Appearance alert: on Miltown's Best talking the MacDaddy saga and more
Check me out with Supra Dave and attorney Bruce Matzkin

Earlier this week, I appeared with attorney Bruce Matzkin on Miltown’s Best.
We ran through several topics, but we primarily spoke about the MacDaddy affair.
We started with the text message which ended the friendship with my (former) friend Megan Fox.
That’s because she was directing the “harassers, doxers, and defamers,” allegation at the host, Dave Teschendorf, because the text was in relation to an appearance I was planning in December 2024.
Dave wanted to address the allegations and stated on the show, “Anyone who is in my chat knows I stand up against harassing. I am so anti-doxing that I was making a documentary about doxers.”
It’s not surprising that Megan mischaracterized Dave. She has thrown away any semblance of honesty and integrity in favor of being a mouthpiece for Jeremy Hales and his popular YouTube channel What the Hale$.
For most of the broadcast, we talked about the MacDaddy affair. This story is important for several reasons. First, it involves Judge Kari Dooley, who is now a federal judge who has ruled on Paul Boyne’s case.
Second, there was a blatant conflict of interest which Dooley and others ignored. Bruce represented Robert Dunn, a partial owner of MacDaddy’s, a macaroni and cheese fast food place in Connecticut. He was being sued by his partner Joseph Voll.
Voll was represented by Michael Conway and Lizz Acee of the now defunct law firm, LeClair Ryan.
During the course of the litigation, Dunn discovered that Voll’s daughter, Katelyn, was trying to open two new locations for a competitor- Mac N’Out- and when Dunn sued, Conway and Acee represented Katelyn, despite the blatant conflict.

On top of this, Judge Dooley allowed for the legal theft of the business. During the dispute, Voll bought an old judgment of Dunn’s. He used that judgment to buy out Dunn’s fifty percent in MacDaddy. He did this even though the LLC Act barred this action. Judge Dooley ignored the law and allowed for the legal theft.
Check out my previous interviews with Bruce Matzkin about the MacDaddy affair below.