The Tyler Durden Stunt

Is it true, everyone asks, that Tyler Durden is building an army? (Fight Club, 1999)

Yes, Einar Korsnes. Why not exploit Aftenposten’s nonsense? The drivel. They turned what was a slightly audacious use of a pseudonym into something akin to serial murder that morning in 2007. And turned Einar Korsnes into a celebrity for a whole day. No, two days in a row.

A while later – in 2008 – I saw no other way than to exploit Einar Korsnes’ celebrity status, and so I placed a small ad reading “His name is Einar Korsnes” on vg.no, Norway’s largest news website.

At the same time, I posted some “clues” on the IFS websites that made it natural to assume the ad had a connection to the film Fight Club starring Edward Norton and Brad Pitt, where the chant “His name is Robert Paulson” is central. The precursor to The Maksima Declaration, which I authored in 2007, had been published, and the political ambitions had been formulated – and I had already begun hyping my new political project. Now I was implying that I, and not just Tyler Durden, “was building an army.”

Was Frank Hartvedt preparing the ground for a political upheaval by employing undemocratic means, like Durden and his gang? Was that what he was suggesting?

Relax, it was just a little whim. Right?