Pewdiepie Nice Try Wall Street Journal

Pewdiepie responds to 'attack' over anti-Semitic video, invites media to 'try once again'

Felix "Pewdiepie" Kjellberg is far and away the most popular person on YouTube, with more than than 53 one thousand thousand people subscribed to his channel. Simply he took a large hit earlier this calendar week when Disney-endemic Maker Studios, which signed Kjellberg in 2013, cut all ties with him over videos including one in which he paid a pair of Indian men to hold upwardly a sign saying "Death to all Jews."

Kjellberg denied any anti-Semitic intent in a subsequent post on Tumblr. "I was trying to show how crazy the mod world is, specifically some of the services available online. I picked something that seemed absurd to me—That people on Fiverr would say anything for five dollars," he wrote. "I think it's important to say something and I want to make one affair clear: I am in no way supporting whatever kind of hateful attitudes."

"I make videos for my audience. I retrieve of the content that I create equally entertainment, and non a identify for any serious political commentary. I know my audition sympathize that and that is why they come to my channel.  Though this was not my intention, I empathise that these jokes were ultimately offensive."

He took a far more than combative stance in a video posted earlier today, withal, in which he blamed his troubles on "the media," which he said is waging a campaign to ignominy him.

"Old-school media does not similar internet personalities because they're scared of us," he said. "Nosotros have then much influence and such a big voice, and I don't think they empathise it. And that's why they continue this approach to us."

Kjellberg repeated his merits that the betoken of the "Expiry to all Jews" video was to illustrate how "stupid" the Fiverr service is, and also reiterated his amends. But he and so moved to accept issue with the manner that mainstream media has covered the story—in particular, the Wall Street Journal, and its merits that nine of his videos over the past six months comprise anti-Semitic content. He defendant the outlet of "cornering" Disney and YouTube with the story, and "forcing them to sever their ties with me," and cited other instances in which it used out-of-context material—such as one "joke" in which he dressed up in a "soldier outfit" and watched a video of Hitler—to "attack" him in an try to "subtract my influence and my economic worth."

"Some people are saying that these jokes are normalizing hatred. Regardless if that's true or non (spoiler alert: it's not, unless there are 53 million Nazis watching me for some reason) a personal assault like this, to portray me as anti-Semitic, is doing no one a favor," he said. "You're targeting some Swedish guy that tries to be funny, most of the time it doesn't really become well—very offensive—just he means well. Is there whatsoever hate in what I do? No. Absolutely not."

To me, Kjellberg's argument fails to acknowledge that his massive audience is thought to exist, in big part, young and impressionable. As he said in the video, he has "and then much influence and such a large phonation," and when he does something like this, joking or not, information technology has an impact. He has 53 million subscribers: If just i percent of that base takes his comments at all seriously, that's more than a half-meg people running around with those messages in their heads.

You tin't have information technology both ways: Either you are influential, or you're not. Kjellberg clearly understands that he is, yet he seems but as clearly determined to disavow any responsibility. Information technology'southward an attitude that bears a faint echo of his 2016 troubles with the FCC, in which he received a warning for failing to fairly disembalm that he was existence paid past WBIE in exchange for positive coverage of Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor: Albeit that he's done something wrong, while at the aforementioned time insisting that he hasn't really done annihilation incorrect.

Kjellberg expressed regret over the loss of his YouTube prove, but ended on a defiant note. "I'm nonetheless hither. I'g even so making videos. Nice try, Wall Street Periodical," he said, middle finger extended. "Try again, motherfuckers."

The full "My Response" video can exist seen below.

Andy has been gaming on PCs from the very beginning, starting as a youngster with text adventures and primitive action games on a cassette-based TRS80. From in that location he graduated to the glory days of Sierra Online adventures and Microprose sims, ran a local BBS, learned how to build PCs, and adult a longstanding love of RPGs, immersive sims, and shooters. He began writing videogame news in 2007 for The Escapist and somehow managed to avert getting fired until 2014, when he joined the storied ranks of PC Gamer. He covers all aspects of the industry, from new game announcements and patch notes to legal disputes, Twitch beefs, esports, and Henry Cavill. Lots of Henry Cavill.

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Source: https://www.pcgamer.com/pewdiepie-responds-to-attack-over-anti-semitic-video-invites-media-to-try-again/

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