We’ll get to that curious change in a minute. But first, check out some other tweets from Alix Bryan, the CBS (out of Richmond, Virginia) employee who reported the Memories Pizza GoFundMe campaign for fraud.
@TwitchyTeam yet she was hoping it was fraud in this post. pic.twitter.com/bQ2xyueAeR
— No longer 4gotten ? (@indepndt4eva) April 4, 2015
“@steve0423: A few more tweets from the epitome of tolerance @alixbryan @TwitchyTeam .@CBS6 #tcot pic.twitter.com/dgBSPcmIB6” .@9underscore9
— Christopher Shea (@CKeefeShea) April 4, 2015
Oh, the tolerance! As Twitchy reported, an utterly lame apology was offered up. A giving Twitter user fixed it:
https://twitter.com/DonnaBegley/status/584222271872638978
Heh.
But take a look at her Twitter bio now: Some people noticed a little something curious.
.@alixbryan changed her Twitter profile. Someone got a TALKIN TO at work: pic.twitter.com/BcZMWUw517
— Ashe Schow (@AsheSchow) April 4, 2015
Hmm. Curious that. Here was the bio before the kerfuffle sparked by the egregious fraud report:
CBS mention scrubbed.
Sorry, toots. The Internet, and Twitchy, are forever.
Related:
CBS employee who reported Memories Pizza fund for fraud ‘just in case’ shows how not to apologize
‘That’s messed up’: Va. CBS employee reports #MemoriesPizza GoFundMe for fraud — ‘just in case’
Can we get an amen? This tweeter’s response to whiny hack Alix Bryan is ‘the best’
Join the conversation as a VIP Member