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Gavin Newsom and his wife allegedly called up the FireAce organization, which they are calling a "$100,000,000 money launder scam." They allegedly requested that information be deleted from the website because Spencer posted a screen recording of them on TikTok. The speaker claims Newsom and his wife do not want people to know that they took fire victim money for their "little made up nonprofit." The speaker says that the information has been removed from the website since yesterday.

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The speaker explains they paid $15,000 to go and interview Clavicular for a thirty-minute session. The purpose was to ask about Clavicular’s funding, his business, and rumors about him and Peter Thiel, because those rumors are everywhere. However, the moment the interviewer brought up Peter Thiel and Palantir, Clavicular panicked, flipped it on the interviewer, and claimed that the interviewer was the one funded by Peter Thiel. Clavicular stated that his team did research on the interviewer and that there were blockchain ties from Thiel-funded parties to the interviewer’s wallet, which, according to him, there’s zero proof of because it never happened. He claimed he literally couldn't show one single receipt that the interviewer is Peter Thiel funded or Peter Thiel backed, and he said, “I'll wait.” The interviewer asks for clarification: “So let me get this straight. You charge $15,000 for thirty minutes, and then you can't handle a single question. Like, source, I just made it up.” The interviewer adds, “And then you're calling me a scammer, but literally what you just did is scamming. Like, nobody told me to do this. I went solo. I came alone.” The interviewer explains that the only reason for asking about Thiel was because everybody was saying that Peter Thiel is the one that got clavicular released from jail and dropped all of the charges. The interviewer concludes, “So, yeah, I just got fraud maxed, but it's pretty pretty clear that clavicular is funded by Peter Thiel.”

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A woman recounts meeting a man through mutual acquaintances and trusting him when he claimed to be an attorney who could help her get a visa pro bono. She says he provided a fake bar number and she trusted him because of her friends' association with him. When she and others began to doubt him, he allegedly threatened her, demanding she sign a contract forgiving him of any wrongdoing, including posing as a fake attorney. She claims he faked submitting her papers, took $2,500 from her and donors from a TikTok fundraiser, and fabricated official documents from immigration services, including a fake USCIS fee stamp and action block. The documents falsely labeled her as an alien of extraordinary ability. She contacted the Department of Labor and the embassy, but they had no record of her case. She also says he presented her with a contract from his fake agency on TikTok, threatening legal action if she didn't sign it within three hours. She discovered that attorneys he referenced, Sergejak and Bulgar, had minimal or no association with him. She shares screenshots of unprofessional messages where he asked her and another client to call him "daddy." She urges viewers to share her video to help stop him from hurting other people.

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Jake Paul made millions of dollars promoting scam crypto projects, and sadly, he's one of many celebrities doing this. One notable example was his NFT scam known as stick dicks, where Jake Paul promoted the NFT for months on his Twitter selling millions of dollars of them. But after sales faded, he dumped the project and walked away with $1,500,000 personally. And after that, got involved in promoting the scam SafeMoon and Yummy, which Yummy was a con where they said the goal was to make people money while donating a large portion of coins to charity. And while they did donate some money to charity, many people were unhappy where after the Jake Paul bubble, there were 90% losses for investors. And the next was SafeMoon, which is a very big project that claimed it would make crypto transactions better. But they ended up under investigation for hiring influencers like Jake Paul to promote it and not having them tell their fans they were paid to do so. Jake Paul made money while his fans lost big making $300,000 off of Yummy and a 190,000 off of SafeMoon. He also made another $189,000 off of scam products like Sacred Devils and Milf. It runs the family where his brother promoted Dinktoink and didn't tell people he's a creator. And with that, I'm Charles and following to avoid celebrity scams.

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Jake Lang, associated with the group 1776, has been in the news for doing a lot of things. The transcript alleges that yesterday he was driving around the speaker’s city “for some reason humping a goat in the back of a van,” but it clarifies that “Jake's not interested in goats.” The report then claims that Lang is interested in young underage women. It mentions a friend of the speaker, Arlen, also known as the Zurg, who allegedly “does underage things.” The account alleges that Lang was foolish enough to give Arlen his number and was creepy enough to interact with him thinking he was a 15-year-old girl. According to the narrative, Lang and Arlen began working on this back in November by following Lang’s account. Lang purportedly reached out and asked, “you coming to my next protest in Texas?” Lang immediately goes for the phone number. The presenter emphasizes that the profiles involved are clearly high school-related, noting that they “always have some sort of high school and some throwback to being in high school.” The speaker also states that they cannot show the profiles publicly because that would reveal the operation, but reiterates the claim that the profiles are clearly linked to high school imagery. The situation allegedly worsens when Lang insisted on moving the interaction to a text message conversation, saying, “I have too many DMs. Text only, sweetie.” A decoy provides a phone number. Lang becomes chatty and asks, “How old are you, by the way?” The decoy responds that she is 30, and Lang asks questions like, “Why are you up so late, young lady? How old are you, baby? Unless you are under 18.” The decoy then claims, “I’m 15 and sends a selfie.” The speaker states that Lang sends “possibly the creepiest message a 30 year old grown fucking man could send to a 15 year old,” asking, “When do you turn 16?” The decoy replies that she will turn 16 in six months and adds, “I won’t get you in trouble. If that's what you're worried about, I can keep a secret.” Lang reacts by liking the message and pressing further, asking, “What state do you live in? I can’t see you till you’re 16.” The closing remark questions Lang directly: “Jake, you’re 30. Is this crazy right-wing influencer thing going so poorly for you that you have to try fucking children, or are you just a pedophile, bro?”

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In this video, the speaker begins by promoting a clothing brand and encouraging viewers to join their online community. The conversation then shifts to two individuals discussing an Instagram account and messages exchanged on it. They try to determine who reactivated the account and consider the possibility of someone holding a grudge against one of them. The conversation also touches on family issues and the person's job in construction. The speaker asks about the person's hobbies and evaluates their performance as a father. Later in the video, Speaker 1 is confronted by Speaker 3 about inappropriate messages sent to an 11-year-old girl named Emma. Speaker 1 denies any wrongdoing and claims it was just a joke, but Speaker 3 expresses concern for the safety of Speaker 1's daughter and plans to involve law enforcement. Speaker 4, Speaker 1's stepdaughter, gets involved, and the video ends with Speaker 3 deciding to report the situation to the police. Additionally, the video features a group posing as minors online to catch predators. They confront a man who messaged someone he believed was a father about his own child. Initially denying the accusations, the man later admits to sending the messages. The group contacts the authorities and discusses the situation, mentioning the man's history with DHR and the concerning nature of the messages. The video concludes with a promotion to join their locals for early content and a sponsorship shoutout to Red Pill Threads for unique shirts.

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Gavin Newsom and his wife allegedly called up the FireAce organization, which they are calling a "$100,000,000 money launder scam." They allegedly instructed FireAce to delete information from their website after Spencer posted a screen recording on TikTok. The speaker claims this was done to conceal that they supposedly took fire victim money for their "little made up nonprofit." The speaker states that the information has been removed from the website since yesterday.

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The speaker accuses someone of making antisemitic remarks, including calling Lucas a "foreign born Italian cosplaying as white." They allege this person claims a Jewish network is out to get J Proof and that he's working with Jewish billionaires. The speaker challenges claims about $5,400,000 in a J Proof wallet, stating the actual value is closer to $115,000, and the recent transfer was only a little over a thousand dollars, not $50,000. They accuse the person of lying and initially denying insider trading, then admitting on Stu Peter's network that the market maker wallet made bad trades and gambled on shitcoins. The speaker asserts this person used their platform to promote a meme coin token, breaking promises and Minnesota state law. They claim a class action lawsuit has enough participants to move forward and that blockchain evidence supports their accusations. They also dispute claims that investing in a mystery project will increase liquidity and market cap, arguing that increasing liquidity makes it harder to increase market cap without buy pressure.

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The speaker claims MrBeast is not independent but owned by a web of powerful media owners and investors. They say he’s connected to the same people who own other creators and were once under a group called Scale Lab. At one million subs, the speaker says MrBeast sought more money and became involved with Reed Dusher, described as the CEO of Knight Media, who allegedly facilitated a honey sponsorship and a sponsorship with Aspirian, an entity linked to a money-lending network run by a prominent family. The narrative continues that Knight Media allegedly steered MrBeast toward major deals, including a recent NBA-related arrangement and an Amazon partnership. The speaker claims Alpha Wave Gamma invested $300 million, run by Rick Gerson, who purportedly knows high-profile figures. The closing question asks why MrBeast refused an interview and what the mentioned entities have in common.

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The narrator describes posting TikToks about Erica Kirk on January 22 and January 27, with both videos performing very well. A day after the second TikTok, they received an email from a PR team allegedly reaching out on behalf of Aranos, claiming to be connected to Younique. The PR team offered “the deal of a lifetime” to help the narrator start their own makeup line with Younique, covering all upfront costs. The narrator then states they looked into Younique and notes that the owner is Derek Maxfield. They then refer back to September 10, describing an incident in which, one hour after a Charlie Kirk incident, a private jet with tail number N888KG took off from Provo, Utah. The plane allegedly turned off its transmitter in flight. The incident received a lot of attention quickly, and the owner of the plane made a statement. The narrator connects this Derek Maxfield to the makeup company by noting that Derek Maxfield is the owner who spoke after the private jet incident, and claims that someone allegedly connected to the makeup company reached out to them one day after they posted the TikTok about Erica Kirk. They acknowledge that this could be a coincidence and present it as their opinion. The narrator closes by asking the audience what they think, describing the connection as “weird.” The overall sequence ties the TikTok engagement about Erica Kirk to a subsequent outreach from a makeup company associated with Derek Maxfield, alongside the prior public incident involving the same individual.

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The speaker discusses a text conversation where someone planned to steal money from him. He mentions meeting the person and their net worth, and how they discussed getting money from him. The speaker refuses to pay any money and mentions a court case where evidence was concealed. The judge found the person's claims to be misleading and denied their request for a restraining order. The speaker sued the person and they counter-sued. Both lawsuits have now been settled, with no money exchanged. The speaker is glad to move on with their life.

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The speaker met Harry in the summer of 2020 and had a friends-with-benefits relationship with him. She considered him a best friend until he recorded her getting someone to admit to graping her. After Harry started drinking, he became aggressively flirty. The speaker noticed a shift in Harry when he gained more attention and created an exclusive Discord. Harry then began working for someone named Camille, who the speaker's father warned her about. A minor in the Discord sent the speaker concerning messages regarding Camille, which she cannot legally show. The speaker told Harry about Camille's actions, but Harry continued working for him. The speaker advised Harry that she was contacting the police about Camille's behavior towards the minor, and Harry advised her not to. The speaker shares screenshots of Harry asking for nudes at inappropriate times. She confronted Harry about her suspicions regarding his relationship with Camille. She received a fake cease and desist for $500,000 accusing her of racism. The speaker also shares a recording of a threatening phone call she received, where an unidentified person threatened to kill her if she posted anything about Camille. The speaker's friendship with Molina ended because she was posting about Harry.

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Speaker 0 notes that the people are not accusing him of rape or selling anyone; they are facing charges including human trafficking, rape, and forming a criminal gang to sexually exploit. Speaker 1 describes OnlyFans as “the best hustle in the world.” He explains the alleged methods: using the “lover boy method,” coercing by being nice, and not mentioning webcam until after sex. He says mentioning webcam on dates “just doesn’t work” and claims he would never do that, arguing the technique is to proceed normally and introduce webcam later. Speaker 2 and Speaker 3 discuss a program called PhD on corporatetake.com: “PhD is a pimp and hose degree.” He claims it teaches how he met girls, how he got girls to like him, how he got girls to fall in love with him to work on webcam, and how to have them spend more time with him. He describes inviting a prospective recruit to a meeting and bringing a girl who works for “Your bottom bitch” to explain the selling. The process emphasizes a “first girl” as pivotal, with girls on camera together the first day so the new girl can observe and imitate. Speaker 4 recounts specific experiences: being bought wine and becoming nervous about webcam work; the narrator describes wealth from webcam operations and retaining girls; he mentions four locations and 75 girls, with roughly half of the money going to the workers, claiming a 50% split and suggesting taxes explain the disparity. Another worker, paid a flat £15 per hour, notes large sums from clients who believed they would meet the girl. Speaker 1 describes a pattern where men fell in love with his models and sent large amounts of money, including people selling houses and life savings. He states: “I used sex as a tool to make women love me so they'd obey me and live in my house to make me money. That’s what I wanted. So I was a pimp in that sense.” He discusses the emotional manipulation that led clients to believe they would meet the girl. Speaker 5 remains skeptical, labeling the operation “pimpy.” Speaker 1 argues about the Me Too era, saying he is not a rapist in a way that would be labeled, yet he admits he likes the freedom to do what he wants. Speaker 6 challenges Speaker 1 by quoting his own statements: that his job was to meet a girl, sleep with her, get her to fall in love, and then get her on webcam to become rich together. Speaker 1 denies that exact quote, but Speaker 6 insists it matches what was said on the website. Speaker 0 reiterates that the belief is he was charged with human trafficking, and Speaker 1 clarifies that “human trafficking” is framed as forcing a girl to work for financial gain, noting TikTok accounts from some girls as part of the justification. He reiterates the PhD as a pimp and hose degree he claims to be pleasant about.

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The speaker discusses Harry's alleged connection to Camille Maroon and Maroon's alleged inappropriate contact with a 14-year-old autistic boy. Maroon founded and ran a social media company that Harry worked with. Maroon also founded Impulse, but is no longer listed on the company. Maroon's LinkedIn and Instagram accounts have been deleted. The speaker states that Maroon was deeply involved with TikTok and TikTok creators, but has seemingly vanished from the internet. The speaker claims that a girl, who revealed information about Harry, knew Maroon "was up to some shit" and made Harry aware. Harry allegedly promised to investigate but continued working with Maroon. The girl also has a recording of a death threat telling her to stop talking about Camille. The speaker states they will get to the bottom of this and encourages others to investigate.

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Denny Junior Camilo Maroon allegedly had the speaker invest in fake Gymshark and GNC brand deals, requiring two LLCs costing $1,400, which the speaker paid via Cash App. The speaker later realized the Gymshark deal document was edited and fake. The speaker then convinced a 17-year-old friend to invest $14,000, with the speaker adding an additional $5,000 of their own money. The speaker says Camille encouraged the underage investment, promising significant returns. After a trip together, Camille blocked people on the speaker's phone, who the speaker later learned were involved in a lawsuit against Camille or had been scammed by him. Camille allegedly wanted to get with the speaker on the trip. When the speaker asked for their money back, citing financial difficulties, Camille requested $500 upfront, which the speaker paid. Camille then claimed issues with the banking information provided. After being confronted, Camille allegedly threatened to sue the speaker for $180,000 for violating an NDA. Camille's TikTok agency was shut down after higher-ups discovered he was allegedly scamming young people. Camille then sent the speaker a picture of a gun to his head. The speaker also heard unconfirmed reports of Camille's alleged involvement with a 14-year-old and accessing the speaker's spicy content.

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The speaker met Harry in the summer of 2020 and had a friends-with-benefits relationship with him. She considered him a best friend until he recorded her getting him to admit to graping her. She noticed a shift in Harry when he gained more attention and created an exclusive Discord where he met Camille. The speaker was advised against working with Camille due to his sketchiness. She received concerning messages from a minor in the Discord about Camille's behavior, which she reported to Harry, who was working for Camille. The speaker confronted Harry about Camille's actions and advised him that she was contacting the police. Later, Harry asked the speaker for nudes, then unsent the message. The speaker had a phone call with the minor, who asked strange questions, revealing that Harry and Camille were working together to discredit her. She received a fake cease and desist accusing her of racism. The speaker shares screenshots of Harry asking for inappropriate pictures and threatening texts, including an audio recording of a death threat related to Camille. The speaker's friendship with Molina ended because she was posting about Harry.

My First Million

How This Amateur Copywriter Scammed Victims Out Of $200M (#482)
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The discussion begins with a mention of a scam involving a copywriter named Patrice Runner, who made $20 million a year by sending letters claiming to offer psychic insights and lottery numbers. The hosts reflect on the short attention spans of modern audiences, noting that data shows half of viewers drop off within seconds of a video starting. They humorously discuss their recording attire and the challenges of convincing friends to move to California. Shaan shares a story about negotiating with Petro China, where they were kept in a freezing room for hours as a tactic to unsettle them. They then delve into the fascinating world of copywriting, highlighting Runner's success and the techniques he used to persuade people to send money for nothing in return. The conversation shifts to the importance of memorable phrases and slogans in marketing, with examples from history and personal anecdotes about crafting effective messaging. They discuss the evolution of dating, mentioning new trends like "Chaos Singles Parties," where singles invite matches from dating apps to parties, and "Date Me Docs," where individuals create detailed Google Docs as dating profiles. The hosts analyze the changing landscape of dating preferences, including the rise of polyamory and the impact of technology on relationships. The conversation touches on the future of dating and relationships, speculating that traditional methods may seem barbaric in the future. They also explore the idea of self-driving cars and the potential for lab-grown meat to replace traditional animal consumption, predicting societal shifts in how these practices are viewed. Finally, they reflect on the absurdities of past dating practices and the evolution of societal norms, concluding that many aspects of modern life will likely be viewed as strange or outdated by future generations. The hosts emphasize the importance of adapting to new ideas and the ongoing evolution of culture and technology.

Coldfusion

36 Year Old Man Accused of Scamming $1.5 Billion
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Abraham Shafi's app, In Real Life (IRL), valued at $1.5 billion with 20 million users, faced scrutiny in April 2023 for alleged misconduct. Investigations revealed that 95% of its users were fake, leading to the app's dissolution on June 27, 2023. Shafi's previous app, Gather, had similar issues, including spamming users. Despite his claims of confidence in IRL's metrics, discrepancies were noted, and the SEC inquiry continues. This case reflects a trend of startup fraud, raising questions about investor due diligence.

Philion

The Jack Doherty Situation is Crazy..
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New John Bravo drop centers on Jack Dardy, accused of grooming dozens of girls for OnlyFans via an agency system, earning millions. He allegedly recruits by DM or at parties and signs them to contracts through Creators Inc., a management operation. Dardy supposedly builds 'charmas' by boosting young women’s social media, moving them into OnlyFans, and taking the top cut. Sam Frank and Neon are named as part of the network, with Dardy boasting about earnings on Adam22’s No Jumper podcast. The tale includes a McLaren crash on a live stream and a callous posture toward others, framed as attention-seeking behavior. The narrative alleges parental profit from his actions, while he grooms more girls and enforces contracts that pay after breakups. It critiques influencer-network pimping and exploitation and frames a troubling ecosystem of talent management, consent, and revenue extraction in adult content.

Philion

Coffeezilla Just Exposed Him..
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Coffeezilla exposed Adam22 for promoting a crypto pump and dump after DM messages showed Coffeezilla warned him that these snipers were planning to snip the coin and make a bundle off someone who doesn't know any better. Adam22 says he didn’t care and was paid hundreds of thousands for a tweet, while Coffeezilla notes he acknowledged snipers and still proceeded. The host casts Coffeezilla as an investigator exposing scammers and mentions the FTX case. Beyond this case, the speaker argues crypto scams are a fast path to money for influencers, with the same excuses used by KSI, Logan Paul, and Mr. Beast—‘I didn’t know,’ ‘I thought I could get away with it.’ The narrator emphasizes that promoting scams harms fans and that regulators like the FBI and SEC are involved, noting Coffeezilla's reports helped trigger enforcement. The piece ends with a weary critique of an Internet economy where scandal, money, and clout outrun accountability, urging real consequences for promoting fraud.

Philion

Logan Paul and KSI's Billion Dollar Scam
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This obnoxious bottle of literal [ __ ] is being pumped down everyone's throats. Prime, prime drink. Kids are spending 10, 20, even a hundred dollars a bottle. If you're above 16 and drink Prime unironically, reevaluate your life. The science behind electrolytes and hydration should be simple, so promoting this without due diligence is baffling. They're scammers at heart, especially Logan Paul, a professional athlete. When we sweat, we lose electrolytes—sodium and potassium—with sodium for blood pressure, nerve signaling, and muscle contraction, and potassium for muscle contraction, heart function, and blood pH. For athletes, replacing electrolytes matters; water alone can be insufficient. Prime blue has 10 mg sodium and 700 mg potassium, an odd balance. In dehydration, doctors give IV saline, not a banana. Hyponatremia and hyperkalemia are real risks from electrolyte imbalance. A marathon anecdote shows hyponatremia from excessive water without salt. Compared with Gatorade, Prime has 2 g sugar from sucralose, 25 calories, and 825 mg electrolytes, versus Gatorade's 36 g sugar, 140 calories with around 270 mg sodium. Prime’s higher potassium ratio is controversial. Prime sticks and Liquid IV comparisons show similar electrolytes but different formulations. The speaker highlights Prime's marketing, growth, and potential for acquisition by large beverage companies, noting Congo Brands is run by Max Clemens and Trey Steiger, with Logan and KSI promoting rather than formulating.

Philion

Jake Paul's Scam, Sugar Daddies, and Fake Viral Videos
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Philion announces his new podcast, The Sunday Sauce, live now with his friend Vinny of Original 151. The project has been in the works for over a year. The show will drop every Sunday and is described as 'super relaxed,' covering trends, games, music, movies, TV shows, cultural references—anything and everything. The first episode is live, and he asks viewers to subscribe and follow Vinny; he says it’s going to be massive and that the podcast is going to take over. Then he critiques scams and hyped giveaways: under Jake Paul’s videos, a Got Drip link promises a 'free Team Ten chain' with free shipping bait; similarly, Supreme Patty and Grant Cardone push free items, then paid upsells and a $997 program tied to a sales funnel asking for your phone number and email. He also covers Sugarbook—a dating site for sugar babies and sugar daddies—where a sugar baby claims a five thousand dollar monthly allowance, college support, and a two million dollar house, describing exclusive arrangements and luxury travel.

Philion

The Larry Wheels Situation is Insane..
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The podcast discusses a breaking news story from John Bravo regarding powerlifter Larry Wheels, who is allegedly involved in a multi-million dollar fraud housing scam. The host, Philion, delves into the details of a lawsuit filed by Daniel, a close friend and team member, who invested $50,000 for 3% ownership in Wheels' company, PR, to help fund a down payment on a mansion. Larry Wheels is accused of misrepresenting the use of these investment funds for personal gain rather than business, failing to compensate Daniel as per the contract, and potentially selling the company without honoring Daniel's stake. The discussion also highlights Larry Wheels' controversial past, including long-term abuse of performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs) since age 17, repeated broken promises to quit steroids, and a severe addiction to cam sites that led to him spending all his money and going broke. The host criticizes Wheels' financial mismanagement, despite earning millions from his YouTube channel and PR company, and questions his business acumen. The current legal troubles, coupled with his history of addiction and financial irresponsibility, are presented as a stark contrast to Wheels' recent attempts to portray himself as a positive role model for young people regarding money management and PED use.

Philion

Wizza is the Newest Influencer Scam
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I discuss scams by influencers who take advantage of their audience, but nothing sticks. They delete tweets, hide videos, and pretend things never happened. Nelk Boys, Steve Will Do It, Mike Majlak, Sommer Ray, RiceGum, Aiden Ross, FaZe Banks, and associates are said to get a hall pass. They’re described as needing to make seven figures by promoting scams and hustles; if someone else did this without clout they would be obliterated. Whizza is a sweepstakes company promoting prizes and causes, including a $315,000 McLaren 720s, a 2021 Lamborghini Huracan Evo Spider, and other items. The process says you enter for a chance to win and donate to a cause, yet the site also states no purchase or payment is necessary to enter. Ticket options range from 100 entries for $10 to 5,000 for $250, with disclaimers that purchases do not improve odds. The transcript calls the promoters untrustworthy and notes suspicious giveaways and address inconsistencies, including a claimed LA winner and non-existent Whizza addresses.

Coldfusion

The Fraud Chronicles feat. Coffeezilla
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This episode of Cold Fusion discusses the rise of modern scams, highlighting significant fraud cases from the past year. Sam Bankman-Fried's FTX collapse is a key example, where he mismanaged billions in customer funds through risky trades and misleading practices, leading to his trial and conviction on multiple charges. Another notable case involves Charlie Javice, who deceived JP Morgan into acquiring her fake fintech startup, Frank, for $175 million, resulting in charges of securities fraud. The TikTok GST scam in Australia exploited the tax system, costing taxpayers $4.6 billion through fake business claims. Additionally, the Safe Moon cryptocurrency project was revealed as a scam, with executives charged for withdrawing $200 million while misleading investors. The collapse of Credit Suisse, plagued by scandals and financial mismanagement, further exemplifies corporate fraud. Lastly, Miles Guo, a former tycoon, was arrested for defrauding investors through a media platform, showcasing the vulnerability of individuals to scams. The episode emphasizes the increasing sophistication of fraud and the challenges regulators face in keeping up with these schemes, urging vigilance against offers that seem too good to be true.
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