Scamming socialite Caroline Calloway believes she's 'going to die' because she hasn't evacuated from the area where Hurricane Milton is set to hit.
Calloway, 32, became one of the first Instagram influencers when she documented her time at England's prestigious Cambridge University but was found to have faked her qualifications.
Posting to her Instagram Story Tuesday night from her new Florida home, Calloway detailed the full extent of her predicament.
'So if you've been following Hurricane Milton, um, I'm going to die! It's supposed to make landfall in the Sarasota-Bradenton area. I'm in Sarasota, I live on the water, it's zone A, mandatory evacuation,' she said.
Calloway then attempted to explain why she didn't get out of her home in time for the storm.
Scamming socialite Caroline Calloway believes she's 'going to die' because she hasn't evacuated from the area where Hurricane Milton is set to hit
Calloway, 32, became one of the first Instagram influencers when she documented her time at England's prestigious Cambridge University but was found to have faked her qualifications
'I can't drive, first of all. Second of all, the airport is close. Third of all, the last time I evacuated for a hurricane, I went to my mom's house in Northport for Hurricane Ian,' she said.
'Her whole street flooded and we were evacuated after three days without power or running water by the U.S. military,' Calloway revealed.
'It was very traumatic and so I don't want to evacuate to my mom's house because the last time I did that, it was the worst time ever!'
She then said that she was holed down with her cat with a bathtub full of 'backup water.'
'We have food but it's kind of scary and... yeah, I'll keep you guys updated,' she finished, before posting video of Tampa Bay Mayor Jane Castor saying that if you don't evacuate, "you will die."'
Calloway notoriously paid for followers on Instagram, and defrauded hundreds of fans with 'creative workshops' that never materialized before bolting to Florida where she says she's 'not f***ed someone who can read in over two years'.
In 2015, her large Instagram following helped her secure a six-figure book deal but she failed to deliver, branding its premise 'sexist', but offering the first seven chapters for sale on Etsy.
Then her ghostwriter Natalie Beach wrote a bombshell essay in The Cut.
The essay coincided with the suicide of Calloway's father, and Calloway told followers on Instagram Stories she was struggling with depression, anxiety, and Adderall addiction, while consumed with existential questions about why she was alive.
Posting to her Instagram Story Tuesday night from her new Florida home, Calloway detailed the full extent of her predicament
She's now in the path of Hurricane Milton, which churned Wednesday toward a potentially catastrophic collision along the west coast of Florida, where some residents insisted they would stay after millions were ordered to evacuate and officials warned that stragglers would face grim odds of surviving
Still needing to pay off the advance on the book she had not written, she opened an OnlyFans account in 2020 claiming that Playboy had commissioned a photoshoot with her.
She told Harvard's Crimson Magazine she imagined her subscribers to be 'boys who went to Princeton and now work on Wall Street and who think I would have been mean to them in middle school'.
But her subscribers were not enough to stop her being evicted from her West Village apartment by a landlord who sued her for $40,000 and damage to the building.
That summer a BBC documentary 'My Insta Scammer Friend' dealt her reputation another blow as former followers detailed their abusive relationship with her.
'I was 10 out of 10 obsessed with Caroline Calloway,' Genevieve Wheeler told the program-makers.
'She would like your posts and it felt like Christmas morning. It was the greatest thing in the world.'
'I would definitely say I was addicted,' said Caitlin Vickers. 'I wanted to be living that life so much.'
She told followers she wanted them to 'grow old with me' and watch her fall in love and get married.
'I can't drive, first of all. Second of all, the airport is close. Third of all, the last time I evacuated for a hurricane, I went to my mom's house in Northport for Hurricane Ian,' she said
'We have food but it's kind of scary and... yeah, I'll keep you guys updated,' she finished, before posting video of Tampa Bay Mayor Jane Castor saying that if you don't evacuate, 'you will die'
But many lost money on her 'creativity workshops' and were devastated when Calloway revealed her mercenary side shortly before quitting social media in 2021.
'Do you know hard it is to conjure fame and money out of thin air?' she demanded. 'And I'm f***ing killing it.
'Big picture: I want fame, power and money and people talking about me is part of that.'
She transferred from NYU to Cambridge with Beach, who admitted she was dazzled by 'the most confident girl I'd ever known'.
'She seemed like an adult, someone who had just gone ahead and constructed a life of independence. I, meanwhile, was a virgin with a meek ponytail, living in a railroad apartment that was sinking into the Gowanus Canal,' she wrote.
'She was constantly calling me her best friend and work wife, telling me she loved me. I thought we were in this together.'
But Calloway later admitted she had been turned on by Beach's account of being sexually assaulted, and cruelly compared her figure to that of a pot-bellied man she had had sex with.
Three years later she was likened to notorious Fyre Festival conman Billy McFarland after selling $165 tickets to a nationwide 'Creativity Workshop Tour', which promised tutorials on building an Instagram brand, developing ideas, and addressing 'the emotional and spiritual dimensions of making art'.
Caroline Calloway, 32, had 800,000 followers on Instagram as one of the site's earliest influencers but was sued for $40,000 by her landlord after leaving her NYC apartment in 2022
Racked by debts Calloway set up an OnlyFans page which she claimed was bringing her $25,000 a month
But most of the events were cancelled with Calloway urging some ticket buyers in Philadelphia to get on a train to New York for one of the few that went ahead.
'It was this sickening feeling,' fan Abigail Scott said. 'A lightbulb went off … She was just looking at her fans as a way to make money.'
Relocating to Sarasota in Florida she cashed in on her reputation with a 2023 memoir called Scammer in which she described the plaque she hoped would one day sit outside her former New York apartment.
Sold through her revived Instagram account and self-published through her imprint Dead Dad publishing it was well received by reviewers with the New Yorker describing it as 'funny, engaging, and full of genuine insight'.
She told the Crimson she expects it to be the first of a trilogy of 'juvenilia' answering her critics before she tries to put her past behind her.
'It's been terrible for my reputation,' she said. 'I mean, people finally know that I'm not a scammer now. How am I supposed to keep up my reputation when people are out here slandering my name?'
Earlier this month she told the No Jumper podcast she was only dating men who know nothing about her past, but she 'hates' them.
She's now in the path of Hurricane Milton, which churned Wednesday toward a potentially catastrophic collision along the west coast of Florida, where some residents insisted they would stay after millions were ordered to evacuate and officials warned that stragglers would face grim odds of surviving.
The Tampa Bay area, home to more than 3.3 million people, faced the possibility of widespread destruction after avoiding direct hits from major hurricanes for more than a century.
The National Hurricane Center predicted Milton, a monstrous Category 5 hurricane during much of its approach, would likely weaken but remain a major hurricane when it makes landfall late Wednesday.