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After my charges were dropped, I was unable to sue the city civilly, so I began writing a book chronicling my personal experiences and the corruption I witnessed. My book, Mags to Riches, was written in an attempt to tell my story and hopefully regain my family’s financial losses that I was unable to recover in a civil suit. I began utilizing social media to grow an audience in order to gain readers for my book. I could not have known at the time, but soon after filing Chapter 7 bankruptcy, the social media pursuit would become my financial savior. In the two years following my arrest, I went completely broke and subsequently became a self-made social media millionaire. I am currently working on a second book which will tell how I made millions on Facebook.

Pretty interesting.

1 posted on 05/08/2015 6:03:29 PM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Wow, this is interesting! Thanks for posting.


2 posted on 05/08/2015 6:06:08 PM PDT by conservativejoy (We Can Elect Ted Cruz! Pray Hard, Work Hard, Trust God!)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

so he took a video of an assault without calling the police? Why did he film it? for laughs?


3 posted on 05/08/2015 6:07:06 PM PDT by dp0622
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Remember that Nancy Pelosi’s father and one of her brothers have both been mayors of Baltimore.


4 posted on 05/08/2015 6:07:11 PM PDT by DuncanWaring (The Lord uses the good ones; the bad ones use the Lord.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

This is from Business Insider’s article about Fyk:

Jason Fyk, founder of WTF Magazine and FunnierPics.net, owns a business that generates about $275,000 a month.

Three years ago, Fyk was bankrupt, in jail, and borderline suicidal. He used Facebook to turn his life around.

Fyk’s financial troubles dated to 2005. Fyk had been working in real estate. As the months went by, the market turned. Eventually, it caused him to go into a “financial tailspin,” as he puts it. With a wife and a young child to support, he scrambled to find a new way to generate income.

Some friends approached him about starting a website, and he snatched up the domain WTFMagazine.com. The acronym, they decided, would stand not for What The F-— but Where’s The Fun, and the site would be a home for original, entertaining content. Fyk likens his business to College Humor.

“[Our team] was running with no money,” Fyk said of the digital business’ early days. “We were doing the fake-it-till-you-make-it thing, putting content together and starting to pick up steam, but I had no idea what I was doing.”

Fyk formed an LLC on Sept. 10, 2010, and launched the website in January 2011. “It was just fun, goofy, stupid stuff,” he said. His Facebook pages and websites publish the same kind of content today.

WATCH: Jason Fyk explains his “attempted murder” charge.
Shortly after WTF launched, Fyk found himself behind bars. He’d driven to Baltimore to interview an American stunt group, the Adrenaline Crew, for a story. They were all hanging out in a parking lot, about to drive to the interview location, when a drunken brawl broke out. Startled, Fyk said, he stood off to the side and began filming the fight on his smartphone. When things got serious, he stopped recording and tried to break up the fight. Instead, he got blamed for allegedly planning the altercation and found himself charged with attempted murder.

jason fyk arrest

“It was a stupid drunken brawl,” he said, adding he had met the people involved in the fight only a few minutes earlier. “Granted, people got hit, and granted, it was a fight, but it was never a felony fight. It was misdemeanor-assault stuff.”

Still, Fyk was thrown in jail and had to spend the little money his family had left on a lawyer. Two months later, the charges were dropped and Fyk was released from prison, broke.

“I couldn’t just go get a job at McDonald’s, because my bills were massive,” he said. “My kid held me together. I was almost suicidal. It was a disaster for me. I put my head down and kept pushing forward.”

Fyk tried to think of ways to make a lot of money quickly. His jail story was so strange, he felt it might make for a compelling book. But he wasn’t an established writer, and he knew the only way to sell a book would be to build a following.

“The only resource I had was social media, and it was free,” he said. “I decided to give everything I could toward getting as many eyeballs in my possession. Basically, I needed a distribution list.”

jason fykFacebook had launched Pages for businesses in 2007, but they were slow to take off. Even by 2011, no one was quite sure of their value. Fyk saw an opportunity, though.

At first, he tried to build on just one Facebook page, representing WTF Magazine. Before long, he realized that pages even totally unrelated to his website could be useful as well.

“It didn’t really matter if a page was specific to my brand,” he said. “I could get distribution whether it was through WTF or through a ‘Family Guy’ fan page, for example. As long as I got someone to like a page, they were effectively one more member of the distribution list.”

Fyk set out to build and maintain as many pages of all varieties as he possibly could. His wife thought he was crazy. “I’m sitting there when we couldn’t put food on the table spending all this time on Facebook pages,” he said. “I’m telling her, ‘Look, I know the distribution is going to be valuable.’”

Fyk now owns about 40 Facebook pages and controls more than 28 million “likes” in total. The pages reach 260 million people on Facebook and the “distribution” list sends his website tens of millions of pageviews a month. This earns him multiple millions a year in advertising revenue, which he pairs with other businesses, such as social-media consulting. He employs 16 people and has a ghostwriter working on a memoir.

Fyk, 40, is now a self-made millionaire who’s built his fortune almost entirely on Facebook. It’s a rewarding business, but not without its challenges. He’s found he must play a constant game of cat and mouse with teenage hackers and digital thieves on the social network. Additionally, he must run his business on a field of battle that is constantly shifting because of Facebook’s habit of routinely — and mysteriously — tweaking its algorithm.


8 posted on 05/08/2015 6:14:36 PM PDT by dangus
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Kudos to him, but I don’t find his story very compelling.


15 posted on 05/08/2015 6:24:24 PM PDT by Usagi_yo (Police are just armed bureaucrats.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

I will always believe that police routinely abuse their power. Treat a cop’s relative the wrong way and you’ll find out. Be disrespectful. In other words, don’t fall down and kiss their shoes but instead quote your rights and see what happens.

The cops, and the DAs, routinely ramp up the charges to get you to accept a plea. And if you’re poor and can’t afford an F. Lee Baily type attorney you’re either going away for a long time or you’re going to plead guilty to something you didn’t do. It happens all the time. You’re only hope is if there are two of you and only one cop. He can’t get away with lying so he behaves himself.

The criminal justice system in this country is broken. Because of the mean, vicious thugs the cops deal with on a daily basis, they’ve started to look at everyone the same way.

A few years back some people started calling in to the Chris Baker radio show here in Houston about the cops arresting a bunch of innocent people. Of course, he took up for the cops. Then he started getting calls from people he knew and it turned out the cops had gone of a “crime busting” spree based on illegal drag racing complaints. They arrested everyone they could get their hands on. Including people coming out of restaurants. The city paid a lot of money when it was all over.

I’ve got my flame retardant suit on!


16 posted on 05/08/2015 6:25:34 PM PDT by VerySadAmerican (I'm very sad for my country. Personally, I've never been happier.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

The DOJ should find that the Mayor and the top cops in the BPD are racist scum and should be removed.

CC


18 posted on 05/08/2015 6:40:00 PM PDT by Captain Compassion
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
I guess my reaction to the discovery that some police departments might be corrupt is ....and? What does that have to do with the tremendous amount of crime committed by certain demographics?

For decades many big city pds were corrupt. Yet most of the citizens of those cities were law-abiding people who didn't riot and loot at the first opportunity.

"Corrupt" pds is a red herring for the out of control violence committed by many black residents in many cities across the country.

23 posted on 05/08/2015 6:48:18 PM PDT by driftless2
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

This pretty much MO in many places, not just Baltimore. That racist cop crap is a wash wash noise to cover up the real crap going on down there. The Feds are guilty of sending white cops to stop blacks from starting businesses (EPA regs etc to keep people on plantation) and the locals are guilty of perjuries. So a whacky story about racism that goes nowhere is going to be pushed forward, crucifying Christ so to speak, instead.


24 posted on 05/08/2015 6:50:32 PM PDT by lavaroise (A well regulated gun being necessary to the state, the rights of the militia shall no)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

bfl


26 posted on 05/08/2015 6:55:58 PM PDT by BerryDingle (I know how to deal with communists, I still wear their scars on my back from Hollywood-Ronald Reagan)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

The BIG elephant in the room that I just don’t see being talked about anywhere is this plain fact:

Police departments are a -product- of the place they serve.

Good places tend to have nicer, more polite police. Bad places tend to have cynical, suspicious and jumpy police. This should surprise nobody.

Baltimore cops are the way they are because... Well... Have you seen where they work lately? The place causes the police to be the way they are, more than the police cause the place to be the way it is.


30 posted on 05/08/2015 7:19:54 PM PDT by Ramius (Personally, I give us one chance in three. More tea anyone?)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

This guy may be totally on the up and up. I can’t say he is or he isn’t.

It’s what’s left out of a recitation like this that causes me concern.

How do I know this is all that was involved?

It doesn’t sound good for the police, but I have never seen a perp error on the side of the police. I have seen many error on their own side.


35 posted on 05/08/2015 7:55:51 PM PDT by DoughtyOne (Conservatism: Now home to liars too. And we'll support them. Yea... GOPe)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
In my bad old days, I had personal experience with 3 different county jails. The author described every one of them, to a tee.

I'm guessing he described most county lock ups in the country.

37 posted on 05/08/2015 8:55:41 PM PDT by Graybeard58
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

Mark my words.... Nashville is next.


41 posted on 05/09/2015 11:11:25 AM PDT by eyedigress (s)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

.
This seems to be Washington, in general.

What isn’t hopelessly corrupt in that dismal place?
.


43 posted on 05/09/2015 11:36:13 AM PDT by editor-surveyor (Freepers: Not as smart as I'd hoped they'd be)
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