If you haven't had to go back and read, view or watch something over again not once but several times this year while staring in disbelief, you haven't been paying attention.
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It's a fairly safe bet that crypto will have more than a little weirdness going on at any one time, and this year was no exception.
What were the 50 biggest crypto stories of 2022? You decide!
From Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg's 90s-quality metaverse selfie that arguably knocked tens of billions off its stock price — to Donald Trump's six-pack packing NFT collection and the Chief Twit's sink — it's been a year with plenty of open-mouthed stare-worthy events.
Without further ado, here are 15 of our favorites:
15. Miami Nightclubs Miss the Crypto Bros
14. Trust Me, I'm An Actor
For example, @unusual_whales said on Twitter:
"It seems to trivialize millions of retail investors, seemingly diminishes one of the most important market movements of 2021, and appears to poke fun at millions of average people joining the market. Ouch."
One game show-themed version has a contestant choosing among categories that include stock tips from your uncle, FOMO, crypto to the moon, and guaranteed returns. She chooses "celebrity endorsements" which brings up a celebrity who says: "You should buy crypto. Trust me. I'm an actor."
13. Vitalik the Alien Crackhead
Another posted an old Buterin website bio claiming that his belief in the need for decentralized systems came from his days playing World of Warcraft after Blizzard nerfed his "beloved warlock's Siphon Life spell." He added:
"I cried myself to sleep, and on that day I realized what horrors centralized services can bring."
12. Tornado Dusting
Seeing as it's not possible to block a cryptocurrency transaction — and Americans are required to block transactions from sanctioned sources — the "dusting" attack left the recipients in violation of the law. The Treasury said, yes, the celebrities would have comply by filing reports, but that it would "not prioritize enforcement" of delays in that reporting by the dusted individuals.
11. "Are You Guys Into Crypto????"
Nor does slapping #ad at the end of a list of seven project-specific hashtags after telling her followers that "a few minutes ago, the E-Max developers burned 400 trillion EMAX, literally 50% of their admin wallet giving back to the entire E-Max Community."
Securities endorsers must specify how much they've been paid, among other things.
10. Let's Go Brandon Coin
Crash and burn doesn't really do the Let's Go Brandon Coin (LETSGO) justice. In NASCAR terms, it's more, smash into a wall, go airborne, flip three times and collapse in a flaming heap that takes another car out with it. Now essentially dead and valueless.
A MAGA-themed memecoin, LETSGO was named for the moment when NBC's Kelli Stavast reportedly misunderstood a crowd — very clearly — chanting "F*** Joe Biden" as "Let's Go Brandon" while interviewing driver Brandon Brown after a victory. Picked up by Republicans like Florida Gov. Ron Desantis and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz as a vaguely subtle way to flip off the president, it turned into a meme before a cryptocurrency.
The coin rose when Brown announced it would be a sponsor logo on his car, then dropped a few days later when NASCAR said no. But it got extra attention when the dumpster fire that is one-term North Carolina Rep. Madison Cawthorn was fined $15,000 by the Congress for promoting the cryptocurrency after having invested in it.
9. Seth Green's Bored Ape
You'd have thought Bored Ape Yacht Club (BAYC) NFTs had pretty much gotten as much hype as they were going to, but then in May it came out that comedian and actor Seth Green was planning to use BAYC #8398 — Fred — as the star of an otherwise live-action TV show.
It is set in and named for New York City's White Horse Tavern — a West Village watering hole famous as a literary watering hole for the likes of James Baldwin, Anais Nin, Norman Mailer, Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, Bob Dylan, and Jim Morrison. And Dylan Thomas, who — the story goes — drank 18 shots, fell unconscious on the sidewalk, and died a few days later in the hospital.
8. It Took You How Long?
By that time, Thevamanogari Manivel had bought herself a mansion, given lavish gifts and — more problematically — sent a large chunk to her sister in Malaysia. Who was not replying to the exchange's Australian solicitors. Manivel was ordered to repay the money she'd spent, with interest.
7. It Took You *How* Long?
6. Mike Novogratz's LUNAcy
On Jan. 5, Galaxy Digital crypto investment firm CEO Mike Novogratz showed off his new LUNA tattoo, celebrating his investment in — and faith in — the UST algorithmic stablecoin, which maintained its dollar peg via an incentivized arbitrage algorithm using partner token LUNA.
5. Everything SBF Has Said Publicly Since Nov. 2
Among the gems:
He didn't notice the giant bad bets being made by Alameda's traders because:
- He was distracted by fame
- He was too busy with FTX to pay any attention to Alameda
- He completely ignored risk management
- The FTX dashboards he was looking at "substantially under-display the size" of Alameda's bets which is why he "was incorrect on Alameda balances on FTX by a fairly large number, an embarrassingly large one…. It was because of a, like, very poorly labeled accounting thing."
Bankman-Fried has been extradited to the U.S. Alameda CEO (and occasional girlfriend) Caroline Ellison and FTX co-founder Gary Wang have cut a deal to testify against him, the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York said on Dec. 21.
Which brings us back to a question George Stephanopoulos asked Bankman-Fried on Good Morning America. Speaking of Ellison, he said:
"If she's in court and you're in court and she's under oath and you're under oath, and you're asked 'Did you know that these funds were being funneled to Alameda,' what is your answer?"
After a long pause, Bankman-Fried answered:
"I did not know that there was any improper use of customer funds."
We'll see what Ellison has to say soon enough.
4. The Chief Twit
Having just spent months trashing the brand, he promptly fired half the staff and demanded the rest sign a pledge to "be extremely hardcore. This will mean working long hours at high intensity. Only exceptional performance will constitute a passing grade." Which sent hundreds more out the door with the promised severance.
He also made a big point of calling himself a "free speech absolutist" who is offering to replatform banned accounts — among them President Trump, who seems happy on his own Truth Social — and Kanye West, who was promptly re-banned for posting a swastika.
3. Donald Trump's NFT Collection
"Hello everyone, this is Donald Trump. Hopefully your favorite President of all time. Better than Lincoln, better than Washington, with an important announcement to make. I'm doing my first official Donald Trump NFT collection right here and right now."
They sold out quickly.
2. Razzlekhan
But the really funny part? They couple were busted after blockchain tracking allegedly connected a $500 gift card purchased with some of the ill-gotten gains to an account connected to them. What store was the card that (allegedly) brought down a pair of billionaires?
Walmart.