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Opinion

What is PewDiePie's game?

What lies behind the latest row over YouTuber Felix Kjellberg's jokes?

February 14, 2017 13:55
PewDiePie promotes his book
2 min read

A man with a silly name who makes pointless videos about computer games has been in trouble for making  offensive jokes. That’s the level of understanding of most people over the age of 30 of the PewDiePie story that broke today. But there is more to the story than that.

if you haven’t seen one of the 30,000 tweets about it, the story is that Felix Kjellberg, a Swedish gamer who lives in the UK and is known as PewDiePie has been making jokes on his YouTube stream. The jokes are about the things that you can get people to do for you in the gig economy. PewDiePie paid an actor to dress as Jesus and say ‘Hitler did absolutely nothing wrong’, and paid two men in India to hold up a sign which read ‘Death to all Jews.’

The thought of millions and millions of  young people laughing their heads off at any joke where the punchline is ‘Death to the Jews’ makes me feel distinctly queasy. That this kind of content is broadcast to fifty million people (most of them teenagers) with no editorial checks, is concerning. And I know that any moves to regulate YouTubers would be decried as censorship. 

But don’t worry, says the joshing gamester, it’s not meant to be actual antisemitism. The point was to illustrate the crazy nature of the world today.