The man known by fans as “Scammer” Floyd Wallace returned to livestreaming Monday afternoon with “good news and bad news” for his fans as he’s apparently settled in Omaha, Nebraska, as planned but has been sidetracked by unexpected events in his life.
While the YouTuber was specifically not fundraising, and received no recorded super chats during his steam, he repeated his claims that he would be opening a new GoFundMe in the near future for a trip to Asia in the fall.
He did, however, share the news that he would be unable to pay back those who he had recently taken loans from to support his move to Nebraska in the time period he had promised.
Wallace blamed lack of donations from his fans for having to stay in Texas for an additional two days last month when the water pump on his car died. He said that since no one donated, he was forced to make assistant Jack Jack pay for his car repairs and fund the rest of his trip to Nebraska.
Because of the delay Wallace said that his job offer which, when he last mentioned it, he hadn’t even applied for, had been rescinded. He made it clear that he was currently unemployed and searching for work because his fans had let him down and did not support him when he was in crisis.
Wallace’s claims about his job status could not be verified as most of his fans did not believe that he had a job waiting for him in the first place. The job itself evolved from working nights in a meat packing plant to working a warehouse job overnight for UPS and seemed too good to be true as Wallace described it as a sure thing.
When one of the people Wallace had taken a loan from brought up the loan status in Wallace’s side chat, Wallace assured the man that he’d “soon” get his money back. Wallace, like all monetize YouTubers, gets paid around the 21st of the month from money accumulated in the previous month.
It’s uncertain if the money Wallace brought in during March would be able to cover the loans Wallace received, as he was offering double and even triple returns to his fans for loans. But fans were without options to recoup their funds as they willingly loaned a man named “Scammer” Wallace money over cash applications.
Wallace ended the livestream early as more fans entered his chat and began to inquire about his payback of the loans he had taken. He assured them that he’d be back in the near future but must return to filling out applications before abruptly ending the stream.