TRASHFUTURE - Graham the Storm feat. Annie Kelly
Episode Date: May 20, 2026We’ve invited friend of the show and journalist Annie Kelly to discuss the recent far-right march in London, the online AI slop aspect of it, and the offshoring of fascist outrage content on Faceboo...k to…entrepreneurs in the Global South? Get more TF episodes each week by subscribing to our Patreon here! RILEY ALERT Check out No Gods, No Mayors here! HUSSEIN ALERT Check out 10k Posts here! MILO ALERT Check out Milo's tour dates here: https://www.miloedwards.co.uk/liveshows NATE ALERT Lions Led By Donkeys will be performing live in London on 29th May and you can get tickets here! Also, Nate's band Second Homes has just released their debut album, and you can stream it for free here! Trashfuture are: Riley (@raaleh), Milo (@Milo_Edwards), Hussein (@HKesvani), Nate (@inthesedeserts), and November (@postoctobrist)
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So all respect to Mike Isaac, who has been doing some great coverage of it.
But now that the Elon Altman lawsuit has concluded as to whether or not Sam Altman could steal a charity, you wouldn't steal a charity.
I have to say, and I think Nova, you were mentioning this is Mike Isaac's view as well for the show Mike Isaac.
This whole thing was a moronic slideshow and we were right to not discuss it.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, I think everybody in, in some of the show, you know,
of like both in the courtroom and society just hates both of them.
And so listen, I'm sad as well that the judge didn't, like there isn't footage of Elon Musk
in the sort of like chains and muzzle being like 19,000 years.
But like, no, it turns out it's just the whole thing is a huge waste of time.
He did manage to call the judge like an activist on Twitter immediately after losing, which is kind of funny.
but for the most part, who care?
Yeah. You know what? It would have been much better
if the bailiff had had to say at one point,
Mr. Musk, you were not allowed to come into the courtroom
dressed like Hannibal Lecter on the dolly.
No one thinks you're Hannibal Lecter.
They should have let them do it by trial by combat.
I don't care if that's not legal in California.
They should have made an exception.
They should have done like a kind of pay-per-view,
like put them on a barge, towed out into like international waters
and make them fight for like with knives.
Presumably that would also mean Sam Altman's.
polycule would show up, or am I thinking
of Sam Bankman-Free?
Sam-Bankman-free.
Sam-Lam-Lam-A-Rubly has like a sort of
harum of former like X-Twinks,
which I guess glens him like a kind of force
multiplier there, maybe.
I don't know. Yeah, so in principle it's the same
but it's not explicitly defined as
a polycule. Yeah, I don't know.
Maybe it's just the fact
that you can even see with making the mistake
between the two that there's an over-abundance
of Sam's for us to care about.
There are a lot of these people who are
only in our lives because they are annoying and have money. And as you said, Riley, the side show
aspect of it, it's definitely whoever wins, we lose thing because there's no one you want to root for
here. There's no one you want to, you want to be like, oh, that person's just, you know, holding the line.
Like, obviously in the libel case or whatever where the rescue diver was called pedo guy by
Elon Musk, you want to support the rescue diver. No, I hope they both lose. I think I have the
idea. Gavin Newsom, if you're listening to this, I know you are. A Thunderdome is. A Thunderdome is,
is not always an unreasonable way to conclude a trial.
Yeah, yeah, you can get them on your podcast
and then your son can fulfill his destiny
by doing a murder-suicide and it'll solve the problem.
It's trash future, by the way.
Oh, yeah, hi, everybody, it's TF.
We're gonna have a friend of the show,
frequent guest, QAnonanonanonymous contributor
and researcher on feminism in the far right,
Annie Kelly on in the second half,
to talk a little bit about,
I don't know if you've all seen this,
London has sloped.
Yeah, we had, we finally did,
speaking of trial by combat,
we finally compressed Chud versus Woke into one day.
And, you know, thanks to the police, neither Chud nor Woke interacted.
And the Chud March just was a lot smaller than the previous one.
Elon Musk didn't show up on account of he was too busy fighting Sam Altman on that barge.
Like Katie Hopkins dialed in like a video message being like, yeah, sure, what's up, morons or whatever.
And the whole thing kind of fizzled, but I think it's instructive.
And I think that's why we want to talk about it is where this Tommy Robinson shit is and where it's going.
Yeah.
So for context, when Nova's talking about the Chud March, which he's journalistic malpractice for mainstream outlets to not refer to it that way.
The Million Chud March.
She's referring to the Unite the Kingdom Rally.
I believe this is the second one.
The first one was last year.
It's definitely like last year's was a lot like hypeier.
and then this time not so much.
And it grows out of this long tradition of the far right descending on London
prosecute a bunch of sort of fantastical terrors,
whether that's statute defending, which we remember a few years ago,
whether that is like COVID-mark,
what pro-COVID marches in a sense.
They do right-wing stuff and they also exhibit behavior previously only seen
in Todd the Squirrel from the webcomic Aikwood, which is do cocaine at people.
Yeah, it's a real kind of like,
It's sort of like, you know, summer holidays for them, come down to London, smash a packet of coke, piss up a warm memorial, and sort of gesture menacingly to students with pronouns who are on the opposite side of 6,000 riot police from you.
Yeah, and in this case, how I've written it down here is one of the two marches is indulging luxury beliefs of media types and is incorporating political concerns from that media based largely overseas rather than bread and budget issues like bins, and the other is a march for Palestinian civil rights.
One is a march of the most easily triggered sensitive people on Earth and the other one is a Palestine march.
Yeah.
And of course, though, guess of course which one, John Woodcock, aka Lord Walney, aka penis, penis, penis, aka Boris Johnson's anti-Semitism czar, said,
was of course the United Kingdom March, the Tommy Robinson march, was quote unquote, decent people who've had enough of importing intolerance.
This year, this year more than last year, they had even more Israeli flags.
Importing intolerance is John Woodcock German now.
the whole weird, there's no such thing as anti-Semitism in Germany except stuff that's been illegally
imported by Muslims because Germany has no history of anti-Semitism, right?
In this case, what it is, is it's the same kind of brain contortions that you see in, like,
unionists in Northern Ireland, where it's like someone who is themselves authentically very
anti-Semitic, also tying an Israeli flag to a lamppost next to, you know, all of the other ones
on the basis that, like, no, actually, now they're Zionists, which is an interesting,
things sort of about face for them.
Yeah, and specifically, right, this is something that is, goes back to the idea of, you know,
information and, like, political belief formation and what you do with, with your demands is that
this, the weirdest thing about this march, it was a continuity from last year, is that it wasn't,
for a bunch of English nationalists, it was super fucking American.
It was so American.
Well, Starma banned a couple of, like, American influences from coming to, like, speak to
the chuds. But even still, like, it's American money and it's American grievances. And, and so it's
been interesting watching Tommy Robinson sort of like go on tour around the world seeking kind of support
and seeking the kind of financing for this stuff. Because now it is just, it's crazy how American is.
It's crazy how Christian it is. Half of these guys had the, like, massive crosses on wheels. People
started saying Christ is king to each other, which is one of the least British things like.
We have a king. He's God's delegate on earth. He's got weird fingers. You really don't want to mess with the hierarchy. It's interesting for me because I guess I inhabit two worlds here. We're on one hand, other organizers from the trade union is fighting the far right reached out and said some people actually showed up and talked to the organizers saying they heard about it on TF so I'm happy. On their hand, I've gotten a bunch of angry emails from British people being like, oh, great, good job with your side show. You fuck. But how much you actually do something on the far right? Because they think lines led by donkeys is led by donkeys. So I am aware.
a protest to happen in the United Kingdom.
So why did you waste all of our money putting up that billboard saying like
migration makes Britain bloody brilliant, you effing cockwumbles?
People literally fucking asked me that.
And it was like a British dude in France who sent me this angry email.
And I responded.
I was like, sorry, we're actually a different show or history podcast.
And he just replied, thanks for the info.
And it's like, great man.
I love my life.
But the thing of what I wanted to say, though, was I've noticed this because of things that
I've seen comments from Americans and friends back in the U.S. being like, I've seen this insane shit on Twitter, which is kind of functioning as right-wing TikTok now.
Someone reached out to me and said, they showed me a screenshot of a tweet saying that a shut influencer was claiming that, you know, Europe is committing suicide by immigration.
All the shit we talked about previously, like the suicidal empathy thing from Joe Rogan.
And they said the EU is, there's a hundred million people in the EU who are migrants who weren't born in the EU.
And I was like, there's like 350 million people in the EU.
Yeah, they're all Muslim.
Do you think the hundred...
I mean, I was like, Britain, when it, before it left the EU,
had a higher rate of people from non,
not born in the country to white English parents or white,
you know, white British parents percentage than other countries in Europe.
It was 80%.
I hear what you're saying, right?
But I see why, I see why you struggle to get all of that on a billboard.
But what I'm trying to say, though, is that it's just that I've seen,
this is a weird fixation.
The, the, you mean, what was this stupid ass?
Brett Stevens wrote this thing about Europe is worth fighting for or whatever because we're anti-immigration.
And it was like, I realized that Europe and Britain in particular as a meme has become a thing that they're obsessed with.
Yeah, I mean, like, there's also sort of some of the jilted lover thing going on where they've lost Hungary or like access to Hungary.
You know, Rod Dreher has sort of like fled over the Carpathians.
And so now, you know, there's always there's always this kind of like, you know, you know, sort of like jangling the keys.
Like, no, not jangling the keys, but like rattling the door handle, like, dude, let me in.
Fascism's a legitimate political ideology.
I'm a woke immigrant to Europe and I'm here with my child on camera right now.
So I say that woke two will be even stronger.
When woke two happens, we won't apologize for the terror.
Yeah.
Well, what we're heading towards is dark woke, woke two, armed wooferendum.
Yeah, exactly.
And I'll be projecting shit on the white cliffs of Dover because I'm in Led ViDakis and not another show.
Yeah, but I want to go back to the Christian thing, right, which is England stopped.
to do with me.
Yeah.
Fair enough.
Thank you.
England,
England stopped like speaking in tongues and chanting Christ as king in 1700.
Yeah,
we deported all of those guys to America so that they could do the Vevich over there and not bother
us.
Right.
And now it's,
now the whole point is,
it comes back,
dressed up as Templars carrying crosses,
New Zealand church groups,
come and rip up the Palestinian flag in support of Israel.
I can't believe a Knight Templar.
I support Israel specifically.
Just guy taking a kind of third position on the crusades where it's like, well, you know who should really be in charge of the Holy Land is the Jews.
And what I, but the thing is like this whole Unite the Kingdom March is, as ever, treated as this authentic expression of what English people want that has to be listened to.
It's the silent majority, right?
Yeah, sure.
I want to read from an article that you sent me, Nova, which I think is, I love this.
I want to salute the new statesman, right? And specifically the author that they sent here, Emily Lawford, because this is a classic in the genre of like liberalism sliding tackle into like fully just sending this woman on Chud Safari.
And she's really good at it.
I had a great time reading it.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's sort of metropolitan arrogance or whatever.
but it's really good.
And also,
new statesman under new management
is like 5% less bad than it used to be.
I was able to do stuff like this.
I would much rather,
I would much rather see some honest to God sneering
about how thick these people are
than another article about how reasonable
their concerns are supposed to be.
Precisely.
Old management would have been like,
we sent our most sympathetic chud whisperer.
There was a chud guy who was on TV
during the 2019 election
who basically was congratulating more
Johnson for in advance and saying get them all out and it was like wow that that sounds bad and in my
mind's eye he was less of a sort of you know your garden variety shithead racist dude and more of like
a I don't know like escape from a home for the criminally insane in my I want and watch the
footage to remind myself of what it was like and in my mind's eye he was like get him out Boris
got him all gone Morris but he didn't actually sound like that but this guy sounds like he's real
it feels like the news the new statesman found the person that was in my mind's eye here was
Specifically, there's an interesting arc of this, right?
Because I'm old enough to remember a previous generation of libs nearing at Nazis, right?
Which was, do you remember the guy who was like on camera very drunk and or high talking about,
he was trying to say like Islamic rape gangs, but what came out through quite a thick accent was Muslimic ray guns.
Yes, I recall this, yes.
And, and, you know, he was, he was much made fun of.
I remember somebody else on Twitter.
which, as we've mentioned now, is like right-wing TikTok,
remembering that guy and someone replying,
oh yeah, I remember laughing at him back in the day.
It's crazy how he was proven right, though.
So that guy, replying that doesn't think that he's been radicalized,
but that's the kind of shift that we've had.
And I think the only answer, right,
because anyone who thinks that,
anyone who's sort of view on that has shifted in that time,
has the sort of brain of an unusually easy,
led sheep, right? And the way that you bring things back is with a bit of good old-fashioned
bullying, right? And so we need the lib sneering back. And I'm sorry for any kind of, you know,
criticism that I made of it at the time, right? Because we need it. We need it to pull people
back into line. Going back in time and turning up Gordon Brown's hot mic.
No, it should have been worse. He should have hit her. Like, I don't know.
Sorry, Graham the builder from Milton Keynes is not going to agree with you because he's all about
respecting women.
A middle-aged man wore a black shirt covered in Gothic script.
Fate whispers to the warrior.
You cannot withstand the storm.
And the warrior whispers back,
I am the storm.
The storm's name was Graham and he was a builder from Milton Keynes.
Oh,
that is liquid like sort of like, you know,
lib anthropologizing.
I love that shit.
I cannot get enough of it.
It studs up into the tackle.
That shirt feels so American.
It's QAnon.
Yeah.
It's literally QAnon.
It's like they donated all.
all the old QAnon shirts, because that's like washed now because they're just in government.
And then they just got scented over here.
I think the Q&N shirts have never been washed in the main.
It, thank you.
It's like the donating the losers victory t-shirts from the Super Bowl to developing countries,
but they're giving all the Chud t-shirts.
And weirdly, shirts that 19-year-old infantry privates would wear,
they all go over to Britain to be used in racist marches.
I asked him why he'd come and he started crying.
Sorry, he said.
Relatable.
Just like, first interaction with this.
guy who is the storm weeping openly unprovokes he says this is my home this is my country i'm scared
what could happen to you any female in this country any male in this country rape and murder the people we've let in
do not respect women i mean obviously this is written in such a way right as to make you wonder about
the level of respect that graham the storm has for women yeah and yeah that's great again good laugh
socially useful to sanction this kind of behavior, right?
But I'm also kind of curious, right?
Because as we say, this is so fucking American.
I don't remember the chuds being like this 10 years ago, 15 years ago.
British chuds aren't supposed to cry.
They're supposed to be hooligans.
Yes.
Testament to how much the lonely island has fallen off because 15 years ago,
they would have made a song about this guy's quote.
They would have done the bedroom intruder song again, all over again.
These guys don't respect women.
This is a guy who is wearing an American shirt,
who is doing the American chud thing
when confronted with the thing
they're afraid of,
which is to start crying at
whoever asked them the question.
The whole thing they've imagined
in their head and pivot to like,
we got to do the death penalty
and like deportation squads and shit.
Yeah.
And this is like this is a genuine transformation
in what the right in this country was.
And again,
not saying,
oh,
we should go back to when it was hooligans
because that was also pretty bad,
but that this is people who've been radicalized
in a different way than the hooligans got radicalized.
I've sort of,
I've,
I've created a counterpoint here or a juxtaposition by picking two paragraphs of this article, right?
Because she did find, Emily Lawford did find one of the kind of older species of Chud, right?
The endangered, the red squirrel of Chuds, right?
The sort of British sort of version that's getting slowly pushed out, right?
And I think this is a real, it's a story ultimately about how all of these guys are globalists,
even if they, you know, purport not to want to be.
because they're engaging with the concerns of Americans.
They're taking Americans money.
And the joke with like the NF or the BNP was always like, yeah, they'd kick the shit out
of people, but they didn't vote, right?
And the BNP was part of the start of this like long project to pull all of these guys
towards what ultimately became Graham the Storm, right?
Who in his way is more desperate and pathetic.
Like it's, they close down the football factory.
Yeah, the football factory.
They like outsource the labor to America.
America, and as we're going to find in the second segment with Annie, also to the global
south.
And now I'll read this paragraph.
You can still find the thugs, though, the ones who'd been with Robinson since his days
in the EDL.
By the park I met Jack who told me he was a hooligan.
I think the march is wank, he told me.
Most of the people involved, he said, were thick as fuck.
Slick as of white powder had congealed in his nostrils.
Quote, do you want some cocaine in your face?
He asked, I'll give you a fucking line of coke.
Oh, you don't want to hand it to them.
A few feet away, 20 police officers had sworn.
formed around one man in an England football shirt
who was lying on his stomach.
His red face was covered in sweat, dirt, and stones.
A horde of men encircled the police,
filming them from every angle.
Relax, bro, someone shouted.
The man spat on the ground.
Suck your mom, he said.
Again, they're doing an American thing.
Makes you proud to be British.
No, that's like the last hurrah of like actual British racists.
Whereas now everyone's, everyone's too Americanized.
And I think it's a real.
shame. Obviously, you know, these are not good people, right? I'm not suggesting that things were any
better. I am saying that they were more autocrinous, right? And so, I don't know, it's very,
very funny to me to have the tiny minority now of like aging guys who are like, I don't really
give a fuck about the politics. I'm just here for the violence and the cocaine and the pissing
on things. And to have them be getting squeezed out by the guys who are like, Christ is king.
that's a real phenomenon.
And it's because, and this is sort of what we're going to get to with Annie in about 10 minutes or so,
this is largely because Graham the Storm wasn't the storm 10 years ago,
whereas the suck your mom getting the shit kicked out of a football hooligan was a football hooligan 10 years ago.
What it is is it's different pathways of radicalization, right?
And your guy who wants to do coke and get in a fight with the cops or anyone, right, isn't,
headed to the same place, as you say. But that also means that, like, Graham the storm is, you know, not to be like, oh, we have to feel bad for the racists, right? Obviously, I don't. But someone who has been profoundly exploited and radicalized by this, right, on the promise that, like, you can sort of reclaim your dignity, which is constantly being assaulted by these sort of, like, gangs of raping, murdering immigrants, right? And this is so bad that you have to, like, cry about it, unprompted to a journalist. And I, I, I, I,
I think, I don't know.
It's really, there's a real divergence,
but it's also, Graham the storm kind of worries me more.
I have maybe a prosaic explanation for this,
but I feel like Jack, the cocaine connoisseur in this second segment,
like you said, his interests likely haven't changed all that much,
whereas I think that via COVID lockdowns and the subsequent things in the last decade,
a lot of people's relationships with the internet,
with social media got way less healthy.
They probably weren't great to begin with.
I mean, Hussein did some reporting on this in his book about people who kind of lost their
minds and became radical, you know, like a hard line Islamophobes just from basically being
on Twitter too much.
But I think that when you look at this and you see someone who's wearing a QAnon shirt and
is clearly not emotionally regulated and is relating into it in the very, like you just described
in a very, very sort of like, I'm willing to go shoot up a pizza parlor because I think
they've got a secret, you know, child dungeon in it kind of mentality.
That strikes me as someone who has kind of gotten caught up in this really, really brain
damaging sort of fabrication lies, conspiracy theory, economy on the internet.
Yeah, and because like Jack the Coke guy, he's exactly where he wants to be.
He says whatever racist group chats he wants to be in, but his screen time hasn't changed that much
from 2026 to 2016.
Thinking about like an ardently pro-vaccine football hooligan,
because it's like the sooner we all get vaccinated,
the sooner we can get back out there
and start kicking fuck out of people?
He's like, I stopped doing cocaine on my phone
because it kept enticing me to pick my phone up and scroll.
And I don't want to do scroll anymore.
I had to find a different glass surface.
And the thing is, Jack, like, the Koki hooligan,
I don't think he's really at risk of at some point
walking up Downing Street to like try and find
where they keep the power in number 10
with like a bunch of his friends.
Graham the Storm absolutely is.
And like the British state and in sort of organs of like surveillance and repression and everything,
they're actually pretty adept at dealing with Jacks, not so adept at dealing with Graham's, you know?
Or at least not so adept at dealing with this version of Graham, the sort of like the Muslim version of Graham, on the other hand, extremely.
But these things, they don't, they don't transfer easily necessarily.
And it goes back to, and this is sort of one of the points we're, one of the things we're going to get into in a few minutes with Annie,
which is that the way to actually respond.
to the Unite the Kingdom rally
that the sort of the people Tommy
Robinson has allied himself with,
whether that's like,
and whether that's like these
American sort of billionaire funded far right groups
or whether that's like the Nigel Farage
doing the minimum possible condemnation
like ritually he possibly can
while welcoming in everything he says,
all this stuff,
is that there is nobody who is responding to it at all.
Yeah, I mean, I've said it a million times, right?
I hate it when the liberal state
defends itself against the left,
but I love it when the liberal state,
defends itself against the right and just out of self-preservation it should. I know it
will never will because that's just how liberals are, but it's what they need to be doing. And I think
it's fair, it's fair to ask, given that that's something that we're leading into next episode,
what are the prospects of like any sort of future Labor Party leader in terms of like doing
that? And I think the answer is basically none. I was all else to say, too, I saw people
commenting like, oh, why, why didn't Sadiq Congo and attend this march or whatever, which
It's a stupid question, but it's a concern trolling question.
It's like because they try to kill him because they think he's part of,
they don't, do you do realize like how all this works, right?
They like, they see Cid Khan as part of a, you know, international conspiracy or something.
Yeah, that was a video of like some woman like at this march being,
I'm not sure what the version of like sort of fedjacketed you would apply on the writers,
but like people deciding that she was like a left wing infiltrator off of the basis that she had glasses on.
So left of their own devices, Graham the Storm and his friends are going to reinvent the Khmer Rouge.
Oh my gosh.
And it's like the thing is, the people who are likely to, yeah, if they maybe not occupy Downing Street,
but try to like go into the London mayor's office and see what they can do about Cidicke.
As we have seen, a million different things that you can do that are damaging.
We could see a British January 6th with these guys.
Graham the Storm could like taser himself in the balls.
We don't know.
Yeah.
The funny thing, the strange thing, right, is that before the United Kingdom rally,
videos appeared online, hugely inflating the number of attendees to millions, and this
was eagerly repeated by people like Tommy Robinson.
I think they used a Shakira concert in Copacabana to like, and then used AI to make it look
like to Fulgar Square.
Yeah.
They had to put the shitness filter on it, make it gray, make it a little bit depressing, make
the buildings worse.
Sadiq Khan and his like covert Islamic group.
public of London now looks like the Copacabana. And it was one of the most popular online videos
about this subject made by a number of far-right influencers who primarily discuss Britain, but don't
live here, and sometimes don't even speak English, so they claim well enough to know what they're
even posting. And it is this ecosystem. That's pretty rude to say Ian Miles Chong doesn't speak
English. It's this ecosystem that this is where Graham the storm is living. And this is how
Graham the Storm is arriving where the football hooligans should be, right?
It's, yes, it's partly his friends on Facebook and it's partly his, like, reading the
spectator or the telegraph, it's partly G.B. News. It's all of these things. But the most powerful
economic flywheel that's involved in getting Graham the Storm to put on the shirt that he
bought from America, come down to London, and then start just weeping at the first journalist he sees,
is a whole economy of things that are utterly unrelated to Britain, except based,
basically by chance because we happen to have one incredibly valuable, apparently natural resource
left here, which we're going to talk about with Annie in just a minute. That was a beautiful
cycle. We're just going to lead right on for what we were talking about, which is this
economy that has sprung up in the last couple of years, combining like the financial incentive
set by meta, the ability to just produce convincing enough seeming content for people
motivated reasoning that, you know, the AI tools allow you to do. And try and connect that to why
like Graham the Storm made his trip down from Milton Keynes to march in the United Kingdom rally
and like just how this, how these things are connected to the rise of the far right in the ongoing
march of like the far right ideology in the UK without even really caring about the fact that
that's the ideology they're promoting. And to help us explore this stupid, stupid phenomenon, it's Annie.
Annie, welcome to the second half. Thank you for joining us.
Thanks so much for having me.
So can you just draw a little line for us?
Because we all know about the London has fallen genre of, you know, a reel or video or whatever.
Far right lunatic goes to Whitechapel, points to a sign in Bengali and then starts crying.
But that used to be a guy who would go to Whitechapel, point at the sign in Bengali,
and then would have to physically start crying.
But that's obviously like that guy's job is.
been automated. We used to build things in this country. Can you just, can you take us through
how we get from that to the Britain in 2050 videos that get reshared by Tommy Robinson to motivate
Graham the storm to come and join the United Kingdom, United Kingdom, really? That's brutal.
Yeah, I mean, having worked in the field of, I guess, far right online social media content for over
10 years, an alarming thing that you find happening is that you become nostalgic for truly,
truly dire content that came before because it only seems to get worse. As you point out, you know,
the London has fallen content, which I talked about a little bit on a QA episode back in the beginning
of the year. I mean, to those people's credit, they were genuinely traveling to that place.
And in some cases, we're actually making the effort to speak to locals, even if they would then,
you know, kind of try and manipulate what they said. I think in one specific case with the South African
travel YouTuber Kurt Kaz.
He actually, he wasn't in Whitechapel, he was in Croydon, and a fan comes up to him on a bike.
And it says, you know, oh, I love your work and does a little, like, wheelie for him on his bike.
And then, Kaz, this is clearly, like, not threatening enough for the narrative that Kaz wants
to tell about London.
So he manipulates the image using AI, I think, for the thumbnail, turns the guy into, like,
the guy to be wearing a balaclava
advancing threateningly on him
and also like Photoshop's a little worried expression on his face
on Kurt Kazza's face as the guy advances
Something your old YouTuber still makes racist content
the old fashioned way
But you sort of think well
You know yeah some human thought went into that
Right some human thought went into that
And yeah I find myself a little similar
this is a bit of a tangent, but, you know, thinking the same about the manosphere.
I think about how, you know, the pickup artists, when they were doing their, like, what they're called sarging back in the day in the early noughties, they would go up and write little field reports about how their evening out had gone.
What tactics had worked with the hot bades, what hadn't.
And then you look at someone like clavicular who's just filming himself walking around and stumbling through conversations.
And you think, man, yeah, at least they used to, at least they used to be doing someone good.
some gutter honest writing.
At least they used to be getting some cardio,
getting the steps in.
But this genre of video,
I mean,
who's an estelle,
like,
okay,
hold on,
idea for a Facebook page
instead of who remembers the bin man.
It's who remembers Paul Joseph Watson.
Who remembers the bin man?
Yeah.
It used to be,
as we say,
someone like this,
goes to London,
gets frightened for largely
the benefit of people around the world
who know about London.
It's a very famous city.
People have an idea of what it's like.
A lot of people speak English.
And so it's almost a whole anglosphere scare tactic, right, to go and get frightened about London.
But now, Tommy Robinson is sharing these London in 2050 videos.
I have an example from the Bureau of Investigative Journalism of some of these videos that are being described.
Annie, I'm sure you've seen a billion.
We spoke to two people who said they were behind an account with more than 20 million views showing content like this.
The account shows AI generated videos from the point of view of people walking through British cities in 2050.
Liverpool, London, Birmingham, and unnamed places in England.
Hey, Matt Goodwin, take notes.
That's how you list cities.
Are depicted as dirty and full of rubbish with people dressed in traditional Islamic clothing and hijabs lining the streets.
Stalls have simply halal written on them.
And there's bunting featuring what looks like Arabic script as well as fire and chaos.
I love to get my halal right next to the fire.
I mean, obviously there's a racial component here where they're trying to, it's really, really grotesque.
But the idea of like, oh, it's chaotic and there's trash everywhere.
It's like, wow, does you really have to burn a lot of fucking computing to generate that image?
Yeah, that video is they're able to now make, what, dozens of it a day, hundreds of it a day,
put it on A-V-tested across hundreds of Facebook groups.
Yeah, what we're getting to here is more efficiently strip mining outrage.
Right.
Is that fair to say?
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
And I think the thing that I find really fascinating about this journalism that the Bureau of Invertis,
investigative journalism have done, looking into some of the influences and social media mcgoules
who are pumping out this AI slop, essentially, is that it's not even really clear there's
much ideology behind it. You know, one of the people that they spoke to, I believe, was a Sri Lankan
influencer who, he seemed pretty cany, essentially. He kind of had a vague understanding of
the British political landscape, sort of said, you know, I'm aware that I'm aware that
older people in the United Kingdom don't like immigrants.
So I specifically target my content to be anti-migrant because I know they spend a lot of time on Facebook.
And so this is just a really profitable avenue for me.
And he's actually teaching classes to aspiring social media moguls and Sri Lanka on how to do the same thing.
And it seems like he has identified that this is, you know, he has lots of different kind of content.
But this one specifically seems to really get views, really get shared.
There was an even more fascinating case, I think, which was a man in Pakistan who it's hard to tell because the interview is translated to a certain degree. And it's also hard to know if he's being totally honest about his motivations. But it's not even really clear if this person fully understood the ideological implications of the extremely racist content they were making. You know, they were kind of creating stuff, you know, with, yeah, images of far right rally.
you know, England says enough.
I think even people shooting, shooting dingy boats in the channel,
possibly another video I think of Kirstama, announcing Sharia law, things like this.
To be fair, he did do that.
I saw it on a video.
He did, and we support that.
We've all had a busy way.
Can we miss some stuff?
It's fine.
But what was interesting about the interview with him was it was clear that he was just riffing off
other AI content that he had seen be successful online, that he was kind of
of taking shots of this, putting it into an AI image generator, and kind of just letting it,
letting it roll, essentially. At least from the interview, I couldn't really grasp whether he
had any kind of particular understanding that he was catering to a specific political demographic or
anything. It was more literally just, this content does well, I'm going to create my own
version of it. And we're kind of facts that you can automate that too, right? You can ask
chat GPT or whatever, what goes viral on Facebook? What's going to make me money on?
Facebook and it goes, oh no, do some politics.
Yeah.
Claude, make me 10,000 a month on Facebook.
Make no mistakes.
Of course it leads you to like make and post AI video of Big Ben being renamed Master of Muhammad.
You know, that's Hussein.
I was just thinking about Hussein commenting about the far right pages that started out as like,
we love animals and animal protection and lost dogs and then pivot to anti-Halal slaughter to then
just to Islamophobia.
And this was a phenomenon he perceived, you know, 10 odd years ago.
And it's like, well, it's just.
seems so much more accelerated that you could effectively do an AI-generated video that involves,
you know, it recreat, it does, you know, a dramatic reenactment of the imagine, you know,
Muslim invader taking all your household pets and disappearing them or whatever. And it's like,
there's a certain audience, I think that's going to recognize it as AI-generated. Obviously,
I think older people and people who aren't a savvy might not, but in general, my impression was that
if it's entertaining, even when people know it's fake, they like sharing it because it's just like,
yeah, but it's showing how things really are. That's certainly.
how I've perceived what I've seen coming back from America. Yeah, I think it's often
quite similar to a belief in conspiracy theories. People will often kind of try and, particularly
in the academic field of conspiracy theories, kind of grapple with what belief means. And a lot of the
time when you drill down to it in interviews, particularly for the more lurid sounding ones,
interview subjects will kind of say, well, this specifically might not be true. But it's the kind
of thing that might happen. And I'm kind of like signaling essentially that I believe that they are
capable of this thing.
Do you know?
And I think there's something similar happening with the AI stuff.
I don't think, I don't think probably even 50% of the people who are sharing it are like,
this is actually real.
This really happened.
So much as a sort of, it's, it's signaling a what they believe to be a social truth,
what they believe to be a fact.
In fact, one of the commenters on the Great British People Facebook page, one of them that
I think is run by this Sri Lankan guy even commented, you know, Graham the Storm, most likely.
Graham the Storm or an equivalent said it's probably AI but the fact is he's right about everything
He actually just goes out and says it
I mean I think I think what's interesting about this is this idea that Graham the storm right this guy who is on a kind of like
Pathway of Radicalization further rightwards and there's just this kind of flywheel powering him now
That isn't really in anyone's control maybe apart from you know some guy who is trying to like maximize ad revenue
This is why also it's so frustrating when the Unite the Kingdom Rally was one of the reasons that the
responses to two things, the Unite the Kingdom Rally and all that it entails, as well as this
industry that's emerged that primarily involves just lying to the most adult racist pensioners
that Britain has. Why no one can counter it because the liberal way of looking at this kind
of thing is about disinformation. It's that this kind of thing is making Graham the storm wrong about
facts and because he's wrong about facts, he accepts a number of beliefs. And those beliefs lead him to
London to call himself Graham the Storm. And if Graham the storm had better information delivered as
unattainingly as possible, he would change the beliefs. I observed the same phenomenon in the United
States with forwarded emails around the time when Obama first became president. And I remember one in
particular that I'll summarize it was effectively someone describing, you know, stereotype,
massively over-exaggerated stereotype of sort of evil Arabs on plane, threatening, calling people
infidel and stuff like that. And the Delta wouldn't do anything because it was woke, although they
didn't have the word for it yet. And when finally, you know, people actually started getting forwarded
enough people believed it was real news actually found the person who originated. And he was like,
oh, well, though, I didn't intend for it to go around the whole country. But it could be true.
It's the kind of thing that could happen, you know, and they wouldn't do anything about it. And it's like,
once again, you know, the correction never got the, the audience of the original claim. But I think
what's pernicious and, and I mean, interesting in a dark way about this is that you do have a segment of people who
will see these things that are AI generated, I feel and believe them. And another significant
segment of people who know that they're fake, but either, like you said, ideologically support
the idea that it could be true or just like going to effectively concern troll or just,
just BS people and just like, no, I saw it. It's real. That's real. And it's like, well, that person
has 14 fingers and fire doesn't move like that. And, uh, you know, they, the, the, all of the writing on
the bus is gibberish. And yet, so it's harder to combat it. It's hard to says halal.
Well, yeah, because the car, there's, there's 18 different shots.
just selling a whole wall.
And it's, but I feel like it is, it is harder to combat it versus the, you know, the curse of
the 2000s, the forward forward forward email that people would get from their grandparents.
Yeah.
I mean, I guess the thing that I find, that I find different about that is the guy who originated
the forwarded email.
Like you said, he was trying to get a cross a point of view.
It was, you know, this was something he believed even if he, you know, he knew he was
bending the truth in service of a wider ideology.
I think the thing that I find really hard to wrap my head around, maybe because I am just quite an ideological person, I don't know, is the fact that I think, from what I can tell, just like the people who are producing this stuff, that is not really their motivation.
London centric did some really great reporting recently about these TikTok videos, which were claiming they were sort of doing these kind of sped up run-throughs of houses and flats, which it claimed were being.
handed out to asylum seekers and it would have inflammatory headlines. It would say stuff like,
you know, I gave this to a Syrian asylum seeker who told me that he hated Britain and things
like that. And when, so London Centric managed to track down who was renting these flats and
they all came from one specific estate agent. That estate agent, it turned out, then when they were
confronted, managed to identify the person who had been doing the tours of these flats and sent
through, I think just to sort of clear their own name to make clear that it wasn't anything to do with them, since through an interview of them confronting the person behind it. And I had been following this story and I had expected it to be a similar one. Similar, yes, it's not true, but I know this is happening in other places. So I thought I would let people know. But the guy was actually, yeah, just much more upfront about the fact that he had previously had a quite successful TikTok account, which had simply been reposting other people's content. But it had been successful enough that it had given him a payout. So when it got banned by
TikTok for reposting other people's content. He sort of sat down and thought, okay, well, how can I make
some more income? And he kind of just sort of thought to himself, oh yeah, the far right, they,
they seem really engaged on TikTok. They seem really active, the anti-innigrant people. So I'll just
kind of like make content baiting them. And it was, it seemed, you know, again, it's hard to,
it's hard to read the minds of people like this, but it seemed purely commercial his motives.
And I think maybe the most fascinating part of the interview for me was when he was,
when the person confronting him described the videos as racist, he said, no, they can't be racist
because TikTok's moderation policies don't allow for racist content. So if they had been racist,
they would have been deleted. A guy who's all guardrail, just like anything. Listen, I couldn't,
I couldn't be like speeding because cars don't go that fast. That's illegal. The whole thing is so
on rails. I mean, we mentioned this Sri Lankan guy earlier. I think it's worth pulling out some of the
quotes from that article in the Bureau of Investigative Journalism,
one of the very few good journalists and co-lets in the UK.
Sri Lankan influencer, Geith Sorriipura,
Instagram feed, shows off his lavish lifestyle.
He and his friend flash expensive-looking watches
dine at five-star hotels and film videos in sleek modern apartments.
He claims to have made $300,000 by running Facebook pages,
including some of which push of this kind of stuff to British audiences.
It's so, so funny to enrich yourself as a foreigner
and as a personal color on the back of racist, white British people.
That's actually like, that's practice, kind of.
Specifically, though, if you think about it,
making the country ungovernable in order to strip mine
our most abundant natural resource,
which is pensioner outrage.
It's colonial reparations quite literally.
What it is, is we have a domestic market
of exploiting pensioner outrage
that now can't compete with more efficient
global extraction.
This is a rapaciousness
of offshoring, you know, just for a couple
cents more of profit, they're going to destroy
a domestic industry.
Paul Joseph Watson has to do the full Monty, okay?
There was a movie in the 70s called the Kentucky
Fried movie, and there's this dumb skits. Some of them
have really not aged well, but one of them was like, we're going to
solve America's oil crisis because this is the early
70s by basically running teenagers
on like an assembly line to extract
oil because of acne and it's going to power cars.
And it sounds disgusting and absurd, but the idea
like we're going to, we're going to fund our lifestyles by generating heat and selling electricity
to the grid from racist pensioners. Like, it sounds similarly absurd. And I was thinking about
what you were saying, Annie, because it feels like in my mind, I can recall a couple of things,
like in 2016, the sort of Facebook monetized blog pages. They called fake news at the time.
Like, typically, I think they were somewhere in the Balkans, people in general, but it might have been
elsewhere. We're making things like, you know, Donald Trump is, wins the Nobel Peace Prize or
It's some of the Brexit stuff too.
You know, all Catholics must vote for Trump kind of thing.
And it was simply, it was just ad revenue driving it.
And it's like, it's weird to trace that through line from what you're describing.
The person who is invested in it is like, I'm going to make things up for the cause in, say, 2010 or 2009 to that.
To then this where it's not even somebody doing it to get clicks within the environment of the country that they're in.
I mean, the story from London centric is different in this regard.
But the idea of like a guy in Sri Lanka being like, well, I know old British people,
People are on Facebook and they hate foreigners and it's like, and there's like two steps in the flow chart to get to Laflai style from that.
I kind of think that there's a, the progressive ruse out of this is simple.
We have to put boomers in the matrix.
We have to put them in the pods from the matrix.
We have because otherwise all of the outrage is getting farmed anyway.
It's just getting farmed to like evil ends, right?
Like we could, we could be using that to power stuff here.
You can take those jigsaw puzzle paintings of like the perfect.
country hamlet somewhere in England where, you know, everything is just is oil painted and you
can convince them they're living in that. And then this problem goes away and they power the
grid. I mean, you really think about it, right? The United the Kingdom Rally is like the effluent
byproduct of outrage farming being undertaken at an industrial scale. We are, Britain is being,
is being treated as a factory farm. And the effluent, the Superfund lake is the United the Kingdom
rally. It is a byproduct, a valueless byproduct. They
people don't give a shit about.
Yeah, it's just tailings.
In March, one of Surapuria's pages
posted a claim as representing Sadiq Khan's
pledged to build 40,000 new London council homes
by saying the homes would be only available to Muslims
so they can be, quote, near mosques and a lot of food shops.
I don't know why he would institute that policy,
but you know what, fair's fair?
And also, by the this stuff isn't, as always, right?
This stuff doesn't actually come from outside the country.
It's just, these guys in Sri Lanka are just better at spreading it.
Because there's a quote from Robert Jenrick about Andy Burnham,
more on him on Thursday's episode.
saying, if Burnham wins, a million low-skilled migrants will be allowed to stay and get British citizenship
the next few years. They won't stop the boats. He'll put them in bed sits on your street. And to pay for it
all, he'll have to hide your taxes. He's never going to fit a boat. It's a small boat, famously.
I guess they do inflates. I don't want to be glib, but I just, it feels like they're taking the James
Dyson model, but for racism. Like, they basically, like, well, you know, we got to move it elsewhere
where the labor is cheaper and we can have the headquarters somewhere with a zero tax rate. And, you know,
I guess to me it's, I knew that there was money to be made in some of this, but it didn't realize
it was to this scale. And I presume that what that means is that one has to be making significant
amounts of content, like churning it out. We are stupid to be left. Like, what is wrong with us?
He goes on to say, the UK is an important audience. They really don't like people from our
countries living there, not just Sri Lankans, even more so Indians. And then again, they describes
more of these videos, right? One AI generated video shows a large naval ship,
colliding with two inflatable dinghys full of people
who are thrown out of the boats into the sea.
The caption reads,
who really wants to see something like this?
Others claim that Star Marul introduced Sharia law.
Yeah, just,
just like,
he's like mining the sort of British boomer edd, right?
But that's why,
because these guys are,
you know,
that you might say,
hilariously,
rootless cosmopholitans,
this is why it's so American.
This is the most American thing
I'm going to say in this episode,
where one of the,
I see someone's already scrolling to this,
one of the sort of like memes that the
produces and sends and gets reposting it's reposting
gets paid for,
Starmor bin Laden wanted for terrorist crimes
against white Christians, pensioners and the disabled.
They barf sack o'crombode Starmor.
On a long enough timeline,
Claude and Chad GVT will invent boomer standard English.
And O Starmor bin Laden
wanted for terrorist crimes
against white Christians,
pensioners and the disabled.
Yeah, so it was weird that Andy Burnham ran on that,
but, you know.
And again, like, Reform UK counselors are constantly sharing all this shit.
Bill Piper, Reform UK counselor in Leicestershire commented this is in late 2025.
So he's been joined by 10 of his friends who all believe the same thing.
Say, quote, I've been saying it for ages on an AI generated image of a man wearing a t-shirt printed with the slogan, quote,
support the country you live in or live in the country you support.
His method, this is the end of the Bureau of Investigative Journalism article,
his methods appear to yield results, at least for some of his students.
in a Facebook group one student posted an AI generated image of the meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg with a large pile of cash,
saying, thank you very much, Mr. Zuckerberg, for helping people in Sri Lanka.
And the thing is, he's right, right?
As you say, it's just, if another thing was more lucrative, that's what they'd be doing.
Yeah.
Right?
But this is the thing that's lucrative, because these are the people who are perennially unsatisfied and desperate to be scared because being scared is their in-group identity.
Yeah, I mean, I think it speaks maybe to just their full-hearted.
of the effort to ban under 16s from social media.
I mean, it really doesn't feel to me like under 16s are the ones we should be worrying about,
you know, the power of the power of the over 65 seems to be just like creating an entire
new racism industries and the global sales.
And also, I think, maybe speaks to the fact that it's actually just not a very smart idea,
particularly to have a population who are largely unused to social media suddenly unleashed on
it.
Yeah, everyone's online and very isolated and now there's this technology that seems to be able to get to anyone this way.
Yeah, I mean, the truth is, yeah, I think that there is some very compelling evidence on the harms of social media for under 16s.
I'm just like not convinced it's compelling enough that it's much more harmful for them than anybody else.
Yeah.
If you know what I mean, like I think, you know, ban it for all of us.
I think this honestly segues quite nicely into just showing how hilariously.
poorly targeted the Online Safety Act is, right?
Largely because UK lawmaking is written in newspaper columns, right?
A lot of the laws just get written in daily mail columns,
and the more you write it in a daily mail column,
the more of a law it will become.
Yeah, and like, despite the sort of valiant efforts
of a few of the more left side of, like, you know, lib journalists,
no one's really been able to sell anyone getting that panicked
about your nan getting radicalized, and to be honest, they should.
But it's very, very easy to get people worried
that your kid is going to be made to have pronouns by the internet, you know?
And it's like there's this whole category of socially destabilizing information like substance out there
that the country refuses to take seriously because it does not sublimate like the sexual urges of a daily male columnist
in the form of protecting children from seeing pornography, which is still good.
I don't know.
You should probably still do that.
But the point of the online safety law is we are terrified of the innocence from all of the horrible,
smut that's out there.
Yeah, and I think it's important to articulate
this stuff as basically pornographic,
right? Okay, it's not sexually
explicit most of the time,
but a lot of it is, as we've seen, with the
sort of like, you know, Royal Navy sort of
running down small boats, it's sort of violently
pornographic. It's certainly appealing
to a sort of like very
basal, emotional level,
right? Because that's how you get those clicks.
And it is learning from a lot of the same
things that porn producers have done.
And the Online Safety Act, right? Specifically,
It specifically says legal but harmful content for adults so long as it's democratically relevant.
And a AI video of, you know, Kirstarmer saying, I'm going to, you know, saying the anti for super soldiers tweet, basically.
This video of Kirstarmer saying the shahada is democratically relevant.
And so there's a specific carve out, ironically, campaigned for by the right wing press who are now having rings run around them by these like AI content farms, at least in terms on return.
an uninvested capital because they don't have to employ a libel lawyer. They don't need an office.
They don't have to hire Rod Dreher. They're not going to pay for a department in Budapest.
Yeah. The overheads on terrifying pensioners when like British reporters are doing it is a really high,
right? And they're getting rings run around them. But it's because the right wing press campaigned
for this carve out where you can lie about so long as it's about politics. And guess what?
Everybody involved in the airline safety act was like, yep, so long as it's not to do with jacking off,
I'm fine. And so it's like I say, how I think about this is it carves out protections for politically
flavored content. So it's legal but harmful for someone to assemble an anti-immigration panic video that
may as well to him be in Greek. And it's protected because it takes a policy position,
which is we should kill everyone coming over in the channel. It's almost as though the online
safety act was created to facilitate right-wing disinformation or right-wing propagandizing at scale
because industrial skill lying is fine. Raleigh, yes? November. That's an interesting.
that's an interesting thing. However, it sounds like what you're telling me to do is to start
farming outrage by making right-wing Greek language content.
Everyone moves one language over.
Yeah, the British market is saturated. We need to be moving to the east.
Yeah, I'm in racism, but like in emerging markets.
I mean, I will say that I can imagine that in terms of trying to come up with like,
what is the most ridiculous overstated sort of Islamophobic hyperbole that you could sell and say,
this is what's happening in the country.
I bet you Greek Cyprius would be really good at that.
So, like, maybe that's where they need to offshore it too.
Yeah.
We have, we have artisan made in England.
I'm currently getting grok to generate me a video of the Greek president
wearing a fez and growing a mustache out.
If they've taken the Copa cabana footage of Shakira and say it's to unite the kingdom
rally, they could absolutely take them out in the northern Cyprus that has the enormous
northern Cyprus flag painted on it with the Adeturk slogan painted underneath it.
And they could just be like, yeah, that's Eastbourne.
That's what it looks like now.
Specifically making my fortune convincing, like, British boomers of the Megali idea.
Like, you have to become, like, anti-Turkish.
One of the thing I want to go back to, right, before we sort of close out, is we've been talking a lot about these ideas as coming from outside in.
And I think that's not quite right.
It might be the people capitalizing on the ideas are outside.
but I mentioned the right wing press earlier.
These are all ideas that the right wing press has.
It's what they've taken Alison Pearson and automated and outsourced her and deskilled her, maybe.
I can't believe that there was anything there to deskilled, but there you go.
I was going to say, it's really difficult to subtract one from zero, but okay, let's go.
Poor Melanie Phillips, she's got to sign on now.
But these are British beliefs.
It's just there is a global, far right ecosystem that is mixing them up with American
beliefs and then creating them in the most efficient way where the cost of labor is cheapest
or where you reach is highest, right?
Yeah.
I mean, I think that's precisely why I found the other example that the other case study
that the Bureau of Investing of Journalism managed to find with the Pakistani man so interesting
because he really was, as far as I could tell, he really was just simply just finding
content that was already successful and replicating it.
But as you say, that wouldn't have been possible essentially without this.
this content already existing in British media ecosystem.
He, yeah, had just kind of simply found like a cheaper and kind of more effective way to
create this content.
But yeah, as with all things with AI, which is kind of, I think, you know, why so many people
get so angry about the kind of claims that it's going to make all of artists and
writers obsolete.
It can only do that.
It can only make them obsolete by cannibalizing their work, right?
And I think what we're finding is, you know, that's true for talented artists.
and it's true for talented writers
but it's also true for talented
racist content creators.
We don't get the artisanal stuff
anymore, you know, it's all slot.
This is why I called it a flywheel
earlier is it's not going to
produce something different, but it's
going to produce the same thing faster, right?
And I think, I guess what makes me
really depressed, actually, really,
can I segue into the next episode?
Is that allowed? Is that allowed?
Okay. So next episode, we want to talk
about Andy Burnham, right? And Manchesterism and Burnhamism and where that's all taking us. And it
kind of strikes me that, you know, we're going to talk about him in like bond markets. And I think
in both cases, right, the sort of Graham the storms of the world, the guys who really engage with this
kind of content, the guys who are really radicalized by it, have understood even if not consciously,
right, that the way that they get what they want is by never being happy, by never being satisfied.
And that's something that this kind of content ecosystem needs from them. It needs
them to be always unsatisfied. They're always clicking more. They're always consuming more. And so they're going
to remain like ever radicalized. And I don't know that anyone has a solution that isn't just
give them more of what they want. And that makes me really depressed and really worried.
It's the result of this, I read recently that the, you know, and this is I think known for a while,
that Starmer tends to select his front benches based on who goes well, who goes on TV well, right?
It's a very Trumpy from him. But he loves television. He's obsessed with television. He's obsessed with
television. He wants good TV performers because it's not just a government, it's an entire
anti-political governing philosophy. Because Tommy Robinson and those Sri Lankan guys and like
the American influencers who are handing out the crusader crosses to like Graham the storm
or hoping to convert the football hooligan guys. Those guys are all political entrepreneurs in some
way. Some of them are just entrepreneurs like the Sri Lankan guys. Some of them have ideologies they're
trying to put forward. Some of them are syncretous, right? But they're all political entrepreneurs.
They're all doing something.
They're taking an action to make things different, whether that's their bank accounts or like
the amount of fascist boots on the street in the country.
But the government seems primarily interested in using the power of the state to change the
theater of news media, which is why they tend to give in to all of the demands that will
never be met because they must be seen in the theater to be engaging with the thing that's
also in the media, right?
It's also on TV.
You want an easy ride from like, you know, Ed Balls or like Sophie Ridge.
or whoever. Yeah, and not to say the Starmer regime doesn't do anything. It does use power.
It uses its power to crack down, but it always cracks down in response to Ed Balls and Sophie Ridge
and the press and so on and so on. Or like, you know, the whatever the addled wackadoo you can get
for fucking question time. And it only steers them in one direction because these guys are not
political entrepreneurs, right? Nor is Andy Burnham, by the way. The government treats like United
the Kingdom and all the ideology around it, including all the AI sloppaganda as this authentic
expression of people's beliefs that need to be accommodated, prevented from spilling into street
violence, and not entirely artificial panic stoked by columnists taken over by content farmers in Sri Lanka
responding to economic incentives set by meta. That is to say, they don't see this as the problem
that it is. They see this as just, if we can just message it better, if we can just strike the
balance, then all of these incentives that are way above us or deep in someone's fucking hindbrain
are all going to go away. If we can get the margin right, which is, I think based on what to
everything we've talked about in the last half hour about what this actually means to people
and the emotive charge that you get from watching a Britain in 2050 video because they're never
going to make Graham the Storm cry about how much they how much he loves their immigration
target right it's it's bound to fail and we've seen it fail yeah I saw a a labor MP on blue
sky recently and she was on blue sky so you know it didn't go down well kind of talk about
she was like when when the late when the immigration issue is sold
then we can kind of, you know, we can move on to this and the public will be more understanding.
Yeah, I think you're exactly right that people are, yeah, this is the immigration issue in a sense.
And it's really hard to understand exactly how this will be solved.
For all the online safety acts faults and yeah, I think you elucidated them really well.
Something that once again, I'm feeling nostalgic about stuff that's not that great.
It does feel like to me already like a relic of a bygone era, which,
is when governments genuinely felt that they had some kind of role in regulating social media.
It sort of came off the back of there was a similar bill that came through,
they call it a bill in the EU. I forget what they call it. An act, I can't remember. And one in the
US, which was typically even more toothless than our own. That was during the Biden administration,
obviously. And it all felt, you know, I kind of watched these sort of make their way through
and gradually get more water down each time. But there was still so.
some kind of effort, some kind of understanding that there was something that governments could
essentially could do about social media. And I think social media platforms themselves also really
had this consciousness up until 2024 or so. This was something that, you know, they were frightened
of and you could see they were doing kind of piecemeal. It was certainly not enough attempts at
moderation on their own platforms. I've watched that over the last two years just completely roll back,
almost to total silent.
You know, there was a time
when if you looked up
the Great Replacement on YouTube,
it would say,
the Great Replacement is a conspiracy theory,
blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And all of the content that it showed
you would be people debunking it.
That is not the case anymore.
You can find this.
I think the second result I got recently
was somebody saying the Great Replacement is real.
I've seen people who got de-platformed
and demonetized post-January 6th
just quietly kind of get their accounts back,
get their finances back on are they're advertising money back on on YouTube.
Similarly with Facebook, there was a time when they certainly weren't doing enough on Q&On
and anti-vaccine content and things like that, but there was an effort to suppress that.
That is not the case anymore.
In fact, my sister who doesn't research this stuff, but recently became pregnant,
said that she had to basically close down her Facebook account because it just kept on,
the second it found out she was pregnant, it just kept on sending her anti-vaccine content
over and over again, you know, about what vaccines would do to her baby.
etc. And I see
absolutely no appetite
at all on behalf of governments
to do anything about this. It's almost as if
because we understand that Trump has no interest
in doing anything about it, that
the whole kind of system has collapsed
essentially on the understanding. That's why
I think you get stuff like should we ban social media
for under 16s because it's
sort of, we have kind of essentially
decided that this stuff is
this stuff is ungovernable and
therefore all we can do is govern
the public. Instead.
You keep seeing that word
ungovernable show up in more
and more like op-eds now.
I think that's the kind of mood music
for Burnham as well is,
well, there's nothing we can do because
you know, it's just, it's just
over. I saw something interesting
because before you joined us,
Andy, we were discussing this and I mentioned
that American friends and people who
are similarly minded have been sharing
a lot of very obviously American
influencer like right-wing to Twitter and
TikTok content that's focused on the United
kingdom. And I was actually kind of taken aback because all of a sudden they were talking about
Manchester as sort of Manchester has fallen, you know, white people are being outbred or whatever. And I don't
necessarily think there's something so acute as to say this is because they, to discredit Andy Burnham,
but it was interesting to see it kind of come to the fore a little bit more. And it feels, I don't know,
like, I don't want to go down the rabbit hole of assuming that everything is directed because it's
very chaotic. We can see this so much there's so many actors with very different reasons involved in this.
But it is interesting that it feels like any kind of.
of politics that might venture into opposing this, then suddenly becomes the target of this,
this, this, this, this, this, this deluge of just of nonsense, but, you know, it's, you can still
drown in nonsense, apparently, whether or not it's, you know, whether or not you point out
that it's fake. It's like, there's just too much of it. And I guess my question to you before we
close, Annie, was you are, you are far better versed in this than I am. And I feel like you see a
lot of different angles in this and have been doing this for a while. And I guess, is there
anything that you feel like people should be aware of because of both the risk of saying,
people they know being radicalized, but also just in general, like the trends that you're seeing.
Because as we've said on this episode, it has changed. It's become more dangerous, but it's definitely
changed. I think the truth is that even though this stuff is much more profitable, it's not
entirely going to replace our industry of homegrown YouTubers who go around kind of causing
trouble in city centers, usually filming people who are, anyone who's not white for one thing.
but also kind of honing in on homeless people on addicts.
I don't know if you guys have covered this before.
It's kind of called auditing.
Have you to discuss that?
Oh, we're very familiar.
That goes back to when we had the Twitch stream.
I've long been interested in those freaks.
Yeah.
I mean, I think it's funny because I think there is like a,
as much as the AI slot might travel really far.
It also feels like there is this appetite,
a kind of almost Colosseum-esque appetite for real, real blood, real death.
you know and I kind of wonder of that kind of content in a saturated market of AI slot
will come to have a certain kind of cachet to a degree because it's so kind of visceral and
ugly it's the sort of like if you're if you're not in front of a green screen then go out
into the street and like push someone on the camera kind of thing right well I do wonder just by way
of closing whether what we're headed for isn't sort of the worst of both worlds where you have all of the
sort of fictionalized AI radicalized stuff like, you know, the sort of imaginary navy shooting
of people, then the real guys have to go and compete with. And so you end up with those guys
kind of chasing that. I don't know. I don't know. Yeah. I mean, I think that's really true.
I mean, I think even in the time that I've kind of been following auditing, it's definitely,
yeah, it's definitely kind of escalated in terms of the kind of violence that its audience
expect essentially. Well, yeah, I mean, I guess there's like a case of the guy in the United States
who actually killed someone, right? What was his name? Oh, God. Oh, tried to build it? Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. So, I mean, I think that is probably actually just like a really, a really dark place that it's
heading essentially is that, yeah, I think you're right. There's kind of an escalating appetite
for more violence in these videos. And that is kind of then egged on by the kind of
fantastical scenes that AI can create.
So, yeah.
So good news.
More good news to come.
Anyway, look, I actually think we're also about at time for today.
So Annie, once again, thank you very much for coming and spending some time with us today.
As a reminder, where can people find more of you?
So, yeah, you can find me on X, but I don't really tend to post there anymore.
And if you want to actually see what I'm saying, I'm on blue sky.
But you can also listen to me regularly featured on the Q&Sky.
QAA podcast. Amazing. Thank you so much.
QAA friends of the show, heartily recommended by us.
Otherwise, we will see you in a few short days on the bonus episode.
Going to be talking about Manchester.
Going to be talking about Andy Burnham.
Manchester, the Hacienda.
You remember the Red, the Northern Quarter.
So obviously, you know, we plug everybody's things that we've got going on, Riley, November.
You've got no guys, no mayors, November.
You've also got Kill James Bond.
And Infinity podcasts.
You've got B.
gay soft crime. I'm in a band called
Second Homes. We have an album called Find A Way to Hate it.
It just came out last week. It's available on band
camp to stream for free as well as to purchase, and
we will link to it in the show notes.
Thank you so much, Riley, for giving me a chance to plug it.
And thank you, Annie. This has been really informative. Thank you.
Thanks so much for having me. Always a pleasure. And we'll
see you in a few days on the bonus.
Bye, everyone. Bye.
