The rightwing politician from Colorado briefly joined the video-sharing platform before apparently deactivating her account.
The most annoying member of Congress is now selling videos on Cameo, which could land her a House Ethics investigation.
A man who had been missing since 1999 has been found after his sister recognized him in a news article seeking the public’s help identifying him. The USA Today article published May 9 said the ...
“There’s a recognition in the Democratic Party that we got a tremendous boost when Kamala took over from Joe Biden, and that ...
Ethics experts questioned whether the paid video app might violate rules against sitting members of Congress receiving money ...
Boebert's profile described her as an influencer who is a "Jesus-loving, Constitutionalist, America first, freedom fighter." ...
Boebert has set up an account on Cameo, the platform confirmed to Newsweek. But House rules limit how much she can make from ...
On Tuesday, Ai2, the nonprofit AI research organization founded by the late Paul Allen, released OLMo 2, the second family of ...
Boebert's stint on the personalized video site may have violated rules as she's still an active member of Congress ...
Colorado Rep. Lauren Boebert started the weekend offering personalized videos on Cameo for $250 a clip. But by afternoon, that account had been frozen. The Denver Post confirmed the authenticity ...
Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) briefly offered videos on Cameo, a website where public figures sell personalized videos to ...