“He didn’t just troll – he taunted. And now the receipts are catching up.”
A new social media scandal is exploding around The Valley’s most polarizing star, as fans and podcasters alike are accusing Jax Taylor of operating a burner account to lash out at his critics and defend himself anonymously in the most condescending, petty ways possible — including calling out viewers who questioned his “rehab journey” with comments like, “Maybe you need rehab, doll.”
The account in question? A suspicious user named Frank Dremon, which ex-wife-to-be Brittany Cartwright claims is Jax’s secret online persona, and which has now become the subject of deep fan investigations. In a recent Watch What Happens Live episode, Brittany stunned viewers when she told co-star Janet Caperna that Jax had “accidentally messaged her from the Frank account,” unknowingly outing himself as its operator. Since then, internet sleuths have pored through hundreds of old comments — and what they’re finding is equal parts cringe and concerning.
One comment in particular has caught fire for all the wrong reasons: responding to criticism about Jax’s brief 30-day stint at a rehab facility, Frank Dremon fired back, “30 days equals 4 weeks. Maybe you need rehab doll… 30 days is more than week.” The smug tone, the casual use of the word “doll” (a Jax-ism if there ever was one), and the bizarre grammatical choices only fueled speculation. But it wasn’t just the wording — it was the behavior. “He wasn’t defending himself. He was belittling fans while pretending to be someone else,” one Bravo blogger noted.
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In another now-viral post, “Frank” weighed in on Jax’s current separation: “People literally separate everyday, reality stars are know different.” The incorrect use of “know” instead of “no” immediately raised red flags — particularly because Jax Taylor himself once made the exact same error on his verified Instagram: “We get it you’re in Coachella knowbody cares.” Podcaster Jenny Blaze was the first to publicly connect the dots, calling it a “narcissistic trail of breadcrumbs” in a now-trending TikTok clip.
“These are not just similar typos,” Jenny said. “This is a man so obsessed with controlling the narrative that he forgot how recognizable his voice is — even when he hides behind a fake name.”
And while burner accounts aren’t a new concept in reality TV, this one strikes a different chord — because it wasn’t just used to uplift, but to actively mock, insult, and belittle people, especially women, who didn’t support Jax’s comeback arc. The “rehab doll” comment alone, many say, crosses the line from defensive to demeaning. “He’s not just lying. He’s laughing at us while doing it,” one fan posted on Reddit. “It’s giving unhinged.”
Meanwhile, insiders close to production confirm that Bravo was aware of online chatter linking Jax to the Frank Dremon account, but has yet to make a formal statement. “There were whispers during filming that he was watching fan responses in real-time and posting as someone else,” a source shared. “Some cast members suspected it, but no one wanted to confront him outright.”
Brittany, for her part, says she’s not surprised. “He told me about that account years ago. I think he just forgot I knew,” she confessed on the show. “And then I started seeing the name pop up under every article, every post… all defending him. I knew it was him.”
What began as an offhand accusation has now morphed into a full-blown exposé — one that not only undermines Jax Taylor’s claims of personal growth, but also paints a disturbing picture of a man desperate to control public perception, even if it means ridiculing his own audience from behind a mask.
As of now, “Frank Dremon” has gone silent. But the internet hasn’t. Because once the facade falls away, there’s no hiding who’s really behind the keyboard — and this time, not even a burner account can rehab that reputation.