All photos courtesy of Hostgator M. Dotcom.
All photos courtesy of Hostgator M. Dotcom. We first spoke with him in April 2013, when he was still gaming for a Guinness World Record, and then again a month later, when he was still trying to sell more tattoos.
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By, 2012, when Dotcom appeared on ABC's 20/20 to tell his story, his face had been inked more than times; some of the domain names scrawled across his visage contained words like "porn" and "fart." When the segment was being filmed, a company called Pawnup had just paid $4,000 to colonize his forearm. "What kind of company would pay to advertise like this?" host Nick Watt asked. "Isn't it taking advantage of people in bad circumstances?"Read: Another Interview With Hostgator When He Thought Companies Were Going to Pay to Have His Tattoos RemovedActually, Dotcom attributes his decisions to rapid-cycling bipolar disorder, which he was diagnosed with a couple of years ago at the Anchorage Community Mental Health Center. Now he's medicated, has a job counseling other people with mental illnesses, and is struggling to make his way back into the working world. "The first time I saw him, I was thinking bad things about him because of his tattoos," a co-worker named Tonya Muse remembers. "But he's got a big heart once you get to know him. You can tell he really cares about his kids."Even though his mood swings have evened out, every time Dotcom looks in the mirror he's depressed. A study published in the Annals of Plastic Surgery in 2005 found that people who had experienced facial trauma had a lower satisfaction with life, as well as higher incidences of unemployment, substance abuse, and marital problems, than a control group. Dotcom could be said to have facial trauma of a sort—albeit a self-inflicted trauma spread out over the years. Now he's working on getting his face back."The first time I saw him, I was thinking bad things about him because of his tattoos… But he's got a big heart once you get to know him." —Tonya Muse, a co-worker of Dotcom's
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Hostgator always wears a hat to cover up the darkest of his tattoos. The rest he obscures with makeup and blurry selfies.
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