CEO Responds to Crisis with Jokes, AI Entrepreneurs Steal Crypto's Marketing Playbook

Odaily星球日报Published on 2026-03-10Last updated on 2026-03-10

Abstract

CEO Roy Lee of AI startup Cluely turned a potential PR crisis into a viral marketing opportunity after being accused of inflating revenue figures. Instead of issuing a formal apology, Lee posted a satirical video response where he appeared professionally dressed from the waist up but revealed he wasn’t wearing pants, blending humor and self-mockery. Cluely, which began as a tool for cheating in coding interviews and led to Lee’s expulsion from Columbia University, has consistently used controversy for growth. Its early slogan was “Cheat on Everything.” The company later pivoted to an AI note-taking assistant but maintained its provocative branding. Lee admitted to casually citing a $7M annual recurring revenue in a TechCrunch interview but claimed it was unintentional. When the reporter disputed his account, he responded with the viral video, shifting focus from the accusation to entertainment. Investor a16z, which led Cluely’s $15M Series A, sees such attention-grabbing tactics as essential in AI, where virality can be a moat. The strategy mirrors crypto marketing, where controversy and memes often drive engagement more than traditional growth metrics. In today’s attention economy, controlling the narrative often outweighs correcting the facts.

Original | Odaily Planet Daily (@OdailyChina)

Author | DingDang (@XiaMiPP)

In most startups, if someone exposes "falsified revenue," it would likely lead to a PR crisis—issuing statements, explaining misunderstandings, correcting data metrics, apologizing, and then steering the conversation back to focusing on product or business growth.

But Cluely's CEO Roy Lee clearly had no intention of doing that.

A Company That Started as a "Cheating Tool"

Cluely was founded in 2025, and its initial product came from a project called Interview Coder, developed by Roy Lee and his college roommate Neel. This was a tool that used AI to help users cheat in LeetCode interviews. Because of this project, both were eventually expelled from Columbia University.

If this were an ordinary person, being expelled from school would be a black mark to be covered up. But Roy Lee turned this incident into a marketing opportunity, even a "turning point in his life."

Cluely's initial product slogan was: "Cheat on Everything." It wasn't until November 2025 that Cluely began gradually shifting its product narrative from a "cheating tool" to an AI note-taking assistant, such as using AI to automatically organize meeting content, optimize collaboration efficiency, and even modify attendees' expressions to hide distraction. But no matter how the product adjusted, this company, or rather, its CEO, never shook off a very distinct vibe: it almost grew through controversy.

And the ensuing storm, to some extent, continued down this path.

An Absurd Performance Sparked by "Falsified Revenue"

The incident began when someone dug up a July 2025 report published by TechCrunch. The article mentioned that Cluely's Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR) had doubled in a week, reaching $7 million. This data was questioned as being fabricated.

Facing the质疑 (questioning/doubts), Cluely CEO Roy Lee was quite candid. He quickly posted承认 (admitting), saying that he had casually mentioned this number when he received the reporter's call and did not expect it to be written into a formal report. Seemingly to prove it wasn't a deliberate exaggeration, he also posted Cluely's real data from June 2025: consumer business annual revenue of $2.7 million, enterprise business annual revenue of $2.5 million, totaling $5.2 million.

Up to this point, there wasn't much of a stir, and the explanation seemed plausible.

But on the same day, TechCrunch reporter Julie Bort published an article refuting Roy's claim. She stated that the interview was proactively arranged by Cluely's PR team, it was documented, and not just a casual chat.

Roy Lee didn't continue with a written explanation but chose a more dramatic way to respond. He released a video with the caption, Big News: Cluely CEO Officially Responds to TechCrunch.

In the video, he sat in front of the camera wearing sunglasses and a suit, with a microphone on the desk, looking like he was preparing to make a serious statement. But the setting wasn't an office; it looked more like a living room, with an old desktop computer next to him, its screen playing Subway Surfers—a classic time-wasting game. Roy's response was also completely informal, more like a self-deprecating performance, mixed with self-mockery and bragging, his tone resembling a rapper freestyling.

Even more absurdly, at the end of the video, he stood up from behind the desk, and this CEO, formal from the waist up, was not wearing pants......

Thus, a PR crisis originally about "falsified revenue" was handled as a流量 (traffic/attention)-grabbing self-deprecating performance.

What a16z Is Betting On Is Actually the Attention Economy

The capital market doesn't seem to mind this kind of performative founder personality. In June 2025, Cluely announced the completion of a $15 million Series A funding round, with participating institutions including the renowned venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz (a16z). Its partner Bryan Kim once mentioned on a podcast: In the AI era, the traditional "artisan product + slow growth" model is no longer sufficient; viral spread itself is part of the product.

His view of the "new AI startup template" is that in an era where model capabilities are increasingly commoditized, attention itself is becoming a key resource. Whoever can capture user attention first may build a new moat.

From the "cheating controversy" of Interview Coder, to the entrepreneurial story of being expelled from Columbia, to this absurd "response video," Roy Lee's entire personal brand has been built almost entirely along this path: controversy itself is the content for传播 (spread/dissemination). This might also explain why a16z chose to invest in Cluely, to invest in Roy Lee.

When Controversy Becomes a Growth Strategy

In past entrepreneurial narratives, growth usually came from product capability, technological barriers, and business models. But in today's internet environment, another resource is becoming increasingly important—attention.

This logic has actually already been proven in the crypto industry. Many crypto projects capture user attention by creating topics, controversies, or even dramatic events, and then convert this traffic into product growth or commercial value, especially with the rise of Memes—pure传播 (spread/dissemination), no (traditional) product.

To some extent, Roy Lee's response video is a classic case of this logic: when negative news emerges, rather than trying to suppress the controversy, it's better to repackage the controversy itself as传播 (spread/dissemination) content.

Evidently, in the current internet environment, attention is often more valuable than explaining the truth.

Related Questions

QWhat was the initial product of Cluely and what was its controversial purpose?

ACluely's initial product was Interview Coder, an AI tool designed to help users cheat on LeetCode coding interviews.

QHow did Cluely's CEO, Roy Lee, respond to the allegations of fabricating the company's revenue?

ARoy Lee responded by releasing a humorous and self-deprecating video where he acknowledged the discrepancy, presented the actual revenue data, and ended the video in a deliberately absurd way by standing up to reveal he wasn't wearing pants, turning the crisis into a viral performance.

QWhich major venture capital firm invested in Cluely's Series A round and what was their stated reasoning?

AAndreessen Horowitz (a16z) invested in Cluely's $15 million Series A round. Their reasoning, as stated by partner Bryan Kim, is that in the AI era, viral marketing and capturing user attention are a crucial part of the product and a key resource for building a moat.

QAccording to the article, what resource is becoming increasingly important for growth in today's internet environment, and which industry has already validated this logic?

AAttention is becoming an increasingly important resource for growth. This logic has already been validated by the crypto industry, where projects often use controversy and memes to capture attention and drive growth.

QHow did the narrative around Cluely's product evolve from its founding in 2025?

ACluely initially had the product narrative of a 'cheat on everything' tool, stemming from its Interview Coder origins. In November 2025, it began to pivot its narrative towards being an AI note-taking assistant for improving meeting efficiency and collaboration, though it maintained its controversial and attention-grabbing brand identity.

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