Welp, one more in the "VAs Who Have Disappointed Me" bucket.
Burn down the American anime dubbing industry; Vic can do half their voices, anyways, and they're increasingly outing themselves as trash.
And to those sperging out because LeFuhrer went to the press, Ty just spent four hours on Nicks show.
I considered this earlier, but the issue, I believe, is with blatancy.
Ty has been going onto Nick's show well before the lawsuit was even filed, a show that doesn't even consider itself alternative news (because it's him doing legal commentary for a couple hours). Said show is hosted by a man in Minnesota well into the night, has gotten 12k simultaneous viewers at its most popular, and has the VODs gathering less than 100k views on average. Ty has come in representing himself, linking his intents and words to his face directly.
On the other hand, Lemonade ran to an established publication (even if they're functionally a tabloid), not long after the filing of his TCPA, and had them write an article that he can hide behind to propagate the defamation currently being assessed in the court. This was the exact same reason why his TCPA was made the way that it was, and exactly the same reason why Rial and company fought as hard as they did to have Vic deposed first (so they could use the TCPA to block discovery for however long, and even if they lost it, they'd still have their sycophants maliciously representing his words in his depo). Hell,
that's why they didn't just start off with filing a TCPA.
I disagree with
@Immaculate Ape-- the issue
is that they went to the press, because the issue is that they're using literally every mechanism possible to defame Vic, and for their newest trick, they've decided to employ the wrap up smear, hiding behind some other person with more credibility to perpetuate their claims. To make things worse, they're doing this with the downtime they were provided because Ty genuinely needed time to work through their combined 1k+ pages of nonsense, and they're doing this after they've made it clear that
they wanted a jury.