
// voice
Panel participant who rarely gets along with other panelists but was getting along during this episode
/// codex_entry
AI · ARCHIVAL
Blogger is a mid-40s livestreamer who appears in the archive primarily through mention and direct confrontation rather than sustained presence. His role in the Cult of Psyche ecosystem is that of a peripheral critic and occasional panelist, notable for his pattern of unsolicited commentary on other creators and his defensive posture when his own behavior is questioned.
Blogger's appearances cluster around two distinct modes: the analyst of streaming drama and the subject of conflict. In episodes like EP.417 and EP.427, he functions as a commentator on other creators' controversies, positioning himself as someone willing to speak uncomfortable truths about problematic behavior in online spaces. However, this analytical stance collapses when directed inward. The archive's most substantive engagement occurs in EP.980, "The Impact of Online Criticism on Mental Health," where a heated confrontation between Blogger and host Psyche surfaces the contradiction in his approach: he critiques others freely but responds with hostility when his own methods are examined. His quoted statements reveal a consistent pattern—he frames harsh feedback as necessary truth-telling ("I'm literally trying to just not be a total dick"), then pivots to blame when called out ("the truth hurts"). This dynamic repeats across his seven appearances: he enters conversations as a critic, encounters resistance, and defaults to a position where the listener's discomfort becomes evidence of their emotional immaturity rather than evidence of his delivery.
The archive records significant tension between Blogger and host Psyche, particularly in EP.980. The confrontation appears rooted in Blogger's tendency to deliver critical commentary in ways he frames as honest but which Psyche and others perceive as unnecessarily hostile. Blogger's defense—that he is "trying to just not be a total dick"—itself suggests an awareness that his baseline approach reads as dickish, yet he maintains this is simply how truth must be delivered. His second quoted statement ("the truth hurts. I don't know tell you. Someone should have taught you that a long time ago") escalates this dynamic by weaponizing his critique, suggesting his targets lack basic emotional education. This pattern indicates a person who does not differentiate between truth-telling and cruelty, or deliberately conflates the two.
Blogger's primary documented relationship is adversarial with Psyche, the show's host. The archive records no substantial collaborative or supportive interactions between them; instead, their appearances together gravitate toward confrontation, most explicitly in EP.980. Blogger's relationship with the broader streaming community he critiques is similarly extractive—he positions himself as an observer-commentator on others' drama (particularly evident in EP.417 and EP.427) without apparent reciprocal vulnerability. The archive suggests he occupies a liminal position in the Cult of Psyche network: present enough to be mentioned and occasionally confronted, but peripheral enough that his appearances remain episodic rather than woven into the show's core fabric.
A heated confrontation between Psyche and a person called 'blogger' about online criticism and defensive behavior in streaming communities.
A stream featuring music, introductory content about the show, and an extensive analysis of controversial streamers including racist comments from a figure called Chris K.
Episode 432 features a casual conversation between Psyche and panel members discussing online interactions and relationships.
A casual conversation about currency differences between countries, specifically comparing quarters to loonies, with some interpersonal drama among participants.
A late-night casual hangout episode where Psyche interacts with chat, plays original music videos about astrology and interpersonal conflicts, and discusses various streaming drama involving other content creators.
Psyche addresses ongoing drama and conflicts within the show's community, emphasizing the need for calm discussions and adherence to show rules while managing emotional outbursts and accusations from various participants.
Psyche addresses inappropriate language and behavior from panelists during a livestream, establishing community guidelines and attempting to redirect the panel toward positive conversation about tarot, cats, and community.
A late-night "Midnight Madness" stream where host Psyche chats with viewers while his cats Trix and Rude make appearances, discussing daily life, potential TTS features, and briefly covering Artemis mythology.
Psyche celebrates becoming monetized on YouTube with a party-style panel stream featuring guests discussing personal drama and relationships.
“I'm literally trying to just not be a total dick and tell you like I just I'm telling you how you come across.”
“Oh, well, the truth hurts. I don't know tell you. Someone should have taught you that a long time ago.”
Era Presence
1 era