A recent livestream shows ZeroDarkTony reacting to DOA clips about narrative manipulation, escalating targets, and an alleged PI business—culminating in a visible shift from deflection to threats.
ZeroDarkTony fired back after the HNZ podcast episode—but his response doubles down on subpoenas, “felony conspiracy” claims, and a version of the law that doesn’t hold up under scrutiny.
ZDT identifies Chee’s husband on-air, targets him with explicit abuse, and later makes an implied allegation about DOA: “Because he’s the next Lorne.”
ZDT targets both Chee and Scott (DOA) in a Rumble livestream, escalating from slurs to threats—claiming he’s “working with LAPD,” warning “this is going to affect you legally,” and describing how easily he could have confronted Scott in person, with “nothing he would have been able to do.”
A recent livestream shows Zero Dark Tony escalating accusations and invoking federal action toward Chee, who has not responded.
ZeroDarkTony issues copyright strikes on Krackhead Kenny, as a feud plays out like Days of Our Lives—with viewers funding the drama live.
YouTube creator ZeroDarkTony (Anthony D’Amato) claimed that online critics documenting his broadcasts are engaged in harassment and warned that anonymous accounts could face subpoenas, lawsuits, and police reports as he seeks to identify those behind the criticism.
ZeroDarkTony predicts arrests, witness testimony from his mother, and a courtroom confrontation during a livestream dispute tied to a restraining order case that was previously dismissed.
ZeroDarkTony rejected claims of perjury and told viewers he was gathering links for potential subpoenas related to his dispute with “Krackhead Kenny,” specifically asking chat to retrieve material from a critic known as “Gang Gang.”
A drama-filled “mean girl” livestream from Sticker Chick mixes legal threats, personal attacks, and shifting accusations—where serious claims are made loudly, but never clearly supported.