The goal of those questions wasn't to obtain admissible testimony
I don't think it was to primarily get #KickVic material but instead I think it was, at several points, an attempt to get a rise out of Vic and then run with it as a legal strategy - not as an on-going Twitter harassment campaign strategy. Examples of attempts include "are you the Fuhrer", "you're asking for money to go sue and grind some women down" and asking him repeatedly about the details of his intimate sexual life, including cheating on his fiancée.
I have said it multiple times already: it's an absolute valid legal strategy, when you have 0% chance of winning, to shoot like a madman for any and all openings which might raise your odds by 1%. That's literally what your lawyer is being paid to do.
This is what those questions represent: if at any point Vic reacted negatively, got upset, threw an insult back to Lesoyne,then BAM he'd be
instantly labelled as unstable, angry, out of control, aggressively predatorial, womanizer, etc and they'd push that agenda all the way through for the 1% chance it would give of convincing a jury of it being true if they squealed loud enough.
If that sounds exactly like the type of defamation and REEEing that has been going on on Twitter, that's because it's basically the same thing. It's what you do when you're losing a battle and you have no evidence, no right and no high ground to support yourself.