Infowars Nears Takeover by The Onion as Jones Targets Tim Heidecker’s Past Work
Alex Jones’s Infowars may be sold to The Onion, the satirical newsroom, as Jones publicizes a new line of accusations against comedian Tim Heidecker. The Onion is reportedly moving toward taking over Infowars, with Heidecker slated to serve as the site’s creative director. Meanwhile, Jones continues to push a narrative about Heidecker’s prior comedic material, circulating a fake “mug shot” and presenting it as a real indictment.
What has happened
- The Onion is said to be nearing a deal to acquire Infowars from Jones and reinvent the site under a new leadership structure that would include Tim Heidecker as creative director.
- Jones has been active on X (formerly Twitter), asserting that Heidecker’s past work contains “pro pedo/child kidnapping, torture and murder” content, and he shared a fake mug shot he claims proves Heidecker’s alleged wrongdoing.
- The post included a mug shot image drawn from a 2017 Adult Swim courtroom-style segment in which Heidecker is shown in a fictional legal setting. Jones suggested viewers should treat this as an authentic document.
Jones’s portrayal of Heidecker and the content he highlighted
- In a 30-minute segment, Jones reportedly narrated and reacted to Tim Heidecker and Eric Wareheim’s sketches, implying the material was linked to real criminal activity.
- Jones warned viewers to spread his message and to financially support Infowars as a way to “fight back against” the people he says are behind the takeover, urging his audience to engage in word-of-mouth promotion and prayer for the broadcast.
- He also touted so-called “whistleblowers” inside Adult Swim and hinted at more material he claimed hadn’t aired, though an inquiry to Jones’s site went unanswered.
Context and background
- Jones has a long history of selling merchandise and various health products, alongside promoting conspiracy theories. He was ordered in 2022 to pay about $1.5 billion to families affected by the Sandy Hook Elementary School tragedy, a ruling tied to his repeated defamatory statements about the event.
- The current Infowars development comes after a period of legal maneuvering in 2024, when a court-appointed trustee and Sandy Hook families supported The Onion’s bid to assume Infowars. An initial judicial block gave way to a licensing arrangement that would allow The Onion to use Infowars intellectual property, though this deal still requires court approval.
- The Onion publicly framed the development as a transition away from a platform that has long thrived on sensationalism, while Jones framed the situation as part of a broader battle against what he calls Satanic influences and inside access to “the real truth” about the site’s new owners.
The Onion’s response and public statements
- Ben Collins, cited in the reporting as a representative of The Onion, criticized Jones’s use of the purported mug shot and described the incident as an example of questionable reporting methods. The Onion signaled enthusiasm for moving beyond the era represented by Infowars, while suggesting the new direction could be more responsible and credible.
- The company emphasized its intention to launch a refreshed platform in the near term, aiming to “kick off next week” with a new project that moves away from the tactics Jones has used.
- The situation involves ongoing legal and corporate processes, with licensing and approvals still in flux. Readers should note that much of the material Jones has circulated as “evidence” has been contested, and the authenticity of some claims remains unverified.
Looking ahead
- If the deal proceeds, Infowars would transition to The Onion’s ownership, with Heidecker as a key creative figure. The timeline and final terms hinge on court approval and negotiations among parties.
- As the drama unfolds, questions remain about how the platform will handle past controversies, how it will present new content, and what role Jones will continue to play amid these developments.
By Mia Sato