OMG. We cannot. We literally cannot.
Meet Gerry McAuliffe — convicted arsonist, alleged narcissist, confirmed chaos machine, and somehow… still hot. Like, "why is my brain doing this" hot.
Yes, this man. The one tied to a fire that left one man dead and a young girl scarred. Tragic. Horrifying. Unforgivable.
And yet the internet is doing what it does best: turning a nightmare into a crush. The screenshots are flying. The message boards are melting. And people are saying things like:
"I KNOW he's disgusting… but if he looked at me like that I'd simply pass away."
STOP IT. No, seriously. Stop. This is not a rom-com. This is not a "bad boy" phase. This is a crime scene.
McAuliffe was sentenced earlier this week after being convicted of arson related to a blaze that destroyed a family home, killed a man who rushed in to save a child, and left his own daughter permanently scarred.
Read that again. Slowly.
Tumblr pages are already popping up. Screen names like BurnForGerry and HotButUnhinged are circulating. One girl reportedly posted, "I know he's evil, but there's something so broken about him."
Girl. No.
Psychologists call this hybristophilia: attraction to people who commit violent crimes. The rest of us call it a cry for help.
During sentencing, McAuliffe barely reacted. He kept his eyes down while the judge lectured about morality, responsibility, and the irreversible damage done to multiple lives.
Reporters screamed questions as he was led away in cuffs. He ignored most of them—until one voice cut through:
"Do you really think fat is evil?"
According to witnesses, that's when he looked up. And that's when every camera suddenly got very, very quiet.
Sources say police later discovered a handwritten note taped to his computer monitor at home. Three words. No context.
Fat is evil.
Let us be clear: this is not misunderstood genius. This is not tortured artist energy. This is unchecked ego wrapped in good bone structure.
THE UNFORTUNATE FACTS:
He's lonely. He's remorseful (allegedly). And if you send him an email, he'll send you back a current photo from 2026. Yes, really.