When you think about famous people who have shaped history or pop culture, you probably picture polished images and flawless personas. In reality, many of these icons lead lives that are wildly different from the glossy narratives we’ve been fed. Below we peel back the curtain and reveal the bizarre, sometimes unsettling, side of ten well‑known figures.
Famous People Who Surprise Us Behind the Curtain
10 Edward Snowden Is An Internet Rage Commenter

Before he became the emblem of government transparency by leaking the NSA’s massive surveillance program, Edward Snowden spent his free time fretting on chat rooms, spewing profanity and fury at the political establishment. By his own admission, he was a relentless, foul‑mouthed heckler even by the standards of the early‑2000s internet.
Snowden’s online persona, “The TrueHOOHA,” was built around blistering tirades about American politics, oddly fixated on whistle‑blowers. In one infamous rant he slammed The New York Times for “reporting classified s—t,” likening them to WikiLeaks and declaring that whistle‑blowers “should be shot in the balls.”
His commentary rarely drew a response—until he launched a tirade against President Obama, claiming the president had “appointed a f—king POLITICIAN to run the CIA.” A fellow user retorted with a vulgar comeback about his mother and a “secretary of my balls.”
Despite the noise, Snowden left a lasting imprint on his IRC peers. When asked about the now‑celebrated leaker, one former chat companion recalled, “I remember that guy. He was a total cockmonger.”
These recollections illustrate a stark contrast between the quiet hacker‑activist we now know and the raging, profanity‑laden commentator he once was.
9 Taylor Swift And Lorde May Be 4chan Users

4chan, the infamous imageboard notorious for its chaotic, anonymous culture, has been rumored to harbor two of the world’s biggest pop sensations. According to self‑styled cyber‑sleuths, a blonde‑haired user posting on the site is none other than Taylor Swift.
The evidence, while quirky, is oddly persuasive. The day before Swift announced a new cat named Meredith, an anonymous 4chan user uploaded pictures of an identical feline and asked the community to christen it. The board collectively settled on “Meredith,” matching Swift’s later tweet.
Although this coincidence isn’t ironclad proof, the same forum boasts stronger circumstantial evidence for Lorde. On December 13, 2012, a user uploaded a raw version of “Royals” seeking feedback, months before the track officially dropped.
Lorde has denied any involvement, but the timing and the file’s origin suggest a possible secret 4chan presence. Whether fact or fanciful speculation, the rumors paint a wildly different picture of these pop icons.
8 Stephen Hawking Was A Regular At Sex Clubs

When most people think of Stephen Hawking, they imagine a brilliant physicist battling ALS from a wheelchair, delivering lectures on black holes. Few consider that he might have also been a regular patron of adult entertainment venues.
Reports place Hawking at Freedom Acres, a swinger’s club that explicitly warns guests to bring their own lubricant and a change of clothes. Remarkably, he was spotted there at the age of 70, far beyond the typical party‑goer demographic.
Friends attempted to downplay the incident, insisting he only visited once. Yet his nightlife résumé includes frequenting a strip club called Devore for lap dances and even gifting fellow physicist Kip Thorne a year‑long subscription to Penthouse.
Whether these escapades reflect a hidden facet of Hawking’s personality or simply sensational headlines, they underscore that even the most revered scientists can lead surprisingly hedonistic lives.
7 Gandhi Was Weirdly Comfortable With Bowel Movements

Decades after his passing, an anecdote from one of Mahatma Gandhi’s close followers reveals an unexpected preoccupation: communal bathroom etiquette. The follower recalled Gandhi greeting local women each morning with a wave and the question, “Did you have a good bowel morning movement this morning, sisters?”
Gandhi’s fascination with regularity stemmed from a genuine concern for widespread constipation in his community. He encouraged his followers to perform enemas on each other without shame, insisting the practice should be routine.
Every time Gandhi visited the restroom, he would linger for at least twenty minutes, inviting anyone nearby to sit and chat while he took care of business. He turned a private act into a social gathering, blending his philosophy of openness with bodily functions.
This quirky habit adds a humanizing, if odd, layer to the image of a man known for political non‑violence and spiritual discipline.
6 Julian Assange Doesn’t Bathe

Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, commands a formidable reputation online, but his personal hygiene—or lack thereof—has become an infamous footnote among those who have met him.
The first public allegation came from a woman who accused him of sexual assault; she also testified that Assange never showered during the period she knew him and refused to flush the toilet. Her testimony highlighted his alleged refusal to bathe as a point of contention.
Although her claims remain unproven, several staff members at the Ecuadorian embassy, where Assange sought refuge, filed complaints about the foul odor permeating the building, noting that “it seems he doesn’t wash properly.”
Even his close aides have voiced concerns. One aide recalled Assange eating with his hands and constantly wiping his greasy fingers on his pants, describing his trousers as the greasiest he’d ever seen.
Activist Jeremie Zimmermann echoed these observations, suggesting the only way to get Assange into a shower is to force him, because “if nobody makes him, he just won’t go in there.”
5 Bill Gates Has A Minesweeper Addiction

Bill Gates may be the world’s wealthiest technocrat, but his pastime in the 1990s involved a surprisingly simple game: Minesweeper.
Gates became so enamored with the classic Windows puzzle that his productivity suffered. To curb the habit, he attempted to delete the game from his computer, only to find himself sneaking into the office of Microsoft’s then‑president Michael Hallman to play covertly on Hallman’s machine.
The addiction culminated in a public display when Gates, exhilarated by a new high score, summoned Hallman’s staff into the office to showcase his five‑second beginner‑mode victory. The episode revealed a side of Gates rarely seen beyond boardrooms and philanthropy.
4 Michel Foucault Was ‘Completely Amoral’

Michel Foucault, a towering figure in post‑structuralist philosophy, is often imagined as a stoic academic in a vaulted university hall. In reality, his personal life was anything but conventional.
Foucault once appeared on television to debate philosophy with linguist Noam Chomsky, motivated by the promise of a “large chunk of hashish” as payment. After the broadcast, he hosted parties where he bragged about bringing his own “Chomsky hash” for guests.
His radical views extended to the legal realm: Foucault championed the elimination of the age‑of‑consent laws, arguing that criminalizing a man who slept with a 13‑year‑old was an example of “Puritanism gone mad.” He dismissed the concept of consent itself, claiming “no one signs a contract before making love.”
Chomsky later described Foucault as “completely amoral,” a sentiment that captures the philosopher’s willingness to flout societal norms for the sake of intellectual provocation.
3 Jack Kerouac Couldn’t Drive

Jack Kerouac’s novel On The Road glorified the open highway, cementing the car as a symbol of freedom in American culture. Paradoxically, Kerouac never actually drove a vehicle.
During his cross‑country travels with Neal Cassady, Kerouac possessed no driver’s license and never took the wheel himself. Even after eventually obtaining a license, he was infamous for his terrible driving, often refusing to drive unless absolutely necessary.
When he did sit behind the wheel, Kerouac was visibly terrified, inching forward cautiously and hesitating whenever another car passed. He later admitted, “I don’t know how to drive. Just typewrite.”
This stark contrast between his literary celebration of road trips and his personal inability to drive adds an ironic twist to his legacy.
2 Albert Einstein Was A Sexual Predator

Albert Einstein’s genius reshaped physics, yet his behavior toward women was far from exemplary. Beyond his well‑known affairs and a secret daughter, he exhibited a pattern of predatory conduct.
Friends noted his habit of leaving his dressing gown unbuttoned, allowing his physique to be on full display whether he was at home or strolling the streets. When women asked him to close his robe, he would become irate, questioning their marital status and chastising them for blushing.
Einstein allegedly used his open robe as a test: if a woman didn’t protest, he interpreted it as consent to pursue further advances, often initiating these encounters in hotel rooms.
These anecdotes paint a troubling portrait of a man whose scientific brilliance was shadowed by a disturbing lack of respect for personal boundaries.
1 Prince Was A Jehovah’s Witness

Prince, the flamboyant musician whose provocative lyrics pushed the limits of popular music, underwent a dramatic spiritual transformation after 2001, becoming a devout Jehovah’s Witness.
Embracing his new faith, Prince took to door‑to‑door evangelism, Bible in hand, often accompanied by bassist Larry Graham. His newfound religiosity sparked a stark contrast with his earlier image.
Adopting the religion’s conservative stance, Prince publicly opposed gay marriage and sexual promiscuity, declaring that God had “cleared it all out” and that “enough” was enough for humanity.
His commitment persisted until his death: he refused a life‑saving blood transfusion on religious grounds and was ultimately laid to rest in a Jehovah’s Witness Kingdom Hall, underscoring the depth of his devotion.

