- On Jan. 30, a comedian praised former acting Attorney General Sally Yates on Twitter for refusing to execute President Trump's immigration order.
- Real estate agent Tony Brust responded to Oswalt's tweet with a reference to Oswalt's deceased wife, Michelle McNamara.
- Oswalt and Brust went back and forth on the social media platform, which may have resulted in Brust being fired from the Peoria-based brokerage he worked for.
These days, Twitter seems to be the first place people go to air out grievances, call out detractors and share opinions â some of which can unwittingly become the catalyst for an all-out internet beef.
On Jan. 30, comedian Patton Oswalt posted a tweet in defense of Sally Yates, the former acting attorney general who criticized President Trumpâs immigration ban and was then fired.
Trump: âYou leave this White House now!â Sally Yates rides bus to city. Becomes a taxi dancer. Leads dance revolt against pimp. Triumphs.
â Patton Oswalt (@pattonoswalt) January 31, 2017
Although Oswalt got some praise for his tweets about Yates, he drew the ire of some others â including Peoria-based real estate agent Tony Brust, who responded in a now-deleted tweet that read: âOh (bleep), the little troll has an opinion again.â
Oswaltâs fans immediately began tweeting back at Brust, unhappy with his comment. Brust then tweeted another more personal jab at Oswalt by making references to the comedianâs late wife, Michelle McNamara, who unexpectedly died in April 2016.
Allegedly, Brust tweeted he was psychically âchannelingâ McNamaraâs opinion about her husbandâs thoughts on Yates.
Oswalt sent out a flurry of now-deleted tweets in response to Brust, including tweets mocking some of Brustâs listing descriptions with lines such as âTotally Not A Murder House,â and âPersonally crop dusted by Tony Brust.â
The next morning, Oswalt deleted many of his tweets and put out a statement on his Twitter page:
Wouldâve happily ignored Tony Brust if he hadnât sent THIS Tweet. But he did and it caught me at a dark moment: pic.twitter.com/yflAMuSAqo
â Patton Oswalt (@pattonoswalt) January 31, 2017
Meanwhile, Brust apparently deleted his Twitter profile and professional website. His LinkedIn page said he was an agent for Jim Maloof/Realtor in Peoria, Ill., but the brokerage says Brust no longer works for him.
When asked if Brust was fired due to his Twitter conduct, the brokerage refused to elaborate on the circumstances.
Oswalt, who apparently caught wind of Brustâs circumstances, made one last tweet about the spat:
đ¶And it seems to me
You lived your life
Like a realtor in Peoria pic.twitter.com/OGZbq1cyH5â Patton Oswalt (@pattonoswalt) January 31, 2017