Zachary K. Hubbard



…What I've done in this world is monumental. I have broken a code that nobody broke before. I have made more correct predictions about sports, celebrity deaths, and news stories than anyone has before. My work is truly important. I can't think of anyone in the history of this nation, literally, who has done something that's actually more important and empowering to the people. The knowledge that I have put out, which I have given to people for free for more than 4 years, and taught, you know, with non-stop dedication: this work has the power to do more for people than anything you can learn at any university, that you have to pay all this money for. So I don't want to hear about how Wikipedia thinks I'm insignificant, that's bullshit!

Zachary K. Hubbard is an American paranoid, science-denying conspiracy theorist, blogger, YouTuber, and crank. Essentially, he believes that the entire world is fake (or "scripted", as he prefers to say), being run by a hidden force of evil Jesuits, the (NWO), the Illuminati, powers that be, etc, who control elections, terrorist attacks, the weather, natural disasters, sporting events, and celebrity/politician deaths by sacrificing them "by the numbers" on a near-daily basis for no apparent reason. Yes, this is actually what he believes. He is so sure, in fact, he's willing to put his entire family on the line on the bet that he's not wrong! He "proves" all this with his secret weapon: new gematria, his very own conspiracy theory which claims that the powers that be are the ones responsible for all of this.

He runs a blog site where he posts his grand "proofs" that, usually, can't even be falsified: his Youtube Channels (he usually runs several at a time) fare no better: many of his videos are just rehashed material from his blog site. He also runs a Patreon where he charges $1 to $20 a month (depending on the membership level) to access more conspiracy nonsense, some chapters of his books, and some other pointless stuff.

Even though his Gematria is “the most important work to the truth community” (paraphrased countless times), in December 2020 Hubbard launched a new YouTube channel, Voice of Humanity. It’s promoted as a gematria-free channel about other types of crankery, which Hubbard launched after (finally) discovering that the majority of the world's population doesn't give two hoots about numbers that any clown can manufacture on a daily basis. Naturally, there is nonetheless some Gematria included in the few videos available as of this writing.

Origin story
Hubbard was born in Portland, Oregon on July 21st 1983. While his parents raised him at Lutheran, he no longer identifies as religious, nor is a practicing Christian. He did not, however, lose his faith in God. He believes that God placed him on the Earth on the exact day he was born on, in the exact location where he was born, and even given his exact name as divine signs. These were, he claims, sacred gifts from God to send him a mission and expose the entire world as being rigged by means of gematria. In other words, God allegedly used gematria to help Hubbard defeat gematria. He is quite critical of atheism, falsely identifying it as a religion.

On September 11th 2001, as thousands of innocent lives died the entire faked attack unfolded, Hubbard took notice to the footprints the Jesuits had, somehow (don't ask how), mistakenly left out in the wide open: 9/11, it was just like 9-1-1, the emergency dial number in the US. While this can easily be explained by coincidence, not to Hubbard: to him, there was no way that was by chance. He later found even more irrelevant data to shoehorn into his narrative clues, such as that the World Trade Center towers began construction in 1968, the same year 9-1-1 became the US dialing code. Getting spooked out yet? But there's more, as he researched American Airlines flight 77, he found something truly extraordinary. Flight 77 was in the air for 77 minutes, the Pentagon is 77 feet tall, and it's located on the 77th meridian.

This, according to Hubbard, was his great "awakening". He finally had "indisputable proof" that our entire world is fake. Using his newly acquired "knowledge", Hubbard set himself on a mission, to destroy all, sources of evil and horror...forever.

We flash forward to 2013: after many years trying to find his way, Hubbard "discovered" what he was looking for all these years: "Gematria". Armed with his newly acquired "knowledge", Hubbard took on his "truth seeker" identity and set sail on his epic quest to destroy the alleged powers that be, to bring about a complete and total utopia, where all the big bad government people in scary black suits rigging everything are destroyed once and for all, where all civilization becomes some futuristic utopia planet like in Star Trek, Mayberry at the end of every Andy Griffith Show episode, Rainbow Road, etc, where we will all live happily ever after.

Of course, given the fact that Hubbard frequently begs people to buy his books, shills out his gematria merchandise, and even charges people money to see some of his "evidence" on Patreon, said origin story of one Zachary K. Hubbard can be disputed.

Daily life
Hubbard claims to be a former teacher at a public school in Seattle, Washington, before being terminated for unknown reasons. A fan of his unsuccessfully petitioned for his reinstatement. However, there is an extremely good case to be made for the simple fact that he never was a public school teacher to be terminated. A request to the State of Washington will verify that one Zachary K. Hubbard was never a public school teacher to begin with. While adding “fluff” to his life story, he seems to have neglected the fact that records about public school teachers are open to the public.

Hubbard hosts a weekly radio program on the self-proclaimed Truth Frequency Radio, Wednesdays at 9PM-12AM Eastern Time (Thursday 2AM-5AM UTC). Call him if you want to just drop in and say hi, ask some questions, refute his arguments (though be warned, this will very likely end up being a complete waste of time), and just plain ol' have a good time. But even on non-Wednesday nights, he live-streams quite often, usually for several hours at a given time, which is why most of his videos are more than 3 hours long (his longest is 6 hours ). Despite his Shakespeare-length videos, he complains often about how people don't watch enough of them.

He has also written a 773 page book on this subject called "Letters and Numbers". The front cover, which looks like it was done by a 3rd grader in Microsoft Paint, lists 4 "quotes" from anonymous (alleged) book critics. Curiously, these testimonials were made before the book was finished. It is apparently a very commercially successful literary work: on Black Friday 2019, he sold an entire copy. He has since released a 2nd book, "Number Games: 9/11 to Coronavirus", which he self published it to Amazon, despite Amazon being in cahoots with the New World Order. That's right, Amazon, arguably the most powerful company in the world, is selling a book on their website that exposes themselves! He is currently working on a third book.

On December 24th 2016, a car was driven through the front wall of his house, possibly by the powers that be coming to kill Hubbard for exposing them. Unfortunately, Hubbard wasn't home at the time, so it didn't work. They have since been too busy to try and come back to do it again when he is home. That same year, Hubbard had a police stake out at his house for unknown reasons, as well as an "unjust" restraining order for "insane reasons" (though we are never told the reasons). As a result, he is ineligible to own a gun.

In December 2019, he launched a new community webshite for members only.

In January 2020, Hubbard set sail on an epic, and quite short-lived, quest to street preach start a world tour travel to different cities to spread the good news knowledge of gematria. Despite making thousands of dollars a month on Patreon, he begged requested his own followers to pay for his trip. Apparently, all that dough he makes on Patreon is for other uses. He hasn't traveled much (if at all) since then, but given that he believes the coronavirus pandemic is a complete hoax, that is unlikely to be why.

In December 2020, Hubbard begged for requested more money on his Patreon: more specifically, $30,000 per month. At that point, he will likely beg for even more money plans to start up a small business, complete with a building and everything, to continue his Jesuit exposing business. But given that Hubbard has been frequently "censored" for his big exposings (see next section), it seems unfeasible to think he could successfully start an entire business of this kind without the powers that be interfering in some way, but this doesn't deter him, nonetheless.

On Christmas Eve 2020, Hubbard vowed to do less gematria in the upcoming year, and to instead look for different ways to get his message of hope and truth more widespread. Unsurprisingly, he has done almost nothing but gematria since the start of 2021.

Hubbard vs "censorship"
Being the hard working "truther" he is, Hubbard is frequently persecuted, or so he claims, for his daily "exposings". He has had at least 20 YouTube channels taken down out of "censorship", which he frequently brags complains about in his videos (for this reason, skeptics are encouraged to archive his videos and use them against him later should his latest channel get taken down as well).

Predictably, he blames YouTube (which is owned by Google, which is in cahoots with the "powers that be") for "censorship", often accusing them of deliberately deleting his channels (as well as subscribers and likes ) in an attempt to hide the "truth". But there's a big problem with this: every time one of Hubbard's channels gets deleted, he just goes and immediately creates another one. Nowadays, he's such an expert at self-destructive behavior, he will just start a new YouTube channel before the current cesspool of misinformation is deleted). So if Hubbard was really "exposing" these said powers that be, why hasn't he been permanently kicked off YouTube, a platform allegedly in on this big conspiracy? Or, better yet, why hasn't he been assassinated yet? Wouldn't an entity of this magnitude have the power and will to do more than just delete a channel, only for him to just make a new one? And yet, just killing Hubbard to stop him from making new channels is out of the question. One wonders why YouTube would keep acting like a broken record instead of just finishing him off for good. Even "exposing" Donald Trump's SCRIPTED ASSASSINATION hasn't been enough to kill him. So his "censorship" excuses only raise more questions than it answers: despite him putting out the "best" knowledge ever given (something he frequently brags about), the powers that be apparently see him fit to continue.

A possible counter-argument to this is that Google deletes old "evidence", so even if Hubbard creates a new channel, all that older information is gone forever. This is unlikely, however, because his old blog site, which contains much of this same "evidence" from years past, doesn't appear to have been "censored" like his YouTube channels (it has, however, been invaded by Russian bots to troll him ). For some reason, while it's allegedly open season on Hubbard's YouTube channels, taking out his blogging sites is out of the question. Also, some of his old videos get re-uploaded to other accounts anyway. Hubbard also re-uploads some of his deleted videos to his Bitchute account, yet another source of "evidence" that is apparently off limits to the powers that be.

Another possible counter is that the powers that be are just preventing Hubbard from going viral, meaning that taking him out entirely isn't necessary. However, this would leave us to assume that Hubbard will never go viral, and thus, is never actually going to do anything to overthrow these alleged powers that be. In that case, why even continue? Are we to believe that Hubbard is wasting his time trying to wake up a group of people to see a problem that will never even be fixed? Is Hubbard's goal to red-pill people into seeing an unfixable problem just so they can live for the rest of their lives in utter hopelessness? Of course, if the answer here is no, and Hubbard does have a chance, then we return to our original question: why not just take Hubbard out entirely instead of relying on petty tactics like shadow-banning/rating manipulation/etc? As with most conspiracy theories, gematria seems to require a belief that the powers that be are ingeniously smart while hopelessly stupid all at the same time.

Admittedly, YouTube's system for flagging videos/channels isn't exactly the greatest. Channels have been getting flagged off of the site for almost as long as YouTube has existed. Therefore, a possible explanation is that his content got mass-flagged off of the site. If this is the case, we certainly don't condone it, but it is a possible explanation, and certainly more plausible than "censorship".

Despite his supposedly deep hatred for censorship, on December 1st 2019, after a long string of "troll" comments debunking him, he disabled comments on his blog to prevent people from debunking him any further Evidentially, he doesn't practice what he preaches.

In 2017, Hubbard threw a fit after his fans tried (and failed) to create a Wikipedia page about him (though he need not worry now: their distant cousin, RationalWiki, is happy to oblige). Hubbard rebuked Wikipedia, arguing that he deserved a page for, get ready for this, accomplishing more importance than anyone in the history of the United States. It was truly impressive he managed to say all this while keeping a straight face. Despite begging his viewers to force Wikipedia to accept the page, Hubbard still does not have a Wikipedia entry as of 2024.

He also seems to be quite aware that "truthers" are always in danger of being assassinated for spreading "the truth". And yet, despite his self-proclaimed accomplishment of destroying the Jesuits secrets, Hubbard has been deemed fit to continue to this day. In fact, as of 2024, there is no record of anyone within the gematria community of having been possibly, let alone conclusively, assassinated, for their "exposings".

New Gematria 101


In a nutshell, here's how this works:

Hubbard finds corresponding, albeit completely random numbers surrounding a particular event, say a political election for example. These random numbers can include absolutely anything: how many days remaining in the year from the election, how many days into the year is the election, the percentage of votes the winning candidate receives, the number of votes a winning candidate receives, and, of course, the 1=A, 2=B, 3=C etc format to "code" a candidate's name. This is what Hubbard calls a "cypher". Using the online "Gematrinator" calculator, numeral values from an ever-increasing number of additional "cyphers" can also be thrown in should they conveniently fit Hubbard's "decoding". And this, ladies and gentlemen, is his indisputable "proof" that said election was rigged.

He also uses these tactics for "proving" the rigging of the National Football League, Major League Baseball, National Basketball Association, National Hockey League, NASCAR, horse racing, wrestling, and even (wait for it) golf. If these sports are truly rigged, these players deserve an Oscar because they sure do a damn better job at acting than any WWE wrestler... as well as literally any Hollywood celebrity for that matter (One possible exception is the NBA, which is notorious for embellishment ). Then again, the powers that be do control Hollywood, so this must be a deliberate planting of evidence to the contrary. Sometimes, Hubbard doesn't even know if the players know about it. We'll let you figure that one out.

It doesn't stop there, he's also "exposed" false flag terrorist attacks, natural disasters, man-made weather, and pretty much anything else that exists as all being rigged. The exact time Trump went to the White House toilet to take a dump could be rigged by the numbers for all we know.

But there's still more. This made up super-secret code also "proves", used very lightly, that everything from IKEA to Marvel Comics to Walt Disney films to presumably every single thing that you could possibly think of is Jesuit/Zionist/satanist propaganda. Gematria truly explains everything!

With rare exception, Hubbard relies extensively on arguments that are non-falsifiable: they are often so bullet-proof that nobody can "disprove" any of them, conveniently enough. Many of his arguments involve a political event/sports game/etc that has already happened, searching every numeric statistic imaginable for matching numbers, listing all the numbers that match (which means ignoring all the ones that don't), and pointing out how much of a "coincidence" such matching numbers could be: the event being rigged or "scripted" by the NWO is the only "rational" explanation (basically, an ex post facto prediction on Hubbard's part). But further, anyone who disagrees is either insane, willfully ignorant, OR worse yet, is a government paid shill who is leaving troll comments to discredit him.

It's also noteworthy that, in the realm of celebrities/sports athletes/politicians/etc, nobody (or at least almost nobody) seems to die of natural causes. Cancer? Car crashes? Nonsense! Even if they're 105 years old, they're always either sacrificed, or they faked their death and are out hiding in a bunker somewhere (he flips back and forth between these two explanations like pancake). Also keep in mind that Hubbard will make multiple matches based on the persons name to link them to Jesuits. This being said it must mean the parents of whoever this celebrity/sports athlete/politician etc must have purposely named this child at birth to have the same numerology as ‘Jesuit’ or ‘Jesuit Order’ which are some of his favourite terms to link up.

If you remember nothing else at all, remember this: none of this is coincidence. Never mind that Hubbard's ideas of mass conspiracy stretch pretty much any level of feasibility, don't you dare believe any of it is coincidence, otherwise, you're a brain-dead, or worse, self-denying, member of the uneducated masses. And we wouldn't want that, now would we?

And also remember, Hubbard says that if word of this "gematria" doesn't spread quickly, we're all gonna either die or live like Mad Max in a post-apocalyptic world, so get out there and spread this information on Facebook/Twitter/Instagram/YouTube/reddit/conspiracy webshites/etc ASAP, just in case it happens to be since it's true.

Most importantly, if you don't believe this, "WAKE UP SHEEPLE!!!"

Predictions
I got 13 right and 3 wrong, the fuck you talking about? Other times, Hubbard predicts (or tries to at least) the outcomes of certain events, usually sports games, but also other things like elections, as part of his "proof" that the whole world is rigged.

Sports
Hubbard claims to have a winning sports predicting day 5.5 out of 7 (79%) days of the week. Assuming this is true, using this as "indisputable proof" that sports (let alone everything else) are scripted goes well beyond any form of rationality. First, wouldn't one expect Hubbard's batting record (no pun intended) to be chalk-full of exact outcomes of exact teams, exact scores, and exact everything with 100% accuracy? But as Gomer Pyle would say: SURPRISE, SURPRISE, SURPRISE! This kind of information is nowhere to be found, either on his blogging site or (numerous) YouTube channels. "But Rationalwiki, he still gets more right than wrong: isn't that evidence?" The kind skeptic (of this article) might ask. The short answer is no: in fact, even Hubbard's unfounded claim that he is the best in the world at predicting sports still wouldn't prop his theory up. The reason why is because these types of hypothesis can often times be proven void by even one failure. Science (or Pseudoscience in this case) is not a sports game, it's not a "number of successes - 1 = number of failures = PROVEN RIGHT!" equation (see image to the right). In science, a single wrong outcome can render any correct outcomes moot, so if a hypothesis (i.e Gematria) gets even one prediction wrong, that could, potentially, from a scientific point of view, toss out the entire hypothesis. As Albert Einstein once famously said:

No amount of experimentation can ever prove me right; a single experiment can prove me wrong

Then again, Albert Einstein is suspected to have been in cahoots with this big gematria conspiracy, so perhaps the point is moot.

In any case, his sports predicting track record actually leaves much to be desired. An examination of his Patreon account, for anyone willing to burn the five dollars and investigate for themselves, will reveal that his daily sports predicting is actually not much better than just random guessing. For example, his old Patreon posts will reveal that he got only about 61% of games correct during the 2020 NFL regular season. Occasionally, he will have an outstanding day, but this is normally not the case.

But that's not all, it gets even worse. Hubbard frequently puts himself in win-win situations. Even in sports games where he picks a team, he will often list reasons why the game could be rigged for the other team as well, just in case he's wrong: This document on his old blogging site is a prime example of this. While going 11-3, nearly every one of his eleven wins were actually win-win ("close") predictions. The obvious problem is that this renders said predictions to be useless. This "Heads, I win, Tails, you lose" approach renders any win-win prediction, even if correct, irrelevant. They are now non-falsifiable (which Hubbard claims gematria isn't). This also means any wrong prediction can easily be explained away thanks to said backup "riddle", and thus the game is still rigged. Even if Hubbard's original prediction turns out correct, he has already voided it by giving himself a safety net, so to speak. Thus, it's now about as impressive as a tight-rope walker with a safety net right under the rope, even if they manage to walk the rope without falling off. But perhaps worst of all, it all but proves that rigging is a pre-determined conclusion if a game is going to be rigged either way. Logical reasoning has no room for pre-determined conclusions, it's the definition of a bias perspective. Rarely does Hubbard actually stick with one team in a game: even then, he still has the potential to get it wrong, as he admits here in this video.

We can only proclaim a positive belief if we have sufficient evidence to support only that and no evidence at all against it. Even then, we can only accept it tentatively, because if future evidence ever confirms that we were wrong all along, then we'll be forced to change our minds accordingly, even if we didn't want to.

On some occasions, his sports biases have even been criticized by other members of his own community. A YouTuber called "Simple Truth TV", another gematria account, has criticized Hubbard for some of his dishonesty. This pretty much debunks Hubbard's claim that he only gets haters for spreading "the truth". While Simple Truth TV might say some kooky things now and then, his videos, unlike many of Hubbard's, can at least be watched without completely melting your brain.

So it's not like I said the Mariners are gonna WIN the World Series. I said they have a shot this year.

One wonders if Hubbard would have still said that had the Mariners won the 2019 World Series.

Politics
Not all of his prophecies are about sports: he also tries predicting non-sports scenarios. Needless to say, his record here isn't any more impressive.

In 2016, Hubbard predicted that Hillary Clinton was rigged to win the 2016 U.S. presidential election. All we can say is this: if you voted for Clinton and were disappointing by the outcome, at least you can use it as an opportunity to laugh at Hubbard shooting himself in the foot once again.

In 2021, realizing this huge Oof up left a gaping hole in his conspiracy theory, Hubbard scrambled to cover his tracks by re-uploading an old February 2016 video "predicting" Trump's presidency. This doesn't work, however, because that video predates his pro-Hillary 2016 blog posts, which range from April 7th to November 7th (the date before the election) 2016. This means that, shortly after that video, he fatally switched his prediction and got it wrong. This means Hubbard is either being willfully dishonest, or is severely mistaken on his own predictions.

Unsurprisingly, of course, this failed prediction didn't stop him from claiming the election was rigged anyway.

Four years later, he predicted Oprah Winfrey would become president in 2020 and serve two terms, claiming that it was foretold in an episode of The Boondocks. Well, you can take a guess how that one went (he also predicted Ivanka Trump would be president, based on an episode of The Simpsons. This remains to be foreseen).

Later, he appeared to favor Biden to win the 2020 election. The good news is that it happened, the bad news is that it's pretty much the nail in the coffin for his Trump assassination prediction. At the same time, this would least explain why Hubbard wasn't killed "exposing" Trump's assassination that would never come.

Speaking of assassinations, Hubbard currently holds an 0-8 record in predicting presidential assassinations, including:


 * Obama's assassination on August 29th 2014
 * Obama's assassination on March 15th 2015
 * Obama's assassination on October 19th 2015
 * Obama's assassination on April 4th 2016
 * Obama or Trump's assassination around the 2016 US election
 * Trump's assassination on May 18th 2017
 * Trump's assassination on some unspecified date
 * Biden's assassination on August 10th 2022

Presumably, Hubbard will repeatedly keep "predicting" the incumbent's assassination until when/if it finally happens. Should he ever get it right (even if predicted in the vaguest fashion possible as it sometimes has been), he will undoubtedly parade this grand "prediction" around as the ultimate "proof" that his work can foretell the future, while of course hoping that nobody notices his previous track record. Presently, he has Biden's his fateful day for June 1 2024 (before trying and failing to revise it to August 10th 2022). . Given his previous batting record, we can assume that absolutely nothing will happen on that day whatsoever... BUT JUST IN CASE, mark it on your calendars!

There is also his failed prediction of the May 20th 2022 assassination of Queen Elizabeth the II, which, in included in the tally, would bring his assassination record up to 0-9.

Other predictions
The above examples are by no means all of his false prophecies, listing all of them could possibly fill an entire book. But if you want just a few more examples, he failed to predict the collapse of the Hoover Dam during the 2015 Superbowl, Bob Dylan's 2016 and 2018 deaths , and the Golden Gate Bridge collapse of August 11th 2019.

Hubbard's Patreon
I still like the Broncos, but I document all the synchs that I see. There is a narrative here for the Steelers. See my work yesterday, I showed what aligns for the Patriots and Belichick as well. This work is not an exact science, and the more I study, the more I wonder if the leagues are scripted with "insurance polices" if you will, for the sake of betting and how the public is placing their money.

Hubbard's Patreon, where most of his revenue "evidence" emanates from, has a main-page description where he lists a number of predictions he's made, which are all but bound to convince unsuspecting readers to give him money. The problem is that most of these predictions are missing a lot of important details. We decided to clear up the record, so that anyone, who wants to, can see all the evidence, not just the stuff Hubbard likes to show.

WARNING: The following section of this article may contain material which may cause brain smouldering. Readers' discretion is advised.

He has no information on his Patreon about the 2014 World Series, despite claiming that he's been "exposing" pro sports since 2014. His Nationals vs Orioles prediction could be the reason for this. There is also nothing on the three different outcomes he predicted for the 2015 Superbowl (all failed).

Our first facepalm. He predicted the Mets would win (not just get to) the World Series in 2015. He also falsely predicted that the 2015 World Series might be the "Subway Series" (Yankees vs Mets). As if shooting himself in both feet wasn't enough, he shoots himself in the leg by calling a 7 game series. It only went to 5. We're not done: he shot himself in the other leg by by predicting in the same post that the Blue Jays would beat the Royals. , But we're still not done. In that same blog post, he (somehow) shot himself in the back by trying to switch to the Cubs in the playoffs, only to revert back to the Mets when that failed (When the Mets swept the Cubs).

As you can see, we're already off to a disastrous start, but we're just getting started.

The blog post titled "The narrative for the Cleveland Indians to win the World Series in Game 6" begs to differ. As you may have guessed, this is a botched prediction, which is almost always the case with not just championships, but his daily sports picks as well. As we've already explained, altering a prediction to gain a win-win situation effectively voids the prediction altogether. But there's more: he spent most of the year claiming it would be Astros/Rangers vs Cubs in the World Series : The Rangers were swept in the 2016 ALDS and the Astros did not even reach the playoffs. He also speculated at the Texas Rangers vs Washington Nationals reaching in the World Series as well, but that failed too. .

A few problems with this. The Astros and Dodgers were, by far, the two favorites for the AL and NL respectively (though in the former's case, it was later found out because they cheated). Making such a prediction might seem nice, but isn't anywhere near "proof" that Jesuitsdidit. He further argued that orange (the Astros uniform color) represents fire, and blue (the Dodgers uniform color) represents water and fire always beats water. It seems in Hubbardland, buildings catch on water, waterfighters show up to the scene, and spray the building with fire and save the day (Which, to be honest, might make a kick-ass Christopher Nolan film). Prior to this, he had the Nationals winning the World Series. To ice the cake, he also predicted the Astros were "guaranteed" to win in Game 6, a prediction which spectacularly backfired.

In September that year, he had the Braves in the World Series, which he got wrong. They lost in the NLDS to the eventual NL champions, the Los Angeles Dodgers. He also speculated the Astros and Brewers to reach the World Series : Ironically, the semi-finals at that point were Astros vs Red Sox and Dodgers vs Brewers, so it was literally a win-win from that point onward.

Assuming this prediction is even true, given that it wasn't made until one game into the playoffs, it isn't too impressive. Throughout the regular season, he said the Mariners would likely win the World Series, only for them to (as usual) finish dead last in the AL West. Also failed to call Yankees and Cardinals to meet in the World Series as well.

After the World Series ended, he posted a blog post claiming victory over his big "successful" prediction, before unleashing an incoherent rant containing more profanity than Samuel L. Jackson in an R rated film, directed at his critics trolls. Because neither Hubbard's YouTube channel or Patreon account show any clear evidence of this prediction, even some of Hubbard's Patreon supporters called Hubbard out on his dishonesty, some unsubscribed from his Patreon.

Calling a game 7 mere hours before it happens isn't really "proof", so to speak.

Not before predicting they wouldn't win the NBA Finals. In one of his videos, he said either the OKC Thunder or Houston Rockets would go to the Finals for the western conference, specifically saying the Warriors were unlikely to return (they returned).

We crossed out the unnecessary bits, nothing else to see here.

Another botched prediction, see "The Case for a Steelers Superbowl Appearance" on his blogging site (referenced at the quote near the heading). As a bonus, he also failed to call the final score. By now, you likely can smell the bullshit coming straight from your computer monitor (or mobile device/hologram/etc)

This was actually a big mess. Right after his Colts (a team he was "dead set" on getting to the big game ) got eliminated from Superbowl contention, he switched his prediction to the Packers, the "Plan B" team , but that failed too.

Here, he admits that he screwed up, but fortunately, he had a backup prediction just in case, so it's cool. Also, he previously hinted at the Vikings going to the big game as well.

No evidence for this to be found, and he had the Washington Football Team Redskins in July 2018.

Referring to 2015 and 2018. Not listed on his Patreon, understandably, is his 2014, and 2016 Triple Crown predictions, both of which failed.

There isn't much else to say on this without getting repetitive here. Basically, this is another unfulfilling example "I got it mostly right, so lets just ignore what I didn't".

But not all the facts. For anyone wondering why we swear in court to tell the truth, and the whole truth, this is why.

This has already been addressed in the "predictions" section (in case you missed it).

Not listed on his Patreon is his 2018 prediction of the Lakers winning the 2020 NBA Finals. While this did happen, he failed to correctly call their opponent, the Heat (instead calling the Celtics). This is important because, most likely, Hubbard won't say that anytime he parades this grand prediction. Also, according to the comments section of his prediction video, there is evidence that Hubbard predicted the Lakers to win in 5 games, or 4 to 1 (Kobe Bryant's age when he died). If this is indeed the case, he Oofed up spectacularly yet again (they won in 6 games).

Also absent from his Patreon is that he failed to call three consecutive Stanley Cup Finals.

In 2020, he claimed to be 12-0 in the NFL playoffs, leading up to the 2021 Super Bowl between Tampa Bay and Kansas City in Tampa Bay. However, this is quite disputable, as he counts this game (for the Saints in Wildcard round) as a "correct" pick: "Close call, but there is a tremendous value with a Bears upset, giving Drew Brees his 55th loss, while the game is televised on Nickelodeon (Chicago Bears = 55, Nickelodeon = 55)." There were several other games where he left picks vague and then claimed positive results afterthefact. The following year, he predicted the Bengals to beat the 49ers in Superbowl LVI, only for them to lose to the Rams.

Once again, all of this information only scratches the surface. It would probably take an entire article in itself to explain everything about how Hubbard's Patreon is a failure, but we gave you a great sample list for anyone disinterested in wasting their money.

Another interesting observation is that the comments sections on Hubbard's Patreon posts are rife with other Patreon accounts self-promoting themselves, some even claiming to have better picks than Hubbard's (basically admitting that Zach's Patreon is in fact a failure). Thus, it seems that the Patreon sports predicting business is more tantamount to a line of crooked carnival games rather than honest research for "truth".

In short, we recommend not wasting your money on his Patreon for the aforementioned reasons, it's five dollars that would be better spent on a cheeseburger (or for that matter, burning with a Bic lighter). Of course, if you don't want to take our word for it, and you really want to go to his Patreon and verify all this for yourself, we can't stop you, but don't say you haven't been warned.

Revenue
In March 2021, Hubbard had amassed approximately 6,000 followers on his Patreon page. How much revenue is this? Assuming that, on average, every follower gave $2 (USD) a month, that's a grand total of $12,000 a month. If every follower gave $5, which appears to be his most popular tier, that's $30,000 every single month. Mind you, this does not include his book and merchandise sales. Despite this, Hubbard claims not to be in this business for money. You decide on that. As of August 2022, he sits around 4,400.

Hubbard and spirituality
Despite his rejection of mainstream religion, Hubbard claims a strong belief in spirituality. Not only that, but he teaches that there is a strong force of evil in this world (presumably the same evil force rigging Florida Panthers games that nobody goes to) that is trying to kill off spirituality. He even believes that "ritual magic" is actually real and that the "powers that be" are stopping us from using it. In other words, we actually live in the Wizarding World of Harry Potter, but we're all just too dumb to see it.

The evidence for this:

He appears to be agnostic, if you will, on the existence of an Afterlife, but says that if (that's right, IF) there is one, his critics/haters will be going there. So buy his books and merchandise believe him just in case.

Hubbard and other beliefs
Hubbard rejects the flat Earth theory, as well as the idea of FEMA death camps. While one could argue this to be a Stopped clock Moment, most likely it's just to make himself look more legit than he actually is. "Look guys, I am NOT a flat Earther! If you think I'M stupid, look over THERE!" is essentially what his anti-flat Earth videos come across as.

In either case, as if rejecting it in 2024 was such a high bar to clear, his bold rejection of the Flat Earth doesn't exactly amount to much, as Hubbard claims belief in the following:


 * Evolution, the Big bang , and Charles Darwin are all Illuminati-based frauds. Even Ken Ham would laugh his ass off at that one (that said, however, there is no evidence he endorses Young Earth creationism).
 * The world is on the brink of a one world currency: he even tried (tried) predicting it would come in 2018.
 * Monsanto and fast food restaurants are deliberately poisoning people.
 * Every form of authority (police, military, school teachers, etc) is hostile to society and need to be exterminated.
 * No planes actually hit the World Trade Center on 9/11: he even criticized Alex Jones for rejecting the no-planes theory, and even (wait for it) accused Jones of working with the Illuminati to mislead people on this subject.
 * The Lynnmouth Flood conspiracy theory.
 * Every major terrorist attack, 9/11, the Boston Marathon bombing, etc, are all false flag operations.
 * Mainstream media is normalizing homosexuality to reduce birth rates and the human population.
 * Vaccines cause autism, and possible some other bad stuff.
 * Climate change is a hoax.
 * Astrology and Hermeticism are not only real but the Bible/government are preventing us from discovering them.
 * The entire Coronavirus pandemic is a massive hoax.
 * Face masks, or "face diapers" as Hubbard calls them, are a symbolic compliance to tyranny and the Mark of the Beast He ended up making a big scene and nearly got kicked out of a Costco store in November 2020 for refusing to wear a mask
 * Jobs are pointless, they only exist exploit humanity... somehow.
 * The Holocaust was a lie, or at least exaggerated.
 * Chemtrails... 'nuff said.
 * Jeff Bezos lives on Mars while Elon Musk lives on Venus.
 * All, yes, we mean all, of US history is fake.
 * Sports athletes and politicians are artificially harvested in labs and aren't actual people (this is not a joke, he's dead serious here).
 * Outer Space is a hoax. How exactly can one even hold an opinion on the shape of the Earth while rejecting space itself?

Belief in all of the above pretty much cancels out any rejection of the Flat earth: in fact, the final point alone cancels it out.

Other lows
This is why I can’t wait for the revolution. There’s going to be a lot of bacon.

Hubbard has openly wished death (even slow and painful ones) on pretty much anyone who disagrees with him. Yes, you read that right. He has done this on quite a few different occasions.

In January 2020, during an hour-long video of irrational incoherence, Hubbard gleefully wished death by starvation and/or thirst on all of his critics

After the deadly airport bombings in Yemen in December 2020, Hubbard subtly celebrated the victims' deaths since they were "probably" non-conspiracy theorists before openly advocating the depopulation of any non-conspiracy theorists (the people that amount to, according to Hubbard, 95% of Earth's population).

If you like me and someone else in the conspiracy theorist community who disagrees with me some fraud, you're half retarded. Period.

That's not all. Hubbard is also sometimes a complete dick to even his own disciples followers , at least, those who don't agree with his every word or give him enough money.

Remember all of this next time Hubbard rants about how he's not getting anywhere in his vain attempts to make gematria go viral.

The Larry Johnson interview
In January 2020, Hubbard baited invited former NFL running back Larry Johnson onto his TFR live-show for an interview, in a desperate attempt to prove that even athletes are "coming out" and supporting his theory. Of course, his viewers might not have been told that Johnson has severe mental health issues, ultimately stemming from head injuries from playing in the NFL. Johnson can't even remember 2 seasons he played in the NFL. His condition is called chronic traumatic encephalopathy, which is due to suffering memory loss, suicidal impulses, mood swings, and headaches all due to his head injuries. One wonders if Hubbard wouldn't point this out if Johnson was arguing against gematria.

Of course, the intent here is not to mock Johnson for his mental conditions. Rather, it is to show that, in general, people with such conditions are probably not the best sources of "proof" for a conspiracy theory.

Hubbard and debates
Likely taking his debating lessons from Ray Comfort, Hubbard once tried his hand at debating his trolls critics after he was caught red-handed deleting comments on previous video. Unsurprisingly, all he did was Gish Gallop, spout nonsense that wasn't even wrong, yell, scream, swear, then hang up on each caller while declaring himself the winner. So if he ever intimidates you into debating him, do yourself a favor and don't even waste your time.

Hubbard vs. RationalWiki
Hubbard has discovered this article on him and, unsurprisingly, isn't too thrilled about it.

While briefly mentioning our article in a live stream, he said:

Hey, for the cocksuckers out there who wrote this page, who I know are watching right now because it's their job, again, why don't you guys update your page and put a thing like 'Hubbard helped people win hundreds of thousands of dollars in 2019 off rigged-off?' Wish granted! Unfortunately, this argument is irrelevant since this page never disputed such a claim (though it is questionalble at least). Rather, it merely pointed out that his arguments (including helping people win money on sports betting, one of his favorites) don't stand up to scrutiny. His "refutation" also demonstrated how little he knows about Falsifiability.

Not long later, on November 8th 2019, he live-streamed some sort of rant about Google "promoting" this article. If what he means by "promoting" is just appearing in Google's search results, than his argument immediately fails, as his blog and YouTube channel also appear on Google's search results, meaning they are also being "promoted". Not only that, but they actually appear before our article, (at least sometimes). Strangely, Hubbard removed the stream replay from YouTube almost immediately after ending it. Why exactly he did this is unknown, but a likely hypothesis is that after concluding, he realized that his "refutation" was horrid, then removed it to prevent his critics (in particular, us) from ripping it. While it is no longer viewable on the web, evidence of its past-existence can be found on Pinterest and Reddit.

For over a year, he appeared to have little, if anything, more to say on our article until February 2021, when he returned to find it expanded from his previous encounter. He went into about a 20 minute rant on our article again, regurgitating nonsense he's been spouting for years. He also took the opportunity to complain about how nobody debates him. The beginning of his rant also suggests that he hates this entire website, not just this article. He also objects to the length of this article, as if that somehow proves it wrong (would a stub be considered more accurate?).

Hubbard vs. RationalWiki: The Prequel
This article is not our first to ruffle his feathers, he previously wrote a brief, poorly concocted "response" to our article on New gematria in 2018.

Likes

 * Numbers
 * Money
 * Attention
 * Live-streaming for hours at a time, sometimes multiple times a day
 * Bragging about his deleted YouTube channels like a badge of honor
 * Himself

Dislikes

 * Coincidences
 * Anyone who disagrees with him
 * Reddit (they down-vote his videos )
 * Google
 * Amazon (despite selling his book on the platform)
 * Having a real job
 * RationalWiki

Other wacky quotes

 * "The Work I lay down is UNDENIABLE!"
 * "It's more proven than anything out there. You can laugh at anything in science if you're gonna laugh at MY work! My work's a theory, I've backed it up better than any scientific theory on the planet!"
 * "When you think about it, the concept of 'hope' is something that takes power away from you and has you place your power and influence in something outside of you. For example, President Barack Hussein Obama, the 44th President, ran on 'Hope'".
 * "Do you know what makes being a slave easier for some people? Adam Sandler movies and other distractions; distractions created by the same people who have enslaved us."
 * "Anyhow, looks like he might be part of the gang. What a scum.  It is too bad there are so many black men who are willing to get fucked in the ass to collect a pay check from a jew.  No Vaseline."
 * "I have zero doubt this Zionist Jew faked his death. Zero.  Him and the Nintendo Guy are probably jerking each other off underground right now, playing Mario and listening to Zeppelin."

Stopped clock

 * Despite his spiritual beliefs, Hubbard is quite critical of religious extremism and fear-based indoctrination.
 * In 2020, he apologized for some of his antisemitic comments of the past.
 * After messing up the 2021 March March Madness outcome, he made a video admitting he was wrong.
 * He dislikes Clickbait