"I used to get sick to my stomach thinking about leaving the building because the fans would be trying to turn my car over when I was a bad guy," said Hogan, who broke into wrestling as a "heel" in the late 1970s before becoming the industry's biggest star. "The good memories at the Philadelphia Spectrum are that it was so loud. It used to make my jaws water. It's kind of like I'd smell good food or something — my jaws would water. It would get so loud in the middle of that ring with that rumble in the building that it would make my jaws water. And then if I was getting beat up by the bad guy, I would reach out for help; the fans would try to come toward the ring. Nothing but good memories about Philly."