Parody Twitter (commonly shortened to PTWT by the community) is a community on the social media platform 'Twitter' (currently known as 'X') where users imitate/roleplay as popular characters from a piece of online or physical media or original characters the users have created themselves.[1] The community gained notability after a parody account of Elon Musk surfaced onto the platform.

The size of the community is currently undetermined, but it may be over 2 thousand cocurrent members.[citation needed]

Account Layout

edit

Most Parody Accounts contain a pinned on their profile that shows the character they are roleplaying as, as well as their information if their character deviates from the original media.[2] The style of pinned varies in every account. To make sure they are not mistaken as a real account, the profile normally contains a warning that they are a Parody Account (whether that be in the name or in the bio) as per requirement by Twitter's policies.[3]

Misconceptions

edit

Contrary to popular belief, Parody Accounts and Roleplay Accounts on Twitter are not classified as the same (albeit some Parody/RP accounts have combined both), but the definition of both remain unclear.

Game

edit

In 2024, 'Parody Twitter: Story Mode' was announced. It was planned to be for PCs. The game was cancelled after the game's creator was exposed.

Controversies

edit

Deer Park Impersonation Incident

edit

On June 26th, 2024, a parody on Twitter called @deerparkpd, was created, impersonating the Police Department of the fictional village of Deer Park. The account soon received a verification badge on X that shows that they were a real police agency, despite being a parody.[4] However, there was a real location in the U.S called Deer Park, located in Texas. Upon learning this, the account owners immediately announced that they were a parody, and their verification status was removed.[4]

  1. ^ "The rise of fake, parody accounts on Twitter and how to spot them - Dubawa". dubawa.org. 2023-03-27. Retrieved 2024-08-07.
  2. ^ "Want to Start a Parody Account on X (formerly Twitter)? Here Are Some Ideas". Lifewire. Retrieved 2024-08-07.
  3. ^ "Misleading and deceptive identities policy". via Twitter Help Desk. Retrieved 2024-08-07.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  4. ^ a b Key, Malachi (2024-07-22). "How 2 teenagers accidentally impersonated the Deer Park Police Department on social media". KPRC. Retrieved 2024-08-07.