And here’s an article where he makes fun of the LGBTQ community on the internet – claiming that maybe it’s not always “okay” to be gay:

Making fun of people on the internet is what gave Maddox his three-book deal with Simon & Schuster. Making fun of people on the internet is what gives Maddox the ability to perform at LA comedy theaters like UCB or The Pack.

And like all bullies, he can dish it…but he can’t take it.

So when I made fun of him on the internet, via a “diss” album that unexpectedly spent three weeks on the Billboard Comedy charts, he went where he could do the most damage:

He went for my job.

He started in January of 2017, by inventing a fictitious reporter persona named “Heather S.” who worked for “Conde Nast.” “Heather” emailed not only my employer — but also my clients, as evidenced below:

Please note: their contact address is “4 Tims Square.”

I’d hope this would go without saying, but this entire email is filled with lies. I’m no fan of the “alt-right” — far from it. When a moderator from the notorious pro-Trump website “The Donald” talked smack about me online for calling myself a feminist, I faced off against him in a UFC ring:

When Michael Dukakis lost the election in 1988, I cried in the middle of my catholic school class. In 2004, I walked off my job at Mad TV in support of the writers strike:

from 2004, apologies for the pre-broadband resolution

For god’s sake: I even kept an adorable Bernie Sanders action figure on my desk! I would make him yell things like, “I want 99% of your M&M’s” at my co-workers. I loved Lil’ Bern!

So his phony email attack didn’t work…as it was ludicrously false on its face. And if you’re not convinced Maddox sent the false email, here’s him admitting to doing it under oath:

When his phony email attack tarring me as an “alt-right” misogynist failed, he stepped things up.

He sued me, my employer, and – so they’d have to spend money on an expensive outside law firm – their in-house legal counsel.

I received my summons in the middle of the workday, on or around November 15th, 2017. Just five days later, on November 20th, this article appears in the world’s largest advertising news outlet: