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Fans felt shock 3 years after the scandal as Ned Fulmer spoke to PEOPLE and announced a podcast debut on Sept. 17, 2025. The timing matters because the episode features his estranged wife and comes exactly three years after he was edited out of The Try Guys. People’s exclusive confirms Fulmer is trying to reframe his story while facing separation and fresh backlash. My take: this is a high-risk reentry that tests creator accountability versus audience forgiveness. Will this reset change how canceled creators return to the spotlight?
What Fulmer’s new podcast means for creators and viewers in 2025
- Ned Fulmer spoke to PEOPLE on Sept. 16, 2025; debut episode drops Sept. 17, 2025.
- Ariel Fulmer appears in episode one; couple announced they are separated three years after scandal.
- The Try Guys removed Fulmer in 2022; his return prompts immediate social media scrutiny and debate.
Why his Sept. 17 podcast debut hits the conversation hard today
Fulmer’s move shifts a private reconciliation into a public product on a fixed date, forcing fans, creators, and platforms to choose whether accountability has an expiration. The new show promises candid testimony – including therapy details and an in-episode conversation with Ariel – which changes the calculus from silence to monetized disclosure. If the first episode drives downloads or views, it could set a precedent for how controversial creators monetize redemption. Do you want creators to speak publicly about private harm, or to stay silent and rebuild privately?
How fans and creators reacted in the first 24 hours after the reveal
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People captured Fulmer’s direct quote: “I feel ready to share my story and to move on into a new chapter,” and that line has split commentary between cautious sympathy and anger. Creators and outlets fast-tracked hot takes about profit, ethics, and platform responsibility. Below is the full episode clip that listeners reacted to and that media outlets used to frame the debate.

Responses ranged from supportive threads to critical essays questioning whether public confession equals accountability, and many creators warned about normalizing controversial comebacks. If you’re a creator, how would you handle a similar fallout?
What the timeline reveals about fallout, separation and public returns since 2022
A quick pattern emerges: immediate removal from collaborative channels, multi-year silence, then a staged reentry with a dated release and guested testimony. That sequence is becoming a recognizable comeback script in creator culture. News outlets note the same three milestones with Fulmer: removal in 2022, private rebuilding, and a public product in 2025. What changes now depends on whether audiences reward or punish transparency framed as content.
The numbers that change the game around Fulmer’s comeback
| KPI | Value + Unit | Change/Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Years since scandal | 3 years | Marks time since 2022 fallout |
| Podcast debut date | Sept. 17, 2025 | First public episode with Ariel |
| Try Guys separation moment | 2022 | Fulmer edited out of group |
This timeline compresses the scandal, separation, and public restart into measurable milestones.
Which social posts are driving the biggest reaction today and why
Media and fans amplified clips, hot takes, and early coverage that framed the podcast as either restorative or opportunistic. A leading entertainment outlet’s social post signaled broad coverage and sent conversations trending within hours.
Former Try Guys member Ned Fulmer is returning to the internet after three years with his own podcast called Rock Bottom
The first episode will feature his wife, Ariel pic.twitter.com/aVOfpKtaYY
— Dexerto (@Dexerto) September 17, 2025
That post and others show the split: some users urge listening and rehab narratives; others accuse creators of monetizing harm. Which side do you find more persuasive?
What this return could mean for creator culture and audiences in 2025?
If Fulmer’s debut is commercially successful, we’ll likely see more public confessions packaged as podcasts or specials. If backlash dominates, platforms and collaborators may tighten gates for returns. Either way, Sept. 17, 2025 will be a test case for whether creators can rebuild via candid storytelling – and whether audiences will forgive on a schedule. What should accountability look like going forward, and who decides when someone is allowed back?
Sources
- https://people.com/ned-fulmer-speaks-out-on-cheating-scandal-after-leaving-the-try-guys-exclusive-11809989
- https://www.vulture.com/article/try-guys-ned-fulmer-separation-podcast.html
- https://ew.com/ex-try-guy-ned-fulmer-wife-ariel-separate-cheating-scandal-11812045

Jessica Morrison is a seasoned entertainment writer with over a decade of experience covering television, film, and pop culture. After earning a degree in journalism from New York University, she worked as a freelance writer for various entertainment magazines before joining red94.net. Her expertise lies in analyzing television series, from groundbreaking dramas to light-hearted comedies, and she often provides in-depth reviews and industry insights. Outside of writing, Jessica is an avid film buff and enjoys discovering new indie movies at local festivals.

