Magazine
CULTURE
CLUB
Can a British Documentarian Crack the Gen-Z Far
Right?
A new miniseries from British documentarian Louis
Theroux tests the limits of traditional journalism in covering America’s racist
youth movement.
By DEREK
ROBERTSON
03/12/2022
07:00 AM EST
Derek
Robertson is a contributing editor to POLITICO Magazine. Follow him on Twitter
@derek_j_rob.
https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2022/03/12/louis-theroux-genz-far-right-00016750
Louis
Theroux is an extremely likely cult hero. The 51-year-old British documentarian
broke out with a late-1990s BBC2 series titled “Louis Theroux’s Weird
Weekends,” in which Theroux — with his Brit pop-chic mop of hair, round glasses
and almost naively straightforward interviewing technique — chronicled some of
the United States’ most outré subcultures for a U.K. audience. An owlish,
six-foot-two Oxford graduate gently probes the edges of a Southern California
swingers’ party, or steps into the booth for a rap battle live on Georgia
radio: To a certain kind of culturally omnivorous viewer, these are not exactly
a hard sell.
Theroux’s
documentaries manage to be funny without mocking their frequently odd subjects,
and uncommonly sensitive while maintaining a journalistic rigor. They also
became more serious as the years passed, covering subjects like the limits of
inner-city policing or even the inhumane trade in (ahem) exotic animals long
before such topics were at the center of the American conversation. For years
most weren’t available in the United States due to rights issues and were
traded around the U.S. internet like samizdat — which, of course, only enhanced
Theroux’s cult status stateside. His most recent BBC2 series, concluded just
last weekend, should be no different: “Louis Theroux’s Forbidden America” is a
three-part revisiting of some of his old favorite subjects, examining how
various subcultures have undergone massive and fundamental changes in the
social media era.
Of the
three episodes, the final two are vintage Theroux: “Rap’s New Frontline” and
“Porn’s MeToo” are humane looks at the world of Florida trap music and the
shifting balance of power in the porn industry, respectively. The humor of
Theroux getting in a quick freestyle verse with a couple of rappers young
enough to be his sons, or enduring a graphic line of questioning about his own
sexual preferences, recalls the early “Weird Weekends” days, while serious
subject matter is treated with appropriate gravity. Dealing with intense issues
like gun violence, fatal drug abuse and sexual violence, the show is a
difficult watch at times — but perfectly successful in its goal of providing
context and emotional depth for various groups presumed far outside the
viewers’ frame of reference.
The first
episode, “Extreme and Online,” is a different proposition entirely. It’s also
an unexpectedly newsworthy one, making its unavailability in the States even
more tragic: In it, Theroux immerses himself in the world of the white
nationalist internet troll Nick Fuentes, whose “America First Political Action
Conference” was attended by Republican Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) and
Paul Gosar (R-Az.) last month to widespread outrage. Theroux is no stranger to
American hate, having embedded with the infamous neo-Nazi Tom Metzger and the
virulently anti-gay Westboro Baptist Church, among others. Fuentes and his
gaggle of attention-seekers occupy a similar space to the latter in our
cultural imagination as a tiny yet vocal band of ideologues who live solely for
the shock and horror that follows their stunts. Some of his greatest hits
include his vocal participation in the Charlottesville “Unite the Right” rally
(and participation in a Freedom Plaza rally on Jan. 6), protesting the
Republican candidates in the 2021 Georgia Senate runoff election and somehow
being offensive enough to get booted from Jason Miller’s right-wing “Gettr”
social media app.
Some
question whether covering Fuentes at all simply amplifies his hateful message
with no further inherent news value. Of course, he’s done quite well gathering
attention himself without journalists’ assistance. Before his ban from Twitter
he enjoyed more than 120,000 followers, and despite his ban from YouTube in
February 2020, his content is still widely available on the platform. Fuentes
is, despite his widespread deplatforming, unquestionably the figurehead of what
he refers to as his “Groyper Army,” the loosely-defined group of young trolls
who hope to leverage the energy and resentment that surrounded Donald Trump’s
election toward a resurgence of outright racist American politics.
As a
journalist who has always relied on his plaintive questioning style and
inherent British “otherness” to evoke sincerity from his subjects, Theroux
faces a particularly difficult challenge. What happens when his brand of arch,
almost whimsical Gen-X irony meets the impenetrable nihilism of Fuentes’
4chan-borne Zoomer irony? Is it possible to puncture that irony and gain some
genuine insight about what it means for the 22-year-old Fuentes and his young
followers to alienate themselves so thoroughly from society in favor of their
internet cloister? And if not, what’s the point of talking to them?
The episode
begins in Orlando last year, as Fuentes and his entourage made their perennial
attempt to crash the Conservative Political Action Conference, hoping to
advertise their own rival event. Fuentes works himself into an awkward lather,
declaring that CPAC “sucks,” is “gay,” and is “not conservative” before
mimicking the former President Trump’s trademark “bye-bye” and storming off
after being refused tickets to the event. Theroux questions Fuentes backstage
at his own AFPAC, and together they examine some faulty merchandise that
proclaims “America First Bitch.” “There should be a comma there, because it’s
not like, you know, ‘I’m an America First Bitch,’” Fuentes stammers. “They
messed it up,” Theroux responds. “That makes it sound like you’re the bitch.
That’s the worst possible outcome.”
Theroux’s
most significant face-time with Fuentes comes during a visit to his studio —
that is to say, his parents’ basement in the western Chicago suburbs — from
which he broadcasts his program. “You dropped out of college. Were your parents
pushing back at all, thinking like, ‘What’s Nick doing? He’s just in the
basement, recording, like, homemade videos?’” Theroux asks.
“They
pushed me. They said, you know, ‘What are you gonna do? You gotta get a job,
you gotta go to school or have a plan,’” Fuentes responds. “And I told them,
‘Why don’t you just give me one year to explore this, and if it works out, I’ll
keep doing it. And if it doesn’t work out, then I’ll abandon it… It worked
out.’”
The taping
is dull and interminable, with Fuentes delivering one of his trademark,
performatively bigoted rants in front of a shabby green screen. Theroux looks
even more exhausted than Fuentes by its end, spending the program’s duration
rubbing his eyes and staring at his phone, alternately attempting to track his
aimless logic and marveling at the program’s massive reach. Having realized the
pointlessness of attempting to penetrate Fuentes’ “ideology” insomuch as it
exists beyond its function as “triggering” his opponents, Theroux simply muses,
“[Fellow white supremacist troll] Baked Alaska thinks you’re going to be
president one day.”
“Eh, I
don’t know about that. Maybe,” Fuentes responds. “But you’d like to be,”
Theroux offers cautiously. “I would. I would, not gonna lie,” Fuentes says,
mimicking Trump’s mannerisms with an eerie, studied similarity.
Fuentes,
the movement’s frontman, is far more composed under Theroux’s questioning than
his various charges, who respond to it by throwing adolescent tantrums. The
climax of this episode comes during a confrontation between Theroux and Baked
Alaska, real name Anthime Gionet, a wayward former BuzzFeed journalist turned
full-time far-right troll (and Jan. 6 defendant). Initially game for Theroux’s
presence during one of his bizarre, roving livestreams, Alaska turns hostile
when Theroux challenges him about his public flip-flopping in and out of the
alt-right and the real-world consequences of his hateful
life-as-performance-art, insomuch as they’ve stoked the anger around events
like Charlottesville or Jan. 6. Alaska short-circuits. Sweaty and red-faced,
standing in the middle of the street during the dark early hours of the Florida
morning, he heaps invective on Theroux, asking him, “Why don’t you apologize
for your fucking ancestors from thousands of years ago, because you’re white,
Louis, aren’t you?”
Another
confrontation between Theroux and a particularly nasty follower bearing the
pseudonym “Beardson Beardly” ends with the latter working himself into a
spittle-flecked rage after Theroux questions him about his motivation for
waving a Nazi salute on camera. Theroux is steely in both cases, having seen
far more authentically intimidating ideologues than the likes of these kids.
“Baked’s political self-labeling was, in the end, immaterial,” he declares in a
closing voice-over, by way of deciding that rather than breaking through an
imagined shell, it’s worth simply taking this cadre at their word. “His record
of racist, homophobic and misogynistic views spoke for itself, a vast digital
catalogue of the internet… Twenty years ago, Nick Fuentes would have been an
almost invisible figure. Now, thanks to the internet, his message reaches young
people in homes around the world, his avowed aim to undermine democracy and
advance the power of white men using irony to mask an ambition that is deadly
serious.”
All of
which rings true, but feels unsatisfying after spending an hour in such
unpleasant company. Introducing viewers to subcultures like Florida trap, or
the modern crop of self-made porn moguls, has a clearly edifying purpose in
helping the viewer see more fully the spectrum of humanity across stark lines
of race, class and gender. The question of what’s gained from covering Fuentes,
on the other hand, is a new and difficult one — especially in the internet era,
where old frameworks about “platforming” have become woefully inadequate.
Despite being banned from every major social media platform, Fuentes’ rants are
still broadcast worldwide to anyone who cares to seek them out. Hate is as much
a part of the human experience as sex, or status competition, or creativity,
and as Theroux points out, its most concentrated and weaponized form is
available at a far larger scale than it has been at any other point in history.
Which is
what ultimately casts an unintentional sadness over his attempt to break
through the trolls’ façade: He’s unsuccessful because, yes, at the end of the
day Fuentes et al. are simply racist weasels. But he’s also unsuccessful
because they simply don’t speak his language — that is, the language of
humanity. The new generation of alt-right trolls suffer from a terminal case of
irony poisoning. They are incapable of leaving their mental playpen of
transgression because the internet has made it so they never have to. The
Discord server in their pockets provides them with a wan and ever-present
simulation of real life. Theroux’s career is part of the grand English
tradition of using irony to better understand the world at large, not negate it
or push it away. It’s the exact opposite of how Fuentes deploys the same force.
To see that
irony break on the rocks of Fuentes’ smug visage is to see a failure of sorts,
but it still enlightens the viewer. Yes, Fuentes and his followers are racists,
and yes, it’s all a joke to them, and yes, they have a real and dangerous
political project. Yes, this is all a contradiction in terms, forcing them into
preposterous rhetorical contortions that render them incoherent. From a
humanist perspective, that self-nullification is a tragedy, apparent in the
trolls’ dead eyes and quivery smirks. But to them, weaned from childhood on the
most extreme content and language imaginable, it’s just how life is — and they
like it that way. For journalists seeking to understand this new generation of
the far right, that takeaway alone is worth spending an otherwise unpleasant 59
minutes in their company.
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