Fake Alpha Male Claimed He Was Worth Millions Online – Then Filed For Divorce Showing No Income

A self-proclaimed millionaire who built an online persona around wealth, luxury cars, and a $12 million mansion has been exposed through his own divorce paperwork, revealing a financial picture that tells a completely different story.

King Azoulay, known in online circles for flaunting a lavish lifestyle, has made a habit of calling out others for being broke while positioning himself as the ultimate alpha male. In his own videos, he boasted openly about his wealth.

He stated, “My life is great. I’m worth over $100 million. I drive a Rolls-Royce and a Lambo. I live in a $12 million home. I have 100 different properties. I’m flying private jets.”

Content creator Jon Bravo obtained Azoulay’s divorce records, which are available as public documents, and the financial details inside them paint a very different portrait. The income and expense declaration filed during the divorce proceedings shows Azoulay listed himself as self-employed and working as a contractor since 2010, but noted he stopped working entirely in 2022. When he was working, he was earning $4,000 a month.

The document shows he is 35 years old, holds a high school diploma, and last filed taxes in 2024. Every line under monthly income was marked zero. The only financial support listed was $1,000 a month from his mother, Rachel, who lives with him at his home. He listed no operating business. Under assets, he reported savings of $12,000 and listed a vehicle valued at $18,000. There was no mention of a Rolls-Royce, a Lamborghini, or any multi-million dollar property.

Bravo was careful to note that he does not typically enjoy highlighting someone else’s financial struggles, acknowledging that financial hardship is something many people experience. However, given Azoulay’s repeated and very public claims of massive wealth combined with his pattern of calling others broke, Bravo argued the public deserved to see the documented truth.

Azoulay had previously targeted Bravo in Instagram stories, offering to fly out a mutual contact, cover hotel costs, and even pay Bravo $10,000, describing him as someone who desperately needed the money.

The timing of those comments, made while Azoulay was apparently living off his mother’s financial support, has not gone unnoticed.

The divorce paperwork, signed by both Azoulay and his now ex-wife, closes the loop on years of online posturing. As Bravo put it, “The more you lie in life, eventually the truth always comes out.”