Full article here: http://www.rightwingwatch.org/post/youtubes-biggest-personality-promoted-an-anti-semite/
How long before he's forced to apologize?
Felix Kjellberg, a Swedish YouTube personality best known online by his account name "PewDiePie," promoted, in one of his video offerings, another YouTube account that has posted white nationalist and anti-Semitic content. At the time of this article, Kjellberg has more than 75 million subscribers on YouTube, making his channel the most popular on the gargantuan video platform, and broadcasts to an audience that skews younger in age.
At the end of a video published on December 9, Kjellberg included a YouTube channel operating under the name "E;R" in his list of recommended channels. The shout-out was noticed by members of the progressive YouTube community, who sounded an alarm.
"We also have E;R, who does great video essays about—he did one on Death Note, which I really, really enjoyed," Kjellberg said. He also linked to the E;R channel in the video description, which has received 15,000 additional subscribers and more than 70,000 video new views since Kjellberg's plug.
In the video description of the Death Note video essay Kjellberg promoted, E;R posts: "The truth about why this took so long is because I thought it was so funny to call Black L "Niglet" throughout all my recordings (obviously because it's an ingenious pun on Lawliet [pronounced Law-let]). I eventually got it through my thick fucking skull that YouTube's looking for A N Y reason, so I redid all the audio to erase my speech crime, but then I got bored and put the project on pause."
In the same video, the user jokes about the murder of Heather Heyer, who died after a neo-Nazi protester at the Unite the Right white supremacist gathering in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017, plowed his car into a group of protesters, reiterating the white nationalist myth that Heyer actually died of a heart attack.
On their YouTube channel, the user posting as E;R has uploaded anti-Semitic content, and on Gab the user has openly discussed the "Jewish Question" conspiracy theory popular in white nationalist circles. In January, the user bragged about seeing footage from one of their videos in a Kjellberg post.
On Twitter, the "E;R" account has posted referring to Jews as "them"—common usage in white nationalist circles—and re-posted jokes about Hitler.
How long before he's forced to apologize?