Adin Ross and Andrew Tate Got Trolled By Their Own Chat and Martha Stewart Was Somehow Involved
Per a June 23 report, the internet's most chaotic co-streaming duo sat down for another broadcast and the audience decided the real star of the show was a 83-year-old lifestyle icon.
Darlings, when you build a streaming career on chaos, do not be surprised when chaos shows up in the chat window and starts making jokes about Entertaining magazine's favorite convict-turned-caterer.
According to a June 23 report from Fathom Journal, Adin Ross and Andrew Tate sat down for yet another co-stream, and the chat allegedly decided to spend a meaningful portion of it trolling both of them with Martha Stewart references. Per the report's headline alone, the bit landed hard enough to be worth writing about. The signal on specifics is thin, so we are sticking to what the sourcing actually gives us.
Here are the receipts, such as they are, laid out for your consideration:
- According to Fathom Journal (published June 23, 2026), a co-stream featuring both Adin Ross and Andrew Tate was the setting for what the outlet describes as a chat-orchestrated Martha Stewart trolling session. The outlet named the clip with an alphanumeric tag (wvJ5Z92902), suggesting the moment was clipped and circulated.
- This is at minimum the third publicly documented Tate-Ross co-stream event in roughly a week, following the June 21 Army-content broadcast already in the known record and the June 17 motivational speech session. Per the pattern, these two are streaming together at a pace that suggests either a genuine creative partnership or a mutual understanding that co-streams move numbers.
- A June 14 stream recap also surfaced in monitored sources, per Mshale, described as a "full stream" between the two. That one came with no notable troll incident attached, which means the Martha Stewart bit is, allegedly, a fresh escalation in the audience's willingness to turn the chat into the actual show.
Now. What does Martha Stewart have to do with Adin Ross and Andrew Tate, two men who have built their brands on a very specific flavor of loud masculinity? Absolutely nothing. Which is, of course, the entire joke. Chat figured out that the most disruptive thing it could send into that particular stream was a grandmotherly woman famous for linen napkin folding and a brief federal stay, and chat was correct.
And if this feels familiar, it is because the audience hijacking the narrative is something that follows Adin Ross like a very committed intern. The Lil Tjay apology, the Blueface payment allegations, the Sean Strickland review of his MMA event: in every case, someone else ends up controlling the story. This time it was the chat. Next time it will be someone with a lawyer.
We wish both streamers strength in this trying time of being outwitted by anonymous commenters with a shared appreciation for fine china and prison memoirs, my loves.
Martha Stewart has not commented. She is probably baking something.