QAA Podcast - Episode 220: Baby Q Rising feat Will Sommer
Episode Date: February 25, 2023We sit with longtime QAnon reporter Will Sommer of the Daily Beast to discuss Baby Q's weird cult, the rise of QAnon over the last few years, the hunt for Q's identity, and the Q-man Centipede. We als...o touch on the latest internal Fox News messages that reveal their eagerness to platform lies about the election even when they didn’t believe those lies themselves. Will Sommer's book is 'Trust the Plan: The Rise of QAnon and the Conspiracy That Unhinged America'. Subscribe for $5 a month to get an extra episode of QAA every week + access to ongoing series like 'Manclan' and 'Trickle Down': http://www.patreon.com/QAnonAnonymous Will Sommer: https://twitter.com/willsommer Will's Book 'Trust the Plan: The Rise of QAnon and the Conspiracy That Unhinged America': https://www.harpercollins.com/products/trust-the-plan-will-sommer QAA's Website: https://qanonanonymous.com Music by Max Weber. Editing by Corey Klotz.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What's up QAA listeners?
The fun games have begun.
I found a way to connect to the internet.
I'm sorry, boy.
Welcome listener to chapter 220 of the Q&ONONANANANANANAS podcast,
The Rise of Q&ONN and Fox News Election Lies episode.
As always, we are your host, Jake Rockatansky, Julian Fields, and Travis Vue.
Once upon a time in 2018, three men in their mid-30s with stalled careers started a podcast about internet weirdos they were obsessed with.
But before then, one of the few places you could read about QAnon was through Will Summers' coverage of the phenomenon in The Daily Beast.
Five years later, he published a book about what he learned in that time.
Trust the Plan, the rise of QAnon and the conspiracy that unhinged America.
Today we're going to be talking to him about his experiences traveling the country talking to QAnon influencers.
attending the events and listening to victims of the conspiracy theory.
We'll also take a detour to the world of cable news where things are not okay.
They're in each other's DMs being shitty.
Yes, a lawsuit has revealed that Fox News hosts were eager to platform lies about the election,
even when they didn't really believe those lies themselves.
So, Will, thanks again for coming on the show to talk about your book.
Hey, thanks for having me, guys.
Hello, Will.
Hey, it's good to be back, you know, with, you know, some fellow OGs of QAnon coverage.
Yeah, we're doing fine, man.
We feel like a little silly.
This morning, this morning, as Julian answered, answered the door to his apartment to let me in so we can record.
The first thing he said, he kind of looked down at the ground and rumbled and went,
why do we have a podcast?
What do we do?
Why are we doing this?
Why do we do this?
I mean, God clearly doesn't want us to.
So if he's hailing on us, he's trying to kill me.
So if Julian has a conspiracy coverage fatigue, Will, I can only imagine the torture you went through writing an entire book about this.
Will was 25 when he started writing this book.
Yeah, that's it.
Yeah, that's right.
I'm in my mid-20s.
He's 82.
He's on dialysis.
But I'm really glad you published this book.
because, you know, I was really eager to read it because you were one of the people who, like, really covered these QAnon topics the longest. And I remember when I first realized that Q&ON was gaining significance in 2018, I was like, oh, holy shit, this is like a big deal. Who's covering this? It was basically yourself in Mike Rothschild. And nobody from, like, the major networks or, like, sort of the big newspapers or anything like that. It was like this weird little fringe thing that a handful of people really cared about.
So I'm curious what made you realize that QAnon was something that has significance and was like being part of the American political landscape in a big way.
Because we cover like extremism or internet weirdness.
There's this, there's these moral congeries because if you do cover it, there's this risk that you're helping amplify or making a mountain of a molehill.
But if you don't cover it, then there's a risk that you're allowing something significant to grow and thrive in darkness.
So what made you realize that this was more than just a weird internet thing?
Yeah, I mean, Travis, I think that's a great point.
point, you know, people still to this day will say, why are you writing about QAnon? You're only
helping them. And it's like, you know, people who are getting into QAnon, they're following
like Jordan Saither and Dustin Nemo's. They're not getting the, you know, what's Will Summer got
to say? But for me, I mean, it's when stuff goes offline. You know, the moment for me, I think, was
April 2018. There was a march in D.C. And I've been covering QAnon for a few months and a couple
hundred people showed up and started chanting where we go on, we go all. And I thought,
this is one of the craziest things I've ever seen. But surely it won't go further than this.
And then a couple months after that, the guy blocked the bridge by the Hoover Dam with a bunch of guns and he was saying, you know, Q, what's going on? You know, where's the IG report? And I thought, you know, these are my internet buddies. What is going on here? And so that, you know, at that point, I think as weird as it is, you know, you kind of owe it to the readership and to, you know, the American public more broadly to accept that they, you know, they're big kids and they can handle knowing this freaky thing that's going on.
What was your first sort of introduction to, you know, that you saw that this thing was kind of like seeping out that even prompted you to cover it in the first place?
Because for me, it was, it was noticing that the posters in our conspiracy on Reddit were mentioning, more and more and more mentioning this guy called Q and that there was this, you know, there was this secret operation and stuff.
I mean, was it, was it more the same for you or how did it first, like, come on your radar initially?
Yeah, well, initially it was cruising 4chan and C, maybe cruising is not the right word, but, you know, the, uh,
Just seeing these, you know, the, yeah, you had a red handkerchief in your back pocket.
Yeah.
Cruise in USA.
Yes, I mean, I'm into, I'm into groipers.
That was what it meant.
Seeing these recurring threads they would have with the big lion and it would say, you know, the storm, call them before the storm.
And then, you know, it's kind of one of these things where I feel like this is a lot of the way with these conspiracy theories.
They're kind of like in your peripheral vision.
And then you see them enough and you go, okay, what is the deal with this?
And in my case, that happened, you know, after a couple months of Q's sort of bubbling up.
And then, you know, once you see it and once I started seeing, you know, broader conservative influencers on Twitter, just saying, you know, hashtag where we go on, we go all, or the storm and sort of alluding to Q, including a lot of people now who wouldn't be caught dead saying they're QAnon people, but who were just sort of casually using QAnon hashtags.
If you look on like LexisNexis back in early 2018, people who kind of got in early.
And, you know, it's just crazy how at every step I kept thinking, all right, this is the high watermark for QAnon, this is it.
And then, you know, a couple years later, I was at January 6th and they had the giant Q signs and they were like, God, we got to kill Mike Pence.
Yeah.
Yeah, covering Qadon for me, at least, has always been this feeling of like waiting for the adults to intervene.
Like, okay, this is, this has gone on far enough.
there's got to be somebody to step in and sort of like understand this and fix it.
But now that just didn't work like that.
Well, you know, Travis, you might have, I think maybe I'm stealing this metaphor from you,
but I do feel like there was a feeling that people like, like us covering this for so long,
that the adults would arrive and I would say, okay, here it is.
I'm going to hand it off and say, okay, here's what I got on them and I'll let you handle it.
And really that moment never happened and it still hasn't.
Yeah, you're just standing with like, you know, a couple of legal pads, you know,
filled to the brim, you know, arm outstretched, waiting, waiting for somebody to come
and Tegman, go, thank you very much, Will, for all this work you do. We've got it from here.
And you go, oh, great, I can go back to my normal life. But that happened for none of us.
Yeah. No, we are locked in a Guantanamo Bay of the mind.
Yeah, they kind of won, I guess. Well, I mean, certainly, you know, it's, if you had said to me,
even in 2019, that in 2023, Donald Trump would be posting Q pictures.
on truth social and, you know, oh, I am the storm. Even then, I never would have believed it. But,
you know, he's really getting into Q&A now. And I think it's really only going to ramp up.
I mean, obviously, he's getting ready to call Ron DeSantis a Pito. And, you know, that's what
we have we're locked in for. I know. He's like, yeah, no, I'm not, I would never do anti-Italian
sentiment by calling him Meatball Ron. Anyways, he molests children.
Yeah. Yeah. It's, I mean, it always made sense to me, though, that, that Trump would, you know,
he would always end up here because, you know, as you've seen with other sort of politicians, as they
slowly fall out of mainstream favor, you know, they're getting dogged on by cable news.
You know, all you're left with is the most fervent sort of supporters and the people who believe
that you are like the hero in this, you know, huge action espionage movie.
And so, you know, as you alienate everybody else, I mean, it's what also happens to your
sort of QAnon believer. As you alienate everybody else in your life, all that's left for you
waiting with open arms ready to tell you that you're good, you're good, you're good are, you know,
the, you know, QAnon believers. Well, you know, you think about in 2018 after the all the Q people
flocked to that one rally in Florida and it sort of was a big breakout moment for Q&on. Then they
banned Q gear at the rallies and they're kind of like, look, why don't you just don't scare the
suburban voters, just get away from the cameras. And then now they're playing the QAnon song
at the rallies and everything. I mean, it's, you can definitely see him warming up to them.
Yeah.
Yeah, actually, I wanted to ask you about the Republican Party's relationship with Qaeda
because you talk about some of this in the book because, you know, again, early in its
development, I thought that there would be like a hard limit on the degree of political
sway that the QAnon community could have.
I thought that, you know, the Republican Party's tolerance for conspiracy theories
wouldn't extend to the belief that a Chan poster is sending coded messages about secret
military activity.
But as you point out in the book, Republicans learned to at least make space for Q&O followers
This is dating back to the Tampa Trump Rally in 2018.
You write this passage, which I thought was interesting.
QAnon's Trump Rally debut was a disaster for Republicans looking to win over moderate voters.
A few days before the rally, a Florida Republican observer had complained to a local website
that the increasingly visible presence of Q believers in the state meant the Florida GOP was becoming seen as the party of QAnon.
And that was before dozens of followers stole the show at a rally, ostensibly meant to promote Republican candidates, not Q.
For Trump allies, the smartest response to the party's newest faction had been to stay quiet.
Florida politician Ron DeSantis pioneered this response after Q&on believers crashed the Trump rally in Tampa
that was meant to promote DeSantis' campaign for the governor's mansion.
A few weeks after the Tampa rally, DeSantis claimed ignorance about the queue-emblazoned rallygoers
that appeared there and at many of his other events.
I'm not sure what that is.
DeSantis told a reporter,
For Republican officials, maintaining a polite distance from Q had some benefits.
It meant they wouldn't come off like lunatics to voters not already soaked in 4chan mind games,
but it also meant that Q supporters wouldn't be antagonized either.
So what do you make of like the way that Republican officials have like handled Q&ON voters over the years?
Like obviously they like you say like they have to like strike this really careful balance between like not, you know,
overtly encouraging them and not alienating them.
Sure. I mean, so, you know, like I say in that passage, I mean, really, they did this thing where they said, okay, we're just going to pretend QAnon doesn't exist or that this is sort of a handful of nuts that, but we're not going to say that, but, you know, that we can safely ignore.
There's a moment in the book where I talk about how Kevin McCarthy initially says, you know, oh, QAnon is obviously BS. Don't worry about it. Like, you know, it's just crazy stuff. And then as QAnon gets more prominent in the party, he goes, he's asked about it later. He says, I've never even heard of that thing. What is it, QOan? You know, this is ridiculous.
So, you know, he really changes his tune.
And, you know, especially when it comes to someone like Donald Trump or someone like Michael Flynn,
people who have really actively encouraged Qaeda and then have this kind of attempted plausible
deniability where they say, you know, what are you even talking about?
You know, in the case of Michael Flynn, a guy holding up Q quilts at rallies and doing that
where we go one, we go all slogan.
And now he says, no, that's just a slogan of family unity.
You know, these guys are, you know, I mean, it has practical effects in which QAnon believers
and potential recruits see that.
say, well, you know, Donald Trump would just say this is a lie if it is, and then they get deeper
into it. Yeah, what's really interesting is it's like, it's usually the other thing, the other way
around with sort of, you know, popular culture trends, you know, at first somebody will say like,
oh, yeah, I've like, yeah, I've never heard. I've never heard of that thing. And then as it gets
more popular and somebody asked them about it, they go, oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, of course. Yeah, I know
what QAnon is. Yeah, of course. Yeah. But this, it's like, when it was in its sort of initial stages,
they're like, oh, yeah, we know about that. It's, it's nothing to worry about. And then when it
becomes, you know, massively popular, it's like, well, I have no idea what that is.
It's just really interesting, just like many other sort of behaviors around, around this
phenomenon. It's like, you find, you find it the reverse of like what, you know, the sort
of like logical step would be.
You have a really fascinating chapter on Austin Steinbart, who's sometimes called
Baby Q. And for those who are just joining us, Austin Steinbart is an Arizona man who
claims to be Q from the future. It's one of the weirdest Q&ON influencers out there.
And he seemed to emerge from nowhere, but he had, like, a lot of this financial backing that
allows him to have his own compound and this professional media studio.
A will in your book, you published some really fascinating reporting about his background
and the activity at The Ranch, which is what they call his place, where he and his most
devoted followers lived.
So how, what's his deal, man?
He was always confusing to be.
Yeah, you're like one of a few people, like maybe the only person I know personally who's
actually sat down and like talk to this guy like yeah what what's your sort of just general vibe about him
it's so weird it's so weird i mean he really is one of the you know i i would rank him up there with
vincent fuska as sort of one of the great bizarre qanon characters you know i got i've been tracking
him for a while um as i i know y'all had as well because he was so weird and like uniquely odd
because unlike other qanon influencers who say i'm interpreting q's clues or whatever he said oh yeah
I'm Q. And future me is Q and he's sending messages back in time. And so he was baby Q. And he managed to
get this compound going. Even as he was flagrantly violating the law as sort of to prove that he was
above the law. So he was in this medical clinic and he videotaped a bunch of football players brain scans for
CTE and very bizarre crimes and he would do extortion against various websites. And then at one point
the FBI came to his door and he said, oh yeah, like I love doing crimes. Yeah, I threatened to murder the
Queen of Denmark and all this stuff. And so as all this is happening, I get a call from a woman
whose sister has been sucked into the compound. And she says, you know, can you get my sister out?
And, you know, obviously I've totally unqualified to do that. But I think it's a sign of, you know,
this desperation these families face when their relatives are sucked into QAnon that this woman
would just say, I guess, I don't know, this guy wrote the one article about Baby Q, I guess maybe
he can help. And so ultimately I go out there and interview him. And he was kind of on this post-prison
kick where he was like now a young Republican. He was running a congressional campaign. He was hanging out
with the CEO of Overstock.com. And he was like an official in the Arizona audit. And he gave this speech to
some state senators. It was very bizarre. And this guy who was just like, yeah, I'm baby Q. But, you know,
I'm trying to make QAnon for everyone. And, you know, we're going to have this very kind of family
friendly QAnon. Just a really bizarre experience, meeting his acolytes who, you know, are convinced that
he's going to run the Space Force. Yeah, not to mention that he has never backed away from his claim
that he is from the future.
Like, okay, yeah, bizarre enough.
Yeah, this young guy is doing weird crimes.
He's videotaping, you know, highly personal information.
You know, while he himself is at a clinic for, you know, whatever reasons,
he's starting all of these different podcasts with young, you know, young millennials.
And, yeah, it looks like a gaming podcast, but they're talking about rabbit holes.
And on top of all of this, it's like he claims that he's.
from the future and that Q is actually like a quantum operation. It's so bizarre. Yeah, I think the best part is
definitely being like, save me, Will, could you, could you look into this? And he looks into it and he walks
away and he's like, oh, he's wearing a fake penis. Yes. Well, thank you. So, so, you know, I don't
think all this made it in the book. But so at one point, you know, he's out on house arrest and he's
living with, with the members of the alleged cult. And he's, he's not supposed to be drinking or
or smoking weed.
And he's doing that very intensely.
And so some people in the compound start to get a little, they kind of start falling out.
And in these moments of alienation, he's supposed to have a cold storage Bitcoin worth
billions of dollars on a hard drive.
And then one of these guys is like, you know, this guy who's 40s who's fallen for
this.
And he starts going, wait a minute.
Austin never pays for the beer.
You know, he always makes me buy the six pack.
This guy's supposed to be a billionaire.
Wait a minute.
He starts digging into it.
And he gets a little suspicious.
And as best I can tell, one of them reports him to probation.
And so the cops sweep in and they find this prosthetic penis he's using to cheat drug tests.
And I report that it's a Wizzinator because that's what the court record said.
And when I was hanging out with him and the gang, they were like, oh, no, it wasn't a Wizzenator.
It was, you know, like the Donganator, like some other kind of fake penis.
An off brand.
Yes.
Yes.
They said, oh, that was all fake news.
And I said, oh, did he not have a fake penis?
I was like, no, it was the wrong brand.
Yeah, that's like, that's the $59.99 one. Austin, he's got the $160 fake dong. Yeah, the stream comes out much more realistically.
It was so funny about this. I didn't know that about the, you know, that it was his own sort of, you know, followers that that dropped dime on him.
You know, similar thing kind of fucked over Hunter S. Thompson with the hell's angels was him not buying the beer.
So yet again, you know, ladies and gentlemen, buy.
Buy your beers. Pay for the beer. Folks. Go, gonna pay for the beer. Pay for the beard. Don't go to jail. That's just how you stay on with these kind of weird groups out in the American West. I mean, he really, the compound, you know what the story's getting good when I'm ripping YouTube videos for the future documentary. I was just kind of storing them away. And the, all these recrimination start. And so Austin ends up in jail and he's denouncing members from the jail pay phone. And then they're saying, you know, my buddy in the compound, who I was working with, you know, was kind of keeping me up to date on things. He's saying,
you know, oh, I just need one more moment with Austin to convince him that I'm not a snitch and
stuff. I mean, it was very, things really went off the rails. Bizarre. I've never had anybody
like me that much. Well, you know, there's like, hey, man, just one more call with you. Let me,
let me just like proved my loyalty to him. Like, that's insane that he has such a dedicated,
you know, dedicating and then also suspicious and traitorous following, I guess, as well.
Well, you know, he claimed they were setting up secret cameras to sort of record him drinking beers.
I mean, there seems to be a lot of evidence of that.
You know, I think I say this in the book that I sort of didn't get the appeal, you know,
that the rock charisma was not working on me.
Yeah.
Well, you're also, you know, I mean, you don't really believe that he's from the future.
I mean, if you believed in time travel legitimately will, as I do, you know, maybe his glamoring would have, you know, worked a little bit better.
Or glimmering, what do they call it with the vampire?
I think a glamour, yeah.
A glamour, yeah.
So I have two questions about Steinbart.
Number one, where did all of his money come from?
Because when I see his videos, he has the slickest setup, the coolest bothers.
Like he has, he seems like he has a lot of cash to the thorough round for equipment and stuff.
And number two, where are all these people who are like making content for him?
Somehow he's able to gather people who make these weird little podcast in which, you know,
they call Austin Steinbar's detractors, Philistines.
Pharisees, Pharisees.
Oh, that's right.
Philistines.
Pardon me, pardon me.
Yes, Pharisees.
And they seem, they, I don't know, it's like, are they paid, I keep puzzling it out.
It's like, are these people like paid actors or something?
What the hell is going on?
So, yeah, those, that's, those what I really want to know about this guy.
Travis, that I hate to, sadly, I must report, they are not paid actors.
I wish, I wish.
No, they were, you know, they were living in this compound and they had, they had like,
They rented a studio, like a high-rise studio in downtown Phoenix.
I mean, it looked, they had better production values than I think some local TV stations.
I mean, it looked, you know, they had all these shows.
There was like the millennial baby cue show where they would drink white claws and say, you know,
you know, here's the tea on the Q Pharisees.
And, you know, it was very bizarre.
As far as where the money comes from, you know, one of these guys I was talking to, he said,
oh, yeah, I donated 50 grand.
So, you know, and I asked Austin, I said, is that true?
And this is the guy that he banished and said, you know,
you have to break up with your fiance because she's an agent for the NSA or something.
And I said, you know, so this guy says he gave you 50 grand.
And he said, oh, yeah, I think that's about right.
Oh, my God.
And 50 grand wasn't enough for him to go, you know what?
I'm just going to hold back on the telling him that his wife is or his fiance is like,
yeah, is a undercover agent.
Because maybe there's another 50 grand where that came from.
But amazing to me that maybe the guy who, you know, donated, you know, an insane amount of money.
He's very quick to just banish.
And, you know, it's, yeah, it's.
I mean, he's not.
exactly careful. That's why he ended up in jail. He is insanely haphazard. I think that's why we
never really entertained the idea that it could be a full-blown cult is just because he's such a mess
and he looks so young and his mannerisms just don't, he doesn't have the Keith Rennary. He doesn't
have the it thing. Well, you know, his first videos, he's wearing this backwards baseball cap. I mean,
he looks like he's going to be giving me a call of duty tips. Yeah, totally. Well, and that's what I
always thought that the sort of the podcasters were, because they were, you know, relatively
young, attractive people. I thought for sure, I was like, okay, these are struggling actors.
You know, they answered, you know, an open casting call. You know, they need the work. They're not
necessarily aware that it's tied to Q&ON. They just know they're doing some cool kind of popular
culture conspiracy sort of show. That was always what I thought, but you're saying that they're all
sort of folded into his live-in believers or cult, as you said. Yeah, I mean,
I mean, they were all into it.
I mean, you know, it gets so bizarre.
I mean, you said he's not careful.
I mean, he, when the FBI knocks on his door, he's carrying a desert eagle handgun.
And he's like, yo, what's up?
Like, I got landmines in the yard.
They said, what?
And then they come in and they said, okay, so the issue is you've been putting out all these brain scans.
And he says, well, yeah, get what else I'm doing.
I smuggled drugs across the border because I can't be arrested.
And the FBI goes, and this is, you know, an African-American guy tweeted this.
I mean, he said, man, I would have been arrested immediately.
And so instead, the FBI just goes, okay, well, we'll be seeing you later.
A fucking deagle?
What?
What is going on?
Comes to the door with a deagle, says their landmine, says I can never be arrested.
I mean, okay, here's a question.
Here's a question I have for you, Will.
Based on your interaction with him and the research that you've done in your reporting and also in the book, I mean, do you think that Austin is a true belief?
Does he really believe that he comes from the future?
Or is this like a bit or is there, you know, mental illness in play?
Well, I think there's a solid amount of mental illness or like some kind of just crazy personality issue.
I mean, he ends up at this brain scan clinic because his mother, according to the court records, sent him there.
I mean, you know, he heavily disagrees with that.
But, you know, as I say in the book, it doesn't seem to be an accident that this coincides with right around when he starts saying,
I'm Q from the future and, you know, but he's nevertheless just sort of from the force of his
personality, able to sweep up all of these sort of disaffected QAnon believers. And, you know, I really
get into the sort of the factionalism of the Q saga. I call up Dustin Nemo's to say, you know,
what's the deal with Austin Steinbart? And he says, oh, you know, that's scumbag, you know,
I'm fascinated by him. And so just sort of the factionalism and the idea that in QAnon, everyone's
always going. Now, that guy is making us look ridiculous. This is a serious operation.
and we're running.
Well, speaking of QAnon influencers, you talk about another once pretty big one in your book
who goes by the name of Neon Revolt.
Now, Neon Revolt has a special place in my heart for a couple reasons.
Number one, he is someone who reacted to our podcast and kind of trolled us when we were
just starting.
We were very excited to get the attention of people who are, like, promoting Q&N.
But also, he's a guy who's interesting.
Before my name was published in the Washington Post, he actually researched me and
discovered my name and my backstory, an attempt to figure out if I was like intelligence or not.
And he wound up not publishing my name because he figured I was just a regular guy and that was
who I said. He had more discretion than the post. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I remember that blog post,
Travis, where he said, yeah, I figured out who he is. He's got a kid. He's pretty boring. I'm not
going to docks him. It was very nice. I'll say that. So I can't praise anything else he's done.
But that was very nice of him.
But you, but you, you learn some interesting facts about really how his, how he came to Qaeda
and, well, and how his like struggles as a screenwriter sort of led him there.
I mean, he also talks about this openly in his book.
Yeah, I mean, so this is Neon Revolt.
He's kind of off the scene now.
But back in the day, I mean, he was, I would say easily like a top five QAnon promoter.
And his, his book just laid out in such a fascinating way how he came to this, you know,
a lowly station in life.
I mean, he, the folks that logically figured out his real name and this guy's named Robert
Cornero.
And essentially, he was a failed screenwriter who became convinced that Hollywood was biased against
him because he was a white man.
And he moved back in with his folks in New Jersey and started, he was obsessed.
He was really, he was a freezer clerk at the grocery store.
And he lost, I mean, he really, his life had hit the skids.
I mean, he lost the freezer position and was furious about it.
He had an online girlfriend in Canada whose dad made her break up with him.
And then he discovers QAnon.
And then he says, well, you know, now I can kind of get revenge on people in Hollywood who
wronged me.
And so he turns his mob on this Hollywood executive who's kind of a guy named Franklin Leonard,
just kind of a big power player there.
And so suddenly this Franklin Leonard guy is like, wait, why is this random guy saying
I'm the King Pito of Hollywood and all this?
And he running like a three-part series on how I work for the cabal.
And so once his real identity came out, I just thought it was a fascinating way to look
into the inside of a Q&on promoter
sort of picking his targets and getting his
personal grievances out through the movement.
I can actually relate to that on
some level. I was talking about this with
Julian the other day is that, you know, I was a
struggling screenwriter,
you know, before, you know, before the
podcast, Julie and I had a different
podcast that wasn't going anywhere, but
and, you know, I mean, people who listen to the show
know my story. You know, I started to kind of flirt
with QAnon and get into that. That's how we ended
up starting the show, was trying to
decipher, you know, if there
was any truth to it and why were people, you know, radicalizing so quickly to this. And I will say that
there is something about the, just a very difficult nature of breaking into the business that I think
does prime people for this kind of internal anger and not wanting it to be your fault. Because in a
lot of ways it isn't, it's, you know, a lot of it is luck. A lot of it is connections. A lot of it is
who you come from. Are you connected to people in the, in the entertainment industry? And so when I,
when I found out that this was neon revolts past, you know, I can relate a little bit because,
you know, I was in a very similar position. And, you know, had I not had good friends who had
good politics and were able to explain the sort of landscape of, you know, our current
political situation in a way that allowed for the grievances that I had, but also offered
a non-fascistic solution, I could have easily gone down that other path. And so I think
that's important context to add here when talking about failed actors, failed models,
failed screenwriters. You know, we find out that a lot of these influencers came from, you know,
sort of unsatisfactory careers in the entertainment industry. You know, I think that's a great point,
Jake. As you said, I mean, you guys have talked a lot about these, you know, failed entertainers who
sort of reinvent themselves as Q&ON figures. And I think in the case of Neon Revolt, you can really see
where QAnon gives this guy status that he would never have had in real life. I mean, one notable thing,
about him is that most QAnon leaders cannot write worth anything. I mean, and there's a reason
there aren't really that many blogs about QAnon and many more YouTube shows and what, what have you.
And he was the only guy who could really string together a sentence. And so because, you know,
the screenwriting background. And so in that way, he's able to sort of get an acclaim for his writing
that he was not in the real world. And so much of, especially in the early days of Q&on, when it
really was less about the satanic panic and less sort of religious, you know, less, less religious
vibes, less, you know, it felt more, it was more in that sort of Tom Clancy, behind the
scenes, sort of espionage novel. I mean, that's something that a, you know, an aspiring
screenwriter can really play with. There's, there's a lot there. And it makes sense to me
that instead of making YouTube videos, instead of trying to, you know, be an on-screen
personality, he went to the thing that he believed was his strength was, was this writing. And
it became very popular. Yeah, he even ended up writing a sequel to Human Centipede.
He did. That's true. That is true. That's true. Yeah, he called it the Q-Man centipede.
No, well, no. What he did was, you know this, Will. He made an image of, like, all the sort of, like, Q&O reporters, like, myself and Mike Rothschild and you. And I think Alex at Media Matters was also there sort of like tied together human centipede style.
So, honestly, like, the nicest, like, most mild-mannered, like, people in the business, which, which, which,
is so, which is so funny. You can't, you couldn't find two nicer guys than Will and Travis.
And yeah, but that's who ends up. That's who ends up in the human sense of people. The nice guys. The nice guys end up there. I did not make it there because he's like, no, of course, that guy, that guy has too much gumption to get his lips sewn to someone's asshole.
On a recent episode, we discussed the film Plandemic 3 by Mickey Willis, which is, of course, the second sequel to the mega viral anti-Veval.
vaccine film Plandemic. Now, I don't know how many people know this, but the Q&ON community was
essential to making that film as successful as it was. So how did that happen? Sure. I mean, so
Plandemic was, you know, cooked up by, as you say, Mickey Willis, who was sort of a crunchy,
alternative wellness, kind of conspiracy theory guy in California, who, of course, hooks up with
Judy Mikovits, a doctor with plenty of access to grind against Anthony Fauci and sort of a one-sided
feud. But really QAnon is what blew that up and made it so much bigger than really than just
the QAnon community. This guy named Zach Voorhees, who was a James O'Keefe whistleblower,
I believe at Google, who actually wrote a story quickly after he emerged as a whistleblower
about all his QAnon beliefs. He was spreading the word among QNon communities on Facebook
saying, oh man, you know, this video's cooking, we got to make this huge. And then, you know,
people, after a pandemic exploded and really was sort of a foundational document of the kind of
counter narrative to the coronavirus science, you know, people look back at it and say, yeah, I mean,
these kind of hyper-connected QAnon communities online were what exploded this and made this
such as kind of a viral phenomenon. Well, and that makes sense, right? Because Q&ON, you know, at least
from my perspective, they're waiting for a big event. You know, they don't necessarily know what
it is, but they're told that some big event is going to take place. There's going to be some
kind of international or national conversation. And COVID, you know, was a big event.
It was a serious change.
There were, you know, our way of life was interrupted, and there were all sorts of new
rules and precautions, and there was information coming out so fast that sometimes people
would get stuff wrong or, you know, information would change, practices would change.
And so if you're already in this mindset waiting for some kind of, you know, event to happen,
and then you're faced with COVID, it's really easy, I think, to make that jump and go,
this is, okay, well, this is part of something.
Not exactly sure what, but I've been waiting for the side.
It's like in, you know, it's like Rick Moranis in Ghostbusters, you know, running around
the city, you know, we're waiting for the side, you know, have you seen the key master?
You know, they're like waiting for this big thing.
And I think that COVID was, you know, became that.
And so, of course, there was going to be content and alternate explanations thrown around
as to what was really happening.
Because even for somebody who's not a conspiracy theorist, something like a pandemic that we never ever thought that we were going to have to experience in our lifetime, all of a sudden happens and it's real and it's affecting your life. I mean, it's hard to grapple with.
Absolutely. I mean, you know, the pandemic was just huge for Q&ON. You know, people have all this time online. There was really weird stuff happening in the world that, you know, was not, oh, I think there's like a weird light off the coast. Maybe they tried to shoot down Air Force One. I mean, these things that you could ignore, I mean, instead,
the case of the pandemic. I mean, it was something everyone had to grapple with. And, you know,
I think for a lot of people, QAnon offered a chance to have some sort of control because, you know,
it wasn't about like weird trades in China or something going down over there and somehow now
you're out of a job. But it was, you know, here are our five guys that we can blame for this.
Yeah. You also discuss attending Clay Clark's Health and Freedom Conference back in the spring of
2021. So, I mean, the way you describe it, seems as though the crowd was hoping to hear more Qaeda
messages than were actually delivered. So what did you learn?
during that trip. Sure. So Clay Clark, you know, I have to say, I think I was maybe, I was right on the
ground floor of the Rewaken America tour, which now has swept America and, you know, been the
accused as the site of an anthrax attack when in fact, everyone just got COVID. So yeah, I traveled
out there to Tulsa in 2021. They said they were going to have heavy security to keep out media
and Antifa, but I managed to get in. And it was so obvious that everyone was just really prime for
QAnon. I mean, they had, you know, they had a bunch of QAnon influencers. And this is where Jim
Kavisel gets up and he says, you know, I got to tell you all about Adrina Crowe and everyone goes,
ah! And then Lynn Wood just gives them a barn burner. This is before Lynn Wood really went off the
rails. And he said, you know, they're abusing children. Tell it to George Soros. Tell the House
of Windsor we're coming for them. And people were just on their feet losing it. Yeah, because it's one thing
to hear it from, you know, anonymous internet source and to discuss it in various, you know,
internet quote unquote research groups, but when you have a huge celebrity like Jim Cavizal,
especially in this crowd because this guy played Jesus, you know, and you've got Lynn Wood and
they're on a stage. You know, it's not coming out of your computer anymore. It's on a stage. These
are people of authority that are echoing this thing that you have believed in for, you know,
a year or two years at this point. I mean, it's a much different vibe. It's a validation. And, you know,
it makes perfect sense why, you know, bringing it off of the computer, you know, was so effective.
I mean, it was thousands of people and they were just, I mean, really, they were about to,
they were ready to, like, roll out if Lynn Wood had said, you know, okay, let's go get them.
You know, they would have done it.
Next Sunday at the Royal Rumble, the House of Windsor is going down.
They're going to feel the pain.
Well, and I mean, in all seriousness, I mean, what you're describing, when you look at January
6 through that angle, it makes a lot more sense.
If you have a group of people that is just foaming at the mouth and ready to do anything, to do something, to wait for, you know, the people that they trust and their authority figures and people that they just like, you know, waiting to, waiting for instructions, you know, there gets to a point where you can only trust the plan for so long.
And I think that that is, you know, for all of us who have been researching this for so long, I think that, you know, that's a weird part to see is that that shift from trusting the plan to,
you know, we are the plan.
Oh, totally. I mean, you know, when you tell people, you know, the most powerful people in
the world are doing these heinous crimes to children and no one's going to do anything about it,
the cops don't care, et cetera. Maybe they're in on it. And so suddenly it's, you know,
someone's going to believe that. And then maybe it's not such a surprise that someone busts
in the common ping pong with a gun or, you know, murders a mafia boss or all these different
things that kind of go haywire when people really believe in it.
I mean, you have these other, like, weird details stuff like Bill Gates's company has been doing
vaccine research for, for, you know, over a decade. And they had run trial, you know, sort of like
practice events to prepare for a pandemic, you know, things that, you know, when you're, when you don't
have a conspiracy, you know, sort of outlook of the world, you go, yeah, that makes sense. I mean,
he's in tech. He's, he's in, you know, the health industry, you know, he's involved in all
of that. Sure, it would make sense that they would run a drill for, you know, something like this.
I mean, this isn't the first time that you, we've had, like, really powerful viruses out in the
world, you know, there was, you know, swine flu and the bird flu and all of this stuff.
It makes sense that they would be running drills for this.
But when you're told that Bill Gates is one of the main enemies and then you find out this
information, you go, oh, well, it all makes sense, you know?
Yeah, I like that you just called it the plandemic.
Our brains are so cooked.
What did I said, planemic?
Yeah, you said that, like, Bill Gates, they did a simulated plandemic.
Well, I mean, that's, I mean, if you're looking at, well, that is what the people
believe.
Yeah, I mean, they were like.
I mean, it is very funny when you watch it because it has super high production values and they are very, you know, if you, once you've experienced the pandemic, you go back and you look at that stuff and it does seem like they're talking exactly about the situation. Yeah. We came to be in.
Yeah. I mean, it's, you know, once you have this, you know, throughout the book I talk about this, like once you have this kind of conspiratorial mindset or that lens over everything you see, I mean, suddenly, you know, stuff starts popping off everywhere and, you know, the world makes sense and kind of a twisted way.
That reinforces your own belief because now all of a sudden these things that didn't make sense before are making sense and you believe that that's because you have insider information and you understand it better than maybe your neighbor or your brother or your spouse or all this stuff.
So it is this kind of self-validating theory that it's not going to steer you away from conspiracy theories.
It's going to push you deeper and deeper down that rabbit hole.
Yeah, I mean, it seems like a lot of fun for a while, honestly.
I mean, you know, the idea that, you know, I think a lot about this interview someone did with some Q and out people who said,
Like, you know, I get the news before everyone else or, you know, I understand what's going on in the world.
So, you know, your neighbor says, oh, you see that Chinese balloon?
And you go, what a simpleton.
Doesn't he know?
Yeah, doesn't he know?
Ha, ha, ha.
And you feel good because life right now is, you know, it's hard to, it's hard to decipher.
Something seems unexplainable.
Some things just don't make sense.
I think that's the uncomfortable.
It makes zero sense.
That's the uncomfortable reality that we live in.
And so to have.
None of this makes sense.
And so to have that, to have that little piece that goes, well, I actually do
know what's going on. You know, that's a good feeling for a lot of people. I want that. I don't have
that anymore. I used to. Nothing's fun anymore. Yeah, we kind of ruined it for you. I used to love,
I used to love conspiracy theories. I was going to say, Jake, I mean, yeah, you know that you know how
fun it can be. Yeah. I mean, it's, I'm trying to, I'm trying to put myself back in the headspace
that I was in, you know, towards the end of 2017 into 2018. And yeah, I mean, that, that really is what,
what it was was this idea
that I had this idea.
You had secret knowledge
about Hillary's arrest. I had secret
knowledge and I was finding
whether it was through self-fulfilling prophecy
or not that my conspiratorial
mindset would have had
me more prepared than the next person. A perfect
example is I was working with
this woman and we were writing a script
together and this was kind
of in the rumblings of the beginning of
COVID. This was like towards the end of
2019 going into sort of
of like January of 2020. And is that right? Is that when March of 2020 was like the first
lockdowns, right? Okay. So, and she, she kind of offhandedly said, you know, I spoke to, yeah,
I have a friend who works at NASA and she told me not to get on a plane. And I took that
information. I went, well, if somebody at NASA is, you know, saying not to get on a plane,
they must know something that we don't. And so me and my, you know, fiance at the time went to
Target and we were the people that had all the, you know, we had loading up on toilet paper,
a big bucket of a hand sanitizer. And this was way before people rushed the grocery stores and
the department stores to, you know, stock up on supplies. And so then when that, when that first
lockdown hit and we were stocked, I went, wow, my conspiratorial mindset is what left us
prepared. Yeah. Little did you know at the time that like a couple years from then, you would
basically gladly trade catching Corona
just to go watch a band
like Pup.
Yeah, well, hey, we all get broke down
and I'll tell you this,
if any members of the band Pup are listening,
it was fucking worth it.
It was worth it.
That is one of the best shows
I have ever seen in my life.
Travis is going to have to do like two or three more
like coronavirus conspiracy theory episodes
to compensate for what you just did.
That rant that I just did
is just going to be filled with bleeps.
Like, the members of, boop, if you're listening, that was the boop show I boop.
All right, Travis, get us back on.
Sure.
Sorry.
Will you devote an early chapter of your book to the question of who is behind the Q-Wan
persona, which appeared on 4chan, 8-chan, and later on 8-Coon after 8-chan went offline?
Now, we, of course, talked a lot about this on the show, and the question was thoroughly explored
on Cullen Hoback's docuseries Q into the storm.
And what's kind of emerged from everyone's investigations is like what I call like the conventional theory of QAnon's persona.
So this posits that Q was possibly started by some trolls or LARPers on 4chan.
It was later picked up and controlled by Paul Ferber.
And then when Q moved to 8chan, it was hijacked or taken over by Ron and or Jim Watkins,
who was the admin and owner of 8chan.
Now, I should note that Ferber and both Ron and Jim Watkins have all denied being Q.
In fact, Jim Watkins denied being Q when he was deposed by Congress.
And, you know, even if that whole story is correct, I kind of doubt it's the whole story.
I mean, there's still like, there's still the question of, like, for example, who wrote all of those Q drops?
There were over 4,000 of them.
Obviously, they didn't write all of them, I don't think.
And there's also the question of, like, the people who promoted Q&N off the chance, you know, Tracy Diaz, who is, you know, one of the first Q-tubers and that sort of thing.
Patriot Soapbox, entities like that.
Pamphlet.
All these classic characters.
Yes.
Pamphlet Anon, yeah. So, but for like for people who are like constrained by journalistic standards of evidence, that's the basic sort of like outline of like, you know, the theory that people have landed on. So what was your experience like attempting to like unmask Hugh, which is, you know, kind of a rabbit hole in itself? Yeah. I mean, so before, in 2018, I made my kind of first stab at trying to figure out who was behind Q. And I went through a lot of the, you know, the evidence that, you know, pamphlin and on was running at that, you know, there would be these videos where he would appear to be logged in.
did the Q account and these kind of things. And honestly, I went nuts. Um, I took a couple days,
you know, I didn't go to the office for a couple days. I just kind of like, started laying it all
out in my living room and my wife came home and I was just like, don't you see? Like, follow the
money. You know, it all makes sense. Um, but ultimately, you know, I couldn't, I couldn't nail it down.
And, you know, I think the, the Colin Hoback thing laid out, um, you know, the book I'd say is pretty
much, you know, I think the most compelling evidence we have, uh, although, as you say,
I mean, kind of the key players all deny it. You know, I sort of wish, hearing you, you recount this,
I wish someone would kind of cook up a new one that was a little more that was equally as compelling
because, you know, I think it's time to kind of freshen up the, uh, the backstory there.
You know, it was tempting to kind of find my own cue for the book and kind of make my own,
uh, counter argument. But, uh, as you say, I mean, when you, when you actually have to stick
with what's out there and what's provable, I think that's the, that's the strongest stuff.
But it really, you can get lost. You kind of, I kind of had my own kind of cue like moment,
uh, obsessing over that. Yes. Many unnamed people have been lost. It's almost like a, yeah,
smaller version of the pro-Q conspiracy theories are the anti-Q conspiracy theories, which, you know,
obviously we're not going to get into, but it is fascinating that I think everybody was essentially
waiting to put together a conspiracy theory. People are hungry for this, and, you know, that
kind of demand on the market has like, you know, obviously many people have set up stand and
started offering product. And often it's, you know, it's people who are kind of doing retreads
of stuff everyone else has already discarded, where it's like, yes, I understand.
understand that story. You know, we kind of went through it and it doesn't hold up. Yeah. And a lot of people don't know, understand what goes on behind the scenes, especially if you work for a journalistic outlet that has all sorts of resources, you know, at your disposal, fact checkers and, you know, the proper education to go through and sift out, you know, what is real evidence and what is circumstantial. But my question for you is maybe kind of a personal one, when you found yourself kind of, you know, like you said, you
You had, you know, papers strewn out all over.
I mean, I imagine your wife comes home to the, you know, the always sunny in Philadelphia
meme of you standing in front of a cork board going, look, look, babe, don't you see who it is?
You know, what was it that allowed you just kind of step back from that and sort of, you know,
refocus and kind of admit to yourself that you were sort of becoming the thing that you were studying?
Well, I mean, I totally felt that desire to, you know, make that leap where it's like, it's all
there. And, you know, I could probably do it and get away with it. You know, just say this guy's
cue. You know, I mentioned in the early days of Q& there were these videos floating around where
people would, all these people with names like, you know, Ultimate Hacker X or whatever, would sort
of purport to have these videos showing various figures logged in as Q. But it wasn't quite
there. And, you know, I would say, okay, well, where I, you know, you don't quite have it.
And they would say, oh, just watch the video again. And I think there's a temptation to say,
all right, good enough. I'll run with that. You know, the readers of the
Daily Beast will not be able to suss out the differences between all these different people named
like Defango and whatever.
Sure.
But the, but you know, ultimately you do have to, you know, it's, I sort of had to admit defeat
and say, okay, you know, maybe someday the, the information will emerge or someday someone
who's a part of this collective or this Discord group will leak the chats and we'll have it
all nailed down.
And, you know, ultimately, I think Colin and his show got, got as close as anyone has.
And, you know, sometimes you just have to admit you, uh, you didn't bake the bread crumbs.
quite right. Yeah, and that's okay. Look, guys, if you put a loaf in the oven and it comes out burnt
or crusty or crumbly, you don't have to eat it. Yeah, you try to put a little bit of butter on it
and it just disintegrates under the knife. It's okay. It's okay to toss that loaf, you know? You don't
need to put it in a bag, put it in the freezer. You know, when you take it out of the freezer two months
from now, it's not going to be better bread. When you reheat it, it's still going to be shit.
And that's okay. While we have you here,
I'd also like to talk to you about the recent revelations about Fox News that came from the Dominion
Voting Systems lawsuit.
So text messages and testimony from some of the biggest stars and most senior executives
at Fox News revealed that they privately expressed disbelief about Trump's false claims about
the 2020 election being stolen, even though the network continued to promote many of those
lies on air.
The network hosts were especially shocked by claims by Q&N on promoting lawyer, Sydney.
Powell. For example, there is this exchange between Tucker Carlson and Laura Ingram. So,
tell you what, Jake, can you play Tucker Carlson and Julian B. Laura Ingram?
Yes, sir. Sure. I'll do my most annoying voice that I can do. So Tucker says,
Sidney Powell is lying, by the way. I caught her. It's insane. Sydney is a complete nut.
No one will work with her. Ditto with Rudy. Our viewers are good people, and they believe it.
So that's crazy stuff. That's just something that they, you know, they, they're just saying like, you know, these sorts of claims that are getting popular with Trump supporters are just worthless. But Will, what do you think this reveals about like the inner workings of Fox News? Oh, man. I mean, I think this filing really, you know, it's like the biggest reporting on Fox News that, you know, even though it's not really reporting in maybe a decade. It just shows us, you know, what was obvious to a lot of observers of what we suspected, which is this is a totally cynical operation saying, okay, we need to kind of walk the line between,
setting off a libel lawsuit, but keeping our viewers entertained and tuned in and sort of
convinced that the world is all against them. But then behind the scenes, you have, I mean, just
Tucker texting Hannity and Ingram being like, ah, fuck. Or saying that, you know, Trump is the
demonic force who wants to destroy me. You know, I mean, these guys are going just absolutely
flipping out. And as you say, behind the scenes saying, you know, Sydney Powell's just full of it,
but I guess we have to keep her on or she's going to go to Newsmax or saying like Maria Barteromo
is just off the reservation. She's going nuts. So, I mean,
it is a it's very insightful and you know the good news is that there's more to come i mean i think we're
going to get more filings the dates keep changing but by the end of the month and then some more in early march
so it is uh it's just wild to me that fox hasn't settled this i know it's a huge amount of money it's
over a billion dollars but it is you know in previous cases like the uh the seth rich case they did
settle it to avoid getting deposed this one is going on so far that um i mean it's it's just really
giving us such a such a fascinating insight into how they run things over there well and what's so
interesting to me is that, you know, they could probably have said, you know, hey, these
claims are, you know, there's really nothing. There's really nothing to them. And, hey, that's
our duty to, you know, because we, we value you, the viewer. And then move right on to something
else that could keep their viewers engaged. Any of the, you know, the wedge topics, gun control,
abortion, all of that stuff. They were going to get, they were going to get out flanked by
Newsmax. And I remember this, this period because a lot of Q people started saying Fox, like they
would include Fox in their like fake news media rants. Yeah, it was like suddenly Fox had a target on
its back because it wouldn't essentially carry water for this thing. Yeah. Yeah, I mean,
they're saying in these messages, you know, they're saying, oh God, Newsmax did a million last night.
Grant Stinchfield, whoever the hell that is, you know, he's kicking our asses. And that must have,
you know, just chuffed them so bad because you look at Newsmax and it looks like the, like the news
station in like Grand Theft Auto 5 like just like a completely like a fake or you know or a B movie
you know when they open it with the newscast they always do that and it just looks like the moniker or
the the Kiron is I've learned the right word I learned the word it's a Kiron thank you to cousin
Josh who texted me that after listening to the episode where I got it wrong you know it's like
god that must just suck because like newsmax listen look at the name newsmax it sounds like a fake
operation, and they're like, oh, my God, they're doing millions.
You know, I think when you sort of view yourself as the number one, you know,
your Kleenex or whatever, and all of a sudden, you know, puffs is, you know, doing good
numbers during, during allergy season, you know, you're worried.
That is a very, very strange choice, but yeah, it's just kind of what came.
It's cold outside.
I got a little bit of a sniffle.
I'm thinking about tissues.
The famous corporate war that we all know between puffs and Kleenex.
They might even be the same.
I'm not sure.
I couldn't think of the number two, the number two Kleenex brand.
Anyways, carry on.
What is Q?
Who is Q?
Not interesting to me.
How does Jake's brain work?
That is the real question of our era.
Yeah, another thing that the lawsuit revealed, and I thought this was interesting, is that
Fox News hosts think that fact checking will cost them money.
There was a message from Tucker Carlson that pointed to a tweet in which a Fox reporter,
that's Jackie Heinrich, fact-checked a tweet from Trump referring to
broadcast. It said that there was no evidence of voter fraud from Dominion. Tucker Carlson said
this about the reporter. Please get her fired. It needs to stop immediately. Like tonight, it's
measurably hurting the company. The stock price is down. Not a joke. And then Hyrick deleted
her tweet by the next morning. Absolute insanity. I know that, I know it's like, it's like kind of a
weird cliche thing to say like Fox News. It's not a news organization. But when literally fact
checking is discouraged in the fact might cost you the your job, then obviously it's not like
a real news organization. You have Tucker Carlson freaking out over this reporter doing the most
milk toast like fact check, election not stolen. And it's just like, oh, no, shut up. And then at this,
also in the document, you have Rupert Murdoch saying, look, I know the election stuff screwed up.
For now, we just got to focus on electing Republicans in Georgia. I mean, just really just laying
it out there. I mean, it does, it does seem like if you were to do like a parody of like how you
imagine like Fox hosts and executives talk about it. It's like, who cares about what's true? Let's get
Republicans elected. But like, that's kind of a cheesy, you know, skit you might see on like late
night TV or something. But like it basically actually happened. And this is like exactly what the
Q&on believers think is happening like behind closed doors at CNN. You know what I mean?
That, you know, some overbearing sort of like editor-in-chief is like, nah, screw the truth. We're running with
this. This is what we're running with. You know?
It's like, well.
Yeah, some guy, you know, I was tweeting about this and some guy was just like, oh, whatever.
I'm sure worse goes down at CNN.
And then I looked him up and he works at the epoch times.
And I was like, well, what the hell do you have?
Stay out of my mentions.
Oh, goddamn.
What a stupid world we all live in now.
More so, more so than the folks that don't have to think about this kind of stuff every day.
How's your mental health after writing the book, Will?
Yeah.
Look, you know, I mean, it really was such a, such a crazy journey.
And I have been hearing from so many people who were sort of meaning to check out this
QAnon thing, but it's, you know, and then they look into it and they read the book and
they're like, damn, this is pretty crazy.
This is for real?
Yeah, yeah.
That's like the number one question I get from people in my, you know, personal life who,
once they find out that I do this, they go, people really believe in that?
I don't get it.
I don't understand.
I'm sure you all run into this all the time.
I mean, in the lead up to this, you know, I was saying to people or people would ask my wife, what's your husband do?
And she'd say, he's writing a book about QAnon.
And then you have to say, you know, it's an anti-Qaeda book, to be clear.
Yeah, when old, like, friends check in on me, like, randomly.
And they'll be like, so what's, how's it going, man?
Like, what's going on?
You still work in entertainment?
I'm like, well.
Certain things have transpired.
Yeah, I have, like, a whole, I'm sure you do, too.
Like, I have a whole speech to be like, well, yeah, I'm tracking, like, online radicalization through conspiracy theories and why?
you know why this happens and then they're like what's the podcast call i'm like cueing on anonymous but
it's like anti-cue but we're but we try to approach it with compact like there's just so many
qualifiers because it is such a bizarre and nuanced and layered movement it's yeah it's it's really
tough so i mean kudos to you for taking all of the research and and you know embarking on the
journey to try to put it in a book that that somebody who isn't necessarily in you know in the weeds like
we are can pick up and and understand uh you know sort of the the broad as well as sort of more
nuanced and specific strokes of what took really took place over the last like four years five
years seven years. I don't know how long it's been a while too long. Yeah that book again is
trust the plan the rise of Q&on and the conspiracy that unhinged America and we just scratched
the surface of the fascinating stuff that's in it so pick it up will thanks again for coming on
the show.
Hey, thanks so much, guys. It's always fun to be on.
Always a pleasure to have you, man.
Thanks, Will.
Thanks for listening to another episode of the Q&On Anonymous podcast.
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Listener, until next week.
May the Deep Dish bless you and keep you.
It's not a conspiracy.
It's fact.
And now, today's auto-cue.
Can't we just, like, build a little army lawful to just go to the monarchy
and grab these monarchs and throw them on their face
and throw them in handcuffs and just get them off the streets?
I plan on, and I'll show you this clip, like, a little, like, as I'm wrapping up here.
But I'm trying to go around to these BLM-minded folks.
I have, like, situations where we're going to go talk to some Crimson Bloods in South Central L.A.,
where they could tell us stories about the CIA drug dealing back in the day.
I'm trying to persuade the black media in Vegas and in L.A.
to back our play here.
And if we do that, that creates this ripple effect around the world.
And now all of these African refugees that they just led into Europe,
now all of those African refugees are foot soldiers for the revolution,
who are, maybe, again, we're not going to tell them to go do anything crazy,
but of course we can't be responsible if they hear the truth,
and they're very upset by that.
And they will.
And they will.
And they make matters in their own hands.
So again, we don't condone violence here at the quantum of course not.
But again, we can't be held responsible for what, like when people hear the truth, it's so crazy that we can't be held responsible for, you know, how people react to that, right?