A former Hulk Hogan publicist has announced a political run in Arkansas.
Her name is Scout Stubbs. She’s now running for state representative in Arkansas!
She privately describes herself as a homeschool mom and business owner who spends time at the Arkansas State Capitol inspecting legislation and guiding public policy. Scout Stubbs revealed in a local interview that she used to work for wrestling legend Hulk Hogan as a publicist. You can watch the interview below.
Arkansas Candidate Reveals Surprise Connections To Hulk Hogan
In an interview with Radio personality Paul Harrell, Stubbs revealed her past working with figures like Hulk Hogan:
“I worked in an office in Nashville. I ran publicity for our touring events. I would contact each place, each city we were visiting. I would contact local media and try to get interviews set up. So free marketing is essentially what I was doing.”
Scout Stubbs slammed the big spending bills reportedly sneaking their way through the Arkansas legislature:
“So especially, you’re looking at these omnibus bills… there’s so much pork packed in these bills that you essentially have to pass. That’s not the way that I think things should work. I think that’s what’s going on in our state legislature. Not nearly as massive of a scale. But you still have these pork filled bill where the title of the bill has nothing to do with what’s in the bill… You have special interest groups and lobbyist groups pushing these things. And a lot of the time our legislatures aren’t even reading them.”
You can watch the full interview below:
Father Sh@@ts Child Predator: Justified? Plus Former Hulk Hogan Publicist Enters Arkansas Race – Paul Harrell Program https://t.co/iGMYvhP9oI
— X America News (@XAmericaNews) July 15, 2025
Scoutt Stubbs describes herself on her campaign website as a homeschool mother and small government candidate:
“As a small business owner and a homeschooling mother, Scout understands the needs of everyday citizens and fights for your rights. She is passionate about reigning in government spending, bringing manufacturing and jobs to Arkansas, and limiting overreaching regulations that cost Arkansas consumers in the end. She believes that we know what is right for our rural district, and do not need to be dictated by some of the urban special interest views from Little Rock.”