Katie Didn't
| Real name | Katie |
|---|---|
| Alias(es) | Katie Did Katie Didn't Katie Doesn't (Do Anything) |
| Location on the globe | United States |
| Main platform | TikTok |
| Papa flerf | Unknown |
| Flerfzi? | Not confirmed; tolerates it |
| Religiflerf? | No |
| Drinks urine? | Unknown |
| Adopted By | Not adopted yet |
| Teeth | All of them |
Katie, known online as Katie Didn't, is an American flat Earther active primarily on TikTok. She is best known for attributing weight and the downward motion of objects to magnetism, despite apparently having performed no experiments to test the claim.
Known accounts
- @katie.did.3—TikTok
- @morethanstars85—TikTok
- @katiedid8503—TikTok (display name: iono)
Flat Earth claims
Weight is caused by magnetism
Katie claims that weight, and the general downward bias observed when objects are dropped, is caused by magnetism or electromagnetism.
She has not presented an experiment demonstrating that ordinary nonmagnetic objects are pulled downward by a magnetic force, nor has she apparently tested the claim using even a basic magnet.
The claim also creates immediate problems. Many objects that have weight are not strongly magnetic, and magnets do not pull every material in the same direction with the same acceleration. Nevertheless, Katie appears to accept magnetism as an explanation for weight without demonstrating a mechanism or producing experimental evidence.
Approach to evidence
Katie is known for demanding that conventional scientific explanations be personally proven while accepting selected alternative explanations without applying the same standard.
She appears willing to accept scientific concepts that can be adapted to support a flat-Earth argument, such as electromagnetism, while rejecting other established scientific conclusions without conducting tests of her own.
Despite repeatedly discussing experimentation and evidence, she has not publicly demonstrated a test of any of her major flat-Earth claims.
Other info
- Sometimes called Katie Doesn't (Do Anything), referencing her lack of experimentation.
- Frequently invokes magnetism or electromagnetism as an explanation without providing a measurable model.
- Has not provided evidence showing how magnetism would produce the uniform downward acceleration normally attributed to gravity.