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Person involved in the conflict described; filed YouTube strikes against Psyche's channel; subject of the song-poem
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AI · ARCHIVAL
Alexandra, also known by the alias Alexander McQueen, is a figure present in the archive only through absence and conflict — never appearing directly, but invoked through Psyche's original composition "Good Bye Take 2." Her primary documented action in relation to the show is the filing of YouTube strikes against Psyche's channel, an act that catalyzed both artistic and philosophical response from the host.
As discussed on stream: Alexandra appears in the archive as a symbol of betrayal and boundary violation rather than as a participant. The single documented episode featuring her involves Psyche performing an original song-poem that processes a relationship breakdown characterized by manipulation and professional transgression. The song-poem functions as both artistic catharsis and public testimony — Psyche transforms personal conflict into mythological material, treating the betrayal as a teaching moment about boundary maintenance and the costs of misplaced trust. The performance is followed by candid discussion of the YouTube strikes themselves, positioning them as part of a larger pattern of online drama and what Psyche frames as violation of his creative autonomy. The relationship appears to have involved collaboration on the "Cult Codex" project, suggesting Alexandra held some role in Psyche's creative or intellectual infrastructure before the rupture occurred.
As discussed on stream: Alexandra initiated formal copyright/legal action against Psyche's channel through YouTube strikes, a move that Psyche characterizes as retaliatory and connected to the personal/professional rift between them. The strikes represent an escalation from interpersonal conflict to institutional suppression, framing Alexandra as willing to use platform mechanisms as weapons in what Psyche implies is a dispute rooted in boundary violations and manipulation.
As discussed on stream: Alexandra's only documented relationship in the archive is with Psyche himself — a collapsed collaboration marked by what the host describes as betrayal and manipulation. The relationship was significant enough to warrant artistic processing and appears to have involved shared work on the "Cult Codex" project, suggesting proximity to Psyche's core creative vision before severance.