Elon Musk said he’s personally paying the legacy blue checkmarks for a few celebrities who previously complained about buying the premium service championed by the new Twitter owner.
On April 20, Musk kept true to his longtime promise, and celebrities, and many others who'd been verified for free but declined to sign up for Twitter’s Blue subscription plan, began losing their legacy status.
However, Musk confirmed that he’s paying for the accounts of William Shatner, LeBron James, and Stephen King out of his own pocket to keep their checkmark.
In another post, the SpaceX founder revealed that he’s only paying for Shatner, LeBron, and King. The three famous personalities—who’ve been vocal about the multibillionaire’s plan requiring a monthly fee to keep the status—previously stressed that they would never pay for it.
At the time, Musk wrote in a tweet that there shouldn’t be a different standard for celebrities. “It’s more about treating everyone equally,” he said.
Musk, who has long been known for his sense of humor and often reposts funny memes, did not elaborate further on why he chose to pay for the checkmarks.
“You’re welcome namaste,” Musk responded in a tweet, indicating he’s covering King’s subscription.
Introducing Twitter Blue
The majority of blue check marks, including those of the most well-known people on the platform such as former president Donald Trump, Bill Gates, and Twitter founder Jack Dorsey, disappeared from accounts on Thursday.Prior to Musk acquiring Twitter in October 2022 for $44 billion, the social media company had handed out blue checkmarks or verification badges for free to verified user accounts, such as those belonging to celebrities, politicians, government officials, journalists, or other accounts of public interest.
One of the new Twitter chief’s first product moves was to launch a service granting blue checks to anyone paying an $8 monthly fee, or $84 per year. The relaunched service costs $8 a month for web users and $11 a month, or $115 per year, for iPhone and iPad users.
Under that plan, users also get early access to select features, like editing tweets and undoing them after publishing. Unlike the previous Twitter rules, user accounts do not have to be notable, although accounts made less than 30 days ago will not be eligible for the paid plan.
Additional gold and gray checkmarks are also available to verify businesses and government or multilateral organizations or government or multilateral officials, respectively.