💥 Viral Bodycam Footage CLAIMS Hulk Hogan Is Dead?! Fans SHOCKED As Police Video Circulates Online 🎥🩸
The 68-year-old WWE Hall of Famer Hulk Hogan — real name Terry Bollea — has long been considered untouchable, a larger-than-life figure known for surviving everything from body slams to public scandals.

But the latest viral footage threatening his legacy doesn’t involve a ring, a script, or even a camera he consented to.
In the early hours of this morning, a 2-minute, heavily pixelated police bodycam video began making the rounds on Twitter (now X), TikTok, and Reddit.
The footage shows first responders entering a luxurious Florida home, rushing toward a lifeless male figure sprawled on the floor.
Viewers quickly began claiming the figure was Hulk Hogan — citing the signature handlebar mustache, bleach-blonde hair, and muscular frame.
The clip ends abruptly, cutting out just as CPR begins.
Within 45 minutes of its upload, the video had over 1.2 million views.
Within 3 hours, “Hulk Hogan DEAD” was trending in 12 countries.

But here’s the terrifying twist: Hulk Hogan is very much alive.
Shortly after the video went viral, Hogan’s official representative released a statement slamming the footage as “irresponsible, fabricated, and deeply distressing to Hulk and his family.
” They confirmed that Hogan is “safe at home, healthy, and aware of the false video circulating online.
So what exactly is this footage? And how did it become so believable?
Experts now believe the video is either a deepfake — a digitally altered piece of media using artificial intelligence to insert Hogan’s likeness — or a manipulated clip from an unrelated police incident repurposed with a false narrative.
Either way, the damage has been done.
Even more chilling is the psychological whiplash the video inflicted on Hogan’s millions of fans.
Messages of mourning began pouring in.
Old match highlights were reshared as tribute.

Even celebrities like Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson and John Cena were briefly caught off guard before clarifying that Hogan is, in fact, alive.
One fan posted:
“I grew up on Hogan.
Seeing that footage messed me up.
I actually cried — I thought we lost him.
Another wrote:
“Whoever made that fake bodycam deserves jail.
That’s not a prank — that’s emotional terrorism.
Social media has since descended into a war zone of debunkers, trolls, and conspiracy theorists.
Some claim the footage is from an unreleased documentary.
Others swear it’s part of a “controlled leak” to distract from another celebrity scandal.

A fringe group has even suggested that Hogan did die, but the family is covering it up — adding fuel to a fire that should have been put out by now.
Hulk Hogan, in a rare and visibly shaken video posted to his Instagram Stories, addressed fans directly:
“I’m good, brothers.
I don’t know who’s out there doing this weird stuff, but it ain’t true.
I’m alive.
I’m strong.
And I ain’t going nowhere.The relief was instant — but the fear remained.
This incident has re-ignited concerns about the growing sophistication of deepfake technology and its terrifying ability to fabricate reality.
In a world where a fake death video can trend worldwide in under an hour — and even trick the media — what’s left for truth?
Law enforcement officials in Florida have confirmed that no such incident involving Hogan has occurred.
They are reportedly working with cybercrime units to trace the source of the footage — but as with many viral hoaxes, the trail may be difficult to follow.

Legal experts warn that if the creator is identified, they could face charges ranging from identity theft to intentional infliction of emotional distress.
But as of now, the original poster of the video remains anonymous, hidden behind layers of VPNs and throwaway accounts.
Fans and media personalities alike are demanding action.
WWE insiders say the company is “furious” about the impact the footage has had on the brand and is looking into possible legal responses.
Meanwhile, Hogan’s camp has called for platforms like X and TikTok to enforce stricter rules on viral misinformation and deepfake content.
This isn’t the first time a celebrity has been prematurely “killed” by the internet — but the realism and reach of this incident make it the most disturbing yet.
For now, Hulk Hogan is safe.
But this viral bodycam video has left a permanent scar — not just on his public image, but on our collective trust in what we see, hear, and believe online.
As Hogan himself said in his final statement today:
“They can fake a video.
But they’ll never fake the Hulkster’s heart, brother.
Stay alert.
Because next time, the fake death might not be so easy to debunk — and the consequences could be very real.