As of late 2024, Rizzi has announced a new project: The Molt , described as a "live, 24/7 AI-assisted reality spectacle" starring Paul Snake and no other fixed cast members. The announcement crashed the website of their new distribution partner, a crypto-backed platform called Kinetic .
Paul Snake (born Paulus Venator, 1988) first emerged in 2019 through a series of low-fidelity YouTube shorts. Dressed in a battered leather jacket and speaking in a slow, hypnotic drawl, Snake’s early content consisted of him reciting conspiracy theories while handling live reptiles. His signature line— "They don’t want you to know the shed is the most honest part" —became an ironic mantra for a generation disillusioned with curated influencer culture.
Rizzi’s approach to content creation was revolutionary because it leaned into "edutainment." Instead of merely showing a snake being fed or handled, the content framed the reptiles as individuals with personalities. By using humor, high-production value, and narrative storytelling, the persona of "Snake" transformed these animals from scary monsters into misunderstood pets. This shift is evident in the comment sections of the associated media channels: viewers who once expressed fear began expressing curiosity. This psychological shift is a tangible contribution to popular media, proving that digital content can actively rewrite cultural tropes. Paul Snake - Regina Rizzi- Rainha do Anal XXX W...
As Snake himself said at the end of the Snake Oil finale, staring directly into the lens as Rizzi watched from a monitor off-camera: "You can build a bigger terrarium, Regina. But you can’t tame the instinct to strike." Then he smiled—just barely—and the screen went black.
High-frequency posting keeps them at the top of feeds. As of late 2024, Rizzi has announced a
Intrigued and always up for a challenge, Paul agreed to meet Regina at an old, abandoned warehouse on the outskirts of town. The meeting was set for midnight, under the light of a full moon.
Their partnership—born out of a bizarre viral moment on a defunct streaming platform—has spawned a micro-genre of content that critics are calling "post-reality grunge." But to understand their impact, one must first understand the serpent and the showrunner. Dressed in a battered leather jacket and speaking
The duo is not without scandal. In early 2024, a leaked internal memo from a major studio described Rizzi’s demands for a potential Snake Oil film adaptation as "uninsurable." Meanwhile, Paul Snake’s refusal to verify any details of his past has led to rampant speculation—some claim he is a former child psychologist; others, an escaped performance artist from a forgotten Euro-art collective. Snake himself fuels the fire, telling The Guardian last month: "Every origin story is a cage. I prefer to be the shed skin."
Moreover, the very act of "teaching" audiences to deconstruct popular media may lead to a joyless consumption of art. If every sitcom is a "psychological tax," when do we simply laugh?
A natural question arises: How do Paul Snake and Regina Rizzi monetize this? The answer is as subversive as their art. They reject platform-exclusive deals, preferring a decentralized model: