Axios is not the only mainstream outlet that has failed to adequately contextualize Rumble in reporting. After former Fox host Tucker Carlson announced that he would be moving his show to Twitter and Rumble’s stock declined from the news, Bloomberg described Rumble as “a right-wing alternative to YouTube,” reiterating the platform’s claims that it creates technologies that are “immune to cancel culture” and propping it up as “a competitor to social-media firms like Twitter and Facebook.”
Several mainstream outlets also failed to mention the prevalence of extremist content on Rumble after Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel announced on April 12 that Rumble would host an exclusive livestream of the first GOP primary debate of the 2024 presidential election. During the announcement, McDaniel emphasized that the RNC is “getting away from Big Tech” — a nod to a repeatedly debunked talking point from conservatives that they are unfairly censored on mainstream platforms — which both Reuters and Forbes repeated without pushback. Additionally, Reuters simply described Rumble as “an online video platform,” and Forbes called it “the video hosting platform that is popular among conservatives.” Forbes also quoted a statement released by Rumble in which McDaniel further pushed false claims about conservatives being silenced by other platforms. In another article about the announcement, Politico described Rumble as a “conservative streaming platform.”
By inadequately covering Rumble’s extremist content, mainstream outlets are allowing Rumble to whitewash the platform and minimize its harms. Rumble has tried to brand itself as a “neutral platform” that “isn’t about forcing ideologies down your throat” but rather “empower[s] adults to decide what to say and hear” and uses “free speech to bring people together.”
Going forward, it is imperative that journalists accurately characterize Rumble as a platform that proudly sponsors extreme, false, and bigoted right-wing content.
Here is a sample of Rumble’s extremism that adequately contextualizes the platform:
Media Matters found that videos from QAnon channels, or channels that feature shows or figures who have historically and openly promoted the QAnon conspiracy theory, appeared on Rumble’s leaderboard of the 50 most-liked videos from the previous 24 hours every day between February 1 and April 30 — a total of 603 times. Notably, nearly half of the three most-liked Rumble videos each day during the time frame studied were from QAnon-supporting or QAnon-adjacent channels. Much of this content is monetized.