Dark truth of the champagne-swigging 'Mooshtips' horse racing expert claiming to earn £100k-a-month from Thai mansion by turning 'ordinary bets into extraordinary wins'
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/articl ... mailonline
Flaunting silk pyjamas, bikini-clad women and wads of cash at his Thai 'mansion' - self-styled millionaire George White poses as the king of horse racing tips.
His social media is a never-ending reel of excess - the carefully curated image of a playboy living a life of untouchable luxury after beating the bookies.
To thousands of his paying subscribers, White is a Champagne-swigging horse racing expert who turns ordinary bets into extraordinary wins.
However, there's just one problem.
George White doesn't exist.
Dark truth of the champagne-swigging 'Mooshtips' horse racing expert
met him in a local bar around 6yrs ago , used to follow him on twitter and he posted a pic of himself in a bar i recognized that was close to where i lived to cut a long story short i messaged him said i knew the bar and he invited me down , he bought me a couple of pints but lets just say if he was made of chocolate he`d have licked himself to death. he`s from down south and this was just outside Manchester so that tells you everything he was touring the country on the con but was a pretty interesting hour i had with him
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JohnsonMiller
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- Joined: Thu Jan 29, 2026 6:25 am
This kind of story sadly ticks all the familiar boxes of tipster scams. Flashy lifestyle, vague claims, no verifiable records, and a persona built entirely for social media consumption. If someone really had a system making £100k a month from betting, they wouldn’t need subscriptions at all. The fact that “George White” doesn’t even exist just underlines how much of this world runs on illusion. It’s a good reminder: if it looks too good to be true, especially in gambling, it almost always is.
