âDril is a real person, or so I had been toldâ
âWith 1.7 million highly engaged followers, Dril is one of the more powerful Twitter users and, by default, one of the more powerful figures on the internetâ
âPaul Dochney, who is 35, does not, in fact, look like a mutant Jack Nicholsonâ
âIn essence, the character of Dril was born on Something Awful, an outsider comedy website that had particularly popular message boards and file-sharing forums in the 2000sâ
âCynicism and brashness defined the Something Awful aestheticâ
âAt that time, Dochney went by âgigantic drillâ on the site, a name he came up with when he was still a teenager. âIf there was some inspiration behind it, Iâve forgotten it by now,â he saidâ
âThe handle â@drillâ with two lâs was taken, so â@drilâ it was.â
âThe character of Dril is fluid, but taken as a whole, the blurry image starts to come into focus: Itâs that of an easily agitated, overly confident, wildly crass, IBS-ridden middle-aged man thrashing away on a computerâprobably a PCâ
âHe is the dark, democratic promise of the internetâthat anyone can use it to broadcast their opinions at any timeâfulfilledâ
âThere is plenty to learn about Twitter through Dril, but less to learn about Dril through Twitterâ
âTwitter, for what itâs worth, seems to value Drilâs presence, as he is reportedly one of about 35 elite users, along with the likes of LeBron James and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, currently being âboostedâ on the siteâ
âPosting, in its various forms and locations, is a skill, and Dochney knows how to recognize it as well as anybody. Donald Trump, he noted, is âa very good posterââa skill that is likely bolstered by the fact that heâs also âlegitimately probably nuts, a little bit.ââ
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