One of the most important developments in right-wing media in the last few years is the rise of a class of provocateurs who create on-the-ground, documentary-style videos targeting communities based on their religion, ethnicity, or political beliefs. These creators frequently make bombastic and unsupported claims, rely on deception and innuendo, and play to longstanding bigoted beliefs that have found purchase in their sizable audiences.
While this type of content was once relatively limited to propagandists like James O’Keefe, social media policies and technological developments — alongside the rise in demand for white nationalist political commentary — have led to an explosion in so-called “independent journalists” chasing virality, influence, and dollars by optimizing hate and misinformation.
The cast of characters who populate this emerging ecosystem is large, but there are a few names that stick out above the others. At the moment, one of those names is Nick Shirley, whose claim to infamy is a video he created and promoted that purported to expose fraud at day care centers in Somali communities in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Shirley’s content helped lay the foundation for the Trump administration’s weekslong mass deportation operation across the state, during which federal agents shot and killed two people and traumatized the city.
He just endorsed an openly antisemitic video.