- Highlight
- #1
Barrett Pall is a 33-year-old gay social media influencer and former model from Stony Brook, NY whose performative wokeness could put the most hardened Tumblrinas to shame. Instead of whoring himself out on Onlyfans like most attention-seeking gays, Pall deemed his "life coaching" worthy of a $25 per month subscription fee on Patreon (a). Despite having 273,000 followers on Instagram, only 30 have decided the advice of an aging circuit queen is a good investment.
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Now living in San Diego, Pall spends much of his time cultivating his social media presence, as that is his primary source of income from sponsors, etc. He has also served as a UN partner. However, despite his meticulously-crafted image, he always seems to rub the internet (including his fellow lefties) the wrong way. Recently, he was subject to the same kind of mob cancellation attempt he's initiated against others.
All links and screenshots are archived by Twitter thread.
Everybody's Cancelled!
Since the George Floyd BLM riots of 2020, Pall's Instagram content has become filled with SJW jargon. While most gays support left-wing causes, Pall takes them to an obnoxious extreme, calling on brands to drop Trump-supporting models among other things.


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When called out as a bully, Pall tried to shift the blame onto white people/their white fragility. Because only white people disagree with cancel culture or something.


Pall's narrative that POC support him fell apart just days later, when Johnny Sibilly, a fellow gay influencer and actor, called his activism out as performative and disingenuous. Unlike white/Jewish Pall, Sibilly is actually a POC. It apparently began when Pall called Sibilly and others with large followings out for not being as openly woke as him, though Pall has since tried to walk back that accusation.

The following two images were posted by Pall on his Instagram story:


Here's some DMs between the two Sibilly posted:

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Pall then posted this on his Instagram story:

Sibilly responded:


Attached to this Tweet was a video clip of Pall saying, "I wasn't there as a hooker."
...then the predictable happened:

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Pall is also fond of calling out others in an overly-dramatic fashion for throwing small parties or traveling to Puerto Vallarta during COVID. (I'm not able to embed or archive the Facebook video.)
Grifting and Performative Activism
Speaking of Robin diAngelo's "White Fragility," Pall has been making money selling the book through affiliate links on his social media profiles. He's "doing the work" alright - marketing products online for a kickback. Once people found this out, a small Change.org petition (a) against him was created, which didn't get much traction:

"Do the work with me! Give me money!" (s/a)


Zero self-awareness. (s/a)
People called him out on Twitter and Instagram, which caused him to get defensive and trigger-happy with the block button.
That last exchange led to these tweets, which were not well-received:

He often uploads videos like this one on Twitter where he says "taking down the patriarchy is exhausting." How exhausting can getting paid to post on Instagram be? (Can't embed Twitter video, a)
Life Coaching, Writing, & Inspirational Work
Pall's "life coaching" is one of his main grifts. He preaches self-love and body positivity on YouTube but often comes off as not being able to graduate 8th grade. His videos are mind-numbingly dull.
On his website (a), he writes short blog posts on subjects ranging from mostly-meaningless word salad about politics (a) to telling everyone his feelings are valid (a). These don't seem to get much traction compared to his Instagram posts. He also shills products through affiliate links, replete with thousands of pictures of himself. "Here's what's new! Donate!"

He's also written numerous columns for the Huffington Post (a) and Elite Daily (a) on subjects ranging from fellow gay grifter Milo Yiannopoulos (a) to why gay men being catty to one another is bad (no self-awareness, I know.) (a)
Reception
Public perception of Pall has soured since his social justice grift began, with most people seeing it for what it is. Here are a couple of the best callouts; the recent Twitter search for his username will always have fresh ones since the gays are relentless.

(s/a)
Someone else tried to call Barrett's activism out, and ended up getting blocked:



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It'd be way easier and less embarrassing if he just owned his narcissism. But then he might not have made it onto the Farms.
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This callout account on Twitter posted a clip of a video (a) he made that sums up his life-coaching gimmick way too well for being 11 seconds.
Accounts & Media
Twitter (a)
Cameo (a)
IMDB (a)
Instagram (a)
YouTube (would not archive)
Wikipedia Draft (a)
Artisan and King (a)
Patreon (a)
Facebook (a)
SoulBoners (his sex-positivity Instagram, a)
HeartHappy315 Instagram (a) - he sells these bracelets on his website
(s/a)
Now living in San Diego, Pall spends much of his time cultivating his social media presence, as that is his primary source of income from sponsors, etc. He has also served as a UN partner. However, despite his meticulously-crafted image, he always seems to rub the internet (including his fellow lefties) the wrong way. Recently, he was subject to the same kind of mob cancellation attempt he's initiated against others.
All links and screenshots are archived by Twitter thread.
Everybody's Cancelled!
Since the George Floyd BLM riots of 2020, Pall's Instagram content has become filled with SJW jargon. While most gays support left-wing causes, Pall takes them to an obnoxious extreme, calling on brands to drop Trump-supporting models among other things.


(s/a)
When called out as a bully, Pall tried to shift the blame onto white people/their white fragility. Because only white people disagree with cancel culture or something.


Pall's narrative that POC support him fell apart just days later, when Johnny Sibilly, a fellow gay influencer and actor, called his activism out as performative and disingenuous. Unlike white/Jewish Pall, Sibilly is actually a POC. It apparently began when Pall called Sibilly and others with large followings out for not being as openly woke as him, though Pall has since tried to walk back that accusation.

The following two images were posted by Pall on his Instagram story:


Here's some DMs between the two Sibilly posted:

(s/a)

(s/a)



(s/a)
Pall then posted this on his Instagram story:

Sibilly responded:


Attached to this Tweet was a video clip of Pall saying, "I wasn't there as a hooker."
...then the predictable happened:

(s/a)
Pall is also fond of calling out others in an overly-dramatic fashion for throwing small parties or traveling to Puerto Vallarta during COVID. (I'm not able to embed or archive the Facebook video.)
Grifting and Performative Activism
Speaking of Robin diAngelo's "White Fragility," Pall has been making money selling the book through affiliate links on his social media profiles. He's "doing the work" alright - marketing products online for a kickback. Once people found this out, a small Change.org petition (a) against him was created, which didn't get much traction:

"Do the work with me! Give me money!" (s/a)


Zero self-awareness. (s/a)
People called him out on Twitter and Instagram, which caused him to get defensive and trigger-happy with the block button.
That last exchange led to these tweets, which were not well-received:

He often uploads videos like this one on Twitter where he says "taking down the patriarchy is exhausting." How exhausting can getting paid to post on Instagram be? (Can't embed Twitter video, a)
Life Coaching, Writing, & Inspirational Work
Pall's "life coaching" is one of his main grifts. He preaches self-love and body positivity on YouTube but often comes off as not being able to graduate 8th grade. His videos are mind-numbingly dull.
On his website (a), he writes short blog posts on subjects ranging from mostly-meaningless word salad about politics (a) to telling everyone his feelings are valid (a). These don't seem to get much traction compared to his Instagram posts. He also shills products through affiliate links, replete with thousands of pictures of himself. "Here's what's new! Donate!"

He's also written numerous columns for the Huffington Post (a) and Elite Daily (a) on subjects ranging from fellow gay grifter Milo Yiannopoulos (a) to why gay men being catty to one another is bad (no self-awareness, I know.) (a)
Reception
Public perception of Pall has soured since his social justice grift began, with most people seeing it for what it is. Here are a couple of the best callouts; the recent Twitter search for his username will always have fresh ones since the gays are relentless.

(s/a)
Someone else tried to call Barrett's activism out, and ended up getting blocked:




(s/a)

(s/a)

(s/a)

It'd be way easier and less embarrassing if he just owned his narcissism. But then he might not have made it onto the Farms.
(s/a)
This callout account on Twitter posted a clip of a video (a) he made that sums up his life-coaching gimmick way too well for being 11 seconds.
Accounts & Media
Twitter (a)
Cameo (a)
IMDB (a)
Instagram (a)
YouTube (would not archive)
Wikipedia Draft (a)
Artisan and King (a)
Patreon (a)
Facebook (a)
SoulBoners (his sex-positivity Instagram, a)
HeartHappy315 Instagram (a) - he sells these bracelets on his website
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