Hulk Hogan: Real American. Hulk Hogan in Hulk Hogan: Real American. Cr. Courtesy of Netflix © 2026
Courtesy of Netflix
“Hulk Hogan: Real American” tells the story of Hulk Hogan, but it’s most compelling when it examines how much Terry Bollea existed outside of him.
It’s taboo to refer to a professional wrestler by their real, government name, but if there’s anyone who truly “lived the gimmick,” it was the man everyone knew in the red and yellow, and later the black and white. He lived and breathed it from the moment he became Hulk Hogan to the moment of his passing, from dazzling in wrestling rings for WWE and WCW to promotional social media videos and political rallies months before his untimely death.
The Netflix docuseries makes a clear effort to unpack his personal life, leaning on interviews with his ex-wife Linda and son Nick while revisiting his relationships through their highs and lows. It also incorporates archival footage of his daughter Brooke, who was not interviewed, amid a falling out long before his passing, along with his estranged relationship with his brother Allan and the initial difficulty his parents had accepting his wrestling career before eventually supporting him at Madison Square Garden.
But more than anything, the documentary tells the story of how completely Hogan was swallowed by a gimmick that no longer felt like a gimmick at all. He was Hulk Hogan inside and out, and Terry Bollea only seemed to surface in fragments, within his marriages or in moments like the infamous Gawker sex tape trial in the 2010s.
“Real American” spends much of its fourth episode unpacking the controversies that defined Hogan’s later years, from that lawsuit to his infidelity and his firing from WWE after a leaked recording of him using a racial slur. It also explores his political alignment late in life, including his support of Donald Trump and the complicated reality of a public figure with a massive following openly dividing his audience.
Even then, everything circles back to the same idea: Hogan never stopped being Hogan. Whether in the ring, at public appearances, or on political stages, he carried himself as the larger-than-life character he created decades earlier. The documentary reinforces that addiction to the spotlight, showing a man who could not step away, even while teasing retirement in the 1990s or maneuvering behind the scenes when he did not see Bret Hart as the right successor before WrestleMania 9. In the end, it always came back to the business and the life he built within it.
The documentary lands a few shots when it comes to Hogan’s controversies and covers a wide range of ground across its four-hour runtime. Still, there are noticeable gaps, particularly around his WWE departure in 2005 and the absence of Mr. America. To its credit, the docuseries only features one sit-down with Hogan, and a moment late in the series makes it clear there were plans to revisit the conversation before his passing. That context helps explain some of what is missing.
Ultimately, “Real American” tries to separate Hulk Hogan from Terry Bollea, but it never fully succeeds because that separation feels impossible by the end. The line between the two had blurred too much over time. Hogan was seen as Hulk, not Terry, and the audience treated him that way. Even in his final WWE appearance on the first episode of Raw on Netflix, fans booed the character for actions that took place outside the ring. If the expectation is to separate the performer from the person, then those reactions should not exist. But they do, because for Hogan, the two were never truly separate.