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STRC Commercial Gets the ‘Gigaslop’ Treatment — Saylor’s Retirement Ad Backfires in Real Time – Crypto News Bitcoin News
Saylor Posts AI Resort Ad for STRC, Crypto Twitter Calls It a Bearish Top Signal
The post, which has since racked up more than 1.67 million views on X, features an artificial intelligence (AI)-designed woman at a luxury tropical resort claiming she retired early on monthly dividends from STRC, Strategy Inc.’s Series A Perpetual “Stretch” Preferred Stock.
The stock is listed on Nasdaq with an ~11.5% annualized dividend paid monthly, proceeds directed toward buying more bitcoin. The video carries heavy disclaimers: not FDIC-insured, not a bank deposit, subject to bitcoin volatility risk, not suitable for everyone. Saylor paired it with a five-word caption:
What followed was anything but a retirement party. A considerable number of observers took aim at the advertisement with pointed criticism. Jason Calacanis, a prominent tech entrepreneur, angel investor, and podcaster, wrote:
The community landed on a working label fast: “AI slop.” Critics called it “gigaslop,” “the sloppiest slop that’s ever slopped,” and “$5 Fiverr gig energy.” The production quality, cheesy resort visuals, a generic script, and obvious AI rendering did the ad no favors. Former Pharma bro Martin Shkreli, not known for measured responses, wrote “wtf is this sh*t” and followed up with “arrest this guy.”
Investor Avi Felman offered another read: “This ad will be used in textbooks. Madoff is blushing.” Udi Wertheimer quoted an old video clip for comparison, letting the parallel speak for itself. Traders weighed in on the price implications. Several called the video a top signal — the kind of aggressive retail pitch that tends to appear late in a cycle. One reply read: “This is the equivalent of telling everyone to remortgage their house and all in bitcoin.”
The optics criticism ran deeper than aesthetics. Multiple users argued that the ad frames bitcoin exposure as a passive lifestyle income in a way that makes the whole space look predatory. One reply:
A smaller group pushed back on the mockery. Some Strategy maximalists read the ad as a calculated attention grab, rage-bait that puts STRC in front of millions of eyes regardless of tone. “Genius marketing,” one user wrote. “Rage bait as many people as possible on CT to get the most eyeballs on STRC.” Others kept it simpler: “Don’t doubt this man.”
That minority view is easier to hold if you understand what STRC is funding. Strategy raises capital through equity issuance and convertible debt, then deploys it into bitcoin. The company trades at a premium to its bitcoin holdings, which critics cite as a structural argument for just buying bitcoin directly, and supporters cite as proof the market assigns value to Saylor’s accumulation engine beyond raw coin count.
Saylor’s post drew a great deal of replies and reposts. By raw numbers, it worked as a distribution play. Whether that distribution built trust or eroded it depends heavily on which account you were logged into.
Saylor has not responded to the criticism publicly as of press time.
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