Category Archives: SOCIAL MEDIA

WhistlinDiesel’s Flaming Ferrari F8 Just Landed Him in Hotter Water—With the State of Tennessee

For most YouTubers, setting a Ferrari on fire generates views. For Cody Detwiler—better known to his millions of fans as WhistlinDiesel—it may have generated something else: a felony charge.

The Tennessee-based content creator, famous for bending, breaking, and outright obliterating expensive machinery in the name of internet entertainment, was arrested this week in Williamson County. The charge? Tax evasion related to his 2020 Ferrari F8 Tributo—yes, the same one he bought, drove, wrecked, and eventually filmed fully engulfed in flames.

And in true WhistlinDiesel fashion, the video hasn’t stopped working overtime.

A Burning Ferrari and a Very Interesting License Plate

In the now-infamous clip, the F8 burns to the ground wearing Montana plates—a detail that likely caught the eye of more than just fans.

Montana LLC registration has long been the worst-kept secret among wealthy car enthusiasts who prefer to skip paying their home state’s sales tax. Registering your supercar under an out-of-state LLC is perfectly legal in Montana. In places like Tennessee, however, authorities are far less amused when residents lean on that loophole.

And according to the indictment, that may be exactly what investigators think happened.

The Charges

Detwiler and WhistlinDiesel LLC are each facing one count of tax evasion, a Class E felony under Tennessee Code § 67-1-1440(g). The statute covers any attempt to “evade or defeat any tax due the state” when the amount exceeds $500.

The indictment mirrors that threshold precisely, alleging that Detwiler tried to avoid “sales tax due on the purchase of a 2020 Ferrari F8 Tributo.” What isn’t clear is whether Tennessee believes:

  • he never registered the car in the state at all,
    or
  • he attempted to dodge taxes by registering it under a Montana LLC.

For context: WhistlinDiesel LLC is indeed registered in Montana, a state that has practically turned tax-friendly vehicle registration into an industry.

With more states cracking down on the practice, it’s no shock Tennessee has taken an interest.

The Arrest and the YouTube Response

Detwiler was arrested and booked before being released, then took to social media—naturally—posting clips of the arrest along with the caption:

“Won so big they thought I was cheating. (100% real not AI)”

He later added:

“I didn’t do ANYTHING.”

His trademark bravado remains intact, but the legal situation is very real. Detwiler is scheduled for arraignment on November 19.

We have reached out to Detwiler for further comment and will update the story if he responds.

What This Means for the YouTube Wild West

The case taps into a larger trend: popular automotive YouTubers pushing boundaries—mechanical, financial, and now legal—for the sake of content. When a Ferrari burns down for millions of viewers, it’s entertainment. When it burns wearing plates that may hint at tax strategy, it becomes evidence.

As for WhistlinDiesel, the man who once turned a $400,000 supercar into scrap for views is now dealing with something far harder to total: a felony charge that won’t simply melt away.

Source: WhistlinDiesel via YouTube

Baltimore PD Ford Explorer Turned Weapon: When Law Enforcement Crosses the Line

Baltimore’s Ford Explorers are supposed to represent safety and order—a rolling symbol of the city’s commitment to protect and serve. But one of those black-and-whites became something else entirely this week: a two-ton projectile in a shocking act of recklessness that has the city’s leadership reeling.

Viral footage posted online shows a Baltimore police officer using his department-issued Ford Explorer in a way no pursuit policy could ever justify—trying to run down a pedestrian in broad daylight.

The video, filmed by a local resident identified as Slick Brown, captures a surreal and terrifying sequence. It begins with Officer Robert Parks pulling up alongside a group of young men on Wylie Avenue in the Park Heights neighborhood. The officer orders them to “walk off.” They comply. Moments later, the same Ford Explorer swings back into frame. This time, it’s not about conversation—it’s about confrontation.

As the camera rolls, Parks drops into the driver’s seat, fires up the 3.3-liter V6, and floors it down a narrow side street. The Explorer lurches forward, tires clawing for traction, before veering hard toward one of the men. The SUV mounts a grassy area, coming within inches of impact. Then, as the man bolts across the street, the officer follows—briefly driving on the sidewalk and even smashing through a fence in what looks less like policing and more like a vehicular rampage.

For a vehicle engineered for pursuit and precision, the Explorer’s power is being wielded here with chilling intent.

Community and City Officials Respond

Baltimore Police Commissioner Richard Worley didn’t mince words.

“What is seen in this video is not only disturbing, but alarming,” he said.
“This is not how we expect our officers to behave… We remain committed to holding officers accountable and rebuilding trust with our community.”

Mayor Brandon Scott called the video “deeply disturbing,” confirming that an internal investigation is already underway. The Baltimore City State’s Attorney’s Office has opened a case through its Public Trust and Police Integrity Unit.

According to reports, the officer was allegedly trying to contact the pedestrian over a failure-to-appear warrant for driving without a license. But that minor infraction hardly justifies transforming a city-issued SUV into a battering ram.

The Ford Explorer: From Fleet Hero to Headline Villain

It’s a bitter irony. The Ford Explorer Police Interceptor Utility is America’s best-selling law enforcement vehicle—a machine designed to bridge power and poise, capable of tackling pursuits, patrols, and high-speed emergencies. Its all-wheel-drive system and pursuit-rated brakes make it a staple in departments nationwide.

But in this viral video, the Explorer’s mechanical competence only amplifies the horror. What’s meant to protect instead intimidates. What’s engineered for control becomes a symbol of chaos.

Baltimore has spent years trying to reform its police image after a string of scandals and federal oversight. Incidents like this threaten to undo that progress in a matter of seconds.

A City Searching for Accountability

Officer Parks has since been suspended, and public outrage continues to build. In the age of smartphone lenses and instant uploads, no department can afford this kind of optics—especially when the weapon of choice is a taxpayer-funded SUV.

The Ford Explorer didn’t choose to accelerate that day. But someone did—and that decision now represents something far bigger than one bad chase. It’s a collision between power and accountability, between what the badge stands for and what it should never become.

Source: WBFF FOX45 Baltimore via YouTube

When Your Reservation Vanishes: The Rental-Car Mirage That Left One Michigan Traveler Stranded

You plan the perfect trip. You pack the bags, sync your playlists, and even splurge on a nicer rental car for the drive. But when you show up to pick up your wheels, the counter agent shrugs and says, “Sorry, we don’t have your car.”

That’s the road trip nightmare Michigan native Briana says she lived through with Budget Car Rental. She’d booked and prepaid for a car, received a confirmation email, and even multiple follow-up messages from the company. Everything looked good—until she arrived.

In a TikTok video that’s now clocked over 223,000 views, Briana (@twfrogs) recounts the surreal moment she discovered there was no car to rent. “I really don’t understand how rental car companies are still able to get away with just lying to people and not providing the service that people are paying for,” she says in frustration.

The Reservation That Wasn’t

Briana had planned to rent a car for a portion of her visit home, choosing a Budget location away from the airport to avoid the chaos of terminal traffic. Her father dropped her off before heading to work—only for her to find that no vehicles were available.

“This does not seem like something that should be that complicated,” she says. “I know so many people who have shown up to a rental car place with all their confirmation info, and the car isn’t there.”

With no vehicle and no alternative offered, she was effectively stranded. “And so now I just don’t have a car,” she says in the video. “There was no option. How are you able to sell me something that you do not have?”

A Familiar Roadblock

The comments section under her post quickly became a group therapy session for frustrated renters.

“You know how to take a reservation, but you don’t know how to hold the reservation,” one commenter quipped—echoing Jerry Seinfeld’s immortal take on the issue.

“It’s like buying a plane ticket and finding out the flight’s oversold,” another wrote.

Others noted they’d never received the model they’d reserved—just whatever happened to be on the lot.

Why It Keeps Happening

While Briana’s situation feels personal, it’s far from rare. According to USA Today, roughly 1% of car rentals in the U.S. vanish into the ether when customers arrive. The reason: overbooking.

Rental agencies, much like airlines, assume a certain percentage of customers won’t show up. The problem arises when everyone does—leaving companies short on cars and customers stranded in parking lots.

The shortage was made worse in recent years as rental fleets shrank during the pandemic and have yet to fully recover. Despite record profits for major operators like Avis Budget Group, the mismatch between reservations and actual cars continues to frustrate travelers.

Avoiding the No-Car Scenario

So what can you do if you don’t want to become the next viral rental-rage story? Frequent travelers suggest a few road-tested strategies:

  • Don’t prepay – Pay at pickup. It gives you more leverage if the car’s not there.
  • Book directly – Avoid third-party sites; go straight to the company for clearer accountability.
  • Call ahead – Confirm your reservation with a human before heading out.
  • Escalate fast – Ask for a manager and request a transfer to a nearby location.
  • Dispute charges – If all else fails, use your credit card company to reverse unauthorized charges.

Until the industry starts treating a reservation as more than a suggestion, travelers like Briana will keep learning the hard way that, in the rental world, confirmation doesn’t always mean commitment.

Because when it comes to renting a car in 2025, the only thing guaranteed might just be the frustration.

Source: @twfrogs via TikTok