As one of the most recognizable American wrestlers, Hulk Hogan amassed such a crazed following that the sensation became known as Hulkamania. The enthusiasm was well warranted during his 33-year career, when he won 12 world titles — six with World Championship Wrestling and six with World Wrestling Entertainment, making him at one time WWE’s highest-paid athlete.

The admission of drug abuse ended his career — and started a new path for him, a rocky roller coaster that included an autobiography Hollywood Hulk Hogan, a reality show Hogan Knows Best and a return to wrestling. But it also included family drama with his son imprisoned for a reckless driving accident and his wife filing for divorce. Scandal followed with a sex tape where Hogan was caught making racist and homophobic remarks, and he later won a $140 million in a defamation lawsuit from Gawker, who had published the footage.

Here are 10 things you may not know about the larger-than-life wrestler:

His wrestling name originated because he was bigger than the Incredible Hulk

Born Terry Eugene Bollea, Hogan wrestled under various names including Terry Boulder, Super Destroyer and Sterling Golden in his early days in the late 1970s. But when he was on a talk show with the actor who played The Incredible Hulk, Lou Ferrigno, the host recognized that the 6-foot-7, 300-pound Hogan was actually bigger than Ferrigno, thus dubbing him The Hulk.

When WWE promoter Vincent McMahon Sr. asked him to take on an Irish personality in 1979, he became Hulk Hogan. His first reaction to McMahon’s suggestion, “Wow, Hulk Hogan sounds like a Hulk Hoagie or something,” he said. “But the name stuck. It worked, and it’s just incredible the name stood the test of time.”

Baseball was his first love

As a kid in Tampa Bay, Hogan had his eyes set on a career as a big league pitcher. His Interbay Little League team even played in the national regional finals in 1966, though he gave up the game-winning home run, so his team didn’t get to go to the Little League World Series.

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MLB scouts soon had their eyes on him, but he injured his throwing elbow during his final year of high school, putting an end to his pitching days. “It was the best thing that ever happened to me, because I segued into wrestling,” Hogan told the MLB. “Once my arm wasn’t what it was, I started chasing the wrestling dream around, and it finally happened. But baseball was the first love.”

He also started a music career

Hogan started playing guitar when he was in junior high. “I wasn’t a big sports guy,” he told Vice. “I was into music and had long hair.” He soon started playing bass guitar in bands, including one called Ruckus. They played rock ‘n’ roll covers and also had about five original songs. “Our band was so tight,” Hogan said. “The whole building would move when we played.”

They were clearly on the right track toward musical success. “We were out there playing for money to get on our feet and get ready to do what we needed to do,” he said. They had the chance to tour with Mother’s Finest and Blackfoot, but the other guys in the band had families and chose not to.

Hulk Hogan stands before his adoring audience at Maple Leaf Gardens before a joust with "Macho Man" Randy Savage, October 1985

Hulk Hogan stands before the crowd at Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto, Ontario, Canada before a joust with “Macho Man” Randy Savage, October 1985
Photo: Al Dunlop/Toronto Star via Getty Images

Hogan used to be scared of wrestlers

Though he was always a “huge” wrestling fan, he wasn’t exactly comfortable with the scene. “As a kid I was scared to death of them because back in the day wrestlers were very protective, and if you called wrestling fake, they would punch you in the face,” Hogan told Vice. “Back in the day there were no lawyers, no lawsuits and obviously no cell phones so no one could take pictures — so wrestlers could do whatever they wanted.”

But a funny thing happened. A handful of wrestlers started showing up at his music gigs. Word spread through the community. “All of a sudden, before I knew it, there were a bunch of wrestlers at our gigs,” he continued. So I finally got enough guts to start talking to Oliver Humperdink, who was managing superstar Billy Graham, and I told him I wanted to try out to be a wrestler. He was like, ‘Yeah, sure, come on down, we’ll give you a try-out.’ CRACK, broke my leg.”

His parents finally approved of his career when he won his first title

When he won his first title in 1984 by famously escaping the “camel clutch” of the Iron Sheik, it was a great moment in wrestling history, but for Hogan, the victory was more important because his parents were in the audience.

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He had gone from studying finance and management at the University of South Florida to quitting and playing music back and forth several times. “I finally quit for good to be a professional wrestler,” he said. “It just killed both my parents. It just ruined their hopes and dreams for me. So, we had a very strained relationship for quite a long time.”

But that victory in Madison Square Garden changed everything. “My dad and mom came to the dressing room, and they both said how proud they were of me,” he said. “They were very, very happy that I made that decision to be a wrestler. So that was the personal greatest moment ever in my career.”

His WrestleMania III match against Andre the Giant changed the industry

Often hailed as one of the most notable match-ups in wrestling history, Hogan took on Andre the Giant in 1987 in front of 90,000 fans in the Pontiac Silverdome in Detroit, which Bleacher Report called the “first truly epic match in WrestleMania’s long and illustrious history” because it was the “epitome of perfect booking” and both wrestlers were “suited for a match of that magnitude.”

While Andre had a far longer tenure than Hogan, it was the newbie who won with a bodyslam and leg drop. “When I got that 7-foot-4, almost 700 pound, big, stinky giant up over my head and slammed him down in front of 93,000 people, it sent tremors around the world,” Hogan said. “It was the greatest thing I ever did in the wrestling ring. It was a one-time deal, brother. I’m glad that giant went up and came crashing down.” Hogan’s newfound fame was credited for popularizing the sport.

He put three guys in the hospital while filming ‘Rocky III’

Hogan made his film debut as Thunderlips in the 1982 movie Rocky III — and the first-time screen star may not have recognized his own strength, as star and director Sylvester Stallone recounted in a 2017 Instagram post. “I remember a violent move where he threw me into the corner, charged across the ring like an enraged bull and leaped so amazingly high above me that his shinbone actually came down [like a] giant tree on my collarbone,” Stallone wrote. “I have never felt such a mind numbing pain from a massive hit before or since that day!”

He wasn’t the only one to experience Hogan’s power first hand. “When he jumped into the audience to fight with the stuntmen, three of them had to be treated at the hospital,” Stallone revealed, adding, “Great guy, great friend, his presence made the film very, very special.”

‘Hogan Knows Best’ was an instant hit

The reality show following his family — then-wife Linda, daughter Brooke, and son Nick — Hogan Knows Best broke records when it debuted in the summer of 2005, becoming VH1’s highest-rated series premiere, as well as its highest-rated regular telecast ever at the time. It was part of the cable network’s Sunday night “Celebreality” programming block.

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The show ran for four seasons through October 2007. What they didn’t predict was that the show would end up following Hogan and Linda’s marital troubles, with the two filing for divorce in 2007. That same year, Nick was in a car incident that critically injured his friend John Graziano and was sentenced to eight months in prison.

He tried to join The Rolling Stones and Metallica

Well into his wrestling career, Hogan started contemplating other career options. “I always still loved music,” he told Vice. When he was in the UK for an awards show, he overheard Mick Jagger’s then-wife Jerry Hall say they needed a bass player. “I was like, ‘Look, I used to play bass. I know all the Rolling Stones songs. Tell Mick if you guys need a bass player for the Rolling Stones, I swear to god I could show up,’ he recalled. “I could rehearse one day and play everything they play.” But the call never came.

Later he heard Metallica had an opening for a bass player. “I was writing letters, made a tape of myself playing and sent it to their management company,” he said. “Kept making calls trying to get through. I tried for two weeks and never heard a word back from them either.”

Randy Savage rapped a diss track about Hogan

In Savage’s song 2003 song “Be a Man,” he laid it right into Hogan, adding more fuel to their real-life feud. “The story goes that Hogan ended up stealing [Savage’s ex-wife Miss Elizabeth] away, and she died of a drug overdose, and he blamed it on Hulk,” Bill Edwards, founder of Big3 record label, said. “He always wanted to go back in the ring and duke it out for real, and Hulk would never do it. Hence, ‘Be a Man.’ The whole message of the song was to call him out.”

“Hot diggity damn Hulk I’m glad you set it off (set if off) / Used to be hard Hulk now ya done turned soft / Doin’ telephone commercials I seen ya / Dancin’ in tights as a ballerina / I knew all along you had those tendencies / Cuz you’ve been runnin’ from Macho like I got a disease,” the song states.