Hulk Hogan’s manhood shrivels up during sex tape trial

hulk hogans manhood shrivels up during sex tape trial 2016

hulk hogans manhood shrivels up during sex tape trial 2016

Hulk Hogan proved in the courtroom during his sex tape leak trial that he’s all mouth like many men when it comes to boasting about their nether regions. On the stand where you must tell the truth (or, at least, the closest you can get to it), Hogan testified that his manhood didn’t come close to his Hulk Hogan claims which were in the ten-inch region.

Obviously, Hogan’s attorney’s opened that door as during cross-examination, he was confronted about a 2006 interview discussing his junk.

The back-and-forth between Hogan and shock-jock Bubba the Love Sponge Clem featured Hogan’s former best friend claiming, “I’ve seen it before” and saying, “hard, you’re probably seven or eight inches.”

“Dude, I’ve got size 15 (shoes), I wear a size 15 ring…Figure it out,” answers Hogan, who says a man’s penis is “two-thirds the size of your feet and hands.”

“So, Hogan, you’re claiming, you’re claiming to maybe have a 10-inch c–k?” Bubba asked.

“I’m not claiming. Those are the facts, Jack,” Hogan replied.

A lawyer for Gawker — which posted the hidden-camera video of Hogan having sex with Bubba’s then-wife, Heather Clem, in 2007 — then asked if Hogan had “any doubt…that you were discussing the length of your penis?”

Well, it’s not mine, because mine isn’t that size, but we were discussing the length of Hulk Hogan’s,” the former wrestler, whose real name is Terry Bollea, replied.

“Seriously?” Gawker lawyer Michael Sullivan asked.

“No, seriously, I do not have a 10-inch penis. No, I do not. Seriously. Believe that. Seriously,” Hogan said.

Sullivan then asked if Hogan was “discussing Hulk Hogan’s penis.”

“Yeah, because Terry Bollea’s penis is not 10 inches like you’re trying to say,” Hogan responded.

Several members of the four-woman, two-man jury snickered and stifled laughs while others grimaced and recoiled in their seats. “Maybe instead of dropping the leg on people’s neck, I’ll start dropping something else. Drop the tripod,” Hogan told Howard Stern in 2012.

It followed the playing of another radio interview in which Hogan boasted about the power of his package just days after Gawker posted the excerpts from the Hogan sex tape in 2012.

This is part of the defenses defense for posting the tape online while Hogan worked hard to separate his over the top Hogan character from himself.

Courtroom action in Hulk Hogan’s lawsuit against Gawker Media began and ended on explicit notes Tuesday, as Hogan discussed how he tried to separate his wrestling persona from his real-life one.

Testimony included detailed references to Hogan’s sex life and sexual parts. In one audio clip from the Bubba The Love Sponge Show, the radio personality and Hogan discussed the length of Hogan’s penis. Later in the day, employees from Gawker Media answered questions about why they posted a photo of a penis in an employee-only chat.

The testimony set Twitter aflame, with wrestling fans, First Amendment watchers and media types riveted to the live streaming video of the trial.

Hogan, whose given name is Terry Bollea, is suing Gawker for $100 million for posting an edited- version of a sex tape. Hogan said he didn’t know he was being filmed when he had sex with his then-best friend’s wife. The friend, Florida-based radio DJ Bubba The Love Sponge Clem, gave his blessing to the coupling — which took place in the Clems’ bedroom — and even handed Hogan a condom.

A broadcast engineer who worked for Clem said he installed a video camera in Clem’s bedroom. David Rice testified that someone had to manually push a button to make a recording with the camera.

Hogan said he didn’t know the encounter was being taped.

In other testimony, Tony Burton, a talent agent for a radio competitor of Clem’s, said he contacted Gawker for a client, to get an address where something could be shipped. Burton, the agent for competitor Mike Calta, did not say what happened next. To many media outlets, he let it be known that he said he had “never had the DVD, seen the DVD or provided Gawker with anything.”

The morning testimony elicited Hogan’s take on his famous public image versus his private life — at times, a discourse on celebrity culture and identity.

Attorney Michael Sullivan asked Hogan if he was embarrassed by some of the media appearances, pointing to a clip on the “Hogan Knows Best” reality show. In that snippet shown for the jury, Hogan sat on the toilet, his pants around his ankles, talking to his then-wife on the phone.

Hogan said no, he wasn’t embarrassed.

“It’s part of the show; it’s part of the good and bad of being an entertainer.”

Hogan also said he didn’t have a problem with news outlets discussing or even writing about the sex tape It was only when Gawker broadcast an edited clip of the actual video that he said he began to suffer.

“I never had a problem with the article. My problem is the videotape. It’s on the Internet. It lives forever,” Hogan said.

He also acknowledged he has little privacy as Hulk Hogan, with people taking photos of him everywhere, including once in a urinal at a baseball game.

Hogan and his attorneys are suing Gawker for $100 million, saying that his privacy was violated, that he suffered emotional distress and that the video was not something of legitimate public interest.

Although the trial has been chock-full of salacious details — an interview on Tuesday mentioned Hogan’s “thong-shaped tan line” that was visible in the video — it’s also a serious First Amendment case. The core issue: Did Gawker have the right to post one minute and 41 seconds of the sex tape, approximately nine seconds of it actual sexual content?

Gawker says the publication was a legitimate scoop because Hogan had talked openly about his sex life before, in forums such as Howard Stern’s radio show. The jury may have to grapple with questions about how celebrity affects expectations of privacy.

Hogan attained pro wrestling stardom in the 1980s and 1990s, winning multiple championships. He also became a celebrity outside his “Hulkamania” fan base, appearing in movies and television shows, including a reality show about his life on VH1.

As Hogan testified, he schooled the jury on wrestling history, telling them of being poor, sleeping in his car while performing in small-town matches across the South and finally getting his break when he was asked to appear in the Rocky III movie.