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Actually, he was responsible for multiple prank calls to Lindell’s show.
The prankster, Ron Blackman, is apparently an old hand at this. He has a podcast called The Macron Show, and he typically uses “social engineering and caller-ID spoofing” in order to soften up a target and make them more susceptible to skullduggery.
According to Blackman, Frank Speech and Lindell were easy marks.
Blackman prepared for pranking the MyPillow boss for weeks, he said, and the initial plan was to register a bunch of new user names on Frank Speech and use them to mock the pro-Trump pillow salesman during his 48-hour kickoff event, titled “Frank-a-thon.” Despite the hotly anticipated launch, the site struggled right off the bat on Monday, with many users unable to log on and set up their profiles.
Not only was Lindell easy to dupe, Blackman said, but the prank calls were made especially easier thanks to the MyPillow CEO’s co-host Brannon Howse, a fellow election conspiracist and right-wing talker.
“That dude is dumber than a bag of rocks,” Blackman said of Howse. “He’s the reason I got to Lindell so easily yesterday.”
Blackman says he got Howse’s personal cellphone number off his public Facebook page, which made it kind of easy to call in to the show. Blackman first got on-air by pretending to be a Wall Street Journal reporter. “I just told her [the assistant] to give me Mike’s number, and she did it without thinking,” Blackman told the Daily Beast. “And it proves 100% that he didn’t even have a plan for his big live stream. He was totally winging it. Sitting there with his iPhone on his desk praying that someone good would call in to support him.”
As for the Trump call, Blackman says he spoofed a number from Mar-a-Lago. “I knew for certain that I’d have about one second to say what I wanted before Lindell panicked and hung up. I used a soundboard of Donald Trump saying ‘Hello everyone’ to reel him in and then I yelled out my website name, so that at least everyone hearing it would know where to find me, so that we got to hijack all his effort and time and use it to promote a prank call show instead of his website.”
And here’s Blackman’s handiwork:
Kimmel also had some (more) fun at Lindell and Frank’s expense Tuesday night.
Meanwhile—and pardon me if this is burying the lede—nothing on Frankspeech.com appears to work at the time of this writing, other than the live feed from the baby monitor we’re all using to make sure Lindell doesn’t choke to death on a Lego.
Here’s what the page looked like as of 10:15 AM PT, on April 21:
Considering that Lindell had planned to launch his site on Monday to everyone and to VIPs last Thursday, that can only be seen as unfortunate. (For Lindell, that is. For democracy and comedy, it’s a boon.)
Gee, it’s almost as if this dude has no relevant experience whatsoever in television production or social media platform launches.
People who are dumb enough to believe Lindell but not quite dumb enough to believe that he meant to launch his big free speech site this way are, you know, complaining.
And for a while earlier Wednesday, the site was completely offline.
Because that’s what you want to show people when you launch a new product that you’ve been hyping for weeks: a page claiming the site is undergoing “scheduled maintenance.”
There’s always FrankSocialMedia.com, courtesy of the folks over at The Good Liars.
Is it too much of a stretch to say I’m now more addicted to Mike Lindell than Mike Lindell was previously addicted to crack? Maybe not, but I should probably limit my exposure. I’m beginning to see that majestic gleaming mustache dancing in the wind whenever I close my eyes.
”This guy is a natural. Sometimes I laugh so hard I cry.” — Bette Midler on author Aldous J. Pennyfarthing via Twitter. Need a thorough Trump cleanse? Thanks to Goodbye, Asshat: 101 Farewell Letters to Donald Trump, Dear F*cking Lunatic, Dear Pr*sident A**clown and Dear F*cking Moron, you can purge the Trump years from your soul sans the existential dread. Only laughs from here on out. Click those links, yo!
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