OMG 🤣 It’s NOT about Chris Proudfoot. Sebastian Rogers. Tennessee.
I gotta tell you—being an activist and an advocate for true crime, in some cases—especially when it’s the bad guys—rocking their world really does make my day.

Sebastian Wayne Drake Rogers disappeared from his secured and locked home where he resided this evening with only his military, MMA-trained, fighting mom. There were no windows or doors unlocked, and the story they give about why he disappeared just doesn’t make sense. In my opinion, his mother, Katie Proudfoot, unalived him.

And after she unalived her son, she called her husband. A three-hour phone call. In my opinion, that’s when they planned his removal from the home.

There’s a lights video that shows two flashlights leaving the Proudfoot home and heading to an unknown car parked on the side of the road—trying to avoid the cameras on Stafford Court.

However, during search efforts for their son, they had better priorities than actually searching for him. Like eating out at barbecue joints. Leaving during major search efforts to go stay in another state while their son is missing. Shopping for motorcycles during a vigil. Then leaving for a South Carolina motorcycle rally.

Chris and Katie are horrible people. I believe they did terrible things to their son—and now he is missing.

But like I said, there are a few things that really just spark my day.

I’ve called for a massive protest at the Governor’s Mansion in Nashville, Tennessee. We’re working on a date, and we are going big or going home.

This is not just about Sebastian Wayne Drake Rogers. This is about the laws in place that do not protect children. This is about all missing persons in Tennessee and what we need to do to fix the problem in this state.

Subsequently, Gallatin police are speaking about an upcoming protest. And I gotta say—it has nothing to do with Bullhorn Betty. But apparently, we’ve got Christopher Proudfoot worried. Shaking in his boots a little bit.

Should we tell him it’s not about him? I don’t know. I think he should gnaw on it for a little bit. Let me know your thoughts.

(Another speaker responds):

Seth, there is no rumor. You know my parents were not with Katie on Sunday. That’s all I’m doing, Chris.

No, you’re causing a problem because you know damn well where my parents were—at their house on Sunday night. They weren’t near Katie. They weren’t near Sebastian.

And then it was, “Okay, are there any cars around there?”

So, going back to the whole light thing—I was told there was an unidentified car sitting on my street, facing the entrance, somewhere around 3:30 or so.

All people have been doing is lying to y’all.

Anybody at this point who has been yelling from the rooftops about their son—it is ____. (Note: unintelligible/blank in original)

Sebastian—he is high-functioning autistic. He loves sitting on homes. He loves video games. He loves fishing. I’m so hungry. (Note: unclear transition; likely someone speaking casually)

He’s typically a sweet boy. He can be quite temperamental if he’s overstimulated or stressed out. He has a unique run—he runs like the Naruto anime character. When he’s excited, he likes to dab. He loves music. He loves to dance.

Life is going to continue to move forward regardless of what the outcomes are, right? Whether Sebastian walks in the door, they find him in the woods somewhere, or we never find him—every door was locked.

So what you’re saying is that the only possibility is the front door? Is that what you’re saying?

I am saying the most conceivable way this makes sense is that he walked out the front door December 7th.

He would have—

Chris Proudfoot, if you’re listening to this—I told you, you’re gonna piss me the **** off. And I don’t give a **** who knows.

Bullhorn Betty speaking again:

Well hello, my beautifuls—my beautiful people of TikTok. I’m Bullhorn Betty. We cover true crime, and we’re covering the case of Sebastian Wayne Drake Rogers.

Hey Jamie, Aaron, Maggie, Mari, Julie—it’s nice to see you. User 444, Ashley Rich, Belinda—it’s nice to see you, my love. I like the name. I understand, I understand.

Nelissa—it’s nice to see you. Mars Kim—hey guys. Sinc, Matt—it’s nice to see you. Crystal—good morning. Good morning, guys.

So—what is going on? Why are we not talking about Sebastian?

He hasn’t been found. We are Sebastian’s army.
We pray': Sebastian Rogers' parents hopeful after FBI's reward announcement
Hey Glenda—it’s nice to see you. Claudia—good morning. Armor, nothing. We’ve got nothing on him. Nothing.

So I just dropped a video. I haven’t told you guys yet, but I’m in the process of scheduling a big event. This is something that’s going to bring in 100–200 people. We haven’t done a demonstration like this in a really long time.

This is coming from a place of love. This is not L.A. We want the governor’s help, right? So we’re not going there for mischief. We’re going there for a cause. And our cause is very, very specific:

It’s about the laws that aren’t protecting children. It’s about updating criminal laws so law enforcement has more tools to use. Because a lot of kids—not just kids, people—are disappearing.

We’re trying to close the gap of people being able to hide somebody really well. That’s the problem going on in Tennessee.

Tennessee has a very vast landscape. Many of you live there or are familiar with it. You know what I mean.

It’s easy to hurt someone and hide them when you have caves, unknown wells, voids in the earth—places locals know but outsiders don’t, especially on private property passed down through generations.

In Tennessee, all you have to do is hide the victim really well, and you escape culpability. It’s basically a “no body, no crime” state.

It’s not that they truly believe there’s no crime without a body. It’s that the legal makeup of the state makes it extremely hard to bring circumstantial cases to trial. Either that, or they lack confidence in those cases.

In Florida, where I live, circumstantial cases go to trial all the time.
May be an image of 1 person and text that says 'SECURITY TREAT?!? 1グ'
So, not trying those cases in Tennessee is a real issue.

(Excuse me—I’ve got allergies, guys. Don’t mind me.)

We’ve called for this big, beautiful protest. A big gathering of voices. Again, this is not L.A. We believe in raising voices from a place of love, not hate. This is about our children. This is about affecting change.

This won’t just be a protest—it will be an event. There will be speakers. I’m hoping to get some politicians on board. We’ll have policy discussions. This will be a big, beautiful event—fighting for our kids in a loving way.

However, Christopher Proudfoot must still be watching—even though I scare him so much he filed a protective order against me.

Apparently, the outrage you see in L.A., New York, and Tampa is coming to Gallatin, Tennessee too. I didn’t know little old Gallatin had protests knocking on their door.

Gallatin is putting out a notice to residents about an upcoming demonstration—affirming the constitutional right to peaceful protest, blah blah blah.

Guys—this has nothing to do with Betty. I don’t get involved in that kind of politics. We have bigger issues—children’s issues, veteran’s issues. We don’t do nonsense. Right?

And I’d already brought up that I’m scheduling this protest. We’re forming a committee to plan the demonstration at the Governor’s Mansion.

Is he worried? Is someone going to be knocking on their door with picket signs?

I’ve never seen a man hiding so well but so curious about what’s going on.

I kind of love it. I love picking on the bad guys. I love making them sweat, putting them under the microscope.

You never know if it’s getting to them—but when you do? It’s everything.
“Do you think something doesn’t add up in this case? Drop your thoughts in the comments—I read every one.” ?