DeleteLawZ Jose “Chille” DeCastro got really loud on both Twitter and his YouTube channel on Thursday, aggressively attacking a female twitter personality he claimed to be a man while promoting an “emergency cause” that suddenly became more important than answering questions about his role in a “hurricane fundraiser” earlier in the week.
DeCastro started the day attacking a twitter user named @andrealynn_rn2. The account claimed to be run by a conservative registered nurse who was promoting conservative ideas. DeCastro attacked the account, saying that the picture looked fake and demanding that the person send him a personal video to prove that she looks the way she does.
As the owner of the account bantered with DeCastro, it was noted by many that DeCastro himself was using a photo that is several years old on his Twitter and not reflective of his current decrepit state. He then went into his usual boasts about how he’s viewed by 40 million people a month and that he’s extremely famous on the internet.
According to Playboard, backed by DeCastro’s own complaints on his YouTube channel, DeCastro hasn’t been seen by 40 million people a month for at least 3 months now, in fact, DeCastro hasn’t cracked 15 million views on his main YouTube channel in quite some time.
The YouTuber is averaging a little over 9 million views per month, with a *total* of 36.4 million views on his YouTube channel for the period of July-October.
For July he pulled in 12.8 million views for his main YouTube channel.
August did slightly better at 14.8 million views.
September crashed, however, at 7.6 million views.
And his current trend for October has seen him pull in a little over 1.1 million views for the month of October so far.
The usual comparison towards our tiny newsletter/newscast will be made with DeCastro’s fans claiming that we’re puny in comparison to his great numbers, which is true, but we don’t brag about numbers, nor do we get into cat fights with people on twitter over who is the most “internet famous.”
DeCastro took in $20.00 in super chats on his Thursday live stream, a convenient distraction from those calling for updates on his “emergency hurricane fundraiser” Monday night. He took in $391.00 in super chats after conversion (he had Australian dollars in the mix) for that chat out of $1,400.00 he supposedly took in for “hurricane relief.”
DeCastro, of course, did not show any of the receipts or records of what he did with the money as he promised he would, nor did he follow up with YouTuber Alan Hubbs, who was going to put all the money into a “Wal-Mart run” then randomly distribute the supplies he bought to those in need in North Carolina.
Again, DeCastro held another “emergency” livestream on Thursday, this time to go over the case of Dawn Briese. DeCastro was looking for criminal defense attorneys in Utah and Arizona to help Briese with problems related to an on-going dispute with her sister over the custody of her sister’s children.
Briese took care of the children while her sister was in jail and the two have had an on-going conflict since her sister was released from jail. Briese claims constant harassment from police in multiple states and gained “viral” fame for yelling at a police officer who had blocked her ring camera when serving a warrant.
This being DeCastro’s cause of the moment, and in celebration of the first full day in his new Los Angeles based studio, DeCastro went three+ hours on the subject, boring even his harshest critic into tuning out rather than pressing him on where the hurricane funding went from his Monday live stream.
DeCastro took in $20.00 in super chats for the nearly four-hour-long broadcast, offering no answers to critical questions about his on-going hurricane fund scandal, nor to where the other 32.4 million people came from in September to justify his claims of “40 million views per month.”
We’ll continue to report on the updated DeCastronomics forecast as he’s expected to go live again later today.