British YouTuber
Shaun The logo of Shaun's channel
Born (1988-06-16 ) 16 June 1988 (age 35) [1] [2] Nationality British Also known as Shaun and Jen Channel Years active 2016 – present Genre(s) Political commentary, Video essay, Cultural critique Subscribers 704 thousand[3] Total views 74.25 million[3]
100,000 subscribers 2018
Last updated: 9 June 2024
Shaun (born 16 June 1988) is a British YouTuber . Video essays by Shaun have covered popular culture and politics, specifically to critique neoliberalism , anti-feminism , and the alt-right .[4] [5]
Career
Shaun began his current YouTube channel in 2016, and it is primarily funded through Patreon supporters.[6] Shaun has made left-wing videos about the 2017 Unite the Right rally ,[7] [5] the scientific racism of the 1994 book The Bell Curve ,[8] the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki ,[6] politics in video games,[9] Native American history ,[10] feminism [5] and white supremacy .[4] [5] He has also created a video series called How PragerU Lies to You, which criticizes and responds to videos created by American conservative YouTube channel PragerU .[5]
His video "Doom: The Fake Outrage" was named by Polygon as one of 2018's best video essays, with Polygon describing him as "quite possibly the most droll human on the internet".[9]
Shaun has been included in an informal group of leftist YouTube essayists sometimes known as "BreadTube "[5] [11] or "LeftTube". This group also often includes Kat Blaque , ContraPoints , Hbomberguy , Lindsay Ellis , and Philosophy Tube .[12] [13] [4]
References
^ @shaun_vids (16 June 2023). "it is my birthday" (Tweet ). Archived from the original on 13 August 2023. Retrieved 21 June 2023 – via Twitter .
^ The Great Replacement Isn't Real - ft. Lauren Southern . Shaun. 9 July 2017. Retrieved 9 August 2023 – via YouTube . So, in 2050, I will be, for example, 62 years old.
^ a b "About Shaun" . YouTube .
^ a b c Mirrlees, Tanner (29 December 2020). "Socialists on Social Media Platforms" . In Panitch, Leo; Albo, Greg (eds.). Beyond digital capitalism : new ways of living . New York: NYU Press . p. 123. ISBN 9781583678831 .
^ a b c d e f Kuznetsov, Dmitry; Ismangil, Milan (13 January 2020). "YouTube as Praxis? On BreadTube and the Digital Propagation of Socialist Thought" . TripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique . 18 (1): 204–218. doi :10.31269/triplec.v18i1.1128 . ISSN 1726-670X .
^ a b Burman, Nicholas (11 January 2021). "Is There a Future for Left-Wing YouTube?" . Tribune . Archived from the original on 11 November 2021. Retrieved 15 July 2022 .
^ Swafford, Andrew (31 December 2019). "A YouTube Doc Exposes What Went Down at the "Unite the Right" Rally" . Hyperallergic . Retrieved 10 January 2021 .
^ Wilder, Darcie (10 January 2020). "I am beginning to suspect that having a massive following on YouTube does not make people happy" . The Outline . Retrieved 10 January 2021 .
^ a b Schindel, Daniel (28 December 2018). "The best video essays of 2018" . Polygon . Retrieved 10 January 2021 .
^ Lewis, Rebecca; Marwick, Alice E.; Partin, William Clyde (3 February 2021). " "We Dissect Stupidity and Respond to It": Response Videos and Networked Harassment on YouTube" . American Behavioral Scientist . 65 (5): 735–756. doi :10.1177/0002764221989781 . ISSN 0002-7642 . S2CID 233224280 .
^ Fuchs, Christian (10 March 2021). "5. II Applications - 4. 5. 7.5 Socialist Influencers". Social Media: A Critical Introduction . SAGE. ISBN 978-1-5297-5601-2 .
^ Amin, Shaan (2 July 2019). "Can the Left Win YouTube?" . The New Republic . Retrieved 10 January 2021 .
^ Moosa, Tauriq (25 January 2019). " 'Success would've been three grand': meet the gamer who raised $340,000 for a trans charity" . The Guardian . Retrieved 10 January 2021 .
Further reading