influencers
Anonymous Goes Political: Hackers, Masks, and a Dumpster Fire of Ideals
Anonymous in 2025 is a relic with a pulse—hackers, coders, maybe an intern or two, all masked up and mad as hell.
Andrew Tate & Tristan: The Misogyny Express Lands Stateside
What’s the Tate vibe? Andrew’s the poster boy—self-described misogynist, banned from X in 2022, reinstated by Musk, preaching “women belong in the kitchen” to Gen Z boys who lap it up like it’s tax advice from a billionaire.
Liz Wheeler’s Epstein Files: A White House Stunt Too Boring to Praise
Wheeler’s pre-X life’s a yawn—no dirt, just a straight-arrow climb. Raised on The Federalist Papers (her claim), she interned for Rep. Todd Rokita (R-IN) in college—no scandals, just filing.
Chaya Raichik’s Epstein Files: A White House Clout Grab
How’d she snag a White House invite? Simple: clout and chaos. By February 2025, Raichik’s Libs of TikTok was a MAGA megaphone, amplifying Trump’s “America First” gospel to millions. Her bomb-threat-linked rants—SPLC dubbed her an “anti-LGBTQ+ extremist” in 2024—made her a darling of the alt-right.
Jack Posobiec’s Epstein Files: White House Flop Not Worth The Views
Posobiec’s career’s a laundry list of stunts: Pizzagate, “Rape Melania,” Stop the Steal, now this. He’s a chaos agent who’s parlayed Navy washout to X stardom, with 3 million followers eating up his “America First” schtick.
Rogan O’Handley’s Epstein Files: A White House Showdown Too Pathetic to Care About
This “grand showdown” is a masterclass in overhyped nothing. Trump’s crew stages a White House handoff like it’s the scoop of the century, only to deliver a sequel nobody wanted.
From Zip2 to PayPal, or How to Stumble Into Billions
Fast forward to 2002: eBay, desperate to own the online payment game, buys PayPal for $1.5 billion in stock. Elon, no longer CEO but still a shareholder, walks away with $165 million. One hundred sixty-five million! For a company he didn’t even start, got kicked out of, and nearly tanked with his X fetish.