San Francisco Chronicle

YouTube critic now fulltime creator

- By Kevin Roose

“I want to build up an audience and use every chance I get to explain how destructiv­e YouTube is.”

Carlos Maza

Carlos Maza believes that YouTube is a destructiv­e, unethical, reckless company that amplifies bigots and profits off fascism. Now it’s also his meal ticket. Maza, 31, announced several weeks ago that he was leaving Vox, where he had worked as a video journalist since 2017, to become a fulltime YouTube creator.

The move shocked some of Maza’s fans, who have watched him become one of YouTube’s most vocal critics for failing to stop a rightwing pile on against him last year. The controvers­y that followed that campaign, which was led by a prominent conservati­ve YouTuber, turned Maza into a YouTube minicelebr­ity and made him a sworn enemy of the site’s freespeech absolutist­s. He received death threats — and was temporaril­y forced to move out of his apartment.

Rather than swearing off YouTube, Maza, a New York socialist, decided to seize the means of his own video production.

“I’m going to use the master’s tools to destroy the master’s house,” he said in an interview. “I want to build up an audience and use every chance I get to explain how destructiv­e YouTube is.”

It’s not rare for YouTubers to criticize YouTube. (In fact, among top creators, it’s practicall­y a sport.) But Maza’s critique extends to the traditiona­l media. He believes that media outlets have largely failed to tell compelling stories to a generation raised on YouTube and other social media companies, and that, as a result, they have created a power vacuum that bigots and extremists have been skilled at filling.

“On YouTube, you’re competing against people who have put a lot of time and effort into crafting narrative arcs, characters, settings or just feelings they’re trying to evoke,” he said. “In that environmen­t, what would have been considered typical video content for a newsroom — news clips or random anchors genericall­y repeating the news with no emotions into a camera — feels really inadequate and anemic.”

The YouTube series that Maza hosted at Vox, “Strikethro­ugh,” drew millions of views with acidic takedowns of Fox News, CNN and other mainstream media organizati­ons. But he took aim at YouTube itself last year after Steven Crowder, a bargainbin conservati­ve comedian with more than 4 million YouTube subscriber­s, began taunting Maza, mocking him as a “lispy queer” and repeatedly making offcolor jokes about his sexual orientatio­n (gay) and ethnicity (Cuban American).

In response, Maza compiled a video of Crowder’s insults and tweeted them out, blaming YouTube for its inconsiste­nt enforcemen­t of its hatespeech policies. (One tweet read: “YouTube is dominated by altright monsters who use the platform to target their critics and make their lives miserable.”)

After an investigat­ion, YouTube found that Crowder’s videos did not violate its rules. That set off an avalanche of criticism and provoked backlash from LGBT groups and YouTube employees, who urged the company to do more to protect Maza and other creators from harassment. The controvers­y even ensnared Susan Wojcicki, YouTube’s chief executive, who was forced to apologize. Late last year, the site revised its harassment policy to address some of the concerns.

A YouTube spokeswoma­n declined to comment.

Inside the world of YouTube partisans, Maza’s feud with Crowder made him a scapegoat. Some creators blamed him for setting off an “adpocalyps­e” — a YouTube policy change that resulted in some videos being stripped of their ads. Others wove elaborate conspiracy theories that NBC-Universal, an investor in Vox, was using Maza to drive viewers and advertiser­s away from YouTube and toward its own TV service.

In July, Vox ended Maza’s show, and after a few months in limbo, he decided to hang his own shingle. He set up a YouTube channel and a Patreon crowdfundi­ng account, bought a camera and hit record. For all its flaws, he said, YouTube is essential for people who want to get a message out.

“The one thing that YouTube offers that’s really good is that it does give a space for independen­t journalist­s to do important work and build an audience without requiring a huge investment of capital,” Maza said.

YouTube can be harsh terrain for a profession­al leftist. The site is nominally open to all views, but in practice is dominated by a strain of reactionar­y politics that is marked by extreme skepticism of mainstream media, disdain for leftwing “social justice warriors” and a tunnelvisi­on fixation on political correctnes­s.

In recent years, some progressiv­e YouTubers have tried to counter this trend by making punchy, opinionate­d videos for leftwing viewers. Bread-Tube, a loose crew of socialist creators who named themselves after a 19th century anarchist book, “The Conquest of Bread,” has made modest stars out of leftists like Natalie Wynn, a YouTube personalit­y known as ContraPoin­ts, and Oliver Thorn, a British commentato­r known as Philosophy­Tube.

But these creators are still much less powerful than their reactionar­y counterpar­ts. Maza attributes that gap to the fact that while a vast network of wellfunded YouTube channels exists to push rightwing views, liberal commentary is still mainly underwritt­en by major news organizati­ons, which have been slower to embrace the highly opinionate­d, emotionall­y charged style of content that works well on YouTube.

“People understand the world through stories and personalit­ies,” he said. “People don’t actually want emotionles­s, thoughtles­s, view-pointless journalism, which is why no one is a Wolf Blitzer stan.”

To reach people on YouTube, Maza said that the left needs to embrace YouTube’s algorithmi­cally driven ecosystem, which rewards “authentic” and “relatable” creators who can connect emotionall­y with an audience.

“There is a need for compelling progressiv­e content that gives a young kid on YouTube some sense that there is a worldview and an aesthetic and a vibe that is attractive on the left,” he said.

Maza’s first video, a fiveminute introducti­on to his channel, hints at how he intends to do that. The video is half political manifesto, half selfdeprec­ating monologue. Playing all three parts himself, he has an imagined conversati­on with his “left flank,” a hammerands­ickle socialist, and his “right flank,” a tieclad centrist, along with his therapist, who warns him that YouTube can transform decent people into “cruel, egodriven” attentions­eekers.

With just 14,000 subscriber­s, Maza has a long road ahead to building a forum as large as the one he left at Vox. But he sees no better route to relevance than going all in on YouTube, even if that means embracing a service whose politics he detests.

“There needs to be some swagger to leftist politics,” Maza said. “And YouTube gives you a space to have that swagger.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States