āI want to clear my name. I want to get these people to stop bothering me.ā
That was the main message from Ocean Marketingās Paul Christoforo, a former representative for N-Controlās Avenger controller attachment. He gained immediate infamy among the Internet gaming community after a hostile customer service email exchange went viral after landing on popular gaming webcomic Penny Arcade.
In a matter of hours, Christoforo went from being just another customer service agent to a focus of ire for thousands of gamers. Christoforo was featured in mocking images and videos, and the Avenger product he was representing was hit with widespread derision and negative Amazon reviews, forcing the company to publicly drop Christoforo as its marketing representative.
A chastened Christoforo is now looking for forgiveness from the Internet community he unwittingly antagonized, saying in an interview with MSNBC.comās In-Game he was ācaught on a bad dayā and that he hopes they will ālet sleeping dogs lie.ā
āTheyāve pretty much ruined me in the past 24 hours,ā Christoforo said. āIt was humbling a little bit, but life goes on. Iām not going to die.ā
That doesnāt mean Christoforo isnāt still feeling the effects from becoming a household name in certain corners of the Internet ā effects he says he was actively dealing with for 17 hours straight yesterday. While Christoforo said blocking his Google Voice number stopped an early flood of harassing phone calls, heās received over 7,000 e-mails in the past 24 hours, some containing threats against him and his wife and two-month-old son.
āItās caused me more annoyance than anything else, but there are some threats and a lot of disrespect,ā he said. āMy sonās two months old ⦠thatās uncalled for, you donāt bring him into this situation.ā
Christoforo said his wifeās Facebook page has been hammered by friend requests from people trying to get at him, and the shared stress of the entire ordeal has led to at least one major argument between the couple.
Yet despite all the drama, Christoforo said he hasnāt lost any of his other accounts, aside from Avenger. āIt hasnāt affected my business yet,ā he said. āClients have brought it up, but theyāve mainly laughed about it. I havenāt lost any clients.ā
āIf I had known, I would have treated the situation a little better.ā
Referring to the email thread that started the whole mess, Christoforo said that he didnāt know who he was talking to in his initial, flippant response to Penny Arcadeās Mike Krahulik.
āI didnāt know who that guy at Penny Arcade was,ā he admitted. āIf I had known, I would have treated the situation a little better. PAX is a great show. What he does is what Iāve been idlolizing since I was a kid. Itās admirable heās put that together. He has a lot of connections, ones I want too.ā
Yet while admitting he handled things badly, Christoforo said he also felt the situation could have been different if Krahulik approached the situation differently.
āHe called me a bully, but he was being a bully ⦠especially when he emailed me out of the blue, saying āThatās f***ing s***ty, youāre banned from PAX,ā I was like āWho the f*** are you? Thatās how you introduce yourself? ⦠I dont want to call him out, but he could have gone about that a totally different way, he could have said, āHey, I run the show, that email was a little unprofessional, if you donāt do something to apologize I donāt want you at my show.ā But he just came at me and said, indirectly, āHey, f*** you, youāre banned from PAX.ā Is that what youād call professional? I wouldnāt.ā
Christoforo also said his response was driven in part by what he saw as the disrespectful tone of the messages that came before it. āNot that I donāt have respect for anybody, but if someoneās badmouthing me or being a little punk or being a jerk, they donāt deserve respect,ā he said. āYou canāt expect to go up and say āHey you piece of s***,ā and expect respect. Send an email, introduce yourself. ⦠I trust everybody until they give me a reason not to respect them. Iām not a tough guy, not a bully, but at same time not going to take s*** if itās uncalled for.
Regarding the litany of names Christoforoās e-mail called up as potential supporters ā a list that included everyone from Epic Gamesā Cliff Bleszinski to the mayor of Boston ā he said the tactic was meant to āimpress, not to threatenā and didnāt come through correctly because āyou canāt see tone of voice in email.ā
āI donāt know the mayor of Boston,ā he admitted. āThat was taken totally out of context, I was just joking around. I am from Boston, though, and I know a lot of people people who own clubs. I know some influential people, like the guy who runs the door at the convention center.
āMaybe it was because it was email, maybe on the phone it would have been different story ⦠it would have nipped everything in the bud.ā
Looking back, Christoforo is still a little shocked that what he thought would remain a private email conversation got blown into an Internet event the way it did.
āIf this didnāt get escalated to Penny Arcade, it would have never gone viral like it did,ā he said. āUltimately, if I was able to control the customer, it never would have happened. Iāve dealt with thousands and thousands of customers with similar complaints, they were all asking the same question. When is it big enough that it hits the news? When it hits Penny Arcade, when it hits a guy who has the biggest affiliations in the industry.ā
Moving on. Despite the harassment, Christoforo says he still respects the gaming community he says heās been a part of for decades.
āI still love the gaming community, and this is not going to change my mind,ā he said. āI do think these people were a little bit excessive with the spam, digging up personal information, calling me. Not to put anyone down, but I donāt know what kind of lives these people have. ⦠Ultimately it doesnāt affect the way I think about anybody. I donāt have any hate or bad will for them, but itās a little bit sad that they didnāt have anything better to do than attack me.ā
Christoforo said heās also been able to laugh at some of the funnier parodies and jokes at his expense out there, particularly a well-made video featuring an over-the-top actor playing an exaggerated version of him.
āIām not depressed at people making fun of me,ā he said. āItās like a parody of Barack Obama. Itās making me more popular. Iām not doing anything to stop it, and it is kind of funny. ⦠Itās not the end of the world, and itāll be old news soon, but itās hot news now, and I do see the lighter side of it.ā
While Christoforo didnāt completely rule out legal action against Penny Arcade and the sources of some of the more vicious Internet slander and threats, he said he probably will not actually call an attorney. Thatās partly because heās not sure thereās a legal case to be made, but also because he doesnāt want his name dragged down any further, he said.
ā[Legal action] is something Iām not interested in doing because the community would be more pissed at me,ā he said. āRegardless of money [possibly won in a settlement], it would really ruin my name. Am I saying I care more about my reputation than money? Yes.ā
But Christoforo also sees some potential positives in all the negative attention heās been getting. His Twitter account, which has now changed names twice because he was āsick of the tweets and stuff coming in,ā has been getting a lot of new followers from the controversy, he noted, a situation that may be beneficial down the line.
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āIf these people stick with me and follow me, a couple months down the road anything I say is news,ā he said. āIf it gets me somewhere else that I wouldnāt have been where this happened ⦠itās negative now, but controversy and bad news is news and thatās just the way it is. Look at all the bad press from people in entertainment industry that turned into something good. Whether I do charity work or something good, I donāt know.ā
In the nearer term, Christoforo has entertained the idea of doing some Internet videos himself, and even considered going to PAX East, held in Boston this April, with a shirt tauntingly saying āIām Paul Christoforoā on it. āIām not sure Iād actually do that, since I donāt want to get in any fights,ā he clarified.
So what lessons has Christoforo taken from his brush with Internet infamy? āIāll definitely stay away from customer service emails,ā he said. āI could have nipped this all in the bud by being a little nicer. You never know who knows who, and lesson learned. We all have bad days and they caught me on one.ā
āAt the end of the day, Iām a human being, and it feels like the entire world was bullying me,ā he said. āI want people to like me, I donāt want people to think Iām a bad person. ⦠I made a mistake. ⦠I hope I can make something positive out of it.ā
Kyle Orland has written hundreds of thousands of words about gaming since he got his start with a Mario fan site at the age of 14. You can follow him on Twitter or at his personal web site, KyleOrland.com. Republished with permission.