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4chan had photos of gruesome murder before it was reported to police

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This story contains graphic content that may be NSFW.

Police are investigating a Washingon man who apparently murdered a woman before posting photos of her corpse on the notorious anonymous online message board 4chan.

Screenshots circulating online show multiple photos of the apparent murder, as well as the suspect discussing it. They appear to have been posted shortly before 3pm on Tuesday, Nov. 4, and the suspect tells other 4chan users to “watch the news in Port Orchard in a few hours.” 

The Daily Dot has seen the screenshots and photos but has not been able to externally verify their authenticity.

Local news reports confirm that the Kitsap County Sheriff’s Office is investigating a “suspicious death in the Port Orchard area, which “appears to be a homicide.” The victim is a woman in her early 30s.

“This is not a random target of opportunity where somebody decided to kick in a door and kill somebody,” spokesperson Scott Wilson said. The photos purportedly of the murder are a focal point of the investigation, Wilson has confirmed. 

The victim’s body was found around 3.30pm Tuesday by a family member—as the suspect predicted on 4chan would happen. News outlets are giving contradictory reports as to whether the victim was the suspect’s wife, girlfriend or otherwise. The 4chan screenshots give no indication as to the nature of the relationship between the two.

The suspect who posted the photos also detailed their intention to commit "suicide by cop," and the police are currently hunting for the victim’s car, a gold 2001 Ford Focus, with the license plate 495-YLY.

Threads discussing the case on 4chan are being deleted almost immediately.

H/T Kitsap Sun | Photo via Michael Mandiberg / Flickr (CC BY-SA 2.0) | Remix by Jason Reed


The 4chan murder was real—and the suspect has been arrested

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A Washington man suspected of murdering his partner and posting photos of her corpse on 4chan has been taken into custody. 

The suspect, now identified as David Kalac, 33, seemed to have discussed the murder on the notorious message board with other users and shared photos of the victim’s corpse, according to screenshots seen by the Daily Dot. 

The victim, identified in news reports as Amber Coplin, was discovered by her 13-year-old son on the afternoon of Nov. 4, shortly after the posts were made to 4chan, sparking a multi-state manhunt for the suspect and Coplin’s missing vehicle. Despite the 4chan screenshots indicating that Kalac intended to commit “suicide by cop,” reports say he turned himself in to the Wilsonville Police in Oregon, and was fully cooperative. 

The vehicle has previously been sighted early on Wednesday Nov. 5, but the police lost it after a “high-speed chase,” according to the Daily Mail.

Kalac and Coplin, both in their early thirties, had been in a relationship, and had shared the Port Orchard apartment together. He is the “primary suspect,” according to police Deputy Scott Wilson. “It stands to reason that in all likelihood he is the person who posted those photographs.”

There had been initial doubts over the veracity of the 4chan screenshots, and the imageboard's "anything goes" culture led some to believe it was a  hoax or an extremely dark joke, But court documents say that the photos posted “matched the deceased,” reports kirotv, and the “residence interior matched the crime scene.” The Washington Post reports that Kalac told a friend by text after the murder they would “read about him in the news.”

Disturbing messages were also reportedly written across the walls of the crime scene by the suspect—including “she killed me first,” “bad news,” and “dead” on Coplin’s driver’s license.

kirotv reports that Kalac had threatened to kill a previous girlfriend last year.

Illustration by Rob Price

Gamergaters are turning their pain into a musical extravaganza

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At this point, it's difficult to tell what Gamergate is parodying: progressive ethics in the gaming community, or just themselves.

First, Gamergate proponents decided to move their campaign over to Tumblr, having been more or less thoroughly trounced on Twitter by worldwide outrage and prominent mockery over the hashtag's association with virulent misogyny in the gaming community.

Now, they're trying to turn their rhetoric into a musical extravaganza, complete with terrible parodies of Broadway musicals, famous rock songs, and, above all, ongoing ridicule of the struggle for diversity and equal representation in games.

Journey with me now, if you will, into a bizarro land where diversity is the enemy and women who criticize games that sexually objectify them are evil cartoon villains.

Over on the 8chan.co message board—where, you may recall, Gamergate proponents were exiled after perennial free-speech haven 4chan banned them for repeatedly doxing women in the community—gamers have been plotting to advance their argument through song. 

Dozens of gamers have written, sung, edited, and vidded new lyrics to several albums' worth of songs promoting the Gamergate agenda. The goal, as reported on the 8chan thread for the project, is "#GamerGate supporters banding together to mock the corruption in the Gaming Journalism Industry with song." The project comes complete with helpful tips for first-time singers or recorders, like "sing in your range," "warm up first," and, since hardcore gamers tend to keep fans running to cool their systems, a reminder to "TURN YOUR GODDAMN FANS OFF BEFORE YOU RECORD, JESUS CHRIST." It even comes with its own Twitter account, GamergateSings, to keep track of its progress.

The project includes a complete rewrite of the lyrics of songs from Les Miserables, the Beatles, Rent, and more.

Though the full catalogue hasn't been completely created yet, most of the songs are on Soundcloud, and all of the lyrics can be read on Pastebin, linked in the Google doc above. And they're... interesting, to say the least. Take the lyrics of "They Are Dead," a satirical filk, or rewritten lyric, of the Lion King song "Be Prepared." In the original, this song is sung by the villain, complete with a horde of hyenas who resemble Nazi soldiers.

In the Gamergate version, the head "villains" are, you guessed it, feminist gaming critic Anita Sarkeesian, and a number of faceless gaming journalists. According to the lyrics, these conspirators want to take over gaming by declaring real gamers "dead" and, shudder the thought, by ridding gaming of sexism, racism, and homophobia.

The lyrics are, well, not the greatest.

I know that your talent at writing
Is as small as a cuucko's backside [sic]
But hacks as you are, pay attention
And we'll take this matter in stride

And later:

[Scar:] Our friends will make games! ...With no fun, and
Catering to our ideology!
[Shenzi and Banzai:] Yaay! All right! No homosexuals is homophobic!
[All Hyenas:] No violence! No more princesses!
[Full song again]
[Hyenas: {In tight, crisp phrasing and diction}]
We won't get to the top by merit.
We'll whine to get all that we want.
[Scar:] Of course, to do so, we're expected
To kill that old identity
Man who oppose us are rapists
Women sockpuppets shall be
And any foolish minorities
Filthy race traitors, baby!

It... doesn't get any better from there.

If you weren't convinced that Gamergate is not actually about ethics in journalism, read the lyrics of these songs. They make the discrepancy even more explicit. The songs all seem devoted to mocking social justice ideals—ideals like making sure the gaming community is a safe space for women and minorities, and that games themselves portray women and minorities fairly, and not just as sex objects or other props for white male gamers.

The end result is something that makes Gamergate look, to say the least, rather ridiculous.

After all, it's hard to see how exactly making snarky songs about how stupid it is to fight racism and sexism in gaming will actually lead to any kind of change in gaming media. If anything, the widespread attention to Gamergate has done more to shine a light on the need for more diversity and less extremism in the community.

It's true that the new musical side of Gamergate is at least a break from the death and rape threats that have characterized the hashtag thus far.

We just hope in the end they'll find something better to sing about.

Screengrab via Vid.me

4chan trolls are gaming a poll to ban the word 'feminist'

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Children raking leaves, a display of seasonal gourds at the farmer’s market, and the crisp chill of fall in the air can mean only one thing: It’s time for 4chan’s annual rigging of Time's year-end polls.

By the time most Americans begin their preparations for Thanksgiving feasts, the denizens of the site’s /b/ board will have cooked up a sinister prank to end their year with one last laugh. It happens every year without fail, and this time, the target is one of the year's most important buzzwords. To close out a year that has seen /b/ antagonize women online like never before, trolls from this infamous prank hub are attempting to ban the word feminist.

The censory offensive began on Wednesday, shortly after Time published its fourth annual word banishment poll, where it asked readers which words they wanted to exile from the lexicon in 2015. Among zeitgeist phrases like “I can’t even” and the trendy party slang “turnt” lurked the option "feminist."

"Feminist" and related terms made headlines like never before in 2014, thanks to a flurry of celebrity opinions about women's rights that raised the profile of the everyday disgraces women face.

If there's one site that exemplifies retrograde, head-in-the-sand thinking, it's 4chan. Seeing a chance to tip the scales drastically against their mortal enemies, the feminists, /b/ members struck quickly. Early Wednesday morning, one of them posted a link to the poll and issued a resounding rally cry of “Get in here fags.” This is how the results trended later on Wednesday.

Shortly after the call to arms went up on /b/, moderators removed the thread, but that didn’t deter users from mounting new insurrections against women’s rights. 

Thanks to the use of auto clickers and constant page refreshing, /b/ was able to stagger the votes drastically in only a few hours. The word “feminist” has taken a massive lead in the polls.

Of course, /b/’s trolling of feminist is nothing new. Since the beginning of the year, its members have attempted to dismantle women in one way or another. It was early January’s “bikini bridge” prank that found /b/ spamming social media and news organizations with body-shaming imagery of women whose flat stomachs had caused their bikini bottoms to become suspended across their hips.

4chan followed that outburst of childish deviousness with a less-than-successful Fourth Wave of Feminism campaign and the downright gory rebuking of feminine hygiene products known as “free bleeding." Until Wednesday, the group hadn’t seen much success on the feminist front, other than their #endfathersday hoax, which trended worldwide on Twitter in June.

This gaming of the polls is something that Time should expect by now, given that /b/ has been waging a one-sided prank war against Time since 2009. It was in April 2009 when saw /b/ trolls first begin to bombard the magazine's polls, spamming the annual Time 100 contest to promote their fearless leader, Christopher Poole, who beat world leaders and real celebrities with over 16 million votes. Since then, /b/ has managed to hack the results of the magazine’s annual Person of the Year poll in both 2012 and 2013.

While it remains to be seen what word will win the banishment poll on November 19th, it’s clear that /b/ has taken advantage of vulnerabilities in Time’s software and given “feminist” a strong head start. Could this push to banish "feminist" from our vocabulary be just a hint of what's to come in Time's 2014 Person of the Year poll?

Once its engineers wised up to 4chan's tactics, Time was able to close the loopholes pretty quickly in 2013, but it doesn’t appear that the site took the same precautions for its word-banishment poll. Here's hoping they'll fix any outstanding software issues before 4chan makes Mama June from Here Comes Honey Boo Boo into Time's 2014 Person of the Year.

Photo via David Fulmer/Flickr (CC BY 2.0) | Remix by Jason Reed

4chan is trying to rig Time's Person of the Year poll—again

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4chan’s merry schemers are cooking up a Thanksgiving appetizer sure to make Time magazine sick once again

A group of anonymous users from 4chan’s imageboard /b/—the searchable Web’s premier pit of filth, pornography, and pranks—are trying to rig Time’s annual Person of the Year poll for the third year in a row.

/b/ is throwing its voting power behind Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the head of the Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria (ISIS).

ISIS is a terrorist organization responsible for killing more than 100 members of the Sunni Arab tribe known as Albu Nimr in November alone. The Islamic State has also become infamous for their video-recorded beheadings, including U.S. hostage Peter Kassig on Nov. 16.

/b/ has begun developing a Java script to automate votes in favor of al-Baghdadi and bypass the Facebook/Twitter authorization Time requires. The script is publicly available on Pastebin. It looks like this:

“If we can bypass the authorisation screens,” this user wrote, “surely we could get a script that allows one to vote 5000 times.”

Within one of the /b/ threads discussing the operation, users lamented the fact that Time prohibited the public from submitting their own Person of the Year contenders. Because if that was the case, /b/ intended to rig the poll in favor of Darren Wilson, the Ferguson, Mo., police officer who shot and killed teenager Michael Brown on Aug. 9. 

“Fuck ISIS and fuck you turds,” this user wrote. “Darren Wilson is Time man of the year and you newfags are retarded.”

Rigging the poll in favor of Wilson was intended to capitalize on the public vitriol sweeping the country following the grand jury decision Monday not to indict him. That decision has resulted in massive protests in Ferguson and around the country.

The Ferguson protesters are currently sitting in second place in Time’s poll with 8.1 percent of the vote, right behind Narendra Modi, India’s prime minister, with 11.8 percent.

A year ago today, /b/ and a small group of programmers attempted a similar prank when they tried to get singer Miley Cyrus and whistleblower Edward Snowden respectively to win. The whole thing proved futile after Time got wise to the scheme and took measures to prohibit bogus votes. But as the case with most /b/ pranks, the ultimate goal was to get the attention of media organizations like the Huffington Post, Entertainment Weekly, and BuzzFeed, each of which reported the Time pranks.

In 2012, /b/ used similar Java scripts to rocket North Korea’s Kim Jong-un to the top of Time’s list while spelling “KJU GAS CHAMBERS” with the first letter of the first name of each participant.

But like Cyrus and Snowden, Jong-un would end up losing the poll. The last time /b/ was successful in fooling the magazine was in April 2009, when they voted 4chan founder Christopher “moot” Poole to the top of its Time 100 poll. The pranksters also spelled out “Marblecake, also the game.” The term marblecake is slang for a sexual act

Photo via Peter Kaminski/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

After 11 years, 4chan founder Christopher 'moot' Poole is stepping down

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After more than 11 years of managing 4chan, the searchable Internet’s most controversial site, founder and sole administrator Christopher “moot” Poole is stepping down. 

Poole made the announcement today in a blog post on the site claiming it was “time for me to move on.”

“I've spent the past two years working behind the scenes to address these challenges, and to provide 4chan with the foundation it needs to survive me by bolstering its finances, strengthening its infrastructure, and expanding and empowering its team of volunteers,” Poole wrote. 

“And for the most part, I've succeeded. The site isn't in danger of going under financially any time soon, and it's as fast and stable as ever thanks to continued development and recent server upgrades. Team 4chan is also at its largest, and while I've still been calling the shots, I've delegated many of my responsibilities to a handful of trusted volunteers, most of whom have served the site for years.”

Since Poole founded the site as a teenager in New York, he has been its sole employee and administrator. In Poole’s place, he has created a foundation to run the company moving forward, which will include “4chan's lead developer, managing moderator, and server administrator.”

Over the past 11 years, 4chan has grown to be one of the most-visited websites on the Internet and home to some of the most popular memes and diabolical pranks. 

When I spoke with Poole for an October 2013 interview as the site approached its 10-year anniversary, he hinted that he might step down.

“It's possible that it'll continue to grow, it'll decline. Either way, I’m happy,” Poole told me. “I never set out to have a large website. Everything is gravy if 4chan went back to being 20 people in a room with me. I just want to make sure the lights stay on for people who need them to be on. How do we get things to a place where a site can outlive its founder? That’s what’s important.”

The Daily Dot has reached out to Poole for further comment.

Photo via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0)

The painful and hilarious story of a man who got his penis stuck in a roll of tape

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This article contains sexually explicit material.

People occasionally ask me why I still go to 4chan. It’s a fair question, because there are plenty of icky, uncouth, depressing corners of the site that should never see the light of day. It’s the sort of thing you experiment with in your teenage years before developing better taste as an adult. At least that’s what’s supposed to happen. I didn’t get the memo.

But here’s the thing. I still go to 4chan because it’s the only place on Earth where I can watch a man give live updates on a roll of masking tape that he managed to get stuck around his penis. (Yeah, the rest of this post might be NSFW.)

So here arrives this… artist, a couple days ago. He makes a thread on 4chan’s infamous /b/ board that reads “I can’t lose this boner! I’ve had it for about 20 minutes, WTF do I do?” Attached was the following image of his very erect penis, with a tight, white roll of tape around its base. The censored image is below, but if you’re feeling very saucy, here’s an archive of part of the thread (NSFW).

/b/ replied with the usual blend of constructive advice (“Run some water over it!” and “Call an ambulance!”) and the requisite anarchy (“I legit hope your dick falls off”) for the rest of the thread.

Our hero provided incremental updates. Apparently the cold-water thing just made the squeeze tighter, and the chaos eventually spilled over into a new thread. Here’s another censored image. 

I very much appreciate the thumbs-up.

Eventually Mr. Tapedick took the advice and called an ambulance, but not before drawing a little smiley face on the shaft. You’re not going to be able to see that in the censored version, but if you’re up for it, well, here it is (NSFW).

That image seriously broke 4chan for a little while. It garnered 46 responses all on its own. My favorite? The guy who wrote “dick looks fine now.”

We don’t know what happened to the original poster. He stopped providing updates after the smiley face. I dearly hope his penis is OK and that he never stops posting on 4chan.

You can see the threads in full here and here. They are about as NSFW as you expect.

Photo via 4chan

How one brave brony turned The Sims into a virtual horse-fetish palace

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Adult male fans of My Little Pony, commonly known as bronies, have found a home on 4chan, the 11-year-old forum that remains among the most bizarre and influential places on the Internet. One brave brony flocked to the video game Sims 4 to live out his fetish in a virtual world—and documented every step for 4chan’s /mlp/ community.

“This is Anon. Anon is living the dream,” the text reads. “On his way to his new home, he stumbled across a magical portal. What came through to visit him... will shock him for the rest of his life.”

At this point, we have no idea where this story is going, or what this little green man-child is going to do. It’s just The Sims, right? It can’t get that weird. Or that sexual.

Creating one horse in The Sims is a little odd. But our hero is doing even more than that.

He’s created a whole world of dead-eyed, multicolored stock horses to frolic with amid the lime-green pastures of Simtopia. Here’s the happy family all together.

This is actually a family portrait of that lonely 4chan anon and all his pony friends in The Sims. It’s so incredible that the cutups of /mlp/, one of the weirdest communities on 4chan, can’t help but laugh.

Then OP begins his journey. He starts in his very own ranch-style house, somewhere beyond time and space.

I mean, really, what can you say?

Can you look at the following image without falling out of your chair? I sure can’t.

Eventually the original poster disappeared. Maybe he couldn’t keep up with the 4chan demands, or maybe he was just too enamored of his magical realm to ever care about earthly duties. But we’ll leave the final word to the always prescient 4chan community, which captures our exact feeling.

Photo via 4chan | Remix by Jason Reed


4chan trolls hijacked a funeral-home page to post 'Dragon Ball Z' memes

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Trolls are hijacking a funeral home page to leave comments, memes, and other nonsense for the recently departed.

Where did this raid start from? 4chan, of course, the forum best known for launching some of the Web’s most notorious pranks of the last 11 years.

Last week, the boys and girls of 4chan’s “random” imageboard /b/ discovered a website belonging to an establishment known as Crotty Funeral Homes. The site let anyone—seriously, anyone—upload any comment or image to the profiles of the recently deceased. No identity verification necessary. You could just type in the box and have things appear among the rest of the mourners. 

Of course, that’s just asking for trouble. 4chan was all over it. 

The posted images range from the silly (Dragon Ball Z memes galore) to graphic necrophilia porn and racist cartoons.

Oh, Christ.

4chan’s army of trolls are veterans of this whole “raiding” thing. Web-culture aficionados will remember when 4chan hijacked the Time Person of the Year poll to put Christopher “moot” Poole, 4chan’s founder, at the top of the list. They’ve annihilated Twitch channels, named Mountain Dew flavors after Hitler, and fooled people into bricking their Xbox Ones. If you thought a funeral home might be off-limits, well, then you don’t know /b/.

Out of respect for the dead, we edited out the actual faces that belong to each defiled grave. But if you’re morbidly curious, check out an archive of the full thread here. 

Photos via 4chan

The story behind 4chan's Pepe the Frog meme

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There’s a veritable meme meltdown going on at the infamous imageboard 4chan, and it involves an odd-looking anthropomorphic frog named Pepe.

The chaotic site has been ground zero for countless Internet in-jokes, from Rage Comics to LOLcats and even Dickbutt. This time, however, members have returned to an old chestnut they’d long ago abandoned, acting out something like a mid-life crisis.

First appearing in Boy’s Club, a comic series by Matt Furie, Pepe the frog became an overnight sensation in early 2008. An image of Pepe saying “feels good man” epitomized various posts on board /r9k/, dedicated to low-key hangouts and original content.

One great thing about 4chan is that it never turns off. Its members took this wide-eyed frog and remixed him ad infinitum. 

4chan took this wide-eyed frog and remixed him ad infinitum. 

Pepe evolved, with various iterations used to indicate anger, melancholy, or surprise. He accumulated a vast set of looks and has been altered to resemble characters from TV shows or reference other bits of pop culture.

With Pepe’s eventual mass prominence, though, he lost his underground cred. He’s been used by major pop stars, from Nicki Minaj to Katy Perry. There’s a Reddit board dedicated to Pepe as well. This didn’t sit well with 4channers, who typically dispense with concepts once they’re embraced by the mainstream. Pepe was no exception.

That got us wondering: What does Pepe’s creator make of his runaway success? To find out, we caught up with Furie and asked him to shed some light on the phenomenon.

What was your inspiration?

My Pepe philosophy is simple: “Feels good man.” It is based on the meaning of the word Pepe: “To go Pepe.” I find complete joy in physically, emotionally, and spiritually serving Pepe and his friends through comics. Each comic is sacred, and the compassion of my readers transcends any differences, the pain, and fear of "feeling good."

Was the comic commissioned?

Seeing a frog always takes my breath away and brings a genuine smile to my face. That is what I want every reader to experience each time they think about the Boy's Club comic—a thrill of overwhelming beauty and joy!

Thoughts on Pepe becoming the mascot for 4chan?

Pepe offers you complete support, attention, and embraces how capable you are of birthing your own Pepe. As your God, my hope is to enhance your Pepe birthing experience by empowering you through it. Obey Pepe. Obey Me. Bow down to your leader. Worship me. Give me genital love or non-genital love. Both are wonderful.

But 4chan went crazy for Pepe, yes?

I believe that the most important thing I can do as an artist is to protect the voices of anonymous people on the Internet and help ensure that that those voices are honored. It is my job to help 4chan have the experience that they want without judgment or criticism. In the end, I want 4chan to feel they were supported by being heard, respected, and part of the decision-making process. Instead of promoting my own agenda, it is my goal to promote 4chan. Different things work for different people. Let me support you in the way you choose to draw Pepe.

What about people profiting off of Pepe?

I believe in supporting people's decisions to profit off of Pepe in order to provide them with the most positive business experience possible. I strive to be an advocate for Pepe in both love and enterprise and hope to help business people to have an empowering and joyful experience while making an ocean of profits as limitless as the universe.

Pepe is now immortal on the internet.

Having Pepe is one of the most life-changing experiences I will ever have. While many may fear the frog, there is no need for anxiety, especially when you feel confident and supported by the 4chan community—this is something my body was created to do, and I did it!

So, seven years after he first won their hearts, how have 4channers tried to resurrect and reclaim Pepe? By acknowledging him as a precious, antique meme—and growing a fictional economy around his widespread allure.

The Pepe “speculation boom” started when a user started complaining about “rare Pepes” on /r9k/. The absurdity of modified frog images shared online falling under a rarity index was hilarious. And, as usual, 4chan just rolled with it.

The result: images of Pepe with watermarks reading “RARE PEPE DO NOT SAVE”—because doing so would diminish their value.

4chan has since taken the odd cartoon frog to heights none thought imaginable. At this moment, you can find massive collections of vintage Pepe  images for auction on eBay. And some have actually drawn bids.

Of course, some anti-capitalist vigilante posted a public file containing over one thousand Pepes, effectively crashing the Pepe economy. It’s all part of a larger, self-negating game in which popularity and prestige are manipulated for sport—a satire of virality, you could say.   

How long will Pepe’s Renaissance last, and will his latest disgusting incarnations—collected under the banner “poo poo pee pee”—finally turn his casual fans away from the meme? Perhaps. More likely, though, 4chan’s meta spin on what ranks among their most popular exports will just attract more disciples. In the end, Pepe is bigger than any of us.  

Photo via Matt Furie/Know Your Meme | Remix by Jason Reed

4chan's latest obsession is the darker side of 'Sesame Street'

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Members of 4chan, a no-holds-barred online message board, are on a constant, unwavering quest to destroy everything. This includes Mountain Dew promotional campaigns and the sanctity of the human body (NSFW, as if you couldn’t guess). 

But one of the subforum /b/’s more recent targets has been the wonderfully innocent world of Sesame Street.

The game is simple: Isolate an out-of-context photo from the beloved educational show, then add some disturbing narrative text at the bottom. The results are like pages from a children’s book, if children’s books were Satanic and intended to traumatize. Here are some examples:

Pretty sick, right? You can never underestimate 4chan’s ability to find the darkness in any situation or repurpose apparently harmless source material for shocking effect. There’s something inherently hilarious about watching the image take the exact, incriminating shape that the text implies. It’s probably my favorite running meme on the Internet right now.

And, of course, my all-time favorite:

We’ll keep you posted on any other relevant 4chan/Sesame Street crossovers, and we’re also actively looking for confirmation on whether or not Bert is, indeed, a Vietnam veteran.

Illustration by Tiffany Pai

Dude who requested Photoshop help gets royally trolled

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Rule number one: Never, ever ask the Internet to Photoshop you. Remember that kid who wanted Reddit to place the sun between his fingers? It didn’t end well. When you summon the dregs of the Web to complete a simple task, expect the most frustrating night of your life.

The noble tradition of Photoshop trolling was renewed with a vengeance recently, when a hapless soul wondered if 4chan might put the Eiffel Tower under his finger. Here’s the original photo:

And here are the results:

Things started getting really meta about halfway through the thread:

There’s a decent chance that the original poster came across this image of some guy pointing at the Eiffel Tower and realized that he could bait the denizens of 4chan into offering up some cheap laughs. But we dearly hope that the request was genuine, and that this dude kept refreshing the thread out of pure antipathy.

If nothing else, it’s a worthy new chapter in the history of the Internet’s unhelpfulness.

Photo via Jiuguang Wang/Flickr (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Behind the vicious campaign to strip Caitlyn Jenner of her Olympic medal

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An army of 4chan trolls have fooled the mass media in reporting on a bogus petition to have Caitlyn Jenner stripped of her Olympic medal.

The trolls—from 4chan’s politically incorrect community, /pol/, and the site’s most popular and controversial imageboard, /b/—duped CBS Detroit, the Washington Post, Perez Hilton, the Daily Caller, Yahoo, and Us Magazine into reporting on its Change.org prank at the expense of Jenner, who revealed the results of a gender transition on Vogue’s July cover.

Two news organizations rightly skeptical of the petition were the Daily Beast and Independent.

Each one of these news organizations failed to mention 4chan’s involvement in the Change.org petition—a “hoax to fuck with feminists and trannies,” as one organizer had it. The phony campaign calls for the International Olympic Committee to make Jenner return the gold medal earned in the 1976 Summer Olympics because “we must now either claim that Bruce Jenner and Caitlyn Jenner are two entirely different people (which we know is not true) or that Bruce Jenner was, in fact, a woman participating in a men's event.” 

“We urge Ms. Jenner to support the transgender community by giving up the medals earned by competing against the wrong gender,” the petition concludes. As of the morning of June 4, it has more than 9,000 digital signatures of the 10,000 it calls for. (Update: After the petition reached 10,000 signatures, the goal posts were moved once again, to 15,000.) 

The prank has been in the works since Monday, with numerous threads urging people to sign the petition and share it over social media.

As is often the case with most 4chan pranks, the underlying motivations are as juvenile as “for the lulz.” But in this particular case, Jenner’s transition only fuels /b/ and /pol/’s longtime obsession with ridiculing and sharing photos of transgender people.

Such boorish behavior is commonplace on /b/ and /pol/, whose users have made it their goal to taint the feminist movement and holidays such as Father’s Day with its perversions.

If the overarching goal of these 4chan pranks is to spark social media outrage—as was the case with the “#cutforbieber” saga—then these two 4chan communities take immense pride in fooling the media. This was also the case in January 2014, when /b/ fooled the media into reporting on a disturbing new fashion trend involving a woman’s weight and her bikini bottoms. The prank was called Operation Bikini Bridge.

Anyway, the next time you see the Worst Thing Ever™ on the Internet, take a deep breath and repeat this mantra: “It’s probably just 4chan.” 

Illustration by Max Fleishman

Does 4chan have its own Robin Hood?

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The beauty of 4chan is its deregulated mystery. It’s a place where anything, no matter how silly or dumb, canpotentially happen. Moderators only swoop in when real, constitutional laws are being broken. Consider it a preservation of the Internet we once knew.

For instance, last month some guy on 4chan posted this message:

That’s right. He’s claiming that the PayPal account in the photo belongs to him, which means he has $3 million dollars in digital funds locked up in the ether. Let’s take a closer look:

Obviously you should take everything with a grain of salt, but this looks surprisingly legit. There’s even a timestamp.

Anyway in the post he says that the first person to “roll dubs” will get paypalled $10,000. “Rolling dubs” is a 4chan allusion to the number that’s attached to the end of every post on the image board. To roll dubs, you want the last two digits of your post number to be the same, which is something you don’t have any control over.

Sounds like traditional 4chan silver tongue false promises, right? I thought so too, except a couple threads later we saw this:

Oh my God, did it really happen?

Now, there’s a chance that this was just engineered by the original poster to get /b/ worked up. In fact I’m leaning toward that reality. But man. Maybe there is some altruistic soul lurking on the Internet, bestowing his dubiously acquired cash to the good people of the Web. Can the dream come true? Just this once?

Photo via Chris Potter/Stockmonkeys.com (CC BY 2.0)

Christopher 'moot' Poole sells 4chan to 2channel founder Hiroyuki Nishimura

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It's the end of an era for the Internet.

4chan, the most complicated corner of the searchable Web, has just been sold to the businessman who owns 2channel, an equally controversial image board.

In a brief post on 4chan.org, founder Christopher "Moot" Poole explained how the site had been sold to Hiroyuki Nishimura, who he considers "the great-grandfather" of the site. 

"His creation of 2channel in 1999 sparked an era of anonymous-centric [W]eb culture in Japan that led to the creation of Futaba Channel, the site that inspired 4chan," Pooled added in his post. "None of us would be using 4chan today—or potentially any anonymous image board—if it weren't for him."

Poole did not disclose how much the site was sold for, setting off a stream of questions around 4chan's business and future.

In January, Poole announced that he was stepping down as CEO of the company that shaped his adolescence, landed him federal court, and earned him a position among Time Magazine's most influential people. Poole's exit was bittersweet.

With a ragtag group of anonymous volunteers, Poole helped guide 4chan from a small anime-obsessed imageboard started in his mom's New York apartment in 2003 to a cultural phenomenon and pariah. 4chan is responsible for creating and popularizing memes like Rickrolling, Pepe the Frog, and Dickbutt. The site, particularly its random imageboard /b/, has been ground zero for pranks such as the "bikini bridge" and and "free bleeding." 

In 2013, 4chan celebrated its 10 year anniversary, making the site one the oldest and most visited websites in Internet history and Poole as one of the few founders to stick it out as long.

"People asked, 'What happens to 4chan if you die?' For a long time the answer was pretty grim: 'I guess 4chan dies too,' because I was the holder of all the keys, the sole administrator. 4chan has a handful of volunteers, but all of that responsibility bubbled up to me," Poole told the Daily Dot in January, echoing feelings he expressed in 2013. "And I realized that’s not healthy and good for the future. If something were to happen to me, a site that 20 million people use shouldn’t have to pay that price."

The Daily Dot has reached out to Poole for a comment on the sale of 4chan to Nishimura.

Nishimura's 2channel (aka 2chan) is one of Japan's most visited websites. The site was started in 1999 and has been just as controversial as 4chan, according to a Wired feature published in 2008. 

"Nishimura has lost about 50 lawsuits and owes millions of dollars in penalties, which he has no intention of paying," stated Wired.

Illustration by Jason Reed 


4chan 'beta uprising' spreads countless threats of more school massacres

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The 4chan imageboard at the center of at least one FBI investigation relating to the Oregon college massacre has come completely unhinged under a spate of media scrutiny.

The head-first descent into madness began Monday afternoon, after the Federal Bureau of Investigation warned Philadelphia-area universities of a threat made on /r9k/, a unique 4chan imageboard formally called ROBOT9001, which uses a script to block text and image reposts. These schools included Temple University, the University of Pennsylvania, and Drexel University.

The thread above is part of what /r9k/ is calling a “beta uprising” or “beta rebellion.” Both terms have lingered in the dark corners of the Internet for years. Both of them refer to males, known as “betas,” who have been passed over by females because of their looks. (A more nuanced explanation of this phenomenon can be found on Reddit’s r/outoftheloop community.)

Beta uprising posts generally involve threats of violence, the targets of which often include females and “alpha” males. James Holmes, the 27-year-old who murdered 24 people at a Colorado movie theater in 2012, said the massacre was part of a beta uprising. The latest strain on /r9k/ often includes threats of more school shootings.

On Thursday, /r9k/ captured the world’s attention after it tried to pin the shooting at Umpqua Community College in Roseburg, Oregon, to one of its users called Eggman

As is often the case with pranks that start on 4chan (here, here, and here are some of its notable attempts), this latest “beta uprising” has been half baked and juvenile.

The following images are from /r9k/ threads made Monday evening. They show anonymous users continuing to make threats against schools.



The “beta uprising” spilled over onto Twitter where some students expressed fear for their lives.



One student fed up with “beta uprising” was a Twitter user named gianna, who called out 4chan for its fear mongering and nonsense. Gianna also tweeted a grainy video she had found featuring the Pepe the Frog meme and what appears to be a bed full of firearms.


4chan’s /r9k/ was not pleased with gianna. They responded to her tweets with violent and porngraphic remixes of Pepe.


These /r9k/ users also dug up old photos of gianna posted on Twitter, printed them out, and masturbated on top of them (the following photos have been censored).


The harassment resulted in gianna deleting her Twitter account.


The Daily Dot has reached out to 4chan for a comment regarding /r9k/’s actions.

Photo via Christopher Sessums/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

No, 4chan did not convince feminists to pee their pants for equality

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Users of 4chan and other sundry men's rights activists claim to have duped feminists into making the hashtag #PissForEquality trend on Twitter.

There’s only one problem: No feminists actually participated.

The alleged 'success' for #PissForEquality appears to be a hoax orchestrated by MRAs themselves. The earliest trace of this effort can be seen in a screengrab from a 4chan thread, plotting to see just how low they could get feminists to go to prove a commitment to gender equality. The peeing oneself aspect is apparently a nod to stories rape victims often tell about waking up to soiled clothing.

"What if we somehow get Tumbler tards to publicly piss/shit their pants in the name of 'Equality'?" the top of the thread reads. From there, other users enthusiastically chimed in. "Potential is radiating from this post," one wrote.

On October 2nd, tweets started to appear with the #PissForEquality hashtag from accounts with female names and avatars.

The photo below, being circulated in a number of related tweets, is actually from a January post on a woman's personal blog called Jellyfish Station. The picture is included with the caption "The unfortunate wash on my jeans makes it look like I’ve wet my pants."

This tweet in particular has been widely shared on Twitter (and Instagram) as the example of these men really pulling one over on the feminists: 

But if you look back at the accounts supposedly tweeting the hashtag in earnest, three of them (including the one of the pink pants) were created on October 2nd, and one only goes back to September 14th.

The "GG" referenced in the tweet above stands for "Gamergate," the anti-feminist movement that caused an Internet holy war in the fall of 2014.

But despite the evidence that #PissForEquality was a hoax, that didn't stop anti-feminist sites like Infowars from writing about it in earnest. They claimed "Feminists on Twitter have fallen for a troll campaign created by 4chan which encouraged women to post photos of themselves peeing their pants in the name of 'equality' under the hashtag #PissForEquality," adding: 

"The sheer hilarity of social justice warriors being so gullible as to fall for such an obvious troll again illustrates how leftists are so desperate to engage in 'virtue signaling' that they will literally piss themselves and put photos of it on Twitter to try and earn ‘progressive’ social brownie points."

Right Wing News also proclaimed "Feminists fall for hoax campaign, PEE on themselves."

And Twitter users shared the hashtag with glee:

But with a hoax so easily debunked, the joke's on them. If someone tries to convince you that feminists wet their pants for equality, you can tell them to piss off.

Image via Twitter.com/Kathy_Viveros

4chan Photoshops ISIS as rubber ducks for operation 'Allahu Quackbar'

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A group of 4chan pranksters have taken up the fight against the Islamic State (ISIS) with their favorite weapon—Photoshop.

In what has casually been declared operation “ALLAHU QUACKBAR,” 4chan users are altering photos of ISIS by replacing the terrorists’ faces with yellow rubber ducks and their guns with toilet bowl brushes.

The idea gained traction on the 4chan board Shit4chanSays (/s4s/), a forum that ironically hosts “the best” of all the horribly racist and violent content posted around the site’s dozens of different image boards.

“ALLAHU QUACKBAR” has no explicit purpose, but from the tone of relevant messages on Shit4chanSays, the overarching goal is to simply disrespect and annoy jihadist groups. Considering the Islamic State’s social media prowess, Shit4chanSays may just get its wish.

ISIS has used social media platforms like Twitter to spread its propaganda and recruit new members. The hacktivist collective known as Anonymous, which coincidentally gained traction on 4chan early in its history, is trying to get thousands of ISIS Twitter accounts taken down. Other hackers recently defaced one of the group’s websites with a Viagra ad.  

Since 4chan was founded, its users have had a penchant for pranks and vigilante justice. The site has inadvertently helped police in a murder investigation, helped a dad keep his kid from skipping school, and gotten countless teens arrested for animal abuse (here and here, most notably).

ISIS has yet to formally respond to this affront, but we’re betting it’s ruffled some feathers.

All photos via 4chan

4chan boarders weigh in on the state of memes in 2015

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My brother is on 4chan. Or rather, for the past two years, he has produced, directed, and edited the annual 4chan /v/ (i.e., video game) board’s “Vidya Gaem Awards.” 

“It’s weird to talk about,” he told me. “I’m involved in this big project that isn’t like really actually associated with the website. I wouldn’t necessarily ever consider myself a part of the community because it makes me mad.” 

He condemns the websites of his teenage years, and 4chan by extension, as “a corner of the internet that uses ‘irony’ and ‘free speech’ to hide behind actual racism/sexism/homophobia/etc.” It’s possible that he says this to me because he knows it’s what I need to hear, but I believe him. He is in it for the weird shit, not the oppressive shit, and he knows the difference between the two.

I’ve benefited, at least somewhat, from the connection. I know about memes maybe a little bit earlier than the rest of the world—maybe a lot. I see lots of weird funny stuff that never makes it big, which is to say to your grandmother’s Facebook feed. (While all memes eventually burn out, their conflagrations vary in size.) He is also a great source of skeleton GIFs

I talked to him and two of his internet friends—recent college graduate James Wilson and graphic designer Ryan Dell—about how they experience the Internet today, and about the weird stuff they read online.

It sounds like you are embarrassed of some of the places online where you used to spend time.

Eamon McArdle: We all have things we feel embarrassed about liking. For some people it’s a movie, band, or TV show. For me it’s a website that makes jokes about 9/11.

James Wilson: It is embarrassing, and it’s reflective to me at least of a time where I was deeply unhappy (weren’t we all deeply unhappy as teenagers though) and I did a lot of lashing out online that I couldn’t do in public or school or wherever.

Ryan Dell: I’m not really embarrassed of the boards, I’m just embarrassed I lacked the self-control to stop myself from browsing them for as much as I did. It’s a lot of time I can’t get back.

How would you describe your current corner of the Internet?

Eamon McArdle: Ironic hell.

James Wilson: It’s for people who spent most of their childhoods online, and it shows. You can easily set up a persona to hide behind on Twitter, and it’s the easiest to communicate with people outside of Facebook (look at all the Sonic the Hedgehog roleplaying accounts, for example).

Ryan Dell: I don’t feel like that’s really my experience. James and Eamon probably have very different feeds because they’re both actively seeking out meta-meta nightmare content like the Sonic RPs.

Tell me a little bit about the Sonic the Hedgehog roleplaying accounts.

James Wilson: Christ.

Eamon McArdle:There are a bunch of people who use Twitter to role-play with each other as Sonic characters, mostly OCs [original characters]. It’s popular with anime/Sonic/My Little Pony fans.

James Wilson: Just read down this thread. You won’t see this on Facebook, that’s for sure

Eamon McArdle: Jesus Christ. God now I'm too invested. 

So do you think these things are jokes? Or sincere? Or a mixture of the two? 

Eamon McArdle: Absolutely sincere.

James Wilson: It depends on the group, really. These people are totally sincere, but there are also many people who play along just for shits and giggles, or try to disrupt them.

Eamon McArdle: I mean there are many hints you can find, the biggest hint to show it’s sincere is when they break character to talk about things like how they are depressed or how school is going.

Ryan Dell: I don’t think there’s any difference between someone spending 12 hours pretending to be Sonic as a joke and someone doing the same thing sincerely. You still spent 12 hours pretending to be Sonic.

Is this the strangest thing you've seen on the Internet recently?

James Wilson: Not really. It’s just emblematic.

Ryan Dell: [One person I follow] is a nonstop train-wreck mess. The nightmare of a life she’s dragging herself through is a surreal, never-ending hellscape, and she’s posting about pretty much every second of it online. I absolutely cannot believe it.

Eamon McArdle: I mean like I follow people who are very into the armpits and sweat of anime characters. I think the strangest thing I've seen are people who are sexually attracted to like skeletons or suits of armor but not like people. I believe it’s because the characters they are attracted to have personality, but that’s my theory.

James Wilson: Not necessarily true, I’ve seen people be attracted to Hatsune Miku [an anthropomorphized voice from a singing synthesizer program], which inherently does not have a personality.

Eamon McArdle: Yeah but that’s like an anime character. I think being attracted to a skeleton is a lot stranger because everything has a skeleton, the only thing different from a skeleton and a person are layers of muscle and flesh.

James Wilson: I don’t know about recently, but this is the most incomprehensible thing I have ever seen online. It’s not even funny. The creators would upload videos about changing April to “Trepril” or “Treypril” for Trey Parker & Tre Cool. They’re badly made on purpose, and the origins and creator(s) are very murky. [James later emailed me this video as a better example of a strange YouTube video. “It’s perfect,” he said.]

Eamon McArdle: Oh, you know what’s pretty weird? The guy who is madly in love with Brian Griffin from Family Guy and the beavers from Angry Beavers. It’s gonna be NSFW. I think he even got a tattoo of him.

Would you say that this guy is pretty notorious, or do only a few people know about him?

Eamon McArdle: Not notorious at all. I mean, the most notorious person is probably Chris Chan, who has a whole Wiki that people have made that chronicles her life just because of how insane she is.

James Wilson: The Chris Chan thing is one of the most interesting things to ever happen on the Internet, I’d say. I’m honestly surprised more hasn’t been written about her, but it’s understandable considering the whole thing is kind of disturbing.

Eamon McArdle: On face value you look at Chris Chan and you “Oh I feel bad for this autistic kid,” but you really have to dig up stuff on how truly awful of a person she is.

James Wilson: She has autism. That’s why people messed with her at first. It’s despicable, but Chris Chan quickly proved herself to somehow be even more vile of a person than the people trolling her. Like it’s a moral morass in which no one emerges unscathed.

What is the latest story involving Chris Chan?

Eamon McArdle: Last year, she [allegedly] maced a GameStop employee after they called security because she was messing with the displays for the latest Sonic game, Sonic Boom, which Chris Chan is very upset about because they changed the color of Sonic's arms.

James Wilson: I’m going to reiterate, Chris Chan maced a guy because she didn’t like Sonic’s new arm color.

Eamon McArdle: That isn't the first time she has harmed somebody; she once [allegedly] hit someone with her car.

Ryan Dell: A lot of the Chris Chan stuff specifically grosses me out and disturbs me. For example, people have been for years calling her under aliases or hacking into her email for new info. That’s not only insanely cruel, it’s also psychological abuse. But even then… 90 percent of the stuff we know about Chris Chan is because she eagerly and willingly posted about it online for a worldwide audience. It’s a weird codependency.

James Wilson: The Chris Chan saga is bizarre because literally every detail of this person’s life for years has been chronicled. This isn’t even an important person. There are just a bunch of internet people who find this person interesting and who cobbled together her whole life story through pretty much everything she’s ever put online.

Ryan Dell: It’s simultaneously fascination and a cautionary tale. Going through someone’s Tumblr history or keeping up with their weird Twitter feed is an alluring siren’s call, because you’re engaging with someone in a way that’s simultaneously incredibly intimate and personal while being completely removed from the situation.

But why is this interesting to you? Or what about it is interesting?

Eamon McArdle: For me it’s because it’s such a weird and specific story that has tons of twists. It’s also interesting because of how invested people are in it.

James Wilson: I’ve always found the funniest jokes for me were the ones I could pick the most out from. There are a lot of details with this story, weird little details that work as great stories in their own right. Many of the people who messed with Chris were revealed to be just as pathetic. Chris had a whole comic book series she wrote that counts as funny in its own right. It’s just a perfect storm of multi-layered, fundamentally disturbing material. It gets under your skin, and it’s funny, but it’s also sickening.

James Wilson: People bullied this poor schlub horribly, but she just kept egging them on to do worse. It’s a train wreck.

Do you feel like stories like Chris Chan's are more or less common than they were when he was first mentioned on the internet?

Ryan Dell: More and more, sadly.

Eamon McArdle: I would say that we will never see somebody take a person like Chris Chan out on a date only to be stolen away from a man in a pickle suit at a mall.

James Wilson: I don’t think something as extensive as Chris Chan will happen again for a long time. The Internet to me feels like a different place now. I don’t know if there are more unspoken “rules” these days or if it’s just me realizing I wasn’t aware of them as a younger lad. I think it generally is for the better that these rules exist. I would not want to come across someone like who I was as a teen. I’d probably block my younger self to be honest, lol.

How do you feel meme culture has changed since you were younger?

Eamon McArdle: Meme culture is constantly changing. Remember Pepe? Remember how everybody joked about Rare Pepes? Now look, nobody is talking about that anymore.

James Wilson: All memes are born to die.

Ryan Dell: The cycle is way quicker. I see them go from being used mostly sincerely to mostly ironically in a matter of hours.

James Wilson: Not to mention that companies have gotten really good at creating memes on purpose these days. I still to this day am convinced that Left Shark was told to dance badly on purpose. It took mere hours for Left Shark merch to show up. Walter Benjamin's lesser known essay, “Memes in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction.”

How do you integrate this part of your life (weird stuff on the Internet) with the rest of your life?

Eamon McArdle: I don’t. I keep it separate for the most part, because I know people won't care, or at the very least I know if I talk about some of these things I’ll sound like an absolute madman.

Ryan Dell: I talk to people in real life or at work all the time about a funny Vine I saw or something that was trending on Facebook. Balance is everything.

James Wilson: I’ve learned that trying to explain Internet shit to people who aren’t as deep in as me usually doesn’t go down that well. But I’ve also learned you can integrate the Internet sensibilities into your real life and people think you’re hilarious and great. Someone once told me “your existence requires context,” and I’m so down with that. Even when I’m offline I’m not fully logged off.

Photo via THERKD/Flickr (CC BY-SA 2.0)

The Internet crusade to bring down Ted Cruz with a sex scandal

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Can 4chan and Reddit manufacture a tabloid sex scandal that takes down a presidential candidate ?

They're damn well going to try.

Donald Trump is incredibly popular on the social platforms, both of which are notorious for their juvenile pranks and subversive humor. It was 4chan, for example, that riggedTime’s Person of the Year poll to feature Kim Jong-un in 2012. 

Now Trump's supporters there are rapidly organizing around tabloid reports that say Ted Cruz is a serial cheater. The goal is to dominate social media, push the news onto mainstream media, crush Cruz's Christian conservative image, and ultimately end his challenge to Trump's presidential run.

The new rumors come just days after Trump threatened to "spill the beans" on Cruz's wife.

Late Wednesday night, supermarket tabloid National Enquirer published a story titled SHOCKING CLAIMS: Pervy Ted Cruz Caught Cheating — With 5 Secret Mistresses! The short article cited a "Washington insider" who claimed “private detectives are digging into at least five affairs Ted Cruz supposedly had." The Enquirer reported that "Cruz's claimed mistresses include a foxy political consultant and a high-placed D.C. attorney!"

Fox News contributor, Trump supporter, and Clueless actress Stacey Dash jumped on the article. 

She personally dislikes the Enquirer, she explained, and it's gotten stories utterly wrong in the past. But it did break affair news about John Edwards in 2008 and Gary Hart in 1988. That's two presidential campaigns ended in 30 years, thanks to Enquirer reports.

"With the race coming down to two viable candidates, the GOP needs to know — Is Ted Cruz hiding five mistresses that Hillary could use against us in the general election?" Dash asked. "Let’s get to the bottom of this."

Cue 4chan and Reddit.

It's easy to laugh off or dismiss the political power of either of these two sites. Those who do, however, miss how influential and well-organized they can be. 4chan and Reddit regularly create popular Internet memes and influence American media. The sites can't alter a presidential race on their own, but they offer a powerful amplifier to any idea they take a liking to.

4chan, famous most recently for turning Microsoft's chatbot into a Trump-supporting Holocaust denier, broke immediately into campaign mode when the Enquirer story hit.

Organizers are pushing a hashtag (#CruzSexScandal) and teaching Trump supporters how to push the tabloid story to local media. One other option for clever hashtags was #TedScruz.

"We need this to go viral," one 4chan user wrote. "Send this to as many news sites as possible, even news sites that aren't that big or credible."

The hashtag was trending nationally on Twitter with over 40,000 posts just after midnight Friday morning.

Next, 4chan looked inside the latest issue of National Enquirer and tried to identify the women. 

The guesses included a Donald Trump spokeswoman (Katrina Pierson) and a pro-Trump Fox News anchor (Andreas Tantaroa) because the National Enquirer very likely used their slightly blurred photos inside the magazine.

Reddit's Trump supporters on r/The_Donald, always happy to follow in the wake of 4chan, pushed the scandal to Reddit's popular front page and thought out loud about how to "spin" the report to claim that Cruz is a "predator" "just like Bill Clinton."

Among the tens of thousands of Trump supporters who jumped on the #CruzSexScandal early, there's been virtually no talk about the truthfulness of the report. That's because the truth of the affair doesn't matter much. 

After all, Trump himself has admitted to having multiple affairs. His first marriage ended amid a storm of affair reports. In his own books, Trump brags about his multiple affairs.

"If I told the real stories of my experiences with women, often seemingly very happily married and important women, this book would be a guaranteed best-seller," Trump wrote in The Art of the Comeback

But Trump supporters are not worried about his past. 

The truth of the Cruz affair reports has nothing to do with the Internet crusade currently ramping up against him. Instead, it's a smart, calculated attempt to sweep the rug out from under a candidate who cites his religious Christian bonafides almost every time he speaks.

"It is exactly right that in terms of who I am, I am a Christian first," Cruz said earlier this year. "I am an American second. I'm a conservative third. And I'm a Republican fourth. And I'll tell ya, there are a lot of Americans who feel the same way."

By early Friday morning, the 4chan and Reddit offensive spread to the wider right-wing base of Trump. Expect mainstream media to report on the rumors soon. If and when they do, you might hear a round of cheers go up from 4chan and Reddit's increasingly energized Trump corps, even if the mainstream media is quiet about just how the scandal became so big so fast.

Update 2:13pm CT, March 25: Cruz has responded to the rumors in a Facebook post, blaming Trump and “his friends at the National Enquirer and his political henchmen” for the “garbage” attacks:

Photo via Gage Skidmore/Flickr (CC BY ND 2.0) 

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