So, who’s this Alix Bryan person? Well, as she puts it in her Twitter bio, she’s “1/3 of a kick-ass web and social media team @CBS6” in Richmond, Virginia.
She’s also a model citizen who took it upon herself to report the wildly successful GoFundMe campaign for Memories Pizza for fraud — despite the fact that she had no evidence whatsoever:
Just in case?
Care to elaborate, Alix?
Ohhhh. She was just being cautious.
No. Because, see, in Bryan’s mind, what she did was totally fine:
Except according to Lawrence B. Jones, who launched the GoFundMe campaign, Bryan didn’t actually, you know, contact him:
Unless Bryan’s referring to this one tweet:
Sorry, honey. But that just doesn’t cut it.
Just a leeeeetle bit!
Dana Loesch — unlike Bryan — is actually making an effort to contact the parties involved:
Here’s what Loesch has gotten so far:
Forgive us if we’re just a mite skeptical of Hayes’ explanation.
Nothing more to see here?
Heh. Seriously, though, two — or more — can play this game:
Hey, better safe than sorry, right?
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Update:
Can we get an amen? This tweeter’s response to whiny hack Alix Bryan is ‘the best’
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Related:
#MemoriesPizza closes due to threats from Tolerance Brigade; GoFundMe campaign takes off
‘Mobs aren’t markets’: You won’t believe this journo’s take on why #MemoriesPizza closed down
‘Hacks’: Did BuzzFeed really think they’d get away with this #MemoriesPizza lie?
Lefty account ‘hacked,’ issues threat to rob Memories Pizza of GoFundMe donations
Tweeter who threatened to rob #MemoriesPizza now admits he lied about getting hacked
Meet some of the #MemoriesPizza truthers who think the GoFundMe money raised is part of one big scam