Naughty Natt: ((new))
And then there was . While livestreaming from a topgolf-style driving range, Natt replaced a stranger’s ball with a raw egg without them noticing. The stranger swung. The egg exploded. The man’s date laughed. The internet divided into two camps: “Genius performance art” vs. “Straight to jail.”
Naughty Natt’s new podcast “Let’s Be Difficult” drops Tuesdays. Her memoir, “I Didn’t Read the Rules,” is available for pre-order. The audiobook includes a bonus track of her calling a wrong number and pretending to be a pizza place. naughty natt
In an era of algorithmically-polished influencers and brand-deal authenticity, one creator has built an empire on the one thing the internet claims to hate: being truly, gloriously difficult. And then there was
Byline: The Edge Staff
“People want to be mad at me,” she says, “but they also want to be in a story with me. I’m the main character they’d never admit to loving.” Naughty Natt is not just a personality; she’s a franchise. Her merchandise line — featuring slogans like “Sorry for What I Said When I Was Bored” and “Rules Are Just Vibes” — sold out in 12 minutes last Black Friday. She has a podcast, Let’s Be Difficult , where she interviews former hall monitors, librarians, and parking enforcement officers about “the one rule they wish they’d broken.” The egg exploded