Advertisement

Joe Biden told viewers to go to ‘Joe30330.’ He meant ‘text Joe to 30330’

Click to play video: 'Biden arrives for day two of Democratic presidential debates as doors open'
Biden arrives for day two of Democratic presidential debates as doors open
As doors opened for the Democratic presidential debate, former vice-president Joe Biden arrived as he's set to face off once more against Sen. Kamala Harris, as well as Sen. Cory Booker among other candidates – Jul 31, 2019

Minutes after Democratic presidential front-runner Joe Biden bungled his closing statement in Wednesday’s debate by telling voters to go to a campaign website that did not exist, a college student was using the URL for a spoof election bid.

Biden misspoke by directing viewers to “go to Joe30330″ rather than “text JOE to 30330,” setting off a flurry of jokes on Twitter about the 76-year-old’s ineptitude with technology and a digital race to buy similar domain names.

WATCH: Joe Biden tells Kamala Harris ‘Go easy on me, kid’ ahead of Democratic debate

Click to play video: 'Joe Biden tells Kamala Harris ‘Go easy on me, kid’ ahead of Democratic debate'
Joe Biden tells Kamala Harris ‘Go easy on me, kid’ ahead of Democratic debate

Josh Fayer, a 21-year-old public relations student at Syracuse University in New York, said he had just stopped watching the debate when a friend texted to say he had bought the domain name the former vice president cited.

Story continues below advertisement

They decided to redirect it to Fayer’s parody presidential campaign site: “Josh for America,” which Fayer said he launched as an April Fool’s joke this year.

For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen.

Get breaking National news

For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen.
By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy.

Fayer’s site introduces him as “the first Gen Z’er to declare candidacy for this office” and includes a video that stated his platform of “no homework in college.”

READ MORE: U.S. Democratic candidates clash over immigration, health care during debate

“I don’t have any broader ambitions for a fake exploratory committee,” he joked to Reuters in a phone interview. “I didn’t file any of the paperwork.”

Fayer said his parody election bid originally garnered only a few retweets but that his site had more than 53,000 views just minutes after the debate in Detroit finished.

He said he did not want to endorse any presidential candidate. But late on Wednesday, his site’s donate button sent visitors to a page inviting them to “donate to our good friend Pete Buttigieg’s campaign.”

WATCH: July 25 — Biden says there’s plenty of reasons why’ Trump could be charged after leaving office

Click to play video: 'Biden says there’s plenty of reasons why’ Trump could be charged after leaving office'
Biden says there’s plenty of reasons why’ Trump could be charged after leaving office

The campaign for Buttigieg, the mayor of South Bend, Indiana, who is one of Biden‘s rivals for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A similar domain, joe3030.com, also was directing people to Buttigieg’s campaign site.

Story continues below advertisement

It appears that Biden meant to direct voters to his campaign’s texting platform, a popular digital fundraising strategy.

Without mentioning the gaffe, the @JoeBiden Twitter handle sent out the correct call to action in a tweet immediately following the debate.

READ MORE: Democrats split on how to counter racism in 2020 election as Trump exploits it

Yet another similar URL, joe33030.com, directed people on Wednesday to Biden‘s official campaign website.

A spokesman for the Biden campaign declined to comment.

Sponsored content

AdChoices