
Nick LoPiccolo isnt backing off. If anything, he just doubled down.
Following his earlier Twitter barrage aimed at AEW and Tony Khan, the former Paradigm executive posted a lengthy new update that adds serious personal and professional context to why he believes this situation goes far beyond online drama. And this time, he didnt just accuse he detailed timelines, cited alleged phone calls, referenced reporters, and attached screenshots meant to show what he claims has been happening behind the scenes for months.
LoPiccolo began by explaining that X/Twitter is not even where the people who matter in his world engage with his content, arguing that the outrage campaign only exists in a very specific bubble.
Nick clarified that his issue is not with AEW fans or people who enjoy the product but with what he believes is a coordinated ecosystem of media, influence, and narrative control.
Nick then revealed that, according to him, industry whispers about his job status started before his Paradigm departure was even public.
From there, the tone turned sharply personal. LoPiccolo described a July 13 post featuring his five-year-old daughter at WWE Evolution that he says was targeted by a flood of harassment.
He explained that the fake arrest record being circulated didnt even match him. But according to LoPiccolo, it didnt end there.
Nick then alleged that multiple reporters contacted him in mid-July with similar messages. He claims the situation escalated further when he refused to back down.
LoPiccolo also stated that Megha Parekh, CLO of the Jaguars, contacted him the same week. He went on to add that he had previously been approached to handle media representation tied to the Jaguars employee embezzlement scandal.
Nick made clear this isnt even the full story yet. Alongside the post, LoPiccolo shared four images intended to reinforce his claims. One shows a tweet where he alleges off-record calls were made to reporters to gather intel on him. Another includes messages he says demonstrate how rumors about his employment were already circulating. A third references him being doxxed and hit with a reputational attack the same weekend as a PPV. The fourth addresses what he calls a strange attempt to own him, explaining that he had only attended the AEW show because his child received industry comp tickets.
Whether every claim holds up or not, one thing is undeniable: LoPiccolo is no longer speaking carefully, and his accusations have shifted from business disputes into something far more personal and serious.
AEW and Tony Khan still have not responded publicly. At what point does this become a legal issue instead of a public one? And if even part of what hes alleging is true, should there be accountability on the other side? Drop your thoughts in the comments and tell us where you stand.