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Meet Crypto’s Meme King: 5 Questions for Neeraj Agrawal

By Jeff John RobertsEditor, Finance and Crypto
Jeff John RobertsEditor, Finance and Crypto

Jeff John Roberts is the Finance and Crypto editor at Fortune, overseeing coverage of the blockchain and how technology is changing finance.

Jeff John Roberts

If you care about cryptocurrency, you know a lot of the action plays out on Twitter. And if you follow the Twitter happenings, you’ve probably come across Neeraj Agrawal—a one-man meme machine who acts as a court jester of sorts to the fractious crypto community.

Agrawal’s stock-in-trade is humor but he also shares real wisdom and policy points in his Twitter feed, and in his role as communications director for Coin Center, an advocacy group for cryptocurrency. His prodigious social media following also means he now frequently goes viral: Agrawal now has more than 51,000 Twitter followers, up from just 2,000 or so a year ago.

I caught up with Agrawal over lunch at the Crimson diner in Washington, D.C. where he dished on his unusual career and recent big news at Coin Center.

What follows is an edited version of our conversation, interspersed with some hallmark tweets from Agrawal.

How did you become a crypto communications guy in the first place?

I was interested in cryptocurrency and the media and comms and policy, but didn’t know how to combine those things. I was pretty green back then, and noticed the media was taking greater interest in this.

Then Coin Center started, and I volunteered for a month or so offering communications help. Then they offered me a job as director of comms even though I was very unqualified. My previous job was at Verisign (a domain name registry), where I did some blockchain research.

The crypto exchange Kraken just donated $1 million to Coin Center. What does that signify?

Part of being a non-profit is fundraising. This donation shows industry is seeing that our body of work speaks for itself.

We have two top agenda items right now. The first is fixing the licensing system for cryptocurrency, which is currently a patchwork of 53 state licenses that a money transmitter has to get. It’s slow and hugely expensive.

The other is obviously the securities issue. [Agrawal is referring to the regulatory uncertainty over whether and when a cryptocurrency must be registered as a security.]

What advice do you have for someone who wants to go into crypto communications?

Read the Bitcoin white paper first. Along with a sense of the cultural history of cryptocurrencies, a basic understanding of the technology is important to be effective. I am in no way an expert, but I know enough to filter signal from noise. It takes a lot more reading than the Bitcoin white paper to get there, but that is definitely the place to start.

From there, Twitter. Twitter is the place.

When I started, Jerry (Coin Center Director Jerry Brito) said he never saw me on the phone with journalists. But then I showed him all my DMs and he understood that’s where it goes down.

Where did you pick up your meme skills?

Just years of being an Internet kid, turning into an Internet person. I’ve been on forums for as long as I can remember. I guess my brain has been rewired to think in that way.

Reddit, random game forums, chat rooms. You name it I’ve been there. I was on Reddit in 2011—2011 was the big Reddit time for crypto. I was on Twitter back then but I was really bad at it.

What do you do when you’re off Twitter?

I’m not sure that exists. I do gaming, read books. I’m also obsessed with policy. Any dumb action movie is a good time.

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