That reads like a classic viral “shock drop” post—high on drama, low on verifiable facts.
There’s no credible reporting that Real Time with Bill Maher ever aired an episode where Bill Maher and Mel Gibson revealed a “43-person blacklist” of Hollywood figures or politicians. Claims like this usually follow a pattern:
Over-the-top language (“media massacre,” “executioner of secrets”)
Huge, precise numbers with no source (“43 power players”)
Urgency + suppression angle (“watch before it’s erased,” “being scrubbed”)
No links to credible outlets (major news organizations would be all over this if true)
If something that explosive really happened on a major HBO show, you’d see confirmation from multiple established outlets—not just viral posts.
Also, be careful with posts urging you to “click now.” They’re often used to drive traffic to low-quality sites, scams, or misleading videos stitched together to look real.
Real Time with Bill Maher ever aired an episode where Bill Maher and Mel Gibson revealed a “43-person blacklist” of Hollywood figures or politicians. Claims like this usually follow a pattern:
Over-the-top language (“media massacre,” “executioner of secrets”)
Huge, precise numbers with no source (“43 power players”)
Urgency + suppression angle (“watch before it’s erased,” “being scrubbed”)
No links to credible outlets (major news organizations would be all over this if true)
If something that explosive really happened on a major HBO show, you’d see confirmation from multiple established outlets—not just viral posts.
Also, be careful with posts urging you to “click now.” They’re often used to drive traffic to low-quality sites, scams, or misleading videos stitched together to look real.
Urgency + suppression angle (“watch before it’s erased,” “being scrubbed”)
No links to credible outlets (major news organizations would be all over this if true)
If something that explosive really happened on a major HBO show, you’d see confirmation from multiple established outlets—not just viral posts.
Also, be careful with posts urging you to “click now.” They’re often used to drive traffic to low-quality sites, scams, or misleading videos stitched together to look real.