Rep. Lauren Boebert became the first sitting member of Congress with a Cameo account. So why did it disappear after one day?
The rightwing politician from Colorado briefly joined the video-sharing platform before apparently deactivating her account.
Rep. Lauren Boebert became the latest Republican to join Cameo, where she offered videos for $250, but may have broken House ...
Boebert has set up an account on Cameo, the platform confirmed to Newsweek. But House rules limit how much she can make from ...
Boebert managed to stay in Congress during the past election thanks to switching to a safer, more conservative district after ...
Rep. Lauren Boebert took down her Cameo page on Monday amid questions about whether it could violate House Ethics Committee ...
Boebert briefly joined the personalized video messaging app Cameo over the weekend, only to quickly shut down her account ...
Anyone with a spare $250 who wants to hire U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert to record a personalized video message may have to wait ...
Colorado U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert broke new ground over the weekend when she became the first sitting member of Congress to ...
Originally Lauren Boebert's Cameo page labeled her a 'politician' but it was later updated to the 'influencer' category ...
Lauren Boebert of Colorado quickly became one of Congress’ most controversial members. Six months into her first term, The ...
Boebert appears to have been the first sitting member of Congress to attempt to sell made-to-order video clips on Cameo.