Last year, we detailed how the Media Research Center worked to reframe right-wing videomaker Stephen Crowder’s homophobic attacks on then-Vox host Carlos Maza — smearing him as a “lispy queer,” among other things, which inspired Crowder’s right-wing follower to doxx Maza — by saying that Crowder is a “conservative comedian” who is apparently exempt from criticism (though that hasn’t stopped the MRC from attacking the humor of comedians who are not conservative). It was only after Maza went public about the verbal abuse and doxxing that YouTube moved to demonetize Crowder’s channel, for which the MRC granted victimhood status to Crowder.
Well, Maza has since gone out on his own to make videos for his own YouTube channel, and the MRC is attacking him once more.
In a Feb. 13 post, Alexander Hall complained that “The New York Times gave this “New York-based socialist” a prominent feature in their business section with two gigantic photos on separate pages,” then engaged in revisionist history about Crowder: “Maza, aka @GayWonk, famously triggered the adpocalypse on YouTube when he blasted the platform for allowing conservative YouTuber Steven Crowder to poke fun at him during Gay Pride Month. Shortly afterward came a wave of ‘carpet bombing’ demonetizations and potential rule changes that restricted free speech on the platform.” Hall made sure not to mention Crowder’s vicious homophobia.
The next day, Clay Waters, the MRC’s designated Times-hater, went after the Times article itself, bizarrely and counterfactually portraying Maza as the aggressor and Crowder as the victim: “Maza, whose Twitter bio refers to Tucker Carlson as a white supremacist, targeted conservative Steven Crowder in 2019. After Crowder mocked him as a ‘lispy queer,’ YouTube was pressured into demonetizing Crowder’s YouTube videos.” (Waters doesn’t mention that Maza’s claim about Carlson is backed up with evidence.)
Waters also insisted that Maza is “no slouch at internet bullying,” while conveying further victimhood on Crowder by complaining that the writer of the Times article showed “hostility toward Crowder” by referring to him as “a bargain-bin conservative comedian.” Needless to say, Waters couldn’t be bothered to describe the full extent of Crowder’s homophobic attacks.
The MRC is quite invested in portraying Crowder as a victim. In December, Hall gave Crowder a platform to rant that “the purge is coming” in the form of YouTube proposing content reforms to cut down on “malicious insults” and “veiled threats” — you know, what Crowder did to Maza. Which, of course, led Hall to invoke revisionist history to claim that Crowder was merely “mocking” Maza.