This comic had a horrible 2020 and his 2021 isn’t looking much better.

No one is hiring him and he is doing everything he can to avoid having to get a real job.

No company will hire him once they find out what made him unemployable in the first place.

Chris D’Elia
American stand-up comedian, actor, writer, and podcast host. He is known for playing Alex Miller on the NBC sitcom Whitney, Danny Burton on the NBC sitcom Undateable, Kenny on the ABC television series The Good Doctor and Henderson on the Netflix thriller series You

Chris D’Elia, Accused of Using Social Media to Groom Teens, Pivots to TikTok

This article was originally published on Humorism, a newsletter about labor, inequality, and extremism in comedy. Subscribe here to get posts like this in your inbox.

Chris D’Elia, the comedian accused of pursuing sexual encounters with underage girls, is on TikTok, the app for teens. After posting on the video-sharing service four times between July 2019 and June 2020, when the allegations against him surfaced, D’Elia started posting regularly this past March, the same month he resumed podcasting.

A quick refresher. Last June D’Elia was accused by numerous women on Twitter of conduct ranging from solicitation of nudes to sexual assault. In many cases the women were allegedly underage when the conduct occurred. In a statement to TMZ, D’Elia said he “never knowingly pursued any underage women,” but that he did “get caught up in my lifestyle.” In July, Netflix axed a prank show it was producing with D’Elia and Bryan Callen, who was himself accused of sexual assault later that month. In September, two women accused him of exposing himself to them. After an eight-month intermission from public life, D’Elia released a video on his YouTube page this past February. He again denied any illegal or nonconsensual conduct and claimed he was in recovery from a sex addiction that drove him to sleep with his fans. In March, he was sued over allegations that he sexually exploited and solicited child pornography from a 17-year-old fan when he was 34. The plaintiff voluntarily dismissed her lawsuit in April, perhaps a sign of an out-of-court settlement.

D’Elia has 675,000 followers on TikTok, even more than his 553,000 YouTube subscribers. His content is nothing remarkable. In his first post back in March, he banters with his fiancée, animator Kristin Taylor, about his nose hair, the camera centering a shirtless D’Elia while Taylor remains out of frame. Many of his videos concern his domestic life, featuring Taylor, their son Calvin, and D’Elia’s parents. Some are clips from his podcast or stand-up specials, such as the routine “What Drunk Girls Are Really Like” from his 2013 Comedy Central hour. In other posts he tries popular TikTok challenges and mocks critical comments from other users, like one who said he’s not funny.

A Mashable feature about the D’Elia accusations last June detailed his alleged use of social media to groom underage fans. One woman said she liked his photos on Instagram and “immediately” started receiving messages from him. Another said she was a high school senior when she tweeted at him after a show. He responded with a direct message and later “tried to hook up” with her and her friend in a hotel room. Another said she was 15 or 16 when he messaged her on Twitter, later moving the conversation to text messages, where he offered to trade career advice for nudes. Another said she was 17 when a 30-year-old D’Elia sent her flirtatious Facebook messages and asked for her number in 2011. Another said she was 17 or 18, and told him as much, when he insisted she visit him in Los Angeles because he “wanted to get naked” with her. The Los Angeles Times contemporaneously spoke with a woman who said D’Elia sent her flirtatious Snapchat messages in June 2017, when he was 37 and she was 19. As all these allegations came to light, a clip from the podcast The Fighter and the Kid made the rounds on Twitter. It showed D’Elia’s apparently shocked reaction to the news that Snapchat users can screenshot messages. – Source

Chris D’Elia quietly unloads Beverly Hills mansion amid controversy

Chris D’Elia secretly sold his Beverly Hills pad for $5.8 million amid controversy surrounding sexual-harassment allegations against him.

The home was never publicly available for sale, and the deal was done quietly in an off-market transaction last month.

This comes less than a year after the comedian was accused of sexual harassment, grooming and solicitation of nude photos by multiple underage girls.

D’Elia, 41, has denied the allegations saying that he had neither “knowingly pursued any underage women at any point” nor “met or exchanged any inappropriate photos with the people who have tweeted about me.” – Source


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