Brooke Hogan Shares Cryptic Message About Dad Hulk in Heartbreaking Post

Brooke Hogan shared a somber message on Instagram to her late father Hulk Hogan on Tuesday, April 14

People Brooke and Hulk Hogan at 2006 Jingle BallCredit: Jamie McCarthy/WireImage

NEED TO KNOW

  • Brooke posted a black-and-white illustration of herself and her father hugging

  • "If my love could have saved you, you would have lived forever," Brooke wrote over the illustration

Brooke Hoganshared a heartbreaking message to her late fatherHulk.

Nearly nine months after theWWE legend's death, Brooke, 37, shared a black-and-white illustration of her father holding her in his arms onInstagramTuesday, April 14.

Over the image, Brooke wrote, "If my love could have saved you, you would have lived forever."

Brooke Hogan's Instagram Story on April 14, 2026Credit: Brooke Hogan/Instagram

Hulk died after he suffered a heart attack at his home in Florida on July 24. Brooke, who had a complicated relationship with her father, broke her silence five days later with a lengthy tribute.

"My dad's blood runs through my veins. His eyes shine through my children," she began in the post, referring to her twins with former NHL star Steven Oleksy.

“When he left this earth, it felt like part of my spirit left with him. I felt it before the news even reached us,” Brooke, whoasked to be removed from her father's willafter his death, continued in her tribute. "... I know he’s at peace now, out of pain, and in a place as beautiful as he imagined. He used to speak about this moment with such wonder and hope. Like meeting God was the greatest championship he’d ever have."

Advertisement

She also said she felt it was "necessary to clear a few things up" and explained that it was not a single "fight" or one moment that caused their estrangement."It was a series of private phone calls no one will ever hear, know, or understand," she said.

"My father was confiding in me about issues weighing on his heart, both personal and business. I offered to be a life raft in whatever capacity he needed. I told him he had my support. I begged him to rest, to take care of himself."

Oleksy, 40, told PEOPLE shortly after Hulk's death that the WWE legend had "no interest" in meeting his grandkids despite Brooke being at Hulk's side "for every surgery leading up to the last two years."

Brooke chose not to attend Hulk's funeral,explaining on Instagram afterthat she didn't think he would want one.

"My father hated the morbidity of funerals. He didn't want one," she said. "And although I know people grieve in many ways - and I'm so grateful for all celebrations and events organized to honor him, as his daughter, I had to make my own decision to honor him the best and most genuine way I knew how...privately...the way that made me feel the closest to him."

Hulk's life and death is the focus of anew Netflix docuseries,Hulk Hogan: Real American, premiering April 22, which will include his final interview. Brooke does not appear in the docuseries.

Read the original article onPeople

Brooke Hogan Shares Cryptic Message About Dad Hulk in Heartbreaking Post

Brooke Hogan shared a somber message on Instagram to her late father Hulk Hogan on Tuesday, April 14 NEED TO KNOW ...
WWE Star Rhea Ripley, 29, Reveals Eating Disorder After Fans Criticize Her Recent Weight Loss

Rhea Ripley revealed she is struggling with an eating disorder after being criticized online for her recent weight loss

People Rhea RipleyCredit: Cooper Neil/WWE via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Fans defended Ripley on social media and urged others to stop commenting on women's bodies

  • Ripley has previously spoken out against body shaming and continues to address negative comments about her appearance

WWE starRhea Ripleyrevealed that she's been struggling with an eating disorder.

On Tuesday, April 14, the former Women's World Champion, 29, replied to a fitness influencer who posted an Instagramvideowondering “what happened” to the Australian wrestler.

In the clip, he shared numerous photos of Ripley's physique over the years and questioned her recent weight loss. He also highlighted several social media critics claiming she quit steroids and “lost all her aura” as a result.

Ripley set the record straight under the video. “Just a little eating disorder that I'm actively trying to handle ✌🏼” she wrote.

Many fans came to Ripley's defense in the comments section. “Leave female bodies alone,” one person wrote.

“You look amazing no matter what, always prioritize your health above all else,” one person said.

Advertisement

Another user commented, “When did it become OK to comment on people's bodies! She looks great no matter what size she is.”

Rhea RipleyCredit: Rich Freeda/WWE Via Getty

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

This isn't the first time the athlete has dealt with online body shaming.

Last month, Ripley posted onX, clapping back at those who were commenting on her appearance.

If you or someone you know is struggling with an eating disorder,The Alliance for Eating Disordersprovides a fully-staffed helpline at 1-866-662-1235, as well as free, therapist-led support groups.

Read the original article onPeople

WWE Star Rhea Ripley, 29, Reveals Eating Disorder After Fans Criticize Her Recent Weight Loss

Rhea Ripley revealed she is struggling with an eating disorder after being criticized online for her recent weight loss NEED TO K...
Nightclub manager speaks out after Ruby Rose claim that Katy Perry sexually assaulted her

• A former manager at the nightclub where Ruby Rose has alleged Katy Perry sexually assaulted her observed the two on the evening in question.

Entertainment Weekly Ruby Rose in 2019; Katy Perry 2024Credit: Slaven Vlasic/Getty; Taylor Hill/FilmMagic

Key Points

• The manager recalls the evening being "a security nightmare" requiring special treatment of the actress and singer.

• Rose has alleged on social media that Perry exposed herself and rubbed against Rose's face, a claim Perry denies.

AfterRuby Roserecently accusedKaty Perryofsexually assaulting herat an Australian nightclub, one of the venue's former managers is sharing his memories of the 2010 evening.

In an interview with theHerald Sun, the former hot spot boss recalled Rose and Perry arriving together at Melbourne's Spice Market, along with a few others. The group was roped off in their own area, so the unnamed man was unaware of any assault, but he shared what problems did arise.

“It was a security nightmare because there were 600 people there and Katy kept coming out and dancing with everybody and going right in the middle of the mosh pit," he said. “[Rose and Perry] were drunk; they weren’t paralytic or anything, just like any other person drinking at a nightclub."

Advertisement

Because they were public figures, the man said that "we didn’t want someone taking photos of them drunk like that," and so they eventually escorted the women out of a back fire exit and put them in car together, believing they were then off to a hotel.

Rose in Melbourne in 2023Credit: Sam Tabone/Getty

On Sunday,Rose wrote on Threadsthat Perry sexually assaulted her that night. "She saw me 'resting' on my best friends lap to avoid her and bent down, pulled her underwear to the side and rubbed her disgusting vagina on my face until my eyes snapped open and I projectile vomited on her," Rose alleged. "It has taken almost 2 decades to say this publicly. Though I am so grateful to have made it long enough to find my voice, it just shows how much of an impact trauma and sexual assault takes."

In response, a representative for Perry toldEntertainment Weekly, "The allegations being circulated on social media by Ruby Rose about Katy Perry are not only categorically false, they are dangerous, reckless lies. Ms. Rose has a well-documented history of making serious public allegations on social media against various individuals, claims that have repeatedly been denied by those named."

Katy Perry in Abu Dhabi last yearCredit: Dave Benett/Getty

Since speaking out on social media, Rose has gone tothe authorities. In a statement obtained Wednesday byEW, a representative for the Victoria Police confirmed that "Melbourne Sexual Offences and Child Abuse Investigation Team (SOCIT) detectives are investigating a historical [alleged] sexual assault that occurred in Melbourne in 2010."

The statement added that "police have been told the [alleged] incident occurred at a licensed premises in Melbourne’s [central business district]," and that the "the investigation remains ongoing."

EWhas reached out to representatives for Perry and Rose for a response.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Nightclub manager speaks out after Ruby Rose claim that Katy Perry sexually assaulted her

• A former manager at the nightclub where Ruby Rose has alleged Katy Perry sexually assaulted her observed the two on the evening in qu...
ICE detains 86-year-old in US to marry long-lost love, family says

An 86-year-old French woman who moved to the United States to marry her long-lost love decades after they first met is being held at an immigration detention facility, her family has said.

USA TODAY

The woman, identified as Marie-Thérèse Helene Ross, was detained byImmigration and Customs Enforcementofficers on April 1 and remains in custody at a detention facility in Louisiana, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

One of her sonstold the French newspaper Ouest-Francethat ICE did not notify the family of his mother’s detainment and that they only found out after French consular officials visited her.

Sam Zeidan watches behind chain link, hoping to catch a glimpse of his brother in a group of migrants being loaded onto an airplane at the Alexandria Staging Facility in Alexandria, Louisiana on June 11, 2025. Richwood Correctional Center in Richwood, Louisiana, is an ICE facility run by private contractor LaSalle Corrections.

Louisiana ICE detention centers key to Trump immigration policies

"They handcuffed her hands and feet like she was a dangerous criminal," her son told the outlet. "For us it’s urgent to get her out of the detention center and bring her back to France. Given her health, she won’t last a month in such conditions of detention."

In an emailed statement to USA TODAY, DHS described Ross as an "illegal alien from France."

"She last entered the country in June 2025 under the Visa Waiver Program, which permitted her to remain in the country for 90 days," the statement said. "Seven months later, she is still illegally in the United States."

In response to questions about Ross' health, DHS said ICE "maintains longstanding practices to provide comprehensive medical care." The agency also urged undocumented immigrants to "self-deport" or risk being "arrested and deported without a chance to return."

Advertisement

Her family did not respond to requests for comment.

Couple reunites after more than five decades apart

Ross moved to the United States in 2025 to pursue a romance with a former U.S. serviceman with whom she fell in love in the 1950s when she worked at a NATO base in western France. The pair were forced to separate in the 1960s after France withdrew from NATO’s integrated military command structure,the Guardian reported.

The two went on to marry other people but reconnected on social media in 2010, her family told Ouest-France. After their respective partners died, Ross moved to Anniston, Alabama, to rekindle their relationship and get married.

Ross’ son said they were like "a couple of teenagers."

But after less than a year together in Alabama, the man died in January. Ross had not yet obtained paperwork that would allow her to remain in the country, her family said. Days before a court hearing related to a dispute with one of her late husband’s children, she was detained by immigration agents.

"Our mother’s a fighter – a force of nature," Ross' son told Ouest-France, adding that they are racing to get her out of ICE detention. "The others being held call her unsinkable."

The arrest comes as the DHS faces scrutiny for itsaggressive immigration enforcement, including the arrests of spouses of U.S. veterans and service members. In early April, ICE agents arrested the wife of a U.S. Army sergeant at a base in Louisiana. The woman, Annie Ramos, a Honduran immigrant who entered the U.S. as a toddler, was released days later.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:French woman, 86, in ICE custody after moving to marry long-lost love

ICE detains 86-year-old in US to marry long-lost love, family says

An 86-year-old French woman who moved to the United States to marry her long-lost love decades after they first met is being held at an...
Nicole Kidman Reveals Surprising New Career Path: Becoming a 'Death Doula'

Nicole Kidman has shared that she's learning to become a death doula

People Nicole Kidman attends the 'Margo's Got Money Troubles' N.Y.C. premiere in April 2026Credit: Cindy Ord/WireImage

NEED TO KNOW

  • The actress explained during a talk on Saturday, April 11, that she had the idea after her mother died aged 84 in 2024

  • "As my mother was passing, she was lonely, and there was only so much the family could provide," she explained

Nicole Kidmanhas a new career in mind.

The actress, 58, shared that she's learning to become a death doula during a talk at the University of San Francisco's War Memorial Gym on Saturday, April 11,theSan Francisco Chroniclereported.

Speaking to investigative journalist and USF graduate Vicky Nguyen as part of the school's Silk Speaker Series, she explained that the idea "may sound a little weird," but that her plans first came about after her mother, Janelle Ann Kidman,died aged 84in September 2024.

"As my mother was passing, she was lonely, and there was only so much the family could provide," Kidman told attendees, via theChronicle. TheHollandactresshas four children, while her younger sisterAntonia Kidman, 55, has six.

Nicole Kidman at the 2026 Academy AwardsCredit: Arturo Holmes/Getty

She continued, "Between my sister and I, we have so many children and our careers and our work, and wanting to take care of her because my father wasn't in the world anymore, and that's when I went, ‘I wish there was these people in the world that were there to sit impartially and just provide solace and care.' "

"So that's part of my expansion and one of the things I will be learning."

Death doulas, also known as end-of-life doulas, provide support to people and their loved ones toward the end of life. Per theInternational End-of-Life Doula Association, "An end-of-life doula advocates self-determination and imparts psychosocial, emotional, spiritual, and practical care to empower dignity throughout the dying process."

Advertisement

Kidman, meanwhile, has often discussed the grief she felt after losing both her mom and her dad,Dr. Antony Kidman, who died in 2014.

A month after losing her mom, Kidmandescribed her as a "compass"and a "major guide" in her life, while she said shortly after that she would sometimeswake up "crying and gasping"amid the loss of both parents.

She learned of her mother's death while at theVenice Film Festivalahead of an appearance for her filmBabygirlandleft early to be with her family.

Janelle Ann Kidman and Nicole Kidman in 2018Credit: Lisa Maree Williams/Getty

At the time, the film's director, Halina Reijn, read a letter on Kidman's behalf during what would have been her acceptance speech for best actress.

In the letter, Kidman stated that she traveled to Venice to learn "shortly after that my beautiful, brave mother, Janelle Ann Kidman, has just passed."

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

In March 2025, shepaid tribute to her momon what would have been her 85th birthday. “Missing Mumma and Papa so much on what would have been her birthday today,” she wrote on Instagram alongside a photo of her parents smiling together, adding a red heart emoji. Shepaid tribute again a year later, writing, "Remembering my Mumma on her birthday. Always in my heart."

Read the original article onPeople

Nicole Kidman Reveals Surprising New Career Path: Becoming a 'Death Doula'

Nicole Kidman has shared that she's learning to become a death doula NEED TO KNOW The actress explained during...
U.S. set to begin Iranian ports blockade and partial Strait of Hormuz blockade

Risk on the Road | Sunday on 60 Minutes

CBS News

Advertisement

Fighting for health care claim approvals

Is your phone listening to you?

U.S. set to begin Iranian ports blockade and partial Strait of Hormuz blockade

Risk on the Road | Sunday on 60 Minutes Advertisement Fighting for health care claim approvals Is your phone listening to you? ...
'Out of many, one,' says a US national motto. What does that push for unity mean today?

NEW YORK (AP) — The aspirations cut a wide swath through American history since 1776 — from the “All men are created equal” of the Declaration of Independence and the “We the people” of the Constitution, to the “indivisible, with liberty and justice for all” of the Pledge of Allegiance.

Associated Press The Latin phrase FILE - New citizen Ivette Lagos, originally from Brazil, wears a stars and stripes scarf while reciting the Oath of Allegiance during a naturalization ceremony where nearly 200 people from more than 50 different countries became United States citizens at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library, Nov. 18, 2025, in Boston. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa, File) FILE - A large wall mural showing the signing of the Declaration of Independence is seen over visitors at the National Archives, Jan. 29, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/John McDonnell, File) FILE - The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, speaks to thousands during his FILE - Thirteen United States flags representing the 13 original colonies are seen at Liberty State Park with 1 World Trade Center, bottom left, and the Statue of Liberty, bottom right, in the background, Sept. 11, 2014, in Jersey City, N.J. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez, File)

America 250 The Unity Question

One can find it in the country’s name — the UNITED States of America — and in the sentiment of the motto written in Latin on its coins and one-dollar bills: E Pluribus Unum, or “out of many, one.”

The effort has been optimistic and unrealistic, successful and a failure, enduring as an American ideal during moments when citizens struggled — and struggle today — to practice it.

How has the notion of unity in American society evolved in 250 years and more? What does it mean — and what doesn't it mean, particularly in fraught and troubled moments? “It's a question,” says one scholar, “that every society has to answer.”

I. The beginnings of these ‘United’ States

From the milestone moment of the nation’s beginning, the founders emphasized that unity would be a vital component of the new country, where government would be based not on a king and monarchy as in Europe but instead, as the Declaration says, “on the consent of the governed.”

“It is of infinite moment that you should properly estimate the immense value of your national union to your collective and individual happiness; that you should cherish a cordial, habitual, and immovable attachment to it … indignantly frowning upon the first dawning of every attempt to alienate any portion of our country from the rest,” George Washington said as he stepped down from two terms as the first American president.

At the start of the experiment, the fabric of a nation first stitched together from 13 original colonies, defining what unity meant was far from settled.

Even as the founders spoke of high-minded ideals, they put limits on who they allowed to take part, who had rights and freedom and who didn't. All these years later, determining the meaning of unity can still be a challenge. Do we interpret that Latin motto to mean a blending of different perspectives to create a country that is greater than the sum of its parts, or does it mean there can only be one, that unity requires sameness?

Either way, here’s the thing about aspirations, as anyone who’s ever quit on a New Year’s resolution can tell you: They don’t turn into reality without effort and commitment, or come out of just a sole moment, no matter how singular.

Our individual lives are built not just from the milestones but from the everydays in between. How could the life of a nation be any different?

II. Aspiration vs. reality

Even as unity has stood among the ideals, the on-the-ground experience of life in America for the last 2½ centuries has reflected the reality that in this created nation, there’s never been just ONE America, where everyone lived in the same way or had the same access to power and prosperity.

It wasn't there at the country's inception. And in the moment the U.S. is living now, it certainly isn't either.

“I think the United State has had a more volatile history in terms of how it deals with questions of inclusion and exclusion, how it draws the line and polices the line of who’s in and who’s out,” says Daniel Immerwahr, a professor of history at Northwestern University.

“It’s a question that every society has to answer … who’s on the inside, who’s on the outside,” he says. “I would say that what’s interesting about the United States in this regard is how changeable and nonobvious some of the answers to those questions are.”

Sometimes the differences have been straightforward — like geography (rural vs. urban, plains vs. mountains) and climate (heat vs. snow, wildfires vs. flooding). Sometimes they were, and remain, cultural — people from different countries of origin, newcomers vs. generations deep, speaking different languages, following different denominations of Christianity or other religions entirely. And of course, the differences have been economic; rich and poor have always lived differently.

But sometimes, the differences have been travesties — like enslaved Africans and their American-born descendants, forced to live under the lash as they worked in the fields and elsewhere for the benefit of white owners. Even after slavery was outlawed, they were subject to discrimination and worse under racism that was legalized in systemic ways into the 20th century and that echoes still.

The Indigenous tribes whose populations were decimated by death and disease as the American experiment moved westward and newly arrived settlers hankered after their tribal lands, and whose cultures were stripped from generations as the U.S. government tried to force “unity” through brutal efforts at assimilation.

Advertisement

Communities of people barred from possibility because of gender, sexual orientation or other characteristics.

There have also been persistent efforts across eras to create a country where the opportunities available to some — say, voting, economic growth, or access to education — would be made available to all. That came gradually through protest movements, legal action, and callbacks to those same American founding ideals and aspirations of unity and equality.

“It provided a language for the groups that were challenging these exclusions to draw on … invoking the ideals of the Revolution and the Declaration and saying, ‘Look, this is what the nation is supposed to be about,’” says Eileen Cheng, a professor of history at Sarah Lawrence College. “They could challenge the system and yet claim that they were being the true Americans.”

III. What could ‘unity’ even look like?

One of the things about ideals, though, is that they can be somewhat abstract.

What does it mean for a country to be ‘united'? Does unity mean uniform? Is it, to borrow a reference from one of satirist Terry Pratchett's books, that people are on the same side, or can they be on “different sides that happen to be side by side.” Is unity overall even a good thing in the context of a raucous democracy?

A look around the globe and through the history books shows there's no single answer. There have been countries with a single official language, others that have recognized multiple languages, and some, like the United States, that for generations have never officially designated any. At times, countries have chosen official religions. Nations have different standards and processes for naturalizing new citizens.

“There are always tensions between the unity and the separateness,” said Paul Wachtel, a psychology professor at the City College of New York. “There’s no society that is just one or just the other … what’s really most essential is that we learn how to negotiate those tensions.”

The United States experienced that firsthand in its infancy. The Constitution we live under is the second attempt at a framework for government. The first, the Articles of Confederation, kept the federal government weaker and the individual states stronger. It quickly became clear that having such a weak central government — i.e., less unity — wasn't effective for the new country, leading to the Constitution.

For some countries, like many in Europe, those negotiations have taken place under the weight of centuries of history and geography, and other established backdrops like the existing form of government, which impacted the direction they decided to go. The U.S., from the founders' perspective, was a new entity.

“What it is to be of the United States is to adhere to a set of principles rather than to have a certain kind of lineage,” Immerwahr says. “Sometimes that makes the United States remarkably open, and then sometimes that gets the leaders of the United States in all kinds of weird contradictions as they try to explain why they’re doing some forms of inclusion and not others.”

The United States has a decidedly mixed history when it comes to dealing with those tensions. Things have fluctuated.

Take migration, for example. There have been eras when the influx of people coming to these shores was seemingly a never-ending stream, but also times when much of the world was barred. In politics, the idea that there would be different factions represented by different parties was loathed by some, even as it became embedded in the political culture. Groups that were once looked down on are later brought into the fold, and vice versa.

“What have we learned over the last 250 years is that things change,” says Cindy Kam, professor of political science at Vanderbilt University. “We are inclined to be social animals, but what those groups are is culturally constructed. So political elites, social elites, cultural elites, they do that work in identifying what the groups are, who is part of ‘us’ and who is a part of the ‘other.'”

By no means is it settled; if anything, the demographic, technological, economic and other changes of the last several decades are making discussions about unity more relevant than ever. In recent years, Americans have lived in a country where polarization is rampant, and serious — sometimes dire — questions abound over what the future holds. That's probably more in line with the country's beginnings than people realize.

“This polarization, people talk about it like it’s a new thing. But I think it’s really a return back to the way that we were at the beginning of the country,” Cheng says. “It’s not like this kind of linear development where we’re growing more and more accepting of difference. I think it’s up and down.”

This story is part of an Associated Press package looking at the United States at age 250. For more stories, clickhere.

'Out of many, one,' says a US national motto. What does that push for unity mean today?

NEW YORK (AP) — The aspirations cut a wide swath through American history since 1776 — from the “All men are created equal” of the Decl...

 

GEAR JRNL © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com