# THIEL DID IT! Inside the media's deranged obsession with blaming Peter Thiel for everything > Published on ADIN (https://adin.chat/s/thiel-did-it-inside-the-medias-deranged-obsession-with-blaming-peter-thiel-for-everything) > Type: Article > Date: 2026-05-21 > Description: Pick a podcast. Any podcast. If the host once said something nice about Bitcoin, hates The New York Times, or wore a vest on camera, somebody in a blue-check byline is right now typing the words "Thiel-backed." It's a tic. It's a tell. And it's everywhere. A Kick streamer named Clavicular goes... Pick a podcast. Any podcast. If the host once said something nice about Bitcoin, hates The New York Times, or wore a vest on camera, somebody in a blue-check byline is right now typing the words "Thiel-backed." It's a tic. It's a tell. And it's everywhere. A Kick streamer named Clavicular goes viral with bone-smashing memes and looks-maxing bits, and within weeks Channel 5's Andrew Callaghan is on the case suggesting Peter Thiel is the secret financier. A dating app for Republicans launches -- Thiel money. A culture mag in Brooklyn pops up -- must be Thiel. A new heterodox university? Thiel. A vibe shift in Manhattan nightlife? Somehow, Thiel. There is a real and growing genre of journalism whose entire thesis is "follow the German guy." The trick works like this. Step one: identify a thing the writer finds annoying -- a podcaster, a startup, a magazine, a fashion micro-trend, a guy with an opinion about cities. Step two: locate a single seed check, an LP commitment in a fund-of-funds three layers removed, a one-time speaking engagement, or, if all else fails, an ideological vibe. Step three: append the words "Thiel-backed" or "Thiel-aligned" to the headline. Step four: collect retweets from people who haven't read past the subhed. What's bizarre is how rarely anyone shows the receipts. "Thiel-backed" has become a free-floating adjective, untethered from cap tables. Sometimes it means he wrote a check personally. Sometimes it means Founders Fund did, which is not the same thing -- Founders Fund has its own partners, its own LPs, its own deal flow. Sometimes it means a portfolio company of a portfolio company hired the person. Sometimes it means literally nothing except that the writer sniffed something right-coded in the air. Try verifying it sometime. Go ahead. Pull up a "Thiel-funded" claim about your favorite anti-woke podcast or your least favorite trad-fashion brand and try to find the actual transaction. You'll find a Vanity Fair piece quoting a Politico piece quoting a Business Insider piece quoting an anonymous source who "is familiar with the funding." Nobody links the SEC filing. Nobody names the entity. Nobody asks why a billionaire who could move markets with a tweet would bother seeding a $40k indie magazine in Bushwick. The right-wing and alt podcast ecosystem has figured this out and it's now a running joke. Every time a host launches a new show, a side project, a Substack, a clothing line, the comments fill up with "lol congrats on the Thiel check" and "enjoy the Founders Fund money." Half the time the host plays along -- yes, the wire transfer landed, please send Curtis Yarvin a fruit basket -- because they know the whole framing is a bit. The accusation has been so over-deployed that it has lost any actual informational content. It's the new "in the pay of Big Pharma," except the alleged paymaster reads Carl Schmitt for fun. Why does this keep happening? A few theories, none of them flattering to the media. One: it's lazy. Naming a single villain is easier than explaining a coalition. There is a real, large, ideologically diverse network of tech money flowing into politics, media, and culture right now -- Marc Andreessen, David Sacks, Bill Ackman, Joe Lonsdale, Elon Musk, Vivek, Palmer Luckey, the whole RETVRN-pilled crowd, plus a much larger tail of mid-tier check-writers. Mapping that ecosystem requires reporting. Writing "Thiel-backed" requires a thesaurus. Two: Gawker. The man literally bankrupted a media company in 2016 and the industry has not emotionally recovered. Every editor who lived through it now sees Thiel as the original sin of tech-versus-press, which means his name gets reached for the way an older generation reached for Koch. The new "Objection" startup he's backing -- yes, that one is actually his, founded by the same guy who ran the Hogan lawsuit -- has poured gasoline on this. A Thiel-backed AI tool to grade journalists is real, it is happening, and it is going to make every "Thiel-backed" headline for the next decade about ten percent more frantic. Three: it's a smear by association that's still legal in polite company. You cannot just call a podcaster a Nazi anymore without getting laughed at. But you can call them Thiel-aligned and let the reader's imagination do the rest. It is the cleanest way to say "this person is bad and you should not listen to them" without having to actually engage with anything they said. It launders ideological dismissal through the appearance of financial disclosure. Four -- and this is the part nobody in the industry says out loud -- Thiel is genuinely interesting and most of the people writing about him are not. He funds weird stuff. He says weird stuff. He has a coherent worldview that includes the Antichrist, declining birth rates, the failure of the university, the stagnation of the physical world, and the corruption of the press. You can disagree with all of it and still notice that he is more intellectually alive than 90% of the people covering him. Slapping his name on a story is a way to import some of that voltage into otherwise inert copy. The funniest part is that the obsession itself probably helps him. Every time a journalist invents a Thiel connection that turns out to be three degrees removed or completely false, the next real Thiel story gets a little less credible. The boy-cried-wolf math is brutal. By the time something genuinely Thiel-backed shows up -- and the Objection thing is genuinely Thiel-backed, and it does deserve serious scrutiny -- half the audience has already filed it under "media freakout." There's a healthier version of this beat. It would name actual entities. It would distinguish between a personal check, a Founders Fund deal, a Mithril deal, a 1789 deal, a Pronomos deal, and a person who once attended a dinner. It would acknowledge that ideology is not capital and that vibes are not investments. It would do the boring work of reading the Form D. Instead we get a media ecosystem where "Thiel-backed" has become the new "industry plant" -- an accusation that doubles as an explanation, a vibe wearing a press badge. Everyone uses it. Almost nobody verifies it. And the more the press leans on it, the more its targets get to laugh at the press for leaning on it. Somewhere in Miami a billionaire is reading these stories with mild amusement, writing actual checks to actual things, and watching an entire industry torch its own credibility one false attribution at a time. He probably has notes.