Inside the Podcasting Wild West: How the ‘Manosphere,’ Joe Rogan & Tucker Carlson Stream Holocaust Denial, the ‘Jewish Question’ & 9/11 Conspiracies to Millions
- Podcasting is becoming a major influence, with nearly half of Americans aged 18 to 29 tuning in multiple times a week, according to Pew Research.
- Joe Rogan hosted Ian Carroll, who spread antisemitic conspiracy theories during a nearly three-hour podcast episode.
- Podcast platforms profit from popular shows promoting hate speech, raising concerns about their oversight.
- Figures like Tucker Carlson and Candace Owens are normalizing hate speech, contributing to mainstreaming antisemitic and extremist views.
4 Articles
4 Articles
How the ‘manosphere,’ Joe Rogan & Tucker Carlson stream Holocaust denial, the ‘Jewish question’ & 9/11 conspiracies to millions
Inside the podcasting Wild West: A near-total lack of oversight is no longer just a fringe problem—it’s a mainstream industry failure. By Rachel O’Donoghue, Honest Reporting If the unstoppable rise of social media defined the 2000s and 2010s, then the 2020s belong to the podcast. Audio talk formats have existed since the advent of radio, but for years, they struggled to hold younger audiences’ attention, eclipsed by television, streaming platfor…
WATCH Tucker Carlson: This threat is far greater to the U.S. than China, Russia or Iran * WorldNetDaily * by Tucker Carlson
Tucker Carlson The Mexican drug cartels are a far greater threat to the United States than China, Russia or Iran, says Doug Macgregor. They’ve got Javelin missile systems on our border, and American officials on their payroll. Chapters: (0:00) The Ukrainian Drone Strike in Moscow (6:54) Why Is… pic.twitter.com/dyJ7TrAZlQ — Tucker Carlson (@TuckerCarlson) March 11, 2025
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