"Dick Tator" is not an ESPN reporter. The account got called out by Johnny Manziel, then framed that tweet.

There are a whole lot of strange Twitter accounts out there looking to gain attention with apparent scoops, including those impersonating the likes of Adrian WojnarowskiAdam Schefter, Ian Rapoport or Ken Rosenthal. And we’ve also seen people make up news with fake sites or fake Twitter accounts, with those reports then getting picked up by actual media. The saga of Johnny Manziel’s release by the Montreal Alouettes and ban from the Canadian Football League as a whole over unspecified violations of his agreement with the league saw an odd combination of those two things, though, with one of the people claiming to have quotes from Manziel on this being an account that goes by “Richard Tator” (@RealDickTator”), uses a stock photo as their avatar, and has their bio call them an “@ESPN Beat writer, covering anything sports related” (before getting to “parody account” much later, and only after notable CFL figures started retweeting him).

That account wound up showing up very high in the Twitter discussion of trending topic “Manziel,” with seemingly-plausible claims from Manziel and his agent. The only problem? Those claims get a lot less plausible if you consider them as from “@RealDickTator,” a made-up punny name for someone who doesn’t appear to actually have any affiliation with ESPN and also seems to have stolen their account photo. But that account still got a lot of attention Wednesday for its tweets about Manziel, his agent, the AAF and more, leading to Manziel himself saying that the claims from “Tator” were false:

https://twitter.com/JManziel2/status/1100873427953438720

Meanwhile, “Tator” reacted with further tweets, and then a framing of the Manziel tweet:

https://twitter.com/RealDickTator/status/1100885088009707522

https://twitter.com/RealDickTator/status/1100904191004938241

It’s unclear what the goal is here for whoever’s running the “Tator” account; if it’s just to get attention, they’ve certainly accomplished that, and made a number of people who took them at face value look dumb in the process. (Or maybe that’s the goal, seeing just who in sports would believe that an ESPN reporter they’d never heard of named “Dick Tator” was a legitimate source.) And they even got a quote retweet from Manziel calling them out. But yeah, people should have been dubious of someone going by “Dick Tator,” of someone claiming to work for ESPN with nothing to support that (ESPN may employ a zillion people, but they tend to have actual presence on ESPN’s website), and of someone whose past tweets include ripping off the Onion, making fake claims about Jussie Smollett, and posting fake Robert Kraft t-shirts:

https://twitter.com/RealDickTator/status/1100485090914828290

https://twitter.com/RealDickTator/status/1099023143593746433

https://twitter.com/RealDickTator/status/1099008466637778946

Other old tweets from “Tator” include a bunch that just took legitimate sports reports from ESPN or other sources and claimed them as his own. But none of those got all that much attention; the Manziel one did, maybe because there’s so little actual information on it out there. At any rate, this account certainly did pick up some notoriety Wednesday. And that’s yet a further reminder to be careful who you retweet.

About Andrew Bucholtz

Andrew Bucholtz has been covering sports media for Awful Announcing since 2012. He is also a staff writer for The Comeback. His previous work includes time at Yahoo! Sports Canada and Black Press.