Endless Thread - SwordTube, En Garde!
Episode Date: May 31, 2024Sword influencers abound on YouTube. Those who specialize in the historic European martial arts, or HEMA, have gained legions of fans showcasing the fantastic, bladed techniques of yore. But talk of ...parries and pommels has recently given way to bigotry. Endless Thread's Ben Brock Johnson speaks with co-host Amory Sivertson about one valiant influencer fighting back. ***** Credits: This episode was produced by Ben Brock Johnson and Dean Russell. Mix and sound design by Emily Jankowski. The hosts are Amory Sivertson and Ben Brock Johnson.
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Emery Seversyverton, are you ready? Ben Brock Johnson. Born ready.
Ungard? Enguard?
Do you know what HEMA is? Nope.
Historic European martial arts.
European martial arts
That's not a phrase
that I have maybe ever heard
in my life
Yeah, it's weird
Hmm
It's weird, right?
Since you made me watch a video
about sword fighting
Are the European martial arts
equivalent to sword fighting?
Yeah, pretty much.
That's, I think, what it means, yeah.
Except swords also,
when you think of sword fighting
Yeah.
You can think of, you know,
like the Princess Bride,
the first scene that comes to
mind is Inigo Montoya and Wesley having that first epic sword fight.
My name is Inigo Montoya.
My name is Inigo Montoya.
You kill my father.
Prepare to die.
Yes, that sword fight was like a big deal in my childhood.
You can think of that.
Or you can think of Akira Kurosawa movies and the samurai sword.
Yeah, yeah.
And Kill Bill.
Yeah.
Be a trick's kiddo.
These are all sword reference.
I agree. Well done so far. Yes. You clearly understand this. I'm not picking up what you're putting down specifically.
So historic European martial arts, this is a big thing on the internet. I didn't really know that. I mean, I'm a, as we have talked about on the show before many times, I am absolutely a medieval nerd of yester your.
years past gone by.
But also, like, recently I discovered there is a massive online, or at least massively
dedicated online community based on historic European martial arts.
You've got your creators like Metatron, Scola Gladiatora, Shadaviversity, and Scala
Grimm. These are sword tube channels, but also there's sell sword arts, which you watched.
Fight!
I mean, it looks very legit. I didn't know if these were stunt sword fighters because they are in garb.
There are some Lord of the Rings looking costuming and some maybe Pirates of the Caribbean
costuming. I saw some Mortal Kombat outfits in one of their videos.
Oh, really? Didn't even pick up on that. And then there were lightsabers involved. Some people in a park fighting with lightsabers.
Definitely not historic European, that part of it. No. Yeah.
No, that's from a long time ago.
So many a moon ago during the fall harvest, there's this post in the subreddit out of the loop that was asking basically what is going on with the drama.
in the internet HEMA community.
Hmm.
This is from a user named Gene Reddit 123.
They say, I've been subscribed to a few Hema Sword Tube content creators,
and recently content seems to have gotten a little more negative.
Shaw Diversity made a video rebuking perceived criticism from CellSword Arts
and also admitting he dislikes Scalagrim in the same video.
Metatron seems to have shifted more from actual historical coverage to modern
socio-political criticism that he feels is somehow distorting his view of history among complaints
of targeted demonetization of his videos.
What?
So basically we've got some YouTubers saying they're being reported on the platform by
other HEMA creator fans in a bad faith way, which of course leads to the previously mentioned
demonetization.
That's what YouTube sometimes does if a creator is engaging in things like hate speech or
harmful conspiracy theories or practices that could get YouTube in trouble.
The poster in Out of the Loop asks, is this the typical hobbyist banter rivalry or is it something
more serious that's going on? And this is the question they're asking.
It seems like they have to actually like fight it out with swords. Definitely.
How big are these communities? Can you tell? Tens of thousands of subscribers, many, many,
many, many views on these videos.
Okay.
Many views.
Approximately many, many, many.
A forest of spears, Amory.
A forest of spears.
A forest of spears.
Yep.
So, in addition to making videos about medieval topics,
Shadiversity is also becoming a right-wing cultural commentator
who does videos about stuff like video games being too woke nowadays.
or there being too many women around, I guess.
Oh, no.
Yeah.
Metatron is sort of in the same place, apparently,
mixing in religious and cultural topics to his discussions of history.
I'd say if we can't just fight with swords without having it represent something larger,
what can we do anymore?
That's not...
Yeah.
Why?
Why does it need to be more than just...
good technique.
Yeah, who cares if the person is actually from European descent, for instance.
Yeah.
If they can swing a Scottish Claymore with the best of them, so be it.
Here, here.
And also, like, you know, I mean, not to be too craven about it, like this commenter on this thread was.
But you're also really limiting your audience, I would say.
Also, as I've previously established, I'm not so sure how European these particular martial arts
can rightfully say they are.
Oh, geez.
You know what I mean?
Emery's questioning the purity of the martial arts.
Just let us fight with swords.
All for one and swords for all.
There's another reference for you.
Yeah, that's pretty good.
I feel like you're low-key, more connected to sword tube and sword content
than I would have originally have assumed.
So I salute you.
I bend the knee to you and dip my head in a show of respect among warriors.
Thank you, good sir.
Okay.
This also apparently has sort of like snuck its way into Rome or medieval time periods in the way that people are talking about them in these certain channels.
Because you've already got the sort of like alt-right return folks trying to kind of like claim this space.
apparently, and
among
this
the fog of war,
among the blood and the mud
and the
carnage
emerges
our hero.
One of the creators
amongst this group
by the name of
Sir Matt Easton.
He,
apparently,
according at least to a comment on Reddit,
has a gay cousin,
as many of us, maybe most of us do.
Right.
Right.
And he, like, essentially called out
some of these, like, problematic
sword tube content creators
and said,
I challenge thee.
You know, or whatever.
Sir Matt Easton, also known as Scullough,
gladiatoria has a very public falling out with other content creators like Metatron and Shad
versity and instead of the sword, the mace, the halberd, the battle axe, he chooses for this
battle, the mighty pen or keyboard. He writes an open letter on Facebook, one that would call
attention to the terribleness that was happening on Sword Tube and take a defiant stance against
it. More on that. Throwing of the internet
Gomplet in a minute.
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Okay, so Amory's sword tube is perhaps falling into disarray.
We're starting to see racism and homophobia and alt-right political rants instead of, you know,
just good old-fashioned sword fights.
And then our hero, Sir Matt Easton, of the realm of the people with gay cousins, enters the fray.
He writes an open letter that kind of starts to get at the fallout between sword tubers.
Because the thing you have to remember, right, is when you're part of a community like this that's like super intense,
normally these Sword Tube personalities would collaborate with one another and creating content, you know, doing meetups in real life, etc.
The audience growing influencer crossover.
But that can't happen when half of them are effectively spewing terribleness, right?
Yeah, and also like these are supposed to be the safe spaces when we are brought together by an interesting.
that has nothing to do with sexual orientation or political beliefs.
Like, these are supposed to be the things that stitch us together.
Like, hey, you like this niche thing that I like, and I like it too.
Oh, and you have this about you and that about you.
And, oh, maybe I understand you more than I did before, you know?
And so the fact that people would come together around these interests and then these divisions would try to warm their
way into the community and tear us apart again is like, no.
Matt Easton writes a letter.
Sir Matt Easton.
Sir Matt Easton.
That's Sir Matt Easton to you.
Yeah, and I'd like to read it to you.
Okay.
Dear community fans and members, this is the kind of post I normally try to avoid.
You will notice that this morning I have removed a post that I made while I was away working
and traveling yesterday.
At quite short notice, I was kindly invited to get together with a very group of people to do some filming.
I don't normally turn down such opportunities unless I have some concrete reason.
Even if I have factual and non-damaging disagreements with another person involved,
I try to beat views that I disagree with with facts and argument and sorts.
One of the people involved yesterday, it turns out, is highly personally offensive to a lot of people I care about, both here and offline.
I did not know the depths and complexities of the issues with that person before yesterday.
I don't care if somebody has historical views that I disagree with, I will argue with them.
But I do deeply care if a person has views that I deem to be venturing into the realm of bigotry, such as sexism, racism, or homophobia.
That is absolutely and obviously a line in the sand for me.
Woo!
Fiery.
Matt Easton, go.
Mm-hmm.
You go, hero.
Mm-hmm.
I have interacted with this person.
person over the years, including posting video rebuttals, arguments, responses, et cetera,
on historical matters, I had not experienced anything negative with that person other than
disagreeing with a fairly large number of points that person made.
As evidenced by my video responses over the years, for example, what is HEMA?
Apparently they disagreed even over what is Hema.
However, yesterday after filming, it was brought to my attention that on their second channel,
one I have only visited a handful of times a long time ago, this person is now
promoting political and social views, which are absolutely against my own views and indeed
against the principles of the groups and events I run.
Goes on and on and on.
Hmm.
And he closes to say, for people who are upset to read this and did not know about this person's views,
I suggest that you go and decide for yourself.
But I know where my line in the sand is.
Now this page will return to its usual content apologies for the diversion.
And that is how Matt Easton, Sir Matt Easton, swung his blade and ended the battle.
But what does that mean he ended the battle?
Like he's off?
Sword Tube and Sir Matt Easton are done?
Sir Matt Easton of the channel Scala Gladiatoria apparently will no longer associate with YouTubers like Shadiversity or maybe Metatron.
This is at least according to the letter, Sir Matt Easton wrote many months ago now.
And if you look at Scala Gladiatoria's page, Matt Easton's out there still doing his courses on saber fighting, still doing meetups, still doing explainers on why some armor is shiny.
He's apparently still living that medieval expert's dream.
Shadaviversity is also still making videos, though I'm not seeing a lot of ads on those videos.
the numbers seem kind of low compared to past videos.
And about a month ago, Shadowversity puts out a very sad 40-minute video of himself,
not wearing his usual tunic, instead wearing like a brown pleather jacket and a red t-shirt.
Shadowversity, the channel is dying, and it's not for the quality of content.
Views are down and revenue is the worst that it has ever been in the last.
five years.
The reason? Apparently shout
adversity's criticisms of too many
women in Marvel movies, of
people of color and fantasy movies,
or comments about how
homosexuality is fundamentally
wrong. The attack against masculinity
is prevalent in the work movement.
What's wrong with Peter Parker? He's problematic
and not diverse enough. Just pissing me off.
Straight people find
gay sex repulsive.
Have maybe caught up with him.
This sad 40-minute video
was immediately parodied by another creator named George Rockall Schmidt.
We all know this has been going on forever with YouTube, silencing perspectives they don't like,
but it especially matters now that it has happened to me.
While Shadowversity says that his other channel, Knights Watch, which is more focused on his
conservative views, is growing, his medieval weaponry channel, which was much bigger, is dying
because YouTube hates him, or maybe because people don't come to
sword tube for complaints about diversity.
So we may have a winner, Sir Matt Easton, and a loser of this duel, she had adversity.
To-shay.
And I don't think everyone lived happily ever after just yet, but I just, I wanted to, you know,
I wanted to bring you this schism that has been clove into amongst the HEMA community.
And, you know, you can go back to your kill bill or whatever your regular programming was,
but just know that sword tube, sword tube is not what it used to be.
Well, thank you for telling me about this schism in a community I didn't previously know existed.
But I do come back to my point, which does kind of broaden this out and make it relevant to me.
even though I'm brand new to this community.
Broaden sword, if you will, yes.
A broad and sword, yes, which is just that I hope we don't lose these places on the internet to political and cultural differences and arguments.
And I do really hope that these places can continue to be, that other communities, sword, tube, trebushableness.
Shay tube. What are some other medieval?
Ditch digging tube.
Ditch digging tube. Peasant tube.
Pledge tube. Didgeridoo.
Plague tube.
Whatever your niche thing is that brings you together with other people.
Yeah.
Let those be spaces of unity and joy in that thing you guys do.
You know?
Yeah.
Well, I'm totally with that.
I will add something, which is like, as Sir Matt Easton said, it doesn't have to be total unity, right?
Of course.
We can disagree with each other.
Yeah.
And we will and we should.
Right.
But like, it needs to be a safe space for everyone to disagree with each other.
Yeah.
And we joke about, you know, I love me a sword fight, but like a sword fight is like literally the most terrifying thing that you might engage with.
with another human for a thousand years.
You know, like, it's like, I feel like we forget, like, sword fighting is fun because
it's, like, very old-fashioned or something, right?
But that used to be, like, how a lot of people who didn't have a lot of agency died, you know?
That's true.
Or, like, duels to the death over disagreements and honor.
And, yeah, that's a good point.
And so, like, I feel like these spaces have to be safe spaces for everyone so that we can
avoid actually fighting each other with real weapons.
Swords for all. Commonalities for all.
Swords, play swords and commonalities for all.
Safe spaces for all.
Let's make a sword video together.
Oh, my God. Can you imagine?
It would be pretty fun.
I don't have a sword.
Me neither.
We'll find some sticks in the park or something.
Endless Thread is a production of WBUR in Boston.
This episode was really produced by Dean Russell in my armor,
and I was just his squire.
It was co-hosted by the Lady of the Lake,
Amory Severson,
Mix and Sound Design by Emily Jankowski.
The rest of our team is Caitlin Harrop,
Sumitajoshi, Franny Monaghan, Matt Reed, Grace Tatter, and Paul Vicus.
Endless Thread is a podcast about the blurred lines
between online communities and that one part of the armor right in the shoulder plate that really chafes your armpit.
If you have an unsolved mystery, an untold history, or an influencer battle to the YouTube channel death, you just have to hear us tell.
Hit us up.
Endless thread at wb u.r.org.
Noon.
High noon.
Tomorrow.
On the seventh day.
Beyond the moon shineeth this insinfulness.
Yes.
After the cock crows and before the stew is served.
The band plays its last rumpa-pump.
Yes, yes.
Continue, my lady.
What more is there to say?
We've got all the bases covered before the stew is served.
Before the last loot, before the last loot is tuneth.
It's tuned in the amongst the pies that the birds fly out of forever.
Amongst the swamps of the histories of time.
That's a strong ending right there.
I can't, I can't.
No more after that.
That's it.
All right, see you later.
Bye!
