MILWAUKEE— One Milwaukee Bucks fan is now a social media sensation thanks to his "Hulk Hogan" antics at Game 6 on Thursday night at Fiserv Forum.

At halftime, Tony Schultz ripped off his shirt, making the jumbotron for the first time. 

By Friday morning, the video had been viewed more than 500,000 times on Instagram. 

 

Side note: The Marathon County farmer told Spectrum News he had his very first martini before the game. 

Tony's 15 minutes of fame didn't end at halftime. He said he had a plan in place if the cameras found him again. 

In the second half of Game 6, the Brooklyn Nets cut into the Bucks' big lead, closing the gap from double digits to just a few points. The energy escalated in the arena, and Khris Middleton hit three consecutive three-pointers. That's when the jumbotron landed on Tony again— who was wearing a new Bucks tee. 

He shredded that one down the middle too. 

"There was just so much energy and Brooklyn had to call a time out," he said. "They were panning around and they got us... It just burst out; it just happened."

Sadly Tony did not re-enact the shirt rip for us in the interview. He was down to his last Bucks t-shirt. 

Even though he's down a few pieces of green gear, it's worth it to Tony. 

"I guess I likBucksntion as much as the next red-blooded American," Tony said. "It's a fun time. It's a fun time to be a Bucks' fan. It's a fun time to be in Wisconsin... I just had a great time."

While he planned to have fun like every other fan there that night, the onset of local-celebrity status came as a shock

"I was going to make the jumbotron— that was a given. But all the Twitter stuff and you know talking to you [the news]: Wow!" he said. 

But it hasn't really gone to his head. The days after the big win, it's business as usual at Stoney Acres Farm for Tony. 

Sweet potatoes won't wait for fame. 

Tony was out in the field early Friday morning planting those. He owns a third-generation family farm in Athens, Wis. near Wausau. 

"We have a community-supported agriculture program and every Friday and Saturday nights, we also open up the farm as a restaurant," he said.

"Pizza on the farm" uses all ingredients grown by Tony and other local farmers. He makes pizza from scratch in wood-fired ovens, which is why he headed home right after the Thursday night game.  

But he'll be watching tonight from his farm. 

"Let's get 'em in Game 7!"

Hopefully, the Bucks take some of Tony's good mojo back to Brooklyn for Saturday night's do or die game.