Outrage and targeted hate sells. It makes us feel perversely good about ourselves.
Victimization also sells. Telling folks that the big meanies have intentionally made their lives miserable and that they’re the virtuous ones almost always works, especially when it is providing a counter to reckoning with actual historical victimization that might force unpleasant introspection.
Almost all this stuff is thinly veiled identity politics. If that’s the basis of the argument you want to make, fine, but in that case I want to hear some concrete suggestions for solutions.
I am universally unimpressed with the quality of the “angry YouTube guy” arguments. The only film analysts I love on Twitter are Red Letter Media, and even they can be wrong sometimes. If you feel they have a particularly good argument, articulate it here, don’t expect folks to watch long videos.
If you think the outrage network or its toxic fallout is limited to America, welp… *gestures to Europe and Australia*
YouTube is a radicalizing force. We’ve known this for a while - it’s been heavily researched. Stupid online arguments about seemingly inconsequential media can be tremendously impactful - much of our current national and even global mess was born in an online fight over video games.