Hulk Hogan

The $115 million verdict against Gawker might not affect other media all that much.
Somebody added insult to Gawker's $115 million lawsuit loss.
The Florida jury sided with Hogan in a case that pitted a celebrity's right to privacy against the First Amendment.
The case could be a landmark for what is protected by the First Amendment.
The editor held that publishing the piece kept with Gawker's mission of producing "true and interesting" journalism.
The former editor-in-chief was joking, wasn't he?
Terry Bolea wants jurors to distinguish between his public persona as Hulk Hogan and his private life.
A flat-Earth truther, a sheriff found guilty of racial profiling and Hulk Hogan.