collaborate with artists like Tarek Atoui, bringing together Arab and Central Asian musical traditions. Weekly street processions and spontaneous performances will animate the city with rhythm and memory. Food is not a side programme, it is the soul of the Biennial. From fermented rituals to nomadic grains, the meals are designed to explore loss, resilience and belonging. Uzbek chefs like Bahriddin Chustiy and Pavel Georganov will share dishes infused with memory, while guest chefs like Fatmata Binta from Sierra Leone and Zuri Camille de Souza from India will link Uzbek traditions to West African and Goan culinary heritage. The final week hosts the Rice Cultures Festival, featuring plov, paella, pulao and jollof rice cooked in the open air, surrounded by stories and songs. 'It's not about haute cuisine,' says Umerova. 'It's about how we gather, how we heal, how we remember - through food'. Why Bukhara? 'Bukhara is not a backdrop,' says Umerova. 'It is the protagonist'. For over two millennia, the city has been a center of spiritual, scientific and artistic exchange. Yet in the modern art world, it has remained peripheral, until now. The Biennial is part of a broader national strategy to reintegrate Uzbekistan into global cultural networks. With support from President Shavkat Mirziyoyev, the ACDF has launched restoration projects, museums, and creative platforms across the country and internationally including the Venice Biennale pavilion and the Expo 2025 in Osaka. 'This is not soft power,' Umerova insists. 'It's structural power. Culture creates jobs. It shapes futures. It builds identity that isn't reactive or nostalgic — but alive, generous, and forward-looking'. Bukhara is accessible by high-speed rail from Tashkent and Samarkand, with boutique hotels and guesthouses nestled among its UNESCO-listed architecture. The Biennial is entirely free and open to the public. Foreign visitors can expect immersive programming in Uzbek, Russian, and English, and a culinary scene where history is served with every dish. More information is available at and on Instagram at @

Bukhara Biennial: A ten-week exploration of food, art, craft and music
Bukhara Biennial: A ten-week exploration of food, art, craft and music

Euronews

time27-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Euronews

Bukhara Biennial: A ten-week exploration of food, art, craft and music

From 5 September to 20 November 2025, this UNESCO Creative City will host the inaugural Bukhara Biennial, a ten-week journey of contemporary art, communal rituals, and culinary storytelling. Titled 'Recipes for Broken Hearts', the Biennial transforms a city of legends into a living stage where grief, memory and joy are reimagined through food, music, poetry and craft. Curated by international art figure Diana Campbell and commissioned by Gayane Umerova, Chairperson of the Uzbekistan Art and Culture Development Foundation (ACDF), the Biennial features over 70 commissions created in Uzbekistan, activating centuries-old madrasas and caravanserais in ways Bukhara has never seen. 'Bukhara has shaped the world before: through knowledge, craft, and exchange,' says Umerova. 'This Biennial is a way of giving it the tools to do so again, through creativity and dialogue'. Not just an exhibition. A sensory ritual. Rather than opening with a red carpet or gallery wall, the Biennial begins with the aroma of fermentation. At Cafe Oshqozon, Buddhist monk and chef Jeong Kwan will prepare kimchi on the first day — only to unearth it again ten weeks later for a final meal, ripened by time and silence. It is a metaphor for the event itself. 'Recipes for Broken Hearts' explores how time, tradition, and care can heal. Every element – from food to sculpture, textiles to sound is part of a broader experiment in emotional repair. Diana Campbell, known for her work at the Dhaka Art Summit, calls it a 'multi-sensory feast rooted in Bukhara's spirit of hospitality and intellectual depth'. She adds, 'You don't just look at the art. You smell it, taste it, feel it in your hands and bones'. From salt and sugar to clay and code The artworks span disciplines and geographies. Egyptian-born food artist Laila Gohar conjures memories through Navat, a traditional sugar crystal made from saffron and grape juice. Colombian artist Delcy Morelos constructs a dome from earth, sand, and spices. Uzbek artist Oyjon Khayrullaeva, working with ceramicist Abdurauf Taxirov, builds mosaic organs - a stomach over the cafe entrance, lungs and hearts tucked across the city connecting venues as parts of one collective body. And then there's Subodh Gupta, who repurposes enamel dishes from traditional kitchens into a towering dome, inside which guests dine on dishes connecting India and Uzbekistan. 'It's about collapsing distance — between countries, between disciplines, between people,' he says. All works are made in Uzbekistan, many in collaboration with local artisans. 'This was non-negotiable,' says Umerova. 'We didn't want an art fair. We wanted something that speaks from here, even when it reaches the world'. At the centre of the Biennial is the House of Softness, a transformation of the 16th century Gavkushon Madrasa into a space for public programmes, children's workshops, and storytelling. Artist and architect Suchi Reddy has designed a protective canopy inspired by Uzbek ikat casting patterns of healing across the courtyard. Here, a three-day symposium titled 'The Craft of Mending' will bring together thinkers, historians and artists to explore repair as both a physical and political act. 'Erasure is a form of heartbreak,' says Aziza Izamova, an Uzbek scholar at Harvard leading the event. 'And so, to repair to remember - is an act of resistance'. Young curators from across Asia will also gather in Bukhara for a workshop on how to commission work that does not yet exist. It is a fitting lesson for a city reshaping its own future. Music, too, flows through the Biennial's veins. Each full moon will be marked by a ceremonial karnay ritual – the long Uzbek horn used in weddings to symbolically summon water to the desert. These performances, led by Himali Singh Soin and David Soin Tappeser, fuse local tradition with global environmental consciousness. Elsewhere, the Bukhara Philharmonic will collaborate with artists like Tarek Atoui, bringing together Arab and Central Asian musical traditions. Weekly street processions and spontaneous performances will animate the city with rhythm and memory. Food is not a side programme, it is the soul of the Biennial. From fermented rituals to nomadic grains, the meals are designed to explore loss, resilience and belonging. Uzbek chefs like Bahriddin Chustiy and Pavel Georganov will share dishes infused with memory, while guest chefs like Fatmata Binta from Sierra Leone and Zuri Camille de Souza from India will link Uzbek traditions to West African and Goan culinary heritage. The final week hosts the Rice Cultures Festival, featuring plov, paella, pulao and jollof rice cooked in the open air, surrounded by stories and songs. 'It's not about haute cuisine,' says Umerova. 'It's about how we gather, how we heal, how we remember - through food'. Why Bukhara? 'Bukhara is not a backdrop,' says Umerova. 'It is the protagonist'. For over two millennia, the city has been a center of spiritual, scientific and artistic exchange. Yet in the modern art world, it has remained peripheral, until now. The Biennial is part of a broader national strategy to reintegrate Uzbekistan into global cultural networks. With support from President Shavkat Mirziyoyev, the ACDF has launched restoration projects, museums, and creative platforms across the country and internationally including the Venice Biennale pavilion and the Expo 2025 in Osaka. 'This is not soft power,' Umerova insists. 'It's structural power. Culture creates jobs. It shapes futures. It builds identity that isn't reactive or nostalgic — but alive, generous, and forward-looking'. Bukhara is accessible by high-speed rail from Tashkent and Samarkand, with boutique hotels and guesthouses nestled among its UNESCO-listed architecture. The Biennial is entirely free and open to the public. Foreign visitors can expect immersive programming in Uzbek, Russian, and English, and a culinary scene where history is served with every dish. More information is available at and on Instagram at @

Hulk Hogan's wife Sky pays touching tribute to ‘my heart' and says wrestler had ‘health issues' before his tragic death
Hulk Hogan's wife Sky pays touching tribute to ‘my heart' and says wrestler had ‘health issues' before his tragic death

The Irish Sun

time25-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Irish Sun

Hulk Hogan's wife Sky pays touching tribute to ‘my heart' and says wrestler had ‘health issues' before his tragic death

HULK Hogan's wife has broken her silence on his sudden death with a heartwrenching statement. Sky Hogan said that her "heart is in pieces" as she opened up about his health issues after her 2 Hulk Hogan's wife mourned his death with a heartwrenching Instagram post Credit: Instagram/ 2 Yoga instructor Sky had been married to Hogan since September 2023 Credit: Instagram/ She mourned her husband with a tragic Instagram post, writing in the caption, "I wasn't ready for this [...] and my heart is in pieces. "He had been dealing with some health issues, but I truly believed we would overcome them. I had so much faith in his strength. I thought we still had more time. "This loss is sudden and impossible to process. To the world, he was a legend… but to me, he was my Terry. The man I loved. My partner. My heart. "Hulk loved his fans so much and despite his growing physical discomfort, he did everything he could to show up, sign autographs, take photos, and connect with the people who supported him through it all. You meant everything to him. more on hulk hogan "He was a believer in Christ, and I take comfort knowing his soul is at peace and he's been welcomed home. "Please keep his family and all of us who loved him in your prayers as we try to navigate this new reality." On Thursday morning, paramedics responded to reports of a cardiac arrest at He was treated at the scene and taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead. Most read in Sport Hogan was reported to be on his deathbed just one month before his death as he suffered from a series of health issues that . However, despite the rumors, Sky, who had been married to Hogan since September 2023, insisted that her husband was healthy. In response to claims that Hogan was in a coma, Sky said last month, "His heart is strong, and there was never any lack of oxygen or brain damage. None of these rumors are true. Speaking to fans on her Instagram stories, Sky explained that her husband was recovering from a complex procedure. 'He's been recovering from a major four-level Anterior Cervical Discectomy and [Fusion], which is an intense surgery with a long and layered healing process,' she said at the time. 'If you look it up, you'll see what the last six weeks have involved… not just for his spine, but also for his vocal cords, and the eating/breathing tubes that are clamped over during surgery." ACDF treats pinched nerves in the neck by removing damaged discs and stabilizing the spine. Daily said her husband of nearly two years had been "in and out of the hospital" as he recovered from surgeries. "He's healing and we're taking it one day at a time with love, strength, and patience," she said. More to follow... For the latest news on this story, keep checking back at The U.S. Sun, your go-to destination for the best celebrity news, sports news, real-life stories, jaw-dropping pictures, and must-see videos . Like us on Facebook at

Hulk Hogan's wife Sky pays touching tribute to ‘my heart' and says wrestler had ‘health issues' before his tragic death
Hulk Hogan's wife Sky pays touching tribute to ‘my heart' and says wrestler had ‘health issues' before his tragic death

Scottish Sun

time25-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Scottish Sun

Hulk Hogan's wife Sky pays touching tribute to ‘my heart' and says wrestler had ‘health issues' before his tragic death

'THE MAN I LOVED' Hulk Hogan's wife Sky pays touching tribute to 'my heart' and says wrestler had 'health issues' before his tragic death Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) HULK Hogan's wife has broken her silence on his sudden death with a heartwrenching statement. Sky Hogan said that her "heart is in pieces" as she opened up about his health issues after her beloved wrestling star husband died at 71 on Thursday. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 2 Hulk Hogan's wife mourned his death with a heartwrenching Instagram post Credit: Instagram/ 2 Yoga instructor Sky had been married to Hogan since September 2023 Credit: Instagram/ She mourned her husband with a tragic Instagram post, writing in the caption, "I wasn't ready for this [...] and my heart is in pieces. "He had been dealing with some health issues, but I truly believed we would overcome them. I had so much faith in his strength. I thought we still had more time. "This loss is sudden and impossible to process. To the world, he was a legend… but to me, he was my Terry. The man I loved. My partner. My heart. "Hulk loved his fans so much and despite his growing physical discomfort, he did everything he could to show up, sign autographs, take photos, and connect with the people who supported him through it all. You meant everything to him. more on hulk hogan STAR'S FIGHT Hulk Hogan's final moments revealed as emergency crew battled to save wrestler "He was a believer in Christ, and I take comfort knowing his soul is at peace and he's been welcomed home. "Please keep his family and all of us who loved him in your prayers as we try to navigate this new reality." On Thursday morning, paramedics responded to reports of a cardiac arrest at Hogan's $11.5 million home in Clearwater, Florida. He was treated at the scene and taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead. Hogan was reported to be on his deathbed just one month before his death as he suffered from a series of health issues that left him unable to feel his legs. However, despite the rumors, Sky, who had been married to Hogan since September 2023, insisted that her husband was healthy. In response to claims that Hogan was in a coma, Sky said last month, "His heart is strong, and there was never any lack of oxygen or brain damage. None of these rumors are true. Speaking to fans on her Instagram stories, Sky explained that her husband was recovering from a complex procedure. 'He's been recovering from a major four-level Anterior Cervical Discectomy and [Fusion], which is an intense surgery with a long and layered healing process,' she said at the time. 'If you look it up, you'll see what the last six weeks have involved… not just for his spine, but also for his vocal cords, and the eating/breathing tubes that are clamped over during surgery." ACDF treats pinched nerves in the neck by removing damaged discs and stabilizing the spine. Daily said her husband of nearly two years had been "in and out of the hospital" as he recovered from surgeries. "He's healing and we're taking it one day at a time with love, strength, and patience," she said. More to follow... For the latest news on this story, keep checking back at The U.S. Sun, your go-to destination for the best celebrity news, sports news, real-life stories, jaw-dropping pictures, and must-see videos. Like us on Facebook at TheSunUS and follow us on X at @TheUSSun

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