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Seth Michael Dillon (born 5 January, 1983) is an American businessman.[1] He bought conservative satire site The Babylon Bee in 2018.
Life and career
editDillon was born in Washington, D.C. His family moved frequently, as his father was an evangelical pastor. He has two siblings; his younger brother, Dan, runs Not the Bee, a companion site that publishes commentary and hosts a social media platform.[2]
Dillon studied business management at Palm Beach Atlantic University[2] from 2000 to 2004. Before buying The Babylon Bee, Dillon worked in e-commerce, selling water bottles, phone cases, and towels online.[2] He and his brother own a venture capital limited liability company that shares an address with The Babylon Bee in Jupiter, Florida.[3][4]
The Babylon Bee
editDillon is the CEO and majority owner of The Babylon Bee, buying the site in 2018.[2] As of 2020, at least 10 employees of the site are fellow Palm Beach Atlantic alumni.[5] Commenting on criticism that the site content had moved away from good-natured takes on evangelical culture to pointed political headlines following his purchase, Dillon told Religion News Service, "We still do lots of church jokes — they just don’t go as viral as the other stuff." He defended the site's move to targeting daily news stories and politicians instead of churchgoers, citing Donald Trump as an example of "an 'outrageous personality' who says outrageous things that deserve to be mocked," according to RNS. Dillon said The Babylon Bee highlights its social media conflicts in marketing to subscribers.[1]
Twitter/X suspension, relationship with Elon Musk
editAfter The Babylon Bee was suspended from Twitter for misgendering Rachel Levine in March of 2022, Elon Musk's ex-wife Talulah Jane Riley reportedly sent the billionaire a text commenting on the suspension. Riley suggested that Musk buy Twitter, then delete the site or "make it radically free-speech."[1] Dillon said Musk later called to confirm the suspension, saying he "might need to buy Twitter." Dillon also claims a Washington Post article said that on Musk's first day as CEO of the site, he "walked in the office and issued an urgent directive: bringing back the Babylon Bee."[6] While speaking at Turning Point USA’s AmericaFest in December 2023, Dillon said he gave Musk an IOU for $44 billion after Musk reinstated the account.[7] At a March 28, 2023, congressional hearing, Dillon claimed that social media companies like Not the Bee do not have a First Amendment right to censor users, arguing that censorship is conduct, rather than a form of free speech.[8]
In April 2023, Dillon said that The Babylon Bee, Tim Pool, and Minds had together sued California Attorney General Rob Bonta to block enforcement of AB 587, a state law that requires social media companies to send the text of their latest terms of service to California's attorney general twice yearly. Dillon said AB 587 violates the First Amendment.[9][10] In a similar suit brought by X Corp against Bonta, Judge William Shubb ruled the law does not.[11]
In November 2023, companies including Apple, Disney, IBM, NBCUniversal, and Sony suspended advertising on Twitter/X following Musk's expression of support of the antisemitic White Replacement conspiracy theory, as well as a report from Media Matters for America demonstrating that these companies' Twitter ads were shown next to content promoting Adolph Hitler and Nazi ideology. In response, Dillon pledged $250,000 in advertisements for The Babylon Bee on the platform. Conservative figures including Tim Pool, Benny Johnson, Gavin McInnes, and Elijah Schaffer later also promised to spend varying amounts on Twitter ads.[12]
Libs of TikTok
editFollowing the 2022 revelation that Chaya Raichik operates the far-right anti-LGBT social media accounts with the handle Libs of TikTok, Dillon announced a partnership with Raichik to "turn her heroic, high-risk work into a career." Libs of Tik Tok LLC and The Babylon Bee are headquarted in the same Jupiter, Florida office. Dillon hung up on a Palm Beach Post reporter who called to ask for his strategy for handling potential defamation lawsuits.[13][14]
Relationship with Ron DeSantis
editDillon donated $40,000 to a political action committee in support of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' re-election campaign in November 2022.[15] The following February, he spoke at a DeSantis press conference promoting the Republican governor's "Digital Bill of Rights."[16]
Feud with Laura Loomer
editIn February 2023, white nationalist media personality Laura Loomer contacted Dillon after noticing a $21,500 payment to The Babylon Bee from Friends of Ron DeSantis PAC during the Florida governor's race. Among texts intended to clarify that the relationship was not related to DeSantis' presidential campaign, Dillon told Loomer he and his colleagues were consulting DeSantis on speeches. "We help him find funny angles on Democrats," he texted Loomer. "We don’t attack Trump for him. That’s silly and false.” Dillon has also claimed that the payment was for email list rentals, the practice of allowing another party one-time use of a list of email addresses for marketing. After Loomer reportedly told Trump about the payment at a private dinner, Trump called The Babylon Bee a "non-entity" on Truth Social, following with, "You don’t spend that much money on The Babylon Bee if you’re running for Governor, in fact, you don’t spend money on The Babylon Bee if you’re running for anything!"[15]
Public Firing of Gavin Wax
editDillon fired The Babylon Bee's vice president of marketing Gavin Wax publicly following an online feud between Wax and Christina Pushaw, the rapid response director for DeSantis' 2024 presidential campaign. On May 26, 2023, Wax confronted Pushaw on Twitter, saying she had liked a tweet accusing Wax of fraudulent activity.[15] Following a back-and-forth between Wax and Dillon on the platform, Dillon tweeted at Wax, "You can take the Bee out of your bio now."[17] In a Twitter Spaces conversation, Dillon said he fired Wax over "vile and vulgar language." Wax has accused Dillon of firing him because of his support of Trump over DeSantis as the Republican presidential candidate, telling Rolling Stone after the spat, "“A lot of Trump supporters have serious questions about the Bee and their leadership’s political leanings. Trump and MAGA diehard supporters were there for the Bee when they were banned on Twitter. Over the last several months many people have become increasingly dismayed. A satire site is now attempting to turn itself into a political outlet.”[15]
Other Controversies
editDisinvitation from speaking at Palm Beach Atlantic University
editDillon's alma mater, Palm Beach Atlantic University, asked him to speak at its DeSantis Family Chapel in 2020. Students and other community members protested to university administration, citing a tweet from Dillon calling Black Lives Matter "a terrorist organization" and The Babylon Bee's anti-LGBTQ content as reasons Dillon should not be allowed to speak in a "sacred space." The school's director of alumni relations notified Dillon the day before his scheduled speech that he would no longer be allowed to speak in the chapel, moving the event to the university library. Quoting a tweet from a student expressing disappointment at the speech having been moved, Dillon accused the protestors of slander, naming and tagging a staff member.[5]
Argument with Joe Rogan
editDillon was a guest on The Joe Rogan Experience on August 16, 2022. On the topic of abortion, Rogan said victims of sexual assault should not be forced to carry a baby to term, pointing out that many such victims are minors. Dillon replied that some individuals conceived as a result of a sexual assault grow up to oppose abortion. Rogan responded, "You don’t have a right to tell a 14-year-old girl, she has to carry a rapist’s baby. ... Like, you don’t have the right to tell my 14-year-old daughter, she has to carry her rapist’s baby. You understand that?" Rogan continued to pushed for Dillon to say he agreed that sexual assault victims should not be forced to give birth; Dillon kept repeating his statement that he knows individuals conceived during sexual assault who are antiabortion.[18][19]
Mocking underage rape victim online
editOn August 16, 2023, Dillon retweeted the New York Post headline "Mississippi girl, 13, gives birth after being raped, unable to get an abortion" with the comment "She could always dress him in a 'should have been aborted' onesie so no one ever mistakenly thinks he's wanted."[20] Dillon has frequently advocated against backing down amid pushback, telling World News Group, " the truth will only prevail if it’s fiercely and unapologetically defended. When I said Christian institutions need a backbone, I meant that they need to stop caring about the mob. It’s cowardly and shameful to care as much as they sometimes do."[21] Following backlash to his retweet mocking the 13-year-old sexual assault survivor, Dillon removed the post.[20]
Criticism continued as Twitter/X users shared screenshots of Dillon's deleted post making fun of a child who had been assaulted and then forced to give birth. On August 17, a Twitter user retweeted a news headline about a missing girl, adding a comment implicating Dillon baselessly. Journalist Matt Binder posted a tweet containing two screenshots from Dillon's account: one asking whether the tweet baselessly accusing him of kidnapping was legal, and a second in which Dillon wrote, "If free speech is anything, it's the right to be wrong." On August 18, Dillon bragged about profiting from Twitter engagement amid the backlash, tweeting, "I must have struck a nerve. And now they're too worked up to realize the more they troll me, the more money I make."[20]
David Horowitz Freedom Center speech
editOn October 27, 2023, Dillon spoke about The Babylon Bee's Twitter suspension at the anti-Muslim David Horowitz Freedom Center.[22][23] Dillon said, "It's good that you're finished eating" before showing a photo of Rachel Levine, the woman whose misgendering by The Babylon Bee had led to the site losing access to its account in 2022. In his speech, Dillon asked:
"Is Rachel Levine really a marginalized and oppressed person? Think about this for a second: A high-ranking, male government official. Dylan Mulvaney—oppressed? Marginalized? While sponsored by every major corporation and standing on a red carpet with flashes going off everywhere? Is Dylan Mulvaney marginalized and oppressed? What do those words mean if they apply to someone like Dylan Mulvaney? And by the way, if you make a joke about these people, you can lose your livelihood or your voice in the public square. They have the privilege of that kind of protection? I don't have that kind of protection! I don't have the power to get you suspended from Twitter for making a joke at my expense! Who has the power in our culture, in our society? Isn't it the opposite of who they say it is? I think the people who are supposedly the most marginalized and oppressed are the most powerful people in our culture. They have both the will and the power to silence anyone who so much as makes a joke at their expense. That's crazy scary power. That's tyrant power. It's oppressive. So I think when we make jokes like the one we made about Rachel Levine, we're punching up. If anything, we're punching back."[24]
Dillon also characterized gender-affirming care as "sterilization and castration and mutilation." During the question-and-answer portion, an audience member called for The Babylon Bee's critics to "go to a re-education camp" led by Dillon. Dillon chuckled and said, "All right! Now that's too far."[24] After the David Horowitz Freedom Center posted a video of the speech to Vimeo, the platform banned the organization's account for hate speech.[22]
Personal Life
editDillon lives in Juno Beach, Florida, with his wife, Tara Lynn, and their two sons.[25] He is an Ashkenazi Jew.[26] He told Fox News that his children attend Christian school, stating he believes public schools promote "woke" ideology. Dillon specifically accused public schools of indoctrination, saying,"Leftists want you to think trans identification is on the rise among youth because our culture is more accepting than ever, but that's a disgraceful lie. The confusion isn't pre-existing in kids' minds. It's being planted there."[27]
References
edit- ^ a b c Smietana, Bob (2022-11-08). "Elon Musk loves The Babylon Bee. Will he let the satirical Christian website back on Twitter?". Religion News Service. Retrieved 2024-01-21.
- ^ a b c d Graham, Jennifer (2021-11-10). "How a preacher's son made The Babylon Bee sting". Deseret News. Retrieved 2024-01-21.
- ^ "Detail by Entity Name". search.sunbiz.org. Retrieved 2024-01-22.
- ^ "Detail by Entity Name". search.sunbiz.org. Retrieved 2024-01-22.
- ^ a b Zeisloft, Ben (2020-10-03). "EXCLUSIVE: Babylon Bee CEO's Christian alma mater disinvites him from speaking in chapel". The Leadership Institute. Retrieved 2024-01-21.
- ^ Dillon, Kassy (2023-04-05). "Elon Musk praised by CEO of once-banned company for restoring free speech at Twitter". Fox News. Retrieved 2024-01-22.
- ^ Chamberlain, Dale (2023-12-18). "Babylon Bee CEO Seth Dillon Praises Elon Musk, Decries 'The Left's Attacks on Comedy' in Address to Students at TPUSA's AmericaFest". ChurchLeaders. Retrieved 2024-01-22.
- ^ "House Event 115561". House of Representatives. 2022-03-28. Retrieved 2024-01-21.
- ^ "MINDS INC, TIM POOL, and THE BABYLON BEE LLC, Plaintiffs v ROBERT A BONTA, Attorney General of California in his official capacity, Defendant". Envisage Law. 2023-04-11. Retrieved 2024-01-21.
- ^ "Assembly Bill No. 587". California Legislation Information. 2022-09-14. Retrieved 2024-01-21.
- ^ Volokh, Eugene (2023-12-28). "Requiring Web Sites to Post and Report Terms of Service Doesn't Violate First Amendment". Reason. Retrieved 2024-01-21.
- ^ Binder, Matt (2023-11-19). "Right-wing influencers pledge to bail out Elon Musk after Apple, Disney, others suspend advertising on X". Mashable. Retrieved 2024-01-22.
- ^ Persaud, Chris. "Libs of TikTok creator backed by Babylon Bee CEO of Juno Beach". The Palm Beach Post. Retrieved 2024-01-22.
- ^ "Detail by Entity Name". search.sunbiz.org. Retrieved 2024-01-22.
- ^ a b c d Suebsaeng, Adam Rawnsley,Asawin; Rawnsley, Adam; Suebsaeng, Asawin (2023-06-01). "DeSantis Is Scheming to Steal the Right-Wing Influencer Vote From Trump". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2024-01-22.
{{cite magazine}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ "DeSantis announces 'Digital Bill of Rights' legal proposal for Florida". WFLA. 2023-02-15. Retrieved 2024-02-07.
- ^ Solomon, Matt (2023-05-31). "'Babylon Bee' Becomes Social Media Hornet's Nest". Cracked.com. Retrieved 2024-01-22.
- ^ Spangler, Todd (2022-08-17). "Joe Rogan Forcefully Defends Abortion Rights in Cases of Rape: Women and Girls Should Not Have to 'F—ing Carry Some Rapist's Baby'". Variety. Retrieved 2024-01-22.
- ^ "Joe Rogan Has Heated Clash With Babylon Bee's Seth Dillon On Allowing Abortion in the Case of Rape". Mediaite. 2022-08-17. Retrieved 2024-01-22.
- ^ a b c "Seth Dillon Human Trafficking and Pedophilia Libel". Know Your Meme. 2023-08-18. Retrieved 2024-01-22.
- ^ "A chat with Seth Dillon". WORLD. Retrieved 2024-01-22.
- ^ a b Greenfield, Daniel (2023-11-14). "David Horowitz Freedom Center's Censorship Talk Gets Censored". Gatestone Institute. Retrieved 2024-01-22.
- ^ "David Horowitz". Southern Poverty Law Center. Retrieved 2024-01-22.
- ^ a b "Seth Dillon - Babylon Bee". Not Vimeo. 2023-11-07. Retrieved 2024-01-21.
- ^ "Bio-DillonS" (PDF). House of Representatives. Retrieved 2024-01-21.
- ^ Dillon, Seth (2022-11-20). "Seth Dillon tweet". Twitter. Retrieved 2024-01-21.
- ^ Dillon, Kassy (2023-05-05). "Babylon Bee CEO: It's nearly impossible to stop woke ideology from indoctrinating your children". Fox News. Retrieved 2024-01-22.