How Josh Hokit Turned A UFC Press Conference Into Must-See Chaos
The fight hasn’t happened yet, but Josh Hokit has already made himself the story.
At a press conference meant to promote UFC 327, which will be held on Saturday in Miami at the Kaseya Center, the rising heavyweight didn’t just participate. He disrupted. What was supposed to be a routine media event quickly shifted into something far less controlled, as Hokit injected chaos, theatrics, and controversy.
UFC pre-fight press conferences used to be must-see tv, but many fans have complained that they have become somewhat boring lately, as fighters go on and on about how much they respect and admire each other. This mutual respect is mature and heartwarming, but some of the fans still like a bit of drama on the side.
On Thursday night, Hokit brought the drama.
Press conferences in the UFC typically follow a familiar script. Fighters size each other up, answer predictable questions, and pose for face-offs. It’s structured, controlled, and designed to build anticipation, without losing order.
Hokit had other ideas.
In the days leading up to the event, he had already drawn attention for strange and theatrical behavior, as he harassed and antagonized fellow fighters in the fighter hotel. This included an unexpected physical confrontation with Jiri Prochazka that had to be broken up by coaches, and him threatening Carlos Ulberg as he went to check in for his media responsibilities. When Josh Hokit is in the building, no one is safe.
By the time he stepped onto the stage for the pre-fight presser on Thursday night in Miami, the tone had already shifted. This wasn’t promotion. It was performance. UFC fans haven’t seen a character like this in quite some time, and for many, it seemed like “The Incredible Hok” came out of nowhere.
Hokit’s presence on this stage, and on this card, didn’t happen in a vacuum.
Earlier this year, he drew national attention, following controversial comments about Brittney Griner, remarks that sparked backlash far beyond the MMA world. In most professional sports leagues, that kind of moment can stall, or even derail, a career. In the UFC, it can have the opposite effect.
Hokit went from controversy to visibility, and from visibility to opportunity. He went from being virtually unknown to instantly famous, even outside of the world of mixed martial arts.
Now, despite being unranked, he finds himself on the main card of a Paramount Plus numbered event, facing the No. 5 heavyweight in the world, Curtis Blaydes. It also raises a larger question about how opportunity is earned in today’s UFC.
The answer is increasingly clear. Attention matters.
Hokit’s approach has drawn comparisons to fighters who understand that visibility can be just as valuable as results. But, where others operate with calculated precision, Hokit leans fully into unpredictability. Blaydes, for his part, has made it clear he isn’t interested in engaging with the theatrics, dismissing Hokit’s behavior as a distraction. That divide, between fighters focused strictly on competition and those embracing spectacle, is becoming more pronounced across the sport.
The modern UFC is not just a meritocracy. It is a marketplace.
Fighters are evaluated not only on wins and losses, but on their ability to generate interest, drive conversation, and create moments that extend beyond the cage. In that environment, controversy can function as currency. It accelerates visibility, reshapes narratives, and, in some cases, fast-tracks opportunity.
That reality is uncomfortable for some, but undeniable.
It also speaks to something broader about the UFC’s place within the sports landscape. While other leagues have increasingly moved toward tightly managed messaging and controlled public personas, the UFC has remained comparatively unfiltered. Fighters speak freely, often at their own risk, and the consequences, both positive and negative, play out in real time.
For some, that openness represents authenticity. For others, it raises questions about where the line should be drawn. Hokit’s rise sits directly at that intersection.
His press conference performance , loud, theatrical, and at times confrontational, ensured one thing above all else: people are talking about him. In a crowded division, that alone can create opportunity. But, it also creates pressure.
Because once the spotlight is on, performance has to follow.
The irony is that UFC 327 is built around high-stakes matchups, yet much of the attention has shifted toward a fighter who hasn’t yet proven himself against elite competition. That shift speaks to the power of narrative, and the evolving dynamics of how fights are sold.
For Hokit, the strategy is clear. He has forced himself into relevance. Whether fans view it as entertaining or excessive, the result is the same: he is now part of the conversation heading into, without question, the biggest fight of his career.
Press conferences can create moments, but fights define them.
Hokit has already taken control of the microphone and reshaped the narrative heading into Saturday night. Now, comes the part that matters most.
He has to back it up.
Because in the UFC, attention may open the door, but only winning keeps it open.

Andrew Carswell is a combat sports columnist and college writing professor, based in Las Vegas, NV, whose work examines the intersection of fighting, media, business, and culture. His commentary and analysis have been featured in various magazines, newspapers, and media outlets, including Yahoo! News, and USA TODAY. Blending journalistic insight and experience with a fan’s perspective, Carswell writes about the fight game as both a cultural phenomenon and a global business.

Did you see him talking to himself at weigh-ins? Strange dude.