The types of viral DARVO rhetoric that have been leveraged against celebrity women like Amber Heard are now being weaponized against everyday, working-class women who report sexual violence. And AI is helping accelerate these narratives. My latest dispatch from hell:
spitfirenews.com/p/doordash-a…— Kat Tenbarge (@kattenbarge.bsky.social) October 24, 2025 at 10:54 PM
Kat Tenbarge breaks down the confusing turned terrifying Tiktok DoorDash story
A female DoorDash driver (Livie) posted a video about how she got sexually harassed by a customer and that DoorDash won’t do anything
the incident: she delivered the food and the male customer was naked from the waist down on the couch behind an open door
depending on the jurisdiction this is a nonconsensual sexual act
comments were first on her side but soon turned the male customer into the actual victim
Livie’s DoorDash account has been suspended
Livie has a video of the incident but tiktok took it down over the customer’s nudity
DoorDash says she shouldn’t have taken a video of a customer, tiktok comments agree with this
Since there is good money to be made with misogyny commentary channels have been all over this, including AI-generated content
“As long as misogyny continues to profit and resonate with mass audiences, there’s nothing stopping the churn, and AI can further accelerate the spread of DARVO narratives online.”
Kat Tenbarge links this to a pattern of DARVO (Deny, Attack, Reverse Victim and Offender) that has been leveraged against celebrity women