Mike Lindell blasted one of its executive vice presidents for 'canceling' him because they said his items 'no longer rate above a four' with customers.
Mike Lindell told Right Side Broadcasting Network that Walmart's decision to stop stocking MyPillow products was "a battle of biblical proportions."
Mike Lindell — aka the MyPillow Guy — is convinced that Walmart is trying to cancel him as the retailer
Walmart confirmed its stores will no longer sell MyPillow products, which can still be found on the company's website
It looks like Mike Lindell's pillow empire as finally lost all its stuffing, as the MyPillow peddler announced last night that Walmart dropped his products. This comes after a petition with 100,000 signatures urged Walmart — along with Amazon — to disassociate themselves with the Big Lie conspiracy-theorist after 22 other mega retailers (i.e., — Read the rest
Former Newcastle United owner claims Jackson made false representations over Derby County takeover interest
MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell revealed on Thursday that he was enraged and "slammed" his computer during a video call after a Walmart executive vowed to never sell his bedding products again.
The 6-to-3 ruling, delivered in a Mississippi case, had been expected after a draft majority opinion leaked to the news media in May, and came from a conservative high court that was remade by President Donald Trump to tilt far further to the right.
"What they did to cancel us out is absolutely disgusting," Lindell told Insider, claiming that his MyPillows were the retailer's top-selling product.
"What they did to cancel us out is absolutely disgusting," Lindell told Insider, claiming his MyPillows were the retailer's top-selling product.
Speaking on CNN this Friday, legal analyst Steve Vladek addressed the questions about both the immediate and long term implications of the Supreme Court's 6-3 ruling to overturn Roe v. Wade, determining that the Constitution does not guarantee a right to abortion.
Joanna Liverance, 26, of Detroit, protests with other abortion-rights supporters Wednesday outside the Supreme Court building in WashingtonJacquelyn Martin / AP