No Holds Barred: Hulk Hogan Tells the Republican National Convention Something, Brother!

Say my prayers. Check. Eat my vitamins. Check. It’s gonna be a good day, brother! Hulk Hogan appeared at the Republican National Convention and you can bet your bandana I’m writing about it! I was transported back to my youth as Hulk Hogan took the stage in an epic moment full of signature Hulk moments — twirling his hand up to his ears as the crowd bursts with cheering, tearing his shirt off, posing to show his muscles. It was such an entertaining, feel-good moment at the 2024 Republican National Convention. Here’s the minute-long intro to his time on stage…


It was nostalgic, sure, but also a moment of immense American pride watching and listening to the Hulkster present his case for electing Donald Trump in 2024. At one point, he even stopped being Hulk Hogan and spoke to the audience as Terry Bollea. This video should be queued up to the part of his speech when he transitioned from actor to proud American.


Anyone thinking about a Trump/Hogan ticket in 2024? Instead of debates where candidates recycle the same old information, winners are determined by a steel cage match. No holds barred!


-Out of the Wilderness

The Samsung Nature Boy Galaxy Fold 6 Bird Commercial

There’s a “nature boy” in this commercial but before you start jumping from the top rope, spoiler alert it’s not Ric Flair. Woooooo!!! But also booooooo 😦 …


The Samsung nature boy is walking around with a nature girl when he whips out his Galaxy Fold6 to identify a bird because the display is in Spanish. This wooooooos nature girl. Take a look.


She’s clearly impressed so nature boy gets a wooo thanks to the Fold6. Birds are real (I think?) and I really enjoy getting photos of some of my favorite types– eagles, pelicans, seagulls, and more. Inspired by the el verderón europeo in the ad, here are a few photos from my bird collection. Take a look at the full gallery here and if you’re looking for some pics to hang in your home or office, all of these are available for purchase. Wooooooooo!


-Out of the Wilderness

That time Taylor Swift sang the National Anthem

Country music has some strange things going on these days. On one end you have the more traditional sounding hitmaker Lainey Wilson (check out my take on her video for “4x4xU”) but at the very same time, there’s the TikTok propelled “Bar Song” by Shaboozy and the country song nobody was really asking for in 2024, “Overdrive” by Thomas Rhett (a breakdown of its blandness here). Then there’s Zach Bryan splitting credits with John Mayer on a song called “Better Days.” It’s a new wild, wild west in C&W music and yes, I called it country & western because some of these singers are putting the western back in country, and I like it! But just like many entertainers who get the opportunity to sing a beloved song, Ingrid Andress (I wrote up a post about her song “More Hearts Than Mine” awhile back) stepped up to the mic to perform the National Anthem recently.


People aren’t holding back in their comments, either. Although, as one who’s graced the stage of a local restaurant for an energized performance of Dolly’s “9 to 5,” nerves can get the best of the best. Also, I sucked and there was nothing energizing about my Dolly performance. But I didn’t let fear keep me in my seat. Neither did Ingrid and her stage was much bigger than mine! The negative comments are peppered with some positive, but few and far between are those.


I recently wrote about a few American entertainers that have gained international fame (check out that post here) and of course Taylor Swift was included. It reminded of that time she sang the Star-Spangled Banner before a Miami Dolphins football game way back in 2006. She was just a 16- or 17-year-old and, oh yeah, she was country! Remember the adorbable C&W version of Taylor Swift? If you can endure the shots of Nick Saban 🤮, watch the clip below…


Nick Saban made it clear he was not leaving the Dolphins– “I’m not going to be the Alabama coach”– and then, of course, he quit coaching the Dolphins and went to Alabama. What a doofus. Can you tell I’m still bitter and I despise Nick Saban? “He told us a couple weeks ago that he’s proud to be a Dolphin and he’s going to be sticking around,” Dolphins quarterback at the time, Joey Harrington said. “So I take him at his word.”

Ingrid’s performance, while a little hard to bear, could’ve been worse. They could’ve cut to shots of Nick Saban. So let’s just be glad it is what it is, am I right?


-Out of the Wilderness

American Music in Other Countries

I’m starting this post out with a mention of Morgan Wallen but if you don’t like him or don’t know who he is, hang tight, I’m just using him as an example of a more general idea about music. Earlier this month, Morgan set the record for the biggest country music concert in the UK with a crowd of 50,000. Granted, he’s just as popular in the U.S. even if he’s throwing chairs or using taboo words. People like his music and I’m guessing they don’t hate his bad-boy persona either. But that’s not the point. The headline about his record-setting concert in London reminded me of another artist I was researching last week. There’s a song called “Austin” (not the one by Blake Shelton) and a few months ago it blew up worldwide, mostly thanks to TikTok, I guess. It’s from country newbie Dasha. She’s had quite a few singles before “Austin” but none that charted. Then boom, she goes #1 in two countries and top 10 in a dozen or more. Who knows if her latest single “Didn’t I” will catch on the same way, although I haven’t heard that lightning striking twice is very common.


Musical artists becoming popular around the world isn’t a new thing but I remember when I first learned about such a phenomenon. I was a naive 20-something-year-old wandering the streets of Vietnam. During this trip I heard all kinds of music and some of it was from artists back in the U.S. There were songs I’d never heard before and one that I had (why were Vietnamese so obsessed with “My Heart Will Go On” from Titanic, I’ll never know!). This was my introduction to the band called Boney M. They were a German group who had many hits worldwide but barely had a blip in the United States. I guess this was when it dawned on me that there, in fact, is music outside the U.S…. So naive was I. We were riding in a Vietnamese taxi and the driver was playing a CD (it was 2006, y’all, CDs were still a thing!). I loved the song I was hearing so I asked if I could see the disc to find out the name of the band. The song was “Rasputin” and thus began my appreciation for Boney M.


But getting back to the point of this post… it fascinates me that an artist who may or may not be popular in the U.S. can be huge in other countries. I mean, the Germans love David Hasselhoff, right? American’s remember him as a lifeguard or the driver of K.I.T.T. but he’s a singer, too. I recently learned more about another legendary artist who was big in other countries. Roy Orbison. Of course, the Big O is very well known even in 2024 in the United States, but with such a long career there were ebs and flows in his popularity and relevancy. The book I was reading went through lots of details of his musical journey and pointed out that a particular song not super well-received in the U.S. might be a #1 hit in another country. This actually happened quite a bit for Roy and it was the reason he toured overseas a lot. So how can the same song float around the middle or bottom of U.S. charts but then blow up in somewhere like Ireland? It’s fascinating.


Of course, there are artists who transcend time and geography… Elvis, Michael Jackson, the Beatles, Taylor Swift, Celine Dion, Madonna, and the list goes on. Artists like these have #1 hits in many countries. That doesn’t fascinate me, though, as much as an artist from the States who has a small tour here but has international fame overseas. It’s a cool thing.

During my trip to Vietnam, I also realized how small my mind was. It never once dawned on me that other countries have popular artists in their own right. Up to that point, I just thought whoever was popular in the U.S. was who people in other countries liked, too. What a goofball. I love that this trip opened up my mind to other countries and cultures… even if it meant I had to eat weird things, too.


-Out of the Wilderness