Enron wants to sell you a nuclear reactor for your home — no,family eroticism of course not really.
The pranksters behind the Birds Aren't Real nonsense "revived" the defunct, famously fraudulent company in December. Now, we've gotten its first "product." Of course, it's something as ridiculous as an at-home nuclear reactor.
The company's X account released a slick, faux launch video for the Enron Egg, an at-home micro nuclear reactor that can power a house for up to ten years.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The stilted delivery, pauses for applause, and cringey attempts at being cool do ring true to an actual tech presentation. And you have to give them credit for detail. The product page looks and reads quite similar to the sort of breathless copy you'd find from a tech company describing its latest phone. It promises: "Limitless Power. Perfectly Controlled."
As CNN first uncovered, Connor Gaydos — co-creator of the misinfo parody Birds Aren't Real — had his company purchase the trademark to Enron back in 2020. Now, they're doing fake products, seemingly parodying the tech industry's willingness to package dangerous ideas and products with relentless positivity.
So, no, your home will not be powered by a nuclear egg one day. But it is a good laugh.
Topics Memes
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
UGREEN Nexode 25000mAh 200W power bank drops to $79.99 at Amazon
NYT Connections hints and answers for March 21: Tips to solve 'Connections' #649.
More KFC, Taco Bell, and Pizza Hut locations will get AI
NYT Connections hints and answers for April 25: Tips to solve 'Connections' #684.
Best Fitbit deal: Save $40 on the Charge 6 at Amazon
Kentucky vs. Troy 2025 livestream: How to watch March Madness for free
How to watch 'Wicked' at home: Here's where it's streaming
What's new to streaming this week? (March 7, 2025)
'Severance' Season 2's Cold Harbor room, explained
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。