Professional by Day, Provocative by Night: YouTuber’s Online Comments Raise Concerns
A heated online feud among several YouTubers — including KFARR Reacts (Mr. Kevin J. Farrar), KTZed (Mrs. Katie Zierk), and Georgia Transparency (Mr. Russell Pickron) — has spiraled from mild chatroom banter into disturbing allegations of harassment, racism, profanity, and implied threats.
What began as casual livestream commentary has evolved into a troubling pattern of personal attacks, unprofessional conduct, and statements that contradict the professional image Mrs. Zierk presents publicly.
A Timeline of Escalation
Before GT made any effort to resolve matters privately, screenshots captured KTZed directing inflammatory and racially charged comments toward him:
“Wow, I didn’t realize that GT was such a racist. I mean, I knew he was from rural Georgia, so I guess that makes sense.”
“Yes, I’m calling you a racist GT. You saw a brown person on the screen and couldn’t help yourself. It’s pathetic.”
“I bet he’s streaming from the basement of his dad’s 7-11”.
These remarks, broadcast live during YouTube chats, quickly drew attention for their tone and language.
GT’s Attempt to De-Escalate
During mid-October 2025, GT emailed both KFARR Reacts and KT Zed, asking to end the feud and move on peacefully.
“The smack talking was getting out of hand,” GT said. “I just wanted to go my own way and stop all of it.”
Mrs. Zierk initially replied and appeared agreeable, while KFARR did not. However, tensions reignited shortly after during another livestream.
Alarming New Comments
In that later stream, Mrs. Zierk posted a message that raised serious concern:
“I had to talk my husband out of taking a trip to LaGrange this weekend. I do not care to take this real world. Please stop, Russell.”
GT subsequently filed a police report as a precaution, noting that the comment could be interpreted as a veiled threat or intent to confront someone offline.
“When people hide behind the walls of the internet and get exposed, they may want to try and do something,” GT said. “It’s best to document and protect yourself.”
Professional Role Raises Eyebrows
According to her LinkedIn profile, Mrs. Katie Zierk serves as an Assistant Property Manager at Arden Logistics Parks, overseeing numerous shopping centers across Georgia and neighboring states.
Her business background paints the picture of a seasoned property-management professional — yet her online behavior tells a much different story.
The same person who represents a major logistics property firm has been caught on livestreams using profanity, mocking others’ weight, making racially insensitive comments, and cursing openly at critics.
For someone in an upper-management, client-facing role, such behavior raises real concerns about professionalism, judgment, and the values represented by her employer.
October 19 Livestream: Mocking a Woman’s Weight
On October 19, 2025, during a broadcast titled “October Game Night” on the KT Zed & Eva & Xena channel, Mrs. Zierk displayed a video clip showing a plus-size woman in a wheelchair — then mocked her appearance and weight before her audience. During the segment, Mrs. Zierk stated, “we don’t need to see that shit,” further reinforcing the mocking tone of the stream.
The clip bore no relation to the “game night” theme and appeared included solely to ridicule the woman. For someone with a professional management background, publicly demeaning another person’s body while using profanity demonstrates a stunning lack of discretion and maturity.
**Livestreams with KFARR Reacts & Alcohol Usage
Mrs. Zierk also frequently appears alongside Mr. Kevin Farrar (KFARR Reacts) in joint livestreams. In those sessions she can be seen consuming alcohol live on camera. While YouTube does not prohibit alcohol consumption outright, its policies specify that content involving regulated goods (including alcohol) must not facilitate sale, must not promote excessive or irresponsible use, and must responsibly restrict younger audiences. Because Mrs. Zierk’s streams include live drinking and hostile conduct (body-shaming, profanity, threats) this raise questions about whether the livestreams remain within YouTube’s guidelines for maturity and responsible portrayal of alcohol use.
The Broader Issue
This controversy underscores a wider problem in the digital age: professionals engaging in online behavior that undermines their credibility and potentially their employment.
GT, who advocates for government and online transparency, summarized it clearly:
“Everyone has free speech — but freedom of speech doesn’t mean freedom from accountability. When you hold a professional title and speak publicly, your words reflect your character.”
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