The dispute surrounding Infowars, the website founded by conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, has entered a new phase: its potential transformation into a platform run by The Onion, the well-known satirical news site. The proposal, still pending judicial approval in Texas, marks the latest chapter in a protracted legal battle that began following Jones’s false claims about the 2012 Sandy Hook massacre, in which 26 people were killed. Those statements — in which he described the shooting as “a giant hoax” — led to defamation convictions that forced him to face payments of up to $1.3 billion and resulted in the liquidation of his company’s assets.
The current plan does not involve a direct purchase of the outlet, but rather a temporary licensing agreement. According to court documents, The Onion’s parent company would pay $81,000 per month for the use of the Infowars domain and brand for an initial six-month period, with an option to extend it. The deal, which must be approved by Judge Maya Guerra Gamble in Austin, Texas, seeks not only to leverage the site’s reach but also to redefine it: transforming a space associated with conspiracy theories into a platform that openly parodies them. Ben Collins, the company’s CEO, has explained that the initiative aims to “create characters and worlds” that mimic and ridicule those who spread misinformation online.
The idea isn’t new. In 2024, The Onion had already attempted to acquire Infowars through a court-ordered auction, but a judge blocked the deal, ruling that the best possible bids had not been obtained. However, new court rulings allowed the process to be reopened. This time, rather than acquiring the site outright, the strategy is to temporarily take control of it and publish satirical content mocking the conspiracy theories that made it famous.
The agreement also takes into account the families of the Sandy Hook victims. Part of the revenue generated by the new project would go toward compensating them, in an effort to translate a long legal battle into tangible benefits. “This is the culmination of a two-year-long effort to get some justice for the Sandy Hook families,” Collins said when announcing the plan, explaining the moral dimension the project aims to address beyond the media spotlight.
Jones, for his part, has responded with hostility. On social media and in recent broadcasts, he accused The Onion of trying to “misrepresent him in an attempt to confuse people and defame him.” In a video posted online, he even claimed that the satirical company is trying to steal his identity: “Just because you’re wearing my shirt doesn’t mean you’re me.” The founder of Infowars has vowed to fight the move in court and continue with his regular program, which could lead to further litigation if the deal gets the green light.
Meanwhile, in The Onion, the message blends irony with a fairly concrete plan. In a message signed by the fictional executive Bryce Tetraeder, the company described its vision of Infowars transformed into a deliberately chaotic space, saturated with “ads,” “scams,” and “free radical misinformation” — an exaggeration that seeks to reflect, through absurdity, the current dynamics of the internet. “The InfoWars of old was only the prototype for the hell I know we can build together,” the message states.
The project also includes a creative twist. Comedian Tim Heidecker has been announced as creative director, with the goal of turning the site into a laboratory for experimental comedy. “I just thought it would be just a beautiful joke if we could take this pretty toxic, negative, destructive force of Infowars and rebrand it as this beautiful place for our creativity,” he explained to The New York Times.
The final decision now rests with the Texas courts. The hearing on The Onion’s licensing agreement is scheduled for April 30 in Travis County. If the judge approves the agreement, Infowars could undergo an unprecedented transformation: from an iconic platform for misinformation to a media experiment that uses it as raw material for satire. Regardless of the outcome, the case raises a fundamental question about the future of the digital ecosystem: whether parody can be an effective tool not only for criticizing disinformation, but also for occupying and redefining the spaces where it is produced.
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