Vice President Kamala Harris campaign, which spent $100 million per week during her condensed run for the presidency, is still flooding supporter's inboxes with requests for cash.
That's led to heightened scrutiny about how the campaign spent its record war chest and still ended up no match for President-elect Donald Trump's MAGA roadshow.
Among the eye-popping expenses was a $1 million paid to Oprah Winfrey's production firm, Harpo Productions, for a town hall event she television star hosted with Harris in September.
The full price tag for the event, meanwhile, was more than just the fee for Harpo: the New York Times, citing two people briefed on the details, reported Sunday that it amounted to to $2.5 million.
The full cost of the town hall is sure to further bewilder critics, who had already falsely accused Winfrey of pocketing the money herself.
"I was not paid a dime," Winfrey wrote in an Instagram comment. "For the live-streaming event in September, my production company Harpo was asked to bring in set design, lights, cameras, crew, producers and every other item necessary (including the benches and the chairs we sat on) to put on a live production. I did not take any personal fee. However, the people who worked on that production needed to be paid. And were. End of story."
Campaign finance law also prevents businesses from making campaign contributions or providing services to campaigns at below-market rates.
Millions were spent on other celebrity events and high profile concerts, with Lady Gaga and Beyoncé among those to appear for Harris. Their effectiveness is now in question.
Among other notable spending, according to the Times, was $2.5 million spent on three digital agencies that work with online influencers -- Trump gained a significant amount of publicity stumping on bro-y and right wing podcasts for free.
There was also the $900,000 spent to reserve advertising space on Las Vegas' Sphere during the final week of the campaign.
Unsurprisingly, consultants, hangers-on, and other Democrats came begging for cash, and the Harris campaign obliged.
To other party committees, like the Democratic Party in Philadelphia for example, a total of near $25 million was given.
Some Harris pals and allies got in on it, too.
Talk show host Areva Martin earned $200,000 as a media consultant and toured swing states for Harris in October, the Times said. Journalist and commentator Roland Martin, who hosts a streaming show for his Nu Vision Media, earned $350,000 in September for a "media buy," telling the Times it was for advertising and that "more should have been spent on Black-owned media."