All Episodes

February 6, 2025 20 mins

You earned it, Sixteenth Minute listeners! As a little treat, Jamie talks with fellow Cool Zone Media host Ed Zitron of Better Offline about the nature of the Hawk Tuah crypto scam, and whether he thinks anything will come of the pending lawsuit. 

Listen to Better Offline: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | iHeart 

Ed's Links:

Newsletter: https://www.wheresyoured.at/

https://twitter.com/edzitron

https://www.instagram.com/edzitron

https://bsky.app/profile/edzitron.com

https://www.threads.net/@edzitron

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Also media, Join.

Speaker 2 (00:16):
Sancus sixteen.

Speaker 3 (00:28):
Six six. Welcome back to sixteenth Minute, the podcast where

(00:57):
we take a look at the Internet's main character and
see what their moment says about us and the Internet.
And I'm your little host Jamie Loftus taking a little
bit of a bonus victory lap here after we wrapped
our recent series on Haley Welch aka the Hawk to
a Girl. And with these longer series there usually ends

(01:18):
up being a few interviews or sections that end up
getting cut for time, but there are some interviews that
are simply too special to leave. And when it came
to understanding the hawkcoin crypto scam, I needed all the
help I could get, and thankfully my pals who know
about it were right there for me. So today a

(01:41):
little bonus a conversation with Cool Zone's own ed Zitron.
Hopefully you know who Ed is already. He's the host
of the wonderful tech podcast Better Offline and the mind
behind the popular Where's Your ed At? Newsletter. He's also
one of the funniest people I know, and I delighted
in torturing him into telling me what crypto scams mean.

(02:03):
Here's my conversation with.

Speaker 2 (02:05):
Ed, Well, I'm at Zichron. I'm the host of Better Offline,
the Cool Zone media tech podcast. I have watched so
many crypto scams happen. One time, a friend of mine
was working on a paper for law school about rug
pulse and said to me, Ed, if you've seen a
rug pool recently? I said, I'm watching one right now.

Speaker 3 (02:22):
Do you remember which one it was?

Speaker 2 (02:23):
It was called ape coin and it was on the
Polygon blockchain.

Speaker 3 (02:28):
Molly and I were talking about. She was like, this
is a very straightforward rug pull. The only reason we're
talking about it is because it's hac Ta girl and
everyone thinks she's funny that.

Speaker 2 (02:37):
And also it was fairly egregious. The market cap, and
the term market cap, as I'm sure Molly's been over,
is kind of a misnumber. It just means the value
of the coin times the amount of tokens that are available.
So at one point it was like half a billion
dollars value, and then it crashed after the rug pull happened.
But yeah, the only remarkable thing is that this person
is famous. There is somebody that has now had to

(02:58):
say to their wife, Hey, honey, I've got some bad news,
and it's about our four oh one k and about
hawk tour. It's such a weird world we live in
because there is some romanticization of someone like this, the
a regular person who was kind of vilified for just
making a regular garden, gross thing that people say all

(03:20):
the time on the internet. With someone who will talking
about a hawk toing on that thing. Yeah, yeah, she
once said once.

Speaker 3 (03:27):
But is she hear get in the accent?

Speaker 2 (03:29):
Yes, it's that's how you say it. I think someone
made a really good comment on Twitter about it, saying
that if Ellen was still around, Ellen would have taken
this woman down in fifth. She'd got fifteen minutes of
fame on The Ellen Show and then done for all.

Speaker 3 (03:40):
Of Ellen's crimes. She really did make sure that the
fame remained contained.

Speaker 2 (03:45):
I think that the hawk tour thing is a wider
phenomenon as well. You're seeing it with the horrifying cost
co children as well, where just everything everyone is so desperate,
Like I have some empathy for these people as well.
Everyone's so desperate to try and find any because just
working a regular job is not sufficient enough to like
rent a house, let alone buy one, and many metros.

(04:07):
So they of course will see this opportunity and they'll
juice it as much as they can, but at some
point there are other people who would like to juice
it too, And I think that's how we got to
hawk Coin. Just Jesus Christ, I think what.

Speaker 3 (04:21):
Is kind of surprising me about not just this story,
but a lot like it is sort of the inherent
cynicism that there is to these schemes. Yeah, of like, yes,
you're obviously being grifted, but if you get it on
the ground floor of this grift, you can grift others just.

Speaker 2 (04:36):
Like exactly, you can ride this grift, because I'm sure
that's what most people thought. Her whole thing is that
she is clearly doing a grift. We all know it's
a grift, but by joining the grift, we too could
grift with others. But then we become the grift e
and it's it's a sex society, but it really is
a sign of a sex society because in a functional

(04:57):
society this would not be possible. But also so this
would be immediately like people would just be like, I'm
not touching this. People knew and still did. It's rough where.

Speaker 3 (05:06):
They're like, no, I'm fine with scams. I just didn't
think I was going to be the victim of this one,
and now I'm mad.

Speaker 2 (05:12):
You're like, okay, yeah, exactly like I thought I was
smarter than the people that I was conning by proxy.

Speaker 3 (05:17):
When did this style of grift start?

Speaker 2 (05:23):
I mean which kind? Because are you talking about the
celebrity one or just the crypto rug pull one.

Speaker 3 (05:28):
Let's just start with the rug pull.

Speaker 2 (05:30):
So it goes back to the mid twenty tens when
you had something called an ICO and initial coin offering,
which just means, hey, I am going to build a company.
I'm going to start by selling a token, and there
will be a certain amount of tokens that go out
and you can buy in at the pre sale level
and you will get the lowest price, and then when
it hits exchanges, so a place you can sell or

(05:50):
buy cryptocurrency really referring to the big ones Finance at
the time, FDx at the time, and of course coinbase,
et OL. The goal is that you get in early.
It was initially sold as some sort of noble thing,
some part of decentralized software. There was a famous one
called file coin, for example, where ostensibly you would be

(06:11):
investing in the early token that would allow you to
use the decentralized drop box. You may be thinking, I
already have dropbox, Why would I need this, And the
answer is I don't know. Now, the ICO craze was
very big because it was an easy way of getting
in low and selling high for the people that were
inside of trading. However, this was the genus of the

(06:32):
drug ball. I'm sure that there are other ones before it,
but the Ico craze is one that was very big.
And then the bottom fell out of the crypto market
twenty seventeen twenty eight and that kind of went away.
Now at that point we'd seen the growth of decentralized exchanges.
So instead of it being I am selling into a
market controlled by a big party that's sustensibly trustworthy, I

(06:54):
am now selling to another person. And there are all
sorts of bots involved in this as well. So you
started to get at the classic rug pool, which would
be I have put together a white paper, which is
just a very long document that claims that the token
will work like this, and this is how these tokens
will eventually operate within a company, and then you invest

(07:14):
in this much like an ICO, and then when we
put it on an exchange, it will sell for lots
of money and blah blah blah. The goal of these
platforms is very rarely to build anything. It's to get
a bunch of money, and then the owners start selling
off the tokens. People became more aware of this, so
people started watching the blockchain and saying, well, wait, you're
selling all the tokens. So over time rug pools became

(07:35):
a little less easy to pull off because there are
really insanely clever people watching. It's a very simple system,
which is we we as an entity, promise to sell
you tokens at this low rate, saying we will build
this company that will grow value, and because of the
company's growing value, token number will go up. And then
you just never do the second part with the value creation.

(07:58):
And also very rare. Is there ever a connection between
a company and the token. These things don't really exist
in concert, and indeed, combining them is borderline impossible.

Speaker 3 (08:09):
Because for a while I was like, why do people
keep falling for this? But it seems like it's more
that people keep falling for the idea that they could
potentially get in on the ground floor of a grift
like this.

Speaker 2 (08:19):
Yes, and I also think that there is a lot
of people out there who truly believe that this is
like investing in the stock market. Yeah, and they're desperate.
I don't think that people realize how desperate the average
person is in America. In other countries too, you get
a lot of people in the Global South with this
who are desperate to get in on this so that

(08:40):
they can turn their local currency into a US dollar
or a tokenized version like tether, which is heavily connected
to money laundering, which is great all other good things
about this. I think it's really easy and fair, especially
in the case of Hawktua, to judge everyone who invests
as kind of a knowing participant in a grift, when
I think more realistically, you could say half of them were,

(09:01):
and half of them were just like, God, damn it,
I just want a fucking chance to do something. I
just want to. I can't. It's not like you can
invest in the stock market really make money. You can,
but day trading is a hell art populated by goblins,
and it's very difficult to do. I believe it's all desperation.
I believe it's because most people cannot accumulate wealth, and

(09:23):
so they see these things that grow in these arbitrary ways,
and perhaps they know deep down this is broken somehow,
this is kind of a scam. Maybe, but you know what,
maybe I can get up, I can get on the
board through this, I can pull the right levers and
then some money will come out, because tons of people
have made money on things like this. Though not specifically this,

(09:44):
I will say the hawk Doer thing is such an
egregious rug pull. Even ape chain took a day or two.
Usually this is the kind of rug pool you see
someone do a couple of hours on a meme coin
where everyone knows it's a scam. It used to do
a few years ago. You'd watch people like launch elon
rocket coin and go up and it goes down, and

(10:05):
no one would be really angry because everyone was basically
playing catch the knife. In this case, it was marketed
in such a way that I'm pretty sure she violated
sec rules. If they even slightly suggest, which they absolutely did,
that this was a thing that you buy into to
make money, they have violated securities law. And honestly, I

(10:28):
really hope they get done for it, not just for
the justice, but because it will be very funny. It'd
be very very funny but they'll settle. You just have
this carved out piece of the Internet where people just
get scammed all the time.

Speaker 3 (10:57):
It seems like there is very little legal repercussion.

Speaker 2 (11:03):
Why is that Because it's quite tough to find the people,
because it costs a lot of money to litigate these things,
and because the law is fairly new. The actual Matt
Levine of Bloomberg said a while ago that basically all
crypto exchanges that are illegal, they're all illegal, but it's
such vague law and the SEC is taking so long

(11:24):
to kind of work out what it is they do,
it's kind of hard to say what's illegal or not.
They still are dinging people, and they're dinging them in
this very arbitrary way. That's kind of fueling these crypto people,
and it pisses me off because I wish that they
just have said something. And now we're going into the
Trump administration, so they'll probably just put a goose and
a hat as the head of you. And it's also

(11:45):
very tough to legislate, and there's so much money from
overseas intermingled with it as well. So many of these
rug pulls come out of the Global South, and again
it's a condition of desperation, a symptom of desperation. Even
it's just the sign that you talk about on this show,
these magical moments and then the arbitrary and sometimes quite
aggressive and harmful effects of the attention you get of

(12:07):
being online. Imagine a million little versions of that all
the time, with these little celebrities that get people's hopes
up and steal money from them and then spend their
lives trying to hide. And now there's other little micro
wars that happen where people docks them and find them.
They wouldn't be surprised if someone was killed. But also
it gets to the core of your show as well,
where it's like these people become micro celebrities at a

(12:31):
time when people feel lonely and isolated and insa you
can become famous and people can rely on you, and
if you actually make these people money, they will love
you forever, not a petty king among them.

Speaker 3 (12:42):
I am curious about this lane of scam. I guess
the influencer to crypto scammer. When did that become common
practice because at this point I don't keep an eye
on crypto at all, and I recognize this as common practice.

Speaker 2 (12:56):
So you had like Floyd Mayweather and a few other
celebrities do it. That's what's kind of weird. Usually influencers,
like actual influencers that regular people know, stayed out of
this because they realized, oh, this is quasi criminal. You
had a few celebrities do it. I can't think of
another podcaster who has done it like this, because again,

(13:18):
you want to avoid this, because suddenly your whole podcast
becomes less trustworthy. I was really surprised when I saw
this was happening, because it's like, why, what year is this?
This isn't twenty twenty one or twenty twenty when this
happened all the time and no one was watching because
everyone was dying. No, it's like twenty twenty four when
you're really which is probably already making a good amount

(13:42):
of money on other stuff. I also can't The weirdest
thing is usually these things have some sort of made
up company attached, like a, oh, this token will let
you on bling blanc. You'll be able to hire a
plumb or on bling blanc, and this will be cheaper
than dollars on bling blanc. But in this case it's
just buy hawk token. It's usually an NFT of a

(14:03):
song or a thing. There's usually a thing that's what's
so weird here, just being like, oh, I'm gonna do
a crypto currency that is some twenty seventeen shit.

Speaker 3 (14:13):
I think that the real red flag for me was
all of a sudden, the proximity to the Paul brothers,
who like are addicted to, who.

Speaker 2 (14:19):
Have already done there. There's the crypto zoo and all that.
But actually that's a good point. So cryptozoo and I
don't know it's super well even which one of those
brothers did it? Forgive me whichever one of the Paul's
two brothers one name they had like an animal, like
a kind of a Pokemon situation, Like you buy into
this thing. That's how these things traditionally work. You promise

(14:39):
a bunch of stuff that you never do. That is
the key part, because when people say where's my money, honey,
you say, well, I'm putting it into the cryptozoo.

Speaker 3 (14:48):
That I say, it buys your time.

Speaker 2 (14:50):
Yeah, the grimbles, the grackles that you find in the cryptozoo,
that's where it's going. I must feed them, or the
developers that I have in a non specific place they
are working on the grim busses that will grow in
your crypto zoo, and then you can kind of lead
them on and hope that they forget. The thing that
people don't realize is the Internet never forgets. These psychos
will follow you steal someone's money online. There are people

(15:12):
who will follow you forever. Eventually you piss off someone smart,
someone animated, and someone bought, and then they learn an
entire kind of forensic accounting and then they follow you
through the blockchain. Just to explain very basic blockchain thing,
you have a crypto wallet where your money goes these companies.
When you invest in a rug port, you send money

(15:34):
to something called a smart contract that has rules coded
into it that says, okay, this will give the person
who sends me this much money this many things out
of it, so very simple. One would be one cent
is one hawk. I'm guessing here, so five dollars will
get you five hundred hawk. Or if it's an NFT, okay,
you've given me one etherorum, I will give you ten NFTs. Now,

(15:57):
these contracts are then spitting the money to other wallets.
Now teams will always say oh and indeed they did
in the hawk to a thing. Well, the original team
can't touch that. They can't touch that money. They obviously
can touch the money. You can just do it. They
claim that code is law, you can change code. That
This is a quicker and easier theory theoretically way to

(16:19):
make money. Money comes out of it way quicker and
disappears even faster. And people have made tons of money
on crypto. When was the last time anyone really like
there was like stories about guy makes money honestly trading stock,
Guy makes money honestly doing job. No, none of the
stories in the media about people who have money are

(16:40):
about them like, oh yeah, and I worked really hard
and then I got one for it. Oh yeah, no,
not even I would love to hear that if it
was true, but it really is. So you hear these
stories about these very irksome looking dickheads who have made
millions off of crypto, and you're like, shit, I look
more normal than this guy, Surely I could. Except just

(17:00):
like every scam in America, those people already made their money,
and they made it in a dishonest fashion, right.

Speaker 3 (17:06):
And they would never be transparent about how.

Speaker 2 (17:09):
And they would also never make their money like this.
They would never buy into someone else's scam. They'd make
their own, and they'd make a better one.

Speaker 3 (17:16):
Do you think that there will be any meaningful consequence
for this case?

Speaker 2 (17:21):
I actually do interesting.

Speaker 3 (17:23):
Okay, tell me more.

Speaker 2 (17:24):
It's a piss poor rug pull. First of all, this
is shit scam. It's just a dog shit scam. In
the event she ever mentioned this on the podcast, she
is getting digged by the SEC. For sure. If she
said anything about hawk to or coin on a podcast.
She has now said, Hey, hey, look SEC, I'm doing

(17:46):
an illicit security. This is an unregistered security. Check it out.
That alone will get her in trouble. I don't know
how harsh the penalties will be. It really comes down
to how much money she made.

Speaker 3 (17:57):
One of the numbers I've seen is three point three
milli in.

Speaker 2 (18:00):
Oh. She may actually she's getting class action suited. The reason,
by the way that everyone so onerously tries to make
sure that they don't say this is a cryptocurrency, it's
a token that will be used in the system, is
by saying it's a cryptocurrency that's used like a currency,
you enter into the Howie test, which, as I mentioned previously,
is the test the SEC uses to say, is this

(18:22):
a security If you are selling unreached securities, that's bad,
that's illegal. And on top of it, if you are
marketing them, which is different than you are extra fucked
because they the sec really doesn't like that. And also
the sec very rarely gets open and shutcases. This is
one of them. And just like every right wing grifter,
she's going to assume that the right wing or protect her.

(18:42):
Oh they won't. She was useful for now talking about
spitting on that thing, so to speak to financial crimes,
that's beautiful why this show exists. Also, this isn't a
complex one. She's so stupid. The fact that it was
just a coin is so dumb. She should have been like,
this will let you into the Hawk two of verse,

(19:03):
this will let you buy your own Hawk tours, and
it could have been a series of Hawks. That feels
like a very twenty twenty one idea, But this is
twenty twenty four when all the magic and whimsy has
been sucked out of the financial crimes. Most of these
people will never see their money again, and if they do,
it will take years and years, and there's not going
to be the kind of media pressure that got FTX back.

(19:25):
And also FTX was a very strange situation, so like
many rug pulls, all of the victims will lose.

Speaker 3 (19:30):
Here well, I feel amazing.

Speaker 2 (19:32):
I feel great, like this has cheered me up.

Speaker 3 (19:35):
Thank you so much to ed Zitron. You can follow
him everywhere at ed Zitron and listen to his podcast
right here, right now on cool Zone Media better offline
link in the description. And thank you sixteenth minute listener.
I hope you've enjoyed this series and that all things considered,
you're doing all right. Extra huge love to my trans listeners.

(19:58):
I love you so much and we will be back
next week. Sixteenth Minute is a production of fool Zone
Media and iHeart Radiops. It is written, hosted, and produced
by me. Jamie Rostis. Our executive producers are Sophie Lichterman
and Robert Evans. The amazing Ian Johnson is our supervising

(20:19):
producer and our editor. Our theme song is by Sad thirteen.
Voice acting is from Brant Crater and Pet. Shout outs
to our dog producer Anderson, my Kats Flee and Casper
and my pet Rockbird who will outlive us all.

Speaker 2 (20:34):
Bye.
Advertise With Us

Host

Jamie Loftus

Jamie Loftus

Popular Podcasts

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

Ridiculous History

Ridiculous History

History is beautiful, brutal and, often, ridiculous. Join Ben Bowlin and Noel Brown as they dive into some of the weirdest stories from across the span of human civilization in Ridiculous History, a podcast by iHeartRadio.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.