Thursday, January 16, 2025

Know You’re Grifter Tactics - Woe Is Me

 You should really watch this important video:

Just kidding!  You didn’t need to watch it, and you couldn’t watch it even if you wanted to.

Starting in 2024, one of our favorite gematria content creators (and calling gematria narrative manufacturers content creators is exceptionally generous) started accelerating the new pattern.

1). Amidst the normal repetitive bullshit put out a “Woe is me, I’m so poor and I need money!” panhandling video.  No meat to the story.  Just asking for money.

2). Leave the video up for a couple of days.

3). Delete that video so you couldn’t see how many similar videos there were in the channel history.

I suppose a lot of long time followers didn’t care that the donation plate was being passed around often.  It’s always the same people in the comments and the same reaction.  A familiar and easy pattern.  The content, even with the “meat” is extremely repetitive.  It’s difficult to believe that serious entertainment value is gained.  At least gematria sports fake decodes get you interested in watching a game.  But the predicting the end of the world every day…that’s like recording the 2008 Detroit Lions winless season and expecting that maybe somewhere one of the game results will change if you just keep rewatching them.  Nearly all the content revolves around the end of the world rapture and for years nothing new has popped up.  Unless you count that the donation requests are more frequent.  Seriously, it had to be at least a half dozen just in November 2024 through now.

But there’s a new pattern to the responses.  Finally.  The panhandling content sounds increasingly desperate.  No longer a side hustle to earn a couple extra bucks, but now somehow the only way to pay bills and buy groceries.  Whether it’s an act or genuine it doesn’t bode well, because the audience is a majority of people equally desperate.  Made up of poverty level social media acts who act like if the world does actually end that’s a good thing.  Let’s look at some of the comments.


 


I desperately need help and thanks for your

Thoughts and Prayers.

What a shocker.  Dirt poor social media addicts who also desperately need money don’t have money to give to others who desperately need money.  Sure, a couple people chimed in that they would PayPal transfer some bucks.  The number of thoughts and prayers outsizes those, and has outnumbered them for some time.

But fear not, the panhandler king is also fond of popping up in the comments of the Sports Gematria recaps of Zach’s losing football picks.  Talking about what a fraud Hubbard is; subliminally suggesting his work is more meaningful.  There’s bound to be some desperate social media addicts who don’t have money they can afford to lose on bad sports picks that will give that a try instead of buying lottery tickets.  At least with that you can generate some genuine interest in the Lions results.

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