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Netflix’s four-part docuseries Hulk Hogan: Real American, which began streaming on April 22, 2026, features the late wrestler’s final on-camera interviews recorded months before his July 2025 death.
In the series Hogan (Terry Bollea) describes extreme opioid use while trying to return to wrestling after his 2009 divorce and stint with Total Nonstop Action: he recounts taking what he called 80‑milligram fentanyl pills twice daily, wearing multiple patches and consuming fentanyl “lollipops” — amounts a pharmacist in the program tells him would normally be lethal.
The doc also covers Hogan’s long-term health troubles, including atrial fibrillation and chronic lymphocytic leukaemia disclosed in medical records, and confirms his death was ruled an acute myocardial infarction at age 71.
Episodes probe his 2007–09 divorce, a period of suicidal ideation, and pain over his brother Alan Bollea’s overdose; Hogan asks producers to stop questioning him about that loss during his final interview.
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Key finding: the documentary’s numeric descriptions of fentanyl use conflict with standard medical formulations. Viewers should treat the self‑reported milligram figures cautiously; follow‑up reporting and expert review are likely to clarify actual dosages.







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