Elon Musk is fond of saying that fate loves irony. This go-to phrase now seems awfully prophetic.
The Technoking of Tesla has long eschewed advertising, arguing the electric-car company is better off spending on product. Besides, who needs a multimillion-dollar Super Bowl spot when you can blast your cherry-red Tesla Roadster into space to the soundtrack of David Bowie's “Life on Mars”?
In addition to staging stunts like that 2018 maiden voyage of SpaceX's Falcon Heavy rocket, Musk is a master at generating viral publicity for himself and Tesla using Twitter. Sure, his posts often can be counter-productive — he's joked about the company going bankrupt, falsely claimed to have secured funding to take it private and talked down its stock price — but he also dominates news cycles and regularly engages with customers.
After spending $44 billion on the very platform he's used to great effect to build Tesla's brand, Musk now runs a company highly dependent on the clubby advertising world he never wanted his car company to go near. Charging users $8 a month for blue checkmarks isn't going to meaningfully change this — the math just doesn't work.
In one of his first acts as Chief Twit, Musk tried to assure advertisers that Twitter wouldn't become, in his words, a “free-for-all hellscape.” He met and spoke with ad executives, activists and civil rights groups, then undercut his own charm offensive by tweeting a bunk conspiracy theory, gutting the company's workforce and threatening a “thermonuclear name & shame” campaign against companies that pulled back from the service.
This week, Musk tweeted and then deleted masturbation jokes, and encouraged his followers the day before elections in the US to vote Republican. So much
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