- $337,000.
Tell us the story briefly. <i>[tense music]</i> <i>♪ ♪</i> HBOMB: In 1970
in "Analog" magazine, Harlan Ellison
and Ben Bova published the short story "Brillo." Ellison's one of the most
famous writers in history, but Bova's no slouch. He soon became editor
of "Analog" where he was beloved and won the Hugo award for Best Professional Editor
six times. This isn't one of his.
He accepted this one on behalf of George R.R. Martin,
whose career he started. George couldn't make it. He was running a chess
tournament at the time. Writers used to have fun. Now we just complain
about Twitter. On Twitter. "Brillo" was about the world's first robot police officer. His name's Brillo
'cause Brillo pads are metal fuzz.
That's pretty good. This is one
of the earliest stories in fiction about a robot cop--
a commonplace trope today, and soon in real life. It wasn't the first example. The most famous earlier one
would be Isaac Asimov's "Caves of Steel."
Remember this. It will come up later. Ellison and Bova thought
the idea had legs and decided to adapt it into
a TV show. They pitched the idea to a few companies
including NBC where an executive named
Terry Keegan said no. They later showed "Brillo"
to Paramount where the head of development--
Terry Keegan-- he'd recently been hired there--
said no. The same man passed on
the same pitch twice at two companies. Clearly not a fan
of the robot cop idea. Six months later, Terry Keegan sold a show called
"Future Cop" to ABC. It's a show about a robot cop. <i>- He's an android.
A robot.</i> <i>The perfect cop.</i> HBOMB: Our boys realize
they've been ripped off. - When I saw it I wanted
to file immediately. My attorney said,
"Forget it, man." He said,
"90% of all plagiarisms suits, "the plaintiff loses.
Besides, these guys'll kill you. You'll never work
in this town again." HBOMB: They spend years finding
a lawyer willing to sue a giant
television conglomerate despite the cost and the possibility
of being blacklisted from working in television. In his deposition, Keegan claims
he never read "Brillo--" an obvious lie. It was later discovered
the memos proving he deliberately ripped them off
had been burned. The jury found in favor
of Ellison and Bova and awarded them $337,000
in damages-- about $1.2 today. Ellison used some of the money
to put up a billboard across the street
from the studio reading, "Writers: Don't Let
Them Steal From You! Keep Their Hands Out
of Your Pockets!" Or at least he said he
was going to in interviews at the time
and later journalism claims it happened but I can't find
any pictures which is a shame. Either way, they still made off
with all that delicious money. Yum, yum. - I've been waiting four years for this moment-- four years--
to tell other writers they can fight 'em and beat 'em. - So. What's all that about? Okay, you know that trick video
essayists use where they open on
a semi-related example that sets the stage
for the wider topic? It's a classic.
I do it all the time. I wanted to open on
a recent example of a writer winning
a plagiarism lawsuit and getting their day in court. But there isn't one. This ancient case
which took place over a decade before I
and statistically you were even born
is still the best, most recent,
and almost only example. Ellison and Bova are among
the few writers to ever see financial
compensation for their work being stolen. Oh, this always happens. [grunts]
[microphone arm clicking] Testing, testing,
one, two, three. [snaps]
For the foreseeable future, if someone else on here steals
your work for money, there's not much you
can do except talk about it. A few years ago I made a video
with some examples of plagiarism and even covered a time I felt
it happened to me. The guy in question,
"Lukiepoo" briefly posted a ten-minute response
accusing me of overreacting before appearing
to think better of the whole thing
and deleting this along with the video copying me. - I watched your video, went through it piece by piece, and copied
it because you're such an incredible YouTuber. - Thanks, Luke.
Apology accepted. He has since rebranded
his channel, recognizing the irony
in presenting himself as a literal piece of shit, but his videos are still awash
with plagiarism accusations, ripping off other YouTubers
for hours at a time now. The only new sections
being stuff about how homophobia's fine. Maybe the rebrand was
a little too soon. But no authority
took Luke's video down. He could have left it up
and people often do. You can spend ages on
a unique video with an original idea
and a way more popular guy can rip it off along with
its thumbnail, get a bajillion views,
and rake in the cash. On YouTube if you have
an original idea, if it's good,
it won't be yours for long. The fact I'm making
this video during one of the biggest creative strikes
in history isn't lost on me. Other people's hands have never
before been this deep in the pockets of creators. We need Harlan Ellison's
billboard now more than ever, but I don't know how
to rent a billboard and it sounds expensive. So instead we're gonna talk about plagiarism on YouTube, what exactly it is,
why it's wrong, and the many unintended
side effects. Only then can we begin
to talk about what to do about it or at least
what I'm going to do to try to put some of it right. I'm gonna use a few relatively
well-known examples you might have heard of already
and some new ones I found just for this video. I could even ruin some of your favorite YouTubers
for you. Apologies in advance.
So, let's start some fights. <i>[upbeat music]</i> Part "eye"--Filip. <i>[static hissing]
[snaps]</i> - What's goin' on, everyone? Thanks for clickin' on
the video. HBOMB: Filip Miucin
was a YouTuber who reviewed
Nintendo Switch games and accessories and talked about
Nintendo-related news. His videos were surprisingly
well-edited and by that I mean they used way
too many fancy transition. I mean, they're not even hard
to do. You just drag and drop them on your timeline and whoa! But when he applied
for a job at IGN, his obvious mastery of
a plugin everyone else also has and existing channel with
a decent size led to him getting picked
as their new Nintendo editor. On August 6th, 2018 his review
of "Dead Cells" went up onto the official IGN
YouTube channel, but then on August 7th, YouTuber Boomstick Gaming posted
a video titled, "IGN Copied
my Dead Cells Review: What do I do?" He had noticed some similarities between Filip's reviews and his own published
in late July. HBOMB: Speaking of repetition,
oh, my God. The review was taken down while
IGN investigated the issue further
and then later that day confirmed he had been let go
from the company, but was this the first time
Filip had done this? Catching someone
doing plagiarism is difficult Someone has to notice the theft
which means having also seen the copied work. And if it's anything obscure,
that's quite unlikely. If you catch someone
plagiarizing once, chances are they rolled
those dice a few times before and hadn't been unlucky yet. People started looking through
his other reviews in case there was more. Over at Kotaku, Jason Schreier's article on
the firing was updated to mention
an anonymous tip pointing out similarities between
Filip's review of "FIFA 18" on the Switch
and the one on Nintendo Life by Chris Scullion. Filips review was made
for his personal channel before he was even hired at IGN, meaning he'd been doing this
for a while. Scullion himself
would later post a video comparing his review
with Filip's, showing off
the many similarities, and I'll link that in
the description, but I want to zoom in
on my favorite example. Filip tries
to hide what he's doing by changing words around
and he does it really badly. In his article,
Chris says compared to the non-Switch versions, the graphics "are
a good deal less detailed." Here's Filip's version. <i>FILIP: However,
when you get up close</i> <i>and get a good look at some
of the character models,</i> <i>it's pretty clear
that they do have</i> <i>a good amount of less detail
than the Xbox One</i> <i>and PS4 versions of the game do.</i> HBOMB: "It's pretty clear
that they do have a good amount of less detail." No one would ever write
that sentence on purpose. You only create that by trying
to change something you stole. There's a great example here
of the deeper problems that plagiarism can cause. Filip's review contains
false information, for example here
when he talks about the game's
Women's league feature. "FIFA 18 comes with
a standard Tournament and Kick Off modes as well
as the Women's League which was officially introduced
in "FIFA 16." - There are no Women's leagues
in FIFA 18. There's Women's football
but leagues are specific real life
organizations that do not exist in the game. Filip's plagiarism avoidance
techniques caused him to reword a sentence so badly
that he invented a feature that doesn't exist. While these discoveries
were being made, Filip made the decision
to record and post an infamous, quickly-deleted video onto
his channel entitled, "My Response."
Not an apology. A response. - [exhales sharply] HBOMB: Filip denied everything,
took no responsibility, and told numerous lies
in this video. At the time this
was criticized heavily by everyone for obvious reasons, but looking back on
it while trying to understand this kind
of behavior, it's actually really useful. This is worth looking at
in a discussion of plagiarism because by being
so poorly thought out, it's actually a valuable insight
into how people react when they're caught
and the different ways they try to cover their ass. When someone more competent than Filip uses these techniques in a subtler way, we can recognize them
for what they are. Thanks, Filip! - There were a lot
of circumstances surrounding it, but at the end of the day, I was the editorial lead on it
so if anything, that makes it my responsibility. HBOMB: He claims there
was a complicated process to making the review with lots
of "circumstances." The point is to make you wonder
what really happened so you forget what happened. Another way of doing this
is to be passive about the events so it's almost like
they happened to him instead of being something he did. - Like I said,
I take full responsibility for what happened with
the "Dead Cells" review. - Filip doesn't say, "I take responsibility
for what I did with my review." He passively
takes responsibility for what happened
with "the" review. When someone tries
to use language to imply what they did
happened by magic, they make it pretty clear
they're trying to deceive you. - I try to look at all resources
that I have available to me before I start formulating
my own critical opinions so that I can offer the most cohesive
possible review. The bottom line
is that what happened with the "Dead Cells" review
was not at all intentional. HBOMB: Even if
whatever happened, it was an honest mistake
of some kind, but the problem
is honest mistakes are easy to explain. Dishonest mistakes
leave proof behind. Filip didn't
unintentionally write a very similar review because
he watched another one. He copied their words exactly
and changed some of them to try to hide it. Hearing Filip try
to pretend this isn't what he did means we're not
just dealing with a plagiarist. We're dealing with
a liar who has more to hide. Filip's next lie was he
had nothing more to hide. - I was lucky enough
to get noticed on IGN through my YouTube channel
which, if in case you're wondering, is in fact all
of my own original work. HBOMB: A truly amazing
defense there. Even if it did happen--
which it didn't-- it only didn't happen once. But the goal
is to preserve what's left of your reputation
by getting people to stop looking for more. This behavior goes
hand-in-hand with a special anger directed
at the people who are looking. - So you can keep looking,
Kotaku, and please let me know if you find anything,
which, by the way, their--their news editor
Jason Schreier tried to imply that
my "FIFA 18" review was also inauthentic by claiming
that I copied it from Nintendo Life,
and that's-- that's just so not the case. I mean, maybe he
was implying that if you have similarly
opinionated reviews, then you're just plagiarizing, or maybe he's just trying
to get as many clicks off of my name right now
as possible, or maybe he just likes kicking
people when they're down. I don't know.
I mean, check it out for yourselves
and--and you be the judge. HBOMB: He's referring
to how Jason updated his article
to include that anonymous tip. Filip accuses him
of deliberately attacking him for attention
by reporting what he has done. The section about how absurd
it is to suggest he copied Scullion's
"FIFA" review is probably why Scullion made
his video in the first place. It begins by showing this clip. Bit of an own goal, there. Uh, by the way, Filip,
that's a--that's a football pun. Filip is using
the reporting on him as a bid to gain sympathy. "Yeah, I did something bad,
but really, the bad guys
are the people trying "to see what else I did. Not me,
the guy who did all of it." This tactic takes
a more direct form. - But one thing that I do know
is that it's not very fun being the target
of a gigantic lynch mob who wants nothing more than
to feed into your destruction. The amount of hate and threats
that I've been receiving on social media
have been pretty staggering, and I get it.
I mean, people are mad,
and rightfully so, but it's one thing to go
and harass me-- berate me with hateful words
and--and threats, and it's a whole other thing
to look up my family members and spread hateful comments
on their social media accounts. That's just--
that's just not okay. I mean, not on any level. HBOMB: Obviously,
no one deserves to have their family members
threatened over their plagiarism and there
is a valid conversation to be had here about how we
treat people who we believe to have done something wrong, and it's really unpleasant
seeing someone try to weaponize that and use it as a shield
against criticism. He just got done shit talking
a journalist and trying to make him the bad guy, and lying about
the "FIFA" review. Scullion has spoken
about receiving a lot of abuse
from Filip's fans during this period as a direct result
of Filip lying like this-- another potential reason he had
to make that video. If you talk about harassment
without being cognizant of the harm you are causing
to others right now, you clearly don't give
a shit about the problem you just brought up. Filip really didn't help
his case by making a "Columbo" villain
"bet you can't prove it" speech. "You can keep looking, Kotaku," was an especially silly thing
to say since obviously people did keep looking. Many more examples came
to light. His "Fire Emblem Warriors" video
was mostly reworded from one on Nintendo Wire. <i>FILIP: Decimating mobs upon mobs
of enemies with</i> <i>the simplest of combos
and tearing through forts</i> <i>and mini bosses with some
of the most flashiest</i> <i>and stylistic special attacks.</i> HBOMB: Most flashiest? His "Samus Returns" review
was stolen from Engadget and his "Bayonetta 2" review
from Polygon, and Jason Schreier seemed
weirdly invested in reporting on all of it. In several videos Filip
just copied text directly from Wikipedia
or other related wikis. <i>FILIP: "Super Mario Odyssey's"
theme</i> <i>is highly focused on surprises
and travel...</i> [speech played at rapid speed]<i>
And the developers incorporated</i> <i>many of their travel experiences
around the world.</i> <i>For instance, elements
of the Sand Kingdom were derived</i> <i>from Kenta Motokura's
experiences during</i> <i>a trip to Mexico,
and the Luncheon Kingdom's</i> <i>food aesthetics was inspired
by Italy</i> <i>and other European countries.</i> [speech played at normal speed]<i>
The developers recognized</i> <i>that when traveling
to foreign countries,</i> <i>something that really
has an impact</i> <i>is the different currencies.</i> All of my own original work. - On October 10th,
the apology video disappeared, along with 901,000 views worth
of other videos from Filip's channel. For a small YouTuber this means a lot of videos getting privated or deleted all at once. This is actually another
important tactic that plagiarists use to try
and hide as much of the evidence as possible. Filip has successfully hidden
the extent of what he actually stole
in his YouTube videos. Many of Filip's videos
are now considered lost media, referenced in articles about
the plagiarism or in videos showcasing it
but not as actual copies that you can watch. This is obviously no big loss but it sucks for me that there's
not many archived copies of some of these videos because,
like, now I have nothing to cut to as reference footage. It's just now I just have to stand on my set
and talk to you. His article about
"Octopath Traveler" is a fucking doozy. It steals a bunch
of shit directly from Jeremy Parish's review
at Polygon, and let me just say,
buddy, if you can barely string
a sentence together, people are gonna know
something's up when you're suddenly using words
like "extrudes." When this was discovered,
Parish tweeted, "Dang, I got extruded right into
the middle of a scandal," which is probably
the funniest thing to come out of all this. But that's not the only thing he stole from this one article. It also plagiarized one
of his coworkers at IGN. Words from Seth Macy's
video review of the game made it in, too. Here's some clips
from Macy's video. <i>SETH: Both it's battle system
and aesthetics</i> <i>pay loving tribute
to the Super NES era while--</i> <i>This isn't merely
a modern retread</i> <i>of past classics,</i> <i>but a phenomenal homage
with genuinely fresh ideas</i> <i>in a fantastically charming
wrapper</i> <i>of old school meets new.</i> HBOMB: Seth
was especially shocked by this, it seems like, and it's not hard
to imagine why. To take game criticism and writing original
material seriously only to have someone
a cubicle over take a hatchet to your stuff and collect
a paycheck for it is so deeply insulting. Things were bad enough
that IGN pulled the plug on almost everything
Filip ever made for the site, just to be safe--
something I've never seen an organization have
to do before. He even--and this is insane--
did a video explaining the Nintendo Switch's
HD rumble feature, and his explanation
is just stolen from a fucking NeoGAF post. <i>FILIP: A normal rumble is just
a motor which spins,</i> <i>creating a vibration, right?</i> <i>Well, HD rumble uses
linear acuators similar</i> <i>to Apple's haptic engine,</i> <i>which is what they use</i> <i>for the new Force Touch stuff</i> <i>in the new iPhones
and Apple Watches.</i> <i>See, I believe that these
are different in that they</i> <i>are more likely
weighted electromagnets.</i> HBOMB: You believe that?
Holy shit. He copied some text from a forum directly
into his script and just read it out! Why would you even do that?
No, seriously. That's the question we're trying
to explore here. Why do people plagiarize? Filip is a great help
in finding answers to these questions because
eight months after all of this died down, he released a second apology. Well, arguably his first since
he didn't really apologize in the first one,
but still. - Hey, everyone. I'm not here to make any excuses or to try
and justify my actions. I'm only here to apologize
to the people that I've wronged. HBOMB: He says sorry directly
to several of the people he copied from, but to avoid making himself look
too bad, he doesn't mention
the forum post or the time he stole
from someone else at IGN or a bunch of the other places. He also doesn't apologize
for denying everything, pretending it was an accident, or accusing specific journalists
of being out to get him by reporting on it. I think this points to what
this apology is actually about, which is appearing more humble
and honest to try and repair his reputation. Admitting to
the truly embarrassing stuff or the dishonest shit he said
when he was caught would just make
him seem disingenuous. It's hard to come off as honest
if the apology includes lying to your face in the past. He wasn't done making excuses,
either. Two days later he uploaded
a third apology. - Hey, everyone. HBOMB: I'm getting déjà vu
from these videos now. In this video he tried
to explain why he did all this. He had insecurities about
the quality of his writing and his fear
of disappointing people. - [exhales sharply]
I felt pretty confident with my video editing skills
and my abilities to create visually
appealing content but I wasn't always confident
with my abilities as a writer. [exhales sharply] And when I got that big break with this awesome gaming company my insecurities were amplified
by, like, ten million, because the audience was bigger and the expectations
were higher. I really wanted to do well
but I was also really scared of saying the wrong thing
or putting out a bad review. HBOMB: Now, maybe it's because
he's lied before and still wasn't owning up
to the extent of what he did, but I simply do not accept this
as the reason. Lots of people have anxiety
about their writing. In fact I'd say most writers do. Not many of them handle it
by stealing, so anxiety and pressure
feel like an easy excuse. From seeing almost all
of Filip's videos-- I feel comfortable
in calling myself a Filip scholar at this point-- I can tell you
for a fact that he is bad at making videos. He thinks cinematic transition
packs equal good editing which
is the reddest possible flag, but even in terms
of basic content, the videos are just bad. His earliest videos
are just news about the then-upcoming
Nintendo Switch, or stuff like the top five ways
to play the Switch-- a console that no one can play. - The single Joy-Con method, and it's probably gonna be
the least preferred way to play the Nintendo Switch. When the Switch
was out he branched out into reviewing accessories like
carrying cases and stuff and doing unboxing videos. Some videos are just summarizing
Nintendo press releases. This is the literal definition
of "content." It's like it got squeezed out of a Nintendo-branded
tube somewhere. It's the most "how do you do
fellow kids" energy I've ever seen coming out
of a 28-year-old man. So he started doing
the most egregious audience growth tricks
for dummies you can imagine, like constantly having giveaways
for subscribers. Filip's following
didn't grow organically from people liking him
or his work. Those people don't exist. It grew from offering free shit
if you subscribe. But I'm gonna give Filip
some credit here and say at some point
he recognized correctly that he didn't know what he
was doing. I mean, if it's obvious
to me watching them it must have been obvious
to him making them, right? So what do you do if you know
you won't get ahead without copying someone better? You copy someone better. And I'm not even talking
about plagiarism here. Even the stuff that isn't stolen
is derivative. There's this one guy called
NihongoGamer who's done some pretty useful tech reviews
and one of them was of an arcade fighting stick
for the Switch. It did surprisingly well
and he gives it a proper workout as someone
who clearly knows their stuff with fighting games.
A few weeks later, Filip coincidentally decided
to review the same thing, but Filip isn't
a fighting game aficionado so his live game play footage
is him playing "Sonic" and, uh, "Mario Kart," making this review
functionally useless as a controller made
for fighting games, but NihongoGamer also in
the same video reviewed this Switch holder
that looks like a little arcade machine. Filip coincidentally
is also reviewing one of these in his video. NIHONGOGAMER: This game
is so much better now. FILIP: This makes this game
so much better. - This isn't even plagiarism. It's just strange. Filip didn't know how
to build an identity of his own so he just borrowed the style
and content of successful videos in an extremely cynical way. He didn't make these videos
for the fun of it, or because he cared
about making them. It was always just about chasing
success by any means necessary, and when that didn't work out, he just borrowed
even more directly and got into this mess. In a fairly recent interview, he's described himself during
this period as having imposter syndrome, but that's wishful thinking,
isn't it? There's a difference between
having imposter syndrome and being an imposter. Objectively speaking, Filip pretended to be a reviewer
and critic while actually just being
a thief and a liar, but I think it's possible
to reverse engineer this falsehood and arrive
at its core truth. The explanation lies in
a little thing he said in apology number three. I consider it
the most meaningful thing Filip has ever said. It's not true,
but it's meaningful. - [exhales]
So I took from sources who I trusted
and respected and-- and I agreed with and I tried
to change them in a way that I would say it. - Filip claims
he sought out reviews from other people he respected
to steal and learn from, but, to be blunt, who the fuck
is Boomstick Gaming? When this happened, Boomstick's channel had
just over 10,000 subscribers. Barely anyone
had any idea he existed. And look at the other places
he copied from. Mostly random web sites,
niche gaming outlets, fucking forum posts. If you consider something
so obscure you can get away
with stealing it, you do not respect it. Filip copied these people
because he thought what they were doing
was beneath respect. Remember "Caves of Steel?" I told you it'd come up again,
you little bastard. You better not have forgotten. In the lawsuit between
Ellison/Bova and the studios, one tactic the studios used was to accuse them
of being the real plagiarists-- of ripping off "Caves of Steel"
when they were writing "Brillo." The problem is these writers
were all friends who knew and respected each other so they
could ask Isaac Asimov what he thought of that. - So we went to New York. I've known Isaac for 25 years,
and, uh-- and Isaac in is deposition said, "I've known Harlan
for 25 years." He said, "You don't steal
from your friends." HBOMB: It all sounds so simple
when Isaac Asimov says it. <i>At the start
I briefly mentioned one</i> <i>of the many times someone's
entire idea</i> <i>and thumbnail have been copied.</i> <i>The thief later flipped
the thumbnail</i> <i>and changed the color
of his shirt. Amazing.</i> This guy's kinda notorious
for stealing from people, and there was
a really notable encounter where he made fun of a guy by joking about how many subscribers
he had. This comes off as generic,
former Vine star narcissism, but it's difficult to ignore
that he specifically steals from people
he considers beneath him, having a lower number. If you're not as important,
your ideas are up for grabs. In 2016 Melania Trump's speech at the Republican
National Convention was found
to have plagiarized one of Michelle Obama's speeches at the Democratic
National Convention. The audience hadn't seen
a speech given at the other convention
so none of them noticed but the media did later. The question going unasked
at the time, at least for me, was, "Why Michelle Obama?" Her speech about hope
and dignity and respect and dreams had nothing
to do with being a republican. They hate that shit. Why didn't the writer rip off a Nancy Reagan speech about killing the poor
or locking up black people for using
the drugs her husband game them? Well, plagiarizing
another republican would annoy republicans
whose opinion the writer actually cares about. If you respect someone,
or want their respect, you generally don't risk
a fight with them by jacking their shit,
but if you don't like someone, stealing is almost like getting
one over on them, isn't it? No one was ever fired
or seemingly punished in any way for stealing a speech
and pretending they wrote it, and that's because none
of these people give a shit about Michelle Obama. They're probably glad
it happened. If you broke into Obama's house and stole some
of his silverware, most speakers at this convention
would pay you a cash prize. Plagiarism is an insult, and don't people love
to insult their enemies? Here's something petty I should
have forgotten about but didn't. When Lukiepoo made
his short-lived video response, while defending himself on
the grounds he actually got the idea from someone on Twitch
who saw my video-- and they're definitely real-- he still took the time
to explain that he also didn't like I criticized
right-wing YouTubers he was a fan of. - I thought Hbomber was a relatively decent
video creator. I disagreed and didn't like some
of the stuff he did, like when he went after Sargon
of Akkad and some other YouTubers. HBOMB: This sat with me. Why was it so important
for him to signal his allegiances like this? I think the point
was to make his theft an act in a larger culture war. Even if he did rip me off,
I'm the bad guy. I don't deserve
to be treated properly, so if anything,
it's good if he did. You don't steal
from your friends. You steal from
the guy who made fun of Daddy. - At this point I'm convinced the only thing Hbomberguy
needs more than a testosterone shot
and some estrogen blockers is a lesson in humility. HBOMB: Okay, where does-- and I mean this
as a compliment-- the most fuckable twink
I've ever seen in my life get off telling me how
to manage my T-levels? Is he speaking from experience? The way Filip pivoted
when caught to attacking his accusers
feels all too familiar to me as someone who has received
the same treatment from someone like him. There's this indignation to it. "I'm better than you. How dare you tell me not
to steal?" What's emerging here
is a social element to theft. Plagiarists seem
to have this belief they are better than their targets. More important,
more deserving of credit. Better politics. A better class of person. Your ideas are wasted on you. They'd be much better served
in my videos. Other games people looked down
on what Filip did with so much anger
and people from IGN continued to be aggressive at him
for years afterwards because they understand
this instinctively. His actions essentially said
out loud he thinks games writing is so worthless,
it's okay for him to steal it. The IGN crew
are especially entitled to be angry about Filip, though, because he did really damage
their credibility When your company produces
plagiarized stuff, it damages people's faith
in your institution and its ability to not do that, and it's really hard
to get that good will back. This leads us,
as all things do, to the Angry Video Game Nerd. Part "E:" Cinemassacre. The Angry Video Game Nerd
is a popular series in whi-- I don't need to explain this! AVGN made James Rolfe a household name the world over, in cool households. Under the umbrella
of his mostly one-man production company Cinemassacre,
James made other things, too. One of these--and my favorite--
was "Monster Madness," where every October James
would release a video every single day about
an old horror or monster movie. I used to rewatch these whenever
I was hung over in university. It always made me feel
way better. There's an infectious positivity
to hearing someone share something they genuinely enjoy.
Good stuff. As the years went on
and he got busy with other projects
and having children-- I mean,
his wife had the children. You get it--
"Monster Madness" took a backseat.
Some years he only made a few new ones.
The guy was busy, or maybe he lost interest in
a project he'd done for over a decade at that point, and that's fair enough, but then Screenwave
got involved. For people with better things
to do, Screenwave Media
is a YouTube network- slash-influencer-agency thing who work with various YouTubers, helping them produce content by editing their videos
for them, assisting with writing,
and helping them find sponsors. They apparently work
with a bunch of channels in various forms, but they work especially closely with Cinemassacre. The writing and editing
of the AVGN videos became different
and weird like someone else was doing those parts. The channel started
making new types of video which were like James
standing kind of awkwardly in the corner while Screenwave
employees discussed a movie. There was a Cinemassacre podcast and James often
just wasn't in it. The guy whose channel
it was became an optional side character. Oh, and everything became packed
with sponsorships. <i>- If you don't know,
Skillshare--</i> HBOMB: It got so bad, episode 200 of AVGN
is split into three videos with separate sponsors
purely because they sold too many brand deals. - Oh, we're gonna have
to make the, uh, episode 200 three episodes
because we sold too many brand deals
and, uh, they didn't tell James. Under Screenwave,
"Monster Madness" became a different beast. They streamlined production
by eliminating the writing. It became James and a rotation
of Screenwave employees you don't know
and James didn't seem to know too well, either, discussing the film and trying
to come up with something interesting on
the spot for 15 minutes. Some of these guys
were basically ordered to be on the show
by their bosses and seem uncomfortable
being there, which makes these being shot
on a dungeon set fitting, and you're constantly reminded
why this was made at all. <i>JAMES: Available now,
US only.</i> both: Release the Kraken! HBOMB: The show certainly wasn't
what anyone had been watching it for, and the creators appear
to notice because in April 2021, it was announced
"Monster Madness" was coming back for real with
the old style of scripted videos featuring
just James and his short
and simple voice over. "Like the old days,"
but, you know, with Screenwave's help,
so not really. Newt Wallen--
a Screenwave employee-- was enthusiastically tweeting
about how he had written 20
of the 31 videos himself, with others writing the rest. The whole point was it
was a guy passionately sharing his actual opinions, but that guy wasn't
writing them. But some people
were still excited. It was a pandemic year.
We were all indoors. Not much else was going on. <i>JAMES: Be sure to check out</i> <i>Cinemassacre's "Monster Madness:
Around the World."</i> <i>31 days, 31 countries.</i> October rolled around,
and so did the first new video, for the film "28 Days Later." It was weird, like James was reading something
written for him, which he was, but what really stood out
was what he was saying. A guy who famously
avoids politics and serious real world events
in his videos suddenly started
talking about how the film reminded him
of the horror of 9/11. <i>JAMES: And when seeing
the film today,</i> <i>and being put into
that time period,</i> <i>you can't help but think
of 9/11</i> <i>and all those TV images
of ground zero</i> <i>and Baghdad being devastated
by war.</i> HBOMB: It didn't take long
for people to start Googling the words he was saying. A user named Z-B-123 posted
a thread on reddit showing a huge portion
of the video's script was taken directly from a review
in "Film Comment--" a fairly well-known film
criticism magazine-- by Dr. Cecilia Sayad, who is currently
a senior film lecturer at the University of Kent. Let's compare and contrast,
shall we? <i>JAMES: Horror films
are frequently interpreted</i> <i>as allegories of our realities.</i>
HBOMB: Okay, that was quick. <i>JAMES: Their fantastic
or supernatural elements</i> <i>often spawn from symptoms
of social and political tensions</i> <i>in a specific era.</i> <i>"28 Days Later" is set in</i> <i>a post-apocalyptic Britain which
has been devastated</i> <i>by an epidemic
that within seconds</i> <i>can transform its victims
into crazed cannibal killers.</i> [speech played at rapid speed]<i>
Following a car accident,</i> <i>he wakes up from a 28-day coma.</i> <i>Finding the hospital abandoned,</i> <i>he walks out and wanders through</i> <i>the empty London streets.</i> <i>He finds that people have fled</i> <i>the country after the outbreak,</i> <i>but those who remain
are either dead</i> <i>or become the infected.</i> [speech played at increasingly
unintelligibly rapid speed] [speech played at normal speed]<i>
You can't help but think</i> <i>of 9/11--</i> [speech played at increasingly
unintelligibly rapid speed] [speech played at normal speed]<i>
Order is born from chaos,</i> <i>and then chaos
is born from order.</i> - It was
as if Professor Sayad's review had been killed and brought back
from the dead in a new tainted form. That's not how the zombies
in "28 Days Later" work. Okay, it was like her review
was the Patient Zero of "28 Days Later" review
and it infected the... This is pretty
straightforwardly plagiarism. The Angry video Game Nerd
had just stolen a film professor's review
of a movie. In true AVGN fashion,
shit hit the fucking ceiling. What was going on? Initially, Justin Silverman--
the lead Screenwave guy-- claimed this was a result
of a new person who was helping accidentally mixing
some notes into a script, and this would be fixed soon and all the other episodes
were fine. The "new person" thing
isn't true. The guy who did it had worked
with Justin for, like, a decade, but I can understand trying
to protect someone's identity if you believed they
had just made a small mistake. Justin updated the page
the video was posted on to say it was being corrected
to remove some accidental plagiarism,
whatever that means. So whoever did it, they successfully
convinced Justin this was an accident,
but it wasn't. There's the telltale red flag
of the awful writing you get when someone
who can't write tries to rewrite something
they copied. <i>JAMES: The movie starts with
the usual tropes:</i> <i>mankind's experiments
go haywire resulting</i> <i>in destructive results.</i> HBOMB: There's another way you
can prove it wasn't accidental. You know, the other excuse
we've heard before, how it just happened once and the rest
of the videos were fine? They weren't fine.
reddit user retired-fool went on the website
the videos were being hosted on and found the second episode
uploaded early. Most of it was from a review
on ScreenageWasteland.com. <i>JAMES: The movie opens with
a shadowy figure</i> <i>with multiple hand attachments
who calls in "The Boys."</i> <i>Four men from
a government agency trying</i> <i>to deal with an alien invasion
in a small New Zealand town.</i> <i>Peter Jackson plays dual roles
of Derek and Robert,</i> <i>who interact through</i> <i>the use of creative camerawork
and editing.</i> <i>So Jackson handled acting,
writing, directing,</i> <i>cinematography,
editing,</i> <i>and special effects
for the film.</i> <i>Derek is perhaps
the best character in the film.</i> <i>He's bloodthirsty,
clumsy, funny,</i> <i>and a little too full
of himself.</i> <i>He spends a good portion
of the film on his own</i> <i>but Jackson manages it.</i> <i>He's got a good sense
of physical comedy</i> <i>that comes in handy when Derek
is dealing with a flap</i> <i>of his own skull that keeps
allowing pieces</i> <i>of his brain to fall out.</i> <i>"Bad Taste"
is a gloriously gory entry</i> <i>in the splatstick genre
and a true cult classic.</i> <i>Watching it today,</i> <i>you can kinda see inklings
of the kind</i> <i>of films Peter Jackson would
prove capable</i> <i>of later on through the pacing,
camerawork,</i> <i>and sheer inventive energy.</i> HBOMB: So day two's video
was also plagiarized. The return of "Monster Madness"
isn't going so well. We know James didn't write this
so who could it have been? Was it perhaps the man who
was just bragging about writing most
of them himself? Uh, yes, it was. The rest
of the Screenwave guys looked at the scripts and many more
examples were discovered. Justin confirmed several more
were plagiarized and Kieran--a video editor
who later quit-- claimed in a live stream
that all of them were. - We went through all
the scripts, plagiarized them all.
They had multiple-- like, every single thing
was plagiarized. They fuckin' plagiarized
every single thing! HBOMB: This
is a tremendous amount of blatant theft,
if true, but soon it became clear
almost everything Newt did and said was copied. While I was looking
for other stuff Newt made, I saw he was one of the speakers
at the Roast of the Angry video Game Nerd
in 2013, and he was proud enough of this, he uploaded
his bit separately to a channel he
was involved with, and just watching it without
doing any serious checking, several of the jokes from this
jumped out at me immediately. - Justin--I heard Justin
was nervous before the show. He couldn't figure out what he
was gonna wear: either honey glazed
or pineapple slices. [laughter] HBOMB: This joke is taken from a Gilbert Gottfried roast. - She couldn't decide between
the honey glazed or pineapple slices. - Brett Vanderbrook
is so deep in the closet, he's having adventures
in Narnia. HBOMB: This is a well-known joke from a 2007 Jimmy Carr
stand-up special. - Come on, you're so far in
the closet, you're havin' adventures
in Narnia. HBOMB: People have been ripping
this off for years. Here it is posted
in 2009 with many of the comments remarking that
it's old and stolen even then, and this was almost half
a decade before Newt stole it. Here's an in-character
Tyrion Lannister Twitter account reusing it a few months before
the roast in 2013. I haven't seen the show
or read the books, so I'm just gonna assume
they read Narnia there, too. Don't correct me. While I was researching
this topic, I found
a reddit post collecting all the places he stole from
for this roast. Obviously, there were a bunch. When I found this I
was worried people would think
I just got this from here. I assure you I do
my own research and don't just
read reddit posts. As proof, they haven't found
the source for the Narnia one, so don't I feel special? Unless Jimmy Carr got it
from somewhere else, too. He's already stealing
from the British tax payer, so I wouldn't be surprised. Newt had just been very sloppily taking shit for over a decade. The guy was fired
and from the sounds of things, everyone's bitter about it, especially the guys who had to make new
"Monster Madness" videos to an insanely short deadline. - And then we have
to rewrite 20-something scripts and re-edit them in--in--
in a week. HBOMB: Even James Rolfe himself
got involved. He quite famously avoids talking about controversial stuff
like 9/11, but there was enough confusion, he saw fit to descend
from his throne of gold and put up an unlisted video
explaining what happened. - One of our writers
had somehow added a portion that was taken from
a preexisting article. That's unacceptable and all
of us here apologize for letting that sneak in. HBOMB: He went with
the story Justin did. Some new guy pasted
something wrong and confused his notes into
the script. - The short story
is somebody fucked up. Somebody new. HBOMB: I'm not sure if this was recorded before
this turned out to be a lie or
if they just decided they didn't need to explain it
to the public in detail, and that's understandable,
but either way, it wasn't somebody new.
It was somebody Newt. That's your joke
for this video. Doing research, I found
an interview with Newt about a low-budget horror film
he wrote. However, the picture they used
was Filip Miucin. I have no idea how this happened
but it's very funny. For the creative
people watching, there's a kind
of positive lesson here. You might be mystified
why someone would copy stuff for a review. Why is it so hard to just write your opinions
on something? But it turns out writing
a good review is really difficult.
For example, I use the phrase "it turns out"
more than once every video by accident because I'm bad
at it. I'm not even joking.
I've written "it turns out" in the next section
without realizing it. That's how fuckin' bad I am. Being able to write
a good review is a unique and difficult skill. Creative people often
have trouble recognizing their skills
as skills because eventually they feel like second nature, and they don't feel real
and practical like building a house or domming. But it turns... in... That this stuff actually
is valuable. If it wasn't,
people wouldn't be stealing it. Creativity doesn't feel
super special or unique until you realize people have
to plagiarize it. Oh, I accidentally bought this
in size twink instead of bear. [groaning] "Oh, would you like some
talcum powder with that, sir?" "No, no, it's fine." [groans] Ow, oh! Oh, I could ring--I could ring
the sweat out from that and probably sell it. It's worth noting that even when the plagiarism was cleared up, the new videos are still weird. The entire appeal
of "Monster Madness" was it was one guy passionately
sharing his opinions. If someone else wrote
those opinions, even if they're not stolen, what exactly is the point? James put this better himself
a few years back before this all began. - I wanna make original films. Lots of people say,
"Well, get somebody to help." Well, I can't get somebody else
to write the review for me. It's an opinionated thing. Uh, imagine if
it's somebody else's words and they say,
"This movie's great," and then I think,
"Oh, well, this movie sucks." So if I'm doing the review, obviously I have to see
the movie and write the script.
It's all me. HBOMB: This is probably why
he made a statement about this. Most people watching would
have assumed James wrote the words he was saying, especially since he'd been so vocal about this before. This is an insidious side effect of plagiarism
in larger operations. It implicates the person reading
the script, not just its writer, but here the plagiarism
is just a symptom of the direction Cinemassacre's
videos have taken. The unstolen ones are almost
as strange as the stolen ones, in the ways James
once predicted. You can only hand off so much
of your work before it stops being yours. It feels weird
to say this about videos where a guy calls a game
from 1992 a fuck stick, but the magic is gone.
These aren't videos anymore. They're products. Late-stage Cinemassacre
is so low-effort, the scripts have obvious
grammatical errors and James just reads them
without even bothering to change them. <i>JAMES: And it's
with these survivors</i> <i>that Jim will struggle
to stay alive with.</i> HBOMB: These videos used to come from a place of interest
and care, to entertain or share something. Now they're made by
a production line for only one reason. - Expressvpn.com/cinemassacre. - Internet video as a business
is at odds with internet video as a medium,
dare I say an art form. Put the gun down. The increased industrialization of videos doesn't
necessarily make the videos better.
Just easier to make. But if you want to make
as much money as possible in the short term, you cut those corners and you make as much product
as possible. This gives me a chance
to respond to the most common question
about plagiarism on the internet which is,
"Why should we care?" Does it really matter in
the grand scheme if a review
of "Octopath Traveler" or "28 Days Later" is stolen?
If you think that, you should try extruding
that logic a bit further until it reaches the pain receptors
of your brain. Internet video isn't
a silly playground where teens pretend to be scared
of horror games anymore. It's a business. There is real money
to be made in this space, or so the E-mails
from the "World of Tanks" guys keep telling me. So it's definitely
worth interrogating the fact people's work
is being exploited in these money-making endeavors. This issue will
become relevant later, and by later,
I mean now. If you want
to maximize your profits by making a video
every other day, how do you write
that much material? You don't! Part "E"...
lluminaughtii. It's a pun.
I--I don't need to impress you. In 2021 when I was working on
the "Vaccines and Autism" video, I needed something to listen to
in the background while I built an Argos bookshelf, so out of curiosity I put on
other videos on the topic. One of them was by a channel
called iilluminaughtii whose real name is Blair Zon. I hadn't heard of her before. She seems to do videos covering multi level marketing schemes, pyramid schemes,
and failed businesses. Stuff like that, and she seems to make a lot of them really quickly.
I wonder how! The video was fine. My phone was several meters away
and I couldn't be bothered to reach out and get it
and change the playlist so it just kept going through
her anti-vax videos, and at one point,
I did a double-take. <i>BLAIR: There was
a joint inventor</i> <i>on these products--
a man named Hugh Fudenberg,</i> <i>a former immunologist who
has been long controversial.</i> <i>In 1989 he was caught up in
a bizarre lawsuit</i> <i>with the Food
and Drug Administration</i> <i>which told him he had
to stop injecting</i> <i>his autistic patients
with blood products.</i> - I remember pausing,
budget B&Q hammer in hand, and thinking, "Haven't I heard
this exact sentence before?" - In 1989 he was caught up in
a bizarre lawsuit involving the Food and Drug Administration
which told him he had to stop inject
his autistic child patients with blood products. - An interesting thing about
the MMR scandal is literally all
of its big discoveries can be attributed to the work
of one man, Brian Deer, whose years
of diligent journalism are basically why we know what
we do about Andrew Wakefield. His 2004 documentary
"MMR: What They Didn't Tell You" effectively "Berserk" Eclipsed
Wakefield's career as a legitimate doctor. It's great and Brian uploaded it to his own YouTube channel for free in 2014 so anyone
can go watch it. This version has the time code
burned in at the bottom which is kind of cute, but if you wanted
to make your own video about the subject and use that
as source footage, that's kind of annoying
to look at, so I spent, like, two full days
of my life trying to find a version without
the time code, and I finally found what I think
is a copy of the original broadcast
from 2004. Harrowing stories of child abuse
do not pair well with teasers for the TV premiere
of "Moulin Rouge." <i>[lively music and cheering]</i> <i>[tense music]</i> <i>♪ ♪</i> <i>BRIAN: When Dr. Wakefield
launched</i> <i>the MMR scare back in 1998--</i> - I used footage
from Deer's documentary in my video,
explained how important it was, thank Brian for all
of his hard work, and even recommended his book on the subject that
had just come out, and he actually E-mailed
my producer Kat with metrics showing people
actually did go out and buy the book
after seeing my video, which is great.
I love knowing that my audience actually reads books.
Thank you so much. So, the reason
the iilluminaughtii video sounded so familiar
was because I had just rewatched that documentary. - Then in 1995 he was suspended
from practicing medicine. <i>BLAIR: Then in 1995
he was suspended</i> <i>from practicing medicine.</i> - And made to pay a $10,000 fine for his misuse
and misprescribing of controlled drugs. <i>BLAIR: And made to pay
a $10,000 fine</i> <i>for his misuse
of prescribing controlled drugs.</i> <i>BRIAN: Professor Fudenberg
has long been controversial.</i> <i>BLAIR: Hugh Fudenberg--</i> <i>a former immunologist who</i> <i>has been long controversial.</i> - Been long controversial? So this is weird. She wasn't quoting Deer. She was saying his words
out loud as if she wrote them. So what's happening here? Well, after the bookcase seemed
to stand up on its own despite all the pieces
mysteriously left over, I watched the video properly
and noticed she does acknowledge Brian Deer and the documentary
pretty openly. <i>BLAIR: In 2004 Brian Deer
came out</i> <i>with a documentary entitled,</i> <i>"MMR: What They Didn't
Tell You."</i> - Blair watched a documentary
and then downloaded it and used it to make her own. In the first 20 minutes
she plays a chunk of the documentary
or just quotes it 25 times. More than once a minute, you're hearing something
Brian Deer said, from his mouth or hers. So this video is lazy. I'm personally insulted that she
just used the version of the documentary
from Deer's YouTube channel with the time code burned in. That's--that gets to me
a little bit after the effort I put in, but that doesn't make
it plagiarism. It's just not very good. And, hey, it's not like this
is her one source. She quotes a lot
of other places, too. Or does-- Here's some
of the times she quotes someone else in the video. Wow, look at all this research
she must have done. One thing, though. What's the source
for these quotes? Okay, we need to talk about how
to cite a source for a second. If you watch any
non-iilluminaughtii video essay, You'll see these pretentious
little commies put some text in the corner
telling you where their quote comes from. This is so you know
what they're quoting so you can check it
or go find it and learn more if you want, and to give proper credit
to the people whose ideas or knowledge
they're borrowing. If you're using
someone else's words in a video you intend
to make money off, it's very important
to give proper credit and attribution. Listing where the quote is from is important not just so
it's easy for people to find and verify it but it's useful context which helps people interpret
what they're seeing. If someone showed you a quote
that made a person look bad you might feel a bit cheated
if they didn't mention its source is a blog
by someone you've never heard of that doesn't exist anymore. I have a little rule for quoting
that other creators seem to use as well. If someone saw a clip of your video out of context, would it be possible for them
to tell you're quoting someone and where it's from? Blair for some reason
doesn't cite her sources. Here's a part where she quotes
Andrew Wakefield. <i>BLAIR: Wakefield also stated,</i> <i>"Mumps, measles,
and rubella together might</i> <i>be too much
for the immune system</i> <i>of some children to handle.</i> HBOMB: I love there's a tiny
Andy there for some reason. But not saying where
he said this is pretty bad citation, but this isn't a mistake. Blair is hiding the source
on purpose for a reason. You see, this quote is from
the same documentary again. Brian Deer plays a clip
of Wakefield saying it at a conference. - Measles, mumps,
and rubella given together may be too much
for the immune system of some children to handle. - Why didn't she just play
the clip? She had it downloaded. Well, because she's already
played so many clips from this documentary,
it looks ridiculous. So she started quoting it
and just not telling you she's quoting
the one thing she watched. I wonder where all
the other quotes come from. <i>BLAIR: And more still,</i> <i>nurses were leaving saying</i> <i>they don't like
what's being done.</i> - Nurses were leaving
and saying they didn't like what was being done
to these children. <i>BLAIR: It needed three people
to hold these kids down...</i> - ...in some cases just
to have blood taken. both: I feel very sorry
for the children who I feel were being abused. <i>BLAIR: This study had
in fact begun with a contract</i> <i>from a group of solicitors...</i> - ...who were trying
to sue MMR manufacturers <i>BLAIR: Chadwick said he'd hoped
the ordeal when it hit the news</i> <i>would die its own death.</i>
- ...Would die its own death. <i>BRIAN: It includes
injecting mice</i> <i>with measles virus--</i> <i>BLAIR: He injected mice
with measles.</i> <i>BRIAN: Extracting
their white blood cells--</i> <i>BLAIR: Extracted
their white blood cells--</i> <i>both: And injected the stuff
into pregnant goats.</i> - This is amazing! She just quotes people
from this one documentary and pretends she did any work. Eventually she stops bothering
to even make it look like a quote and just starts saying
Brian Deer's words out loud, and that's how the stuff
at the beginning happened. She got so lazy
she stopped bothering to pretend she wasn't copying
the documentary. both: In 1989 he was caught up
in a bizarre lawsuit with the Food
and Drug Administration which told him he had
to stop injecting... - His autistic child patients...<i>
- His autistic patients...</i> both: ...with blood products. Then in 1995 he was suspended
from practicing medicine and made to pay a $10,000 fine
for his misuse of prescribing controlled drugs. - "MMR: What They
Didn't Tell You" has been chewed up
and spat back into your mouth like you're a little baby bird.
Mmm. [mimics rapidly chewing] My favorite part is when some of what she's saying appears
in quotes for some reason, attributed
to "Lawsuit with FDA." Like, no, Brian Deer said that. <i>Blair: He established
a scientific system</i> <i>that would satisfy Wakefield
and Pounder for testing--</i> HBOMB: And Pounder?
Wait a second. Who's Pounder? This Pounder guy never
comes up again in the video. She brings him up here
by mistake because she's paraphrasing
another section of the documentary. <i>BRIAN: He established</i> <i>a scientifically valid system</i> <i>that would satisfy Dr. Wakefield
and his head of department</i> <i>Professor Roy Pounder.</i> HBOMB: Roy Pounder
is an important character in the story.
Blair has cut him out completely to save time
but she accidentally kept this one reference. This makes the copying kind
of blatant. She's referencing a guy
who exists in the documentary and not her video. Obviously stealing
someone else's words is plagiarism but on
a more zoomed out level, so is copying
an entire documentary and trying to hide it. Like, obviously there's
something wrong here. Here's a hint. If you're trying to trick people into thinking you're not quoting the thing you're quoting, you're probably
doing plagiarism. But here's where
it gets interesting. Blair knows people
might notice this so she's come up with
a defense mechanism. The video has a link in
the description to a list of sources where stuff
she quoted or showed in the video gets linked.
This is normal. Lots of people do this, although usually they cite them
when they use them in the actual video,
but still. It's an unlabled collection
of links that's difficult to sort through,
but if you keep digging, eventually you find the link
to Brian Deer's YouTube upload of the documentary. So now if anyone criticizes the fact she ripped it off, she can say, "No, I--I was using
a source! I cited it! Check!
It's in my list!" "Somewhere!" And she uses this flimsy excuse to basically steal anything
she wants. Blair frequently
plagiarizes people, never mentions they exist in
the video or cites them anywhere, but she puts a link in
a list no one will read. So that makes it okay, right? The video we've
been talking about so far is the second in a series
of three about Andrew Wakefield. Here's part of the first one
where she talks about his early career. <i>BLAIR: He became a fellow
of the Royal College of Surgeons</i> <i>in 1985 and a year later
was awarded</i> <i>a Welcome Trust
traveling fellowship</i> <i>to study small intestine
transplantation</i> <i>in Toronto, Canada.</i> - Let me ask you real quick. Is she quoting
a source right now? I mean, no.
It's just stock footage. So clearly she wrote this part,
right? No, she's just reading
an article from "The Telegraph." <i>BLAIR: He became a fellow
of the Royal</i> <i>College of Surgeons
in 1985 and...</i> [speech played at rapid speed]<i>
...a year later was awarded</i> <i>a Welcome Trust
traveling fellowship</i> <i>to study small-intestine
transplantation</i> <i>in Toronto, Canada.
Dr. Wakefield returned</i> <i>to the UK in the late 1980s
where he began</i> <i>to devote more time to research.</i> HBOMB: Oh, no, there's more. [speech played at rapid speed]<i>
BLAIR: Joining the Royal Free</i> <i>Hospital in London he worked on
the liver transplant program</i> <i>and in 1996 began researching
bowel disorders, autism,</i> <i>and the MMR vaccine.</i> HBOMB: The average person
watching this is being led
to believe Blair wrote the words she is saying here. This is called plagiarism. The audience has no way
of knowing she's actually reading them
the fucking newspaper. But the article she plagiarized
is in the list of sources. So we already know what
the excuse will be. It wasn't plagiarism. She was just quoting a source. Without telling you. I'm imagining
an alternate universe where Filip and Newt's videos
just had a little Pastebin link at the bottom which goes
to all the stuff they stole. Like, as if that would make
it okay. This is just plagiarism
but with a shitty excuse in her back pocket
to create plausible deniability. The intent behind this
is pretty clear. iilluminaughtii videos are,
like, 90% quotes by volume. The part where she plagiarizes
"The Telegraph" is in a five-minute sequence
mostly consisting of quotes from other places. <i>BLAIR: More research groups</i> <i>with more sophisticated
techniques failed</i> <i>to confirm Wakefield's findings.</i> <i>Wakefield was actually born into
a family of doctors in 1957.</i> <i>His mother was--
...This data led us</i> <i>to prostulate that there may be</i> <i>a role for measles infection
and Crohn's disease even if...</i> <i>[voice over talking over
each other]</i> - Seriously, huge chunks
of the video are just reading
entire screenfuls of text from the BBC,
various papers, "Slate," "The Telegraph",
and Brian Deer. Yeah, she actually quotes
Brian Deer in this one. Wow! But this makes
the videos boring. She's just reading pages
of quotes at you. So to break up the screens
of text and make it feel more original, Sometimes she doesn't tell you she's reading
someone else's words. She's doing plagiarism out
of embarrassment to make the videos less boring. When I think a video
is being lazy, I do a little test. I check what sources
the video used-- thankfully Blair provided
a list-- and I compare it with
the sources you would get if you went
to the Wikipedia page for the topic. All of the quotes in that five-minute sequence
I mentioned, including the "Telegraph"
article she plagiarized, are just linked on Wakefield's
Wikipedia page. Oh, I know how this video
was researched. This is a really common trick
with lazy creators. Go on Wikipedia and quote all
of their sources, and then it looks like you did
a bunch of research and work. And to make it even better, she pretends she had
to look for this stuff. <i>BLAIR: Other studies
have suggested</i> <i>there may be a link to Crohn's
and Measles,</i> <i>just not Wakefield.</i> <i>I was able to find
a different study</i> <i>from the National Library
of Medicine that's more recent.</i> - "I was able to find?" I mean,
I guess I'm glad you were. One of the lights went off.
Hold on a second. I'm not sure everyone
is fully convinced that quoting a documentary
for 30 minutes while pretending you're quoting someone
else counts as plagiarism. "I mean, it's a bit weird,
but she cited it as a source. So technically it's fine." I see you,
you little pedant. You think you're so
fucking clever, don't you? But the fact she's trying to pass off other
documentaries' work as her own is obvious
when you realize if you didn't know
the source material, You would have no idea she
was doing this. To test this theory, I decided to watch a video
of hers on a subject I knew next
to nothing about: the Fyre Festival, which I've really
not looked into before. <i>BLAIR:
It was no isolated island,</i> <i>but an under-developed lot
just north of a Sandals resort.</i> - At first glance the video
is surprisingly well-researched with plenty of backstory
and explanations. According to Maryann Rolle-- a local that owns
an Exuma Point Restaurant-- they had every living soul on
the island of Exuma who could lift a towel working. HBOMB: Lots of it
is just quotes, of course. She's still just
quoting people mostly, but the fact there's
so many quotes makes it feel well-researched
and credible. <i>BLAIR: One of these people
was Keith Vanderlaan--</i> <i>a pilot in charge
of flying Billy around</i> <i>the Bahamas.
According to Keith,</i> <i>"Billy's team really wanted
to do--"</i> <i>[speech played at unintelligibly
rapid speed]</i> - And once or twice, Blair brings up one
of the documentaries about the Fyre Festival and mentions
something that happens in them. <i>BLAIR: Later in
a documentary around the event,</i> <i>Billy himself claims that they
had rented 250 houses.</i> - She makes it very clear what
her source for that section is. This all seems very above board. And at the end Blair says
those two documentaries were some of the sources
she used for her video. BLAIR: I used both the Hulu
and Netflix documentaries as sources for this episode
as well as various articles. - I think it's fair to say
an average person would think they were watching
an original work with lots of research
and sources which tastefully brings up two
documentaries when necessary. And that's what I thought, too,
and I thought that was fine. It was a pretty well
put-together video. But then I watched "Fyre," the Netflix documentary about
the Fyre Festival. <i>- And what I realized was that
they had rented an area north</i> <i>of Sandals Resort.</i> <i>BLAIR: It was no
isolated island,</i> <i>but an underdeveloped lot
just north of a Sandals resort.</i> <i>- And then effectively
Photoshopped out</i> <i>the bottom portion of the map
to make it look like</i> <i>they were on a deserted island.</i> <i>BLAIR: They were Photoshopping
out the rest of the island</i> <i>to make it appear as if Fyre K
was a deserted island dedicated</i> <i>to the event.</i> <i>According to Maryann Rolle--</i> <i>a local that owns
an Exuma Point Restaurant--</i> <i>they had every living soul on
the island of Exuma</i> <i>who could lift a towel working.</i> <i>MARYANN: They had every
living soul</i> on the island of Exuma
who could lift a towel working. <i>BLAIR: According to Keith,</i> <i>"Billy's team really wanted
to do tents so what I did..."</i> <i>KEITH: Is I took my wife
and we tried to sleep</i> <i>in a tent for one night
and, uh,</i> it was so terrible. - Her Fyre Festival video
is mostly her reading words from the Fyre Festival
documentary on Netflix set to footage she got
from the Fyre Festival documentary on Netflix, with supplemental footage taken from the Fyre Festival
documentary that's on Hulu. But don't worry.
Her first source in her list is the Netflix documentary
so that makes it okay, right? And then further down in
the list is the Hulu one, although fucking hilariously,
she doesn't link it on Hulu. She links it on 123films.cc, the piracy web site
she watched it on. Now, this is journalism!
Yee-haw! <i>BLAIR: Calvin claims
he then went</i> <i>to the Bahamas for himself</i> <i>to see what was going on
and discovered that</i> <i>the luxury festival tents
were nothing more</i> <i>than leftover emergency relief
tents from Hurricane Matthew.</i> HBOMB: Apparently this part
is from Calvin Wells. Uh, no, it's from
the same documentary she got everything else from. <i>CALVIN: One of the things
that really struck out to me</i> <i>was that they were erecting
these dome tents</i> <i>that were pitched
as luxury villas</i> <i>that I realized were leftover
hurricane tents</i> <i>from Hurricane Matthew.</i> HBOMB: The footage playing while
she is saying this is the same footage
the documentary's showing as Calvin says it. She's just replaced
the documentary's voice over with herself quoting
the documentary. It's ridiculous. Quoting documentaries
you pirated for 30 minutes while pretending
you're just quoting specific individuals
is plagiarism. To give an example of how
to do these quotes correctly, here's a "New Republic article
that quotes one of the things Blair did. "As one caterer put it
in Netflix's 'Fyre.'" It's clear and to the point. The article isn't trying
to look like it found this quote. Blair could have said,
"In the Netflix documentary, this person says this." But she'd have to say that
50 fucking times, and it would make it obvious she's just remembering Netflix
at you, so she deliberately obscures
the actual source of her quotes. This is to convince
a casual audience she found these herself
by doing actual research and reading articles
and interviews with these people,
which she didn't. This is passing off the work
that went into making the documentary as her own. When she brings up
the other documentaries as if she's only
just talking about them. This is a lie to make you think she hasn't been doing
it the whole time. <i>BLAIR: According
to Marc Weinstein,</i> <i>a festival consultant--</i> HBOMB: A metric shit ton--
actually, slightly more-- an imperial shit ton
of this video is just footage from
the Netflix documentary. Seriously, you can't even
fucking take your own screenshot of these articles?
What the fuck? This isn't even plagiarism. This is genuinely just
copyright infringement. Like, the copyright holder
could get this video taken down easily, and maybe even take her to court
for the ad revenue she got from their footage. You know YouTube's copyright
system where if you use five seconds
of the wrong TV show your video is demonetized? You're probably wondering why that didn't happen here. This is what
the content ID system actually exists to stop,
after all. Well, this is why the video
has all these ugly filters. What Blair is doing
is so obviously stealing that YouTube would notice
so she had to put bisexual lighting
over all the footage she got
from the documentary. Whoever's making these videos
is fully aware what they're doing
is unacceptable and is purposefully
working around the systems designed
to stop them doing it. Blair doesn't just reuse
other people's footage without credit, though. The video has also been edited to hide the credit that
was there. The Fyre documentary itself
used videos posted on Instagram
and Twitter by people who attended the event,
and guess what? It credits them. Their social media's in
the corner. Blair's video steals
this footage from the documentary, too,
and puts a filter over it but also blurs out
the social media. She uses a few clips
from a Vice video as well and the Vice logo
gets blurred out so you can't tell
where it's from. Since Blair's making
a documentary out of other people's documentaries
without permission for money, she's trying to hide
the evidence of whose footage she's using
so they don't notice and serve her a fucking cease
and desist. Incidentally, when the Vice
video uses footage from the documentary,
it tells you, because this is how this shit
is supposed to work. At one point she uses
a clip of a news piece about the festival which used footage
from the documentary and you'll notice they also
correctly credit the footage, too. Blair's sources are full
of examples of how to credit the source. But if she'd done
the same thing, the word Netflix would just
be in the corner for 30 minutes. The video's opening features
this fan art depicting her bro fisting with
a person I believe she recently sent
a cease and desist to. Put this on r/agedlikemilk. This piece of fan art
is better attributed than the documentary
she stole this video from! The 25 minutes of clips
and quotes from Netflix don't get this treatment.
She just says, "Oh, I used these documentaries
as research," at the end. And I guess she's not lying. She definitely did. I wish there was room in
the video to show you just how much she quotes
the documentary without telling you while
reusing greased-up footage from it,
but it's most of the video. There's just too much to show. I also wanted to go more into
the ways making sloppy, poorly researched videos means
the videos are full of obvious mistakes but
this video's looking kinda long so I shouldn't. However, before I realized
I shouldn't, I'd already made all of it,
so, uh, check out the new video on my hot new second channel. I have a second channel now. It's not a live stream channel
I hastily rebranded. Check it out if you wanna
see me complain about Blair getting
the Stanford Prison Experiment wrong
and also "Silent Hill" lore. Why would you want to watch
that? I dunno.
This is a horrible pitch. As a creator my question is, why make three bad videos
a week when you could make one half decent video
every two weeks, or one pretty good video
every year? Videos like this aren't made
for the reasons normal people make videos like to inform
or entertain or for the joy
of making something. They're made for the purpose
of putting out more content. <i>[tense music]</i> <i>♪ ♪</i> The phrase "content mill" refers
to organizations which produce huge amounts
of material very quickly, designed to get attention
with no interesting quality. If you've ever seen an article
in a search with a compelling title
but which says nothing for several hundred words
and only tells you the thing you wanted at the end while showing you
seven million ads, you've had the content mill
experience, my friend. Some of these are just a link
to a video someone else made but they got to show you ads. There's a ton
of channels out there whose objective is to make
as much stuff as possible as fast and as easily
as possible. We just watched Cinemassacre
become one of these, making easier,
lower-effort, worse videos, and for the ones
that were supposed to be good, outsourcing the editing to a guy underpaid so badly
he later quit, and the writing to a guy who
turned out to be stealing shit. The quality suffers, yeah, but if you don't care
about quality, you save yourself a lot
of time and effort. The people who are in this
for the money are engaged in a constant race
to the bottom to find
the easiest possible content to make and still get paid
for it. If you're a nerd--
and look at you-- you've been recommended
a YouTube short where a robot explains what happens
in a comic. <i>- The sad story
of Rocket Raccoon.</i> <i>The drunk who knew
Batman's identity.</i> <i>After Homelander lost his mind--</i> - These float to the top because
there's catchy names and there's hundreds of them, so they get recommended
to everyone even though nobody likes them. My favorite insane
content farm stuff is when an AI explains the plot
of a movie to you but the title is, "A woman wakes up covered
in bees," or something. <i>- Welcome back to Movie Recaps.</i> <i>Today I will show you
a drama-fantasy film from 2018</i> <i>titled, "Be With You."
Spoilers ahead.</i> - These are so perplexing, they wrap back around
to being performance art. "He has only three organs left
but the scientists turn him into a super soldier." It's "RoboCop!" An AI voice explain
the plot of "RoboCop" to you! Incredible! But if something
becomes successful, even if it's something
this weird, people are gonna try
and do the same thing, especially if it's easy
to crank out like an AI recapping a film. <i>- The opening scene features
a guy who finds himself confined</i> <i>within a large cube.</i> <i>- The opening sequence
introduces a prologue.</i> <i>After this, the chaos caused by
the Egyptians is depicted.</i> <i>- Today I'm going to explain
a film based on</i> <i>the real life story
of the youngest warrior</i> <i>of World War II
called "Soldier Boy."</i> <i>Today I'm going to explain
to you horror zombie film titled</i> <i>"Warm Bodies."
- ...and walked over</i> <i>to the man.
When the man saw it,</i> <i>he was still cursing
at his wife.</i> <i>- The dog king
has gathered hundreds</i> <i>of stray dogs.</i> <i>He is leading his entire army</i> <i>to attack the city.</i> <i>- Hi, JAKE RECAPS here.</i> <i>Today I am going to explain</i> <i>a movie called "Allerleirauh."</i> - So you can see
how content mill shit dovetails very nicely
with ripping people off, if not outright plagiarism. And right in the middle
of this ecosystem are reaction videos where people
just upload themselves reacting to other people's videos. The money almost makes itself. Reaction videos are a key piece of the iilluminaughtii
puzzle here, because that was Blair's
previous content mill. A few years back reacting
to reddit posts was a popular format, and it was easy to make
so hacks jumped on it. She used to make videos reacting
to popular reddit posts and she'd try to add
to the jokes and, you know, not manage it. <i>BLAIR: "After all,
if I can't trust</i> <i>"the President
of the United States,</i> <i>who can I trust?"</i> <i>And that's, uh--
[chuckles]</i> <i>Tricky Dick.
Very cool man.</i> <i>The Watergate scandal man
himself.</i> HBOMB: Extremely boringly
reading out reddit posts wasn't good content,
but it was content. She saw moderate success
doing this for a few years, briefly forming
a communal channel where she
and several friends reacted to reddit posts together
called Sad Milk, a channel which has since been
completely obliterated and she's currently
sending cease and desists to the other members to stop them talking about why,
so that's fun. But this kind of explains a lot.
In a way, Blair has always just been reading other people's stuff
at you. She spent over half
a decade trying to become a popular YouTuber
by any means necessary. Before these she used
to do story time videos back when they
were really popular, which led to a notorious video where she talked about clogging a toilet by literally filling
it with shit. - I didn't even see the hole
so I knew the poop wouldn't go. - When video essays
started being a popular format,
she pivoted again and started making
what she makes now. None of this has ever been about actually making something
she cares about. It's always been about
making something popular. When these finally caused her
to really take off as a creator, she basically immediately
deleted all of her previous cringe attempts
to cash in on other trends. Remember when nearly
a million views disappearing from Filip's channel
was a bit weird? Try 40 million. Sounds like those videos aged
like milk. Sad Milk, that is!
[laughs] [coughs] The iilluminaughtii channel is a video essay content mill. She has a team
of editors helping to put out videos
every other day and she doesn't need a writer. Wikipedia's got her covered, and if there happens to be
a documentary on the topic, she can just quote that
40 fucking times. The video happens overnight
because she didn't have to do any work. There's a part in
the vaccines video where she talks about all
the documentaries she's watched as part
of her research process and I don't think she realizes
she's telling on herself here. <i>BLAIR: And I've got
to tell you that</i> <i>I've seen a lot
of documentaries doing research</i> <i>for these deep dives.</i> <i>The Netflix "Betting On Zero"
for Herbalife,</i> <i>"The Dark Side of Chocolate"
for Nestle,</i> <i>documentary series' on
the hikikomori,</i> <i>and all the "Goop" episodes
on Netflix,</i> <i>"Blackfish" for SeaWorld--
there's a lot.</i> - This is just a confession. Referencing
the big documentaries on a topic you're covering is fine. Quoting them
or using some footage from them makes a lot
of sense, I think. But at a certain point, you're just repackaging
other people's work and selling it off as your own. And speaking of selling... Why would someone do this? Well, when I sat down to watch
the Fyre Festival video I got served two advertisements
before I could hit play and then immediately got hit
by a commercial for Blair's plushie. <i>BLAIR: Make sure
to snag one before it's gone</i> <i>because these
are not coming back</i> <i>once this runs out.</i> - Then 11 minutes in I got a message from today's sponsor,
Mint Mobile, where I could get
squixteen dingles of my bext burger. <i>BLAIR: And we will begin
to unravel what happened</i> <i>at the Fyre Festival right after
this ad break.</i> <i>Make sure you go
to mintmobile.com/mlm.</i> <i>That's mintmobile.com/mlm.</i> - And then within seconds
of that sponsorship ending, I got a second sponsorship! She has two right next
to each other! Go to
blueland.com/iilluminaugh-- <i>BLAIR: ...to blueland.com/mlm.</i> <i>That's 15% off your first order
of any products</i> <i>of Blueland orders
at blueland.com/mlm.</i> - Now, I don't want to speculate
how much money Blair made from this sloppy shit that
was made in about a day, uh, but I do know how much a video with that
many views makes in ad revenue and I know what
the overhead is on those plushies, and I've been offered
similar sponsorships, so I'm pretty comfortable
in saying she made a fuck ton of money from stealing someone else's
documentary. It turns out it's the same twist
it always is. Why did this stupid shit happen? Oh, it's money! This is a really good racket.
I'm almost jealous. With a small team of editors, you can knock one
of these out every few days, and she does. I mean, she doesn't need
a writer. Now, maybe this technically
isn't plagiarism. Maybe you give them
a pass because having a link somewhere in
a description makes it okay to have done this, but I think we can all agree
that even if it isn't plagiarism it is at the very least shit. When we're talking about
creative works, questions like this aren't
really about rigid definitions. It's about whether
or not something passes the vibe check, as adults pretending
to be children might say. A lot of this is about
how something feels. Case in point, when Blair
accused someone else of stealing from her! Plot twist, baby! Party time:
The Legal Eagle Debacle. This is Devin Stone, law YouTuber and actual lawyer whose channel name
is LegalEagle. He's pictured here
interviewing me in my pajamas in
the final year I had hair. I used this clip so I could
savor it for a second. On April 20th of this year, Blair accused one
of Devin's editors of taking her video's style. They were trying to replicate
her videos. Her evidence: one
of his editors E-mailed asking how her editors achieved
a specific effect in an old video, and then later asked on Discord if he could ask them there. I know, right?
And if that's not enough, she posted some comparison shots
showing, uh, they both have used torn paper
effects when showing quotes and, uh, they both highlight, uh, text when they
show documents. <i>- LegalEagle is no longer
the one good lib.</i> - It's cut and dry, really. There's just one small
question left, and that is, "What the hell
are you talking about?" This is one of
the most common things you see in all videos. No one owns the concept
of highlighting text. Tons of people use torn paper
in their visuals when they're quoting books
or newspapers. It's basic skeuomorphism-- when the thing looks like
the thing that it is. I do the same thing when
I'm trying to look professional. LegalEagle has used
these visuals for years. Before iilluminaughtii
has used them, even. Who's ripping off who, again? But in any case, it's normal for editors
to ask each other how they do things. That's how information spreads. You know those transitions that
I do occasionally and Filip did literally all
the time? I found out how to do those
by asking another YouTuber named bobvids how he made
his transitions so smooth in his videos in, like, 2016, and he told me
what plugin he used. Almost everyone finds out
about it by asking someone else
whose videos they like how they did that thing. This is a communal craft where people learn
and share things. That's why there's
12 million tutorials for how to do a chromatic
aberration effect without having to pay for one
of the professional ones. Editing is for the people. More like comradeic aberra--
no. The accusation
wasn't just false. It illuminates--ha, ha--
how Blair sees the world. She doesn't really understand
the concept of sharing amongst creatives, because she's never actually
created anything. Ripping people off
is her entire business model. So she assumes that's how
the rest of the industry works. Just people competing
to exploit each other's ideas. To this sort of person, the fundamental act
of asking questions and talking shop
become devious tricks to get you to give away
your precious secrets about how you highlight text. Basically, this is a completely
ridiculous accusation. This particular thing
really annoyed me, not just as a video editor but because I had a personal history
with her videos. Here was someone whose career
is built on remaking other people's hard work
three times a week getting extremely aggressive
that someone asked someone else how they did something. I'd found the Brian Deer stuff
years ago and kept it to myself because--I know this might
be hard to believe-- I don't like randomly
starting fights with strangers. But since Blair seems okay
with doing that-- and it was on my mind anyway
since I was already working
on this video-- I posted a video
with some examples of her ripping off Deer
in a quote tweet. A lot of the reactions
to my tweet seemed to show that this
made people rethink how they felt about the work of someone
they previously respected. And this for me confirms
my hypothesis, that whatever you call this, there's something wrong
about it. Realizing
how heavily regurgitated someone's work is changes how
it feels to watch. Even if you like something
about it, .now in the back of your mind, you're wondering
if its them you like and not the person they got
it from. Plagiarism stains
a person's work and makes it tough
to appreciate even the original parts, because you'll never really know for sure again
if they're original. And being
the one getting ripped off feels pretty bad, too, which I'm sure
Blair understands. That's why she posted all
of these tweets. Now imagine how
those journalists and documentarians might feel. Imagine spending your life
doing painstaking research, actual investigation, going out there
and interviewing people, and physically finding things, not just Googling it and copying what's
already there. And then imagine someone reading
your words out loud in between sponsorships
for dish soap, getting half of the words wrong, and not even making it clear
how heavily she's relying on you to make her video. Brian Deer has had a lot
of trouble with plagiarism. During the scare Deer got sued
and went to court to defend his findings. He could have lost his home
in the fight to get the truth heard, so when people steal his work without crediting him properly,
it's messed up. Some entire documentaries have come out
which don't credit him. Channel 4 did
another documentary about Wakefield recently
and they don't acknowledge that it was
his work they were using. They pretend Channel 4
itself made those discoveries. They try really hard
to cut Deer out of the story
and it doesn't even work. Articles he wrote
and his book keep popping up in the background. Deer have been battling to have his work
properly recognized for years while other people
pretend they discovered it. Deer actually put
it best himself when he saw my tweet
and replied to it. Sorry to drag you into this,
Brian. While copying and pasting text
from other people's stuff is a kind of plagiarism, it's not the only kind, and focusing on that
as the only way would be a mistake
that falls short of understanding the problem. Even when Blair isn't just
reading other people's words, she's still gutting other
people's work and selling it, and I hope I've explored
that properly. I wish the story ended there
so we could move on already. I had other examples I wanted
to get to, I swear. But on the 28th of April, Blair released a video entitled,
"iilluminaughtii exposed" which contains an apology
to LegalEagle, a response to Hbbomerguy's
plagiarism claims, and I guess a response
to the five other things she's currently
being accused of. She seems great. And in the section intended
for me, she responded to my tweet. So in the interest of fairness, let's see what she has to say. <i>BLAIR: Before I get into
the accusation itself,</i> <i>I want to address the topic
of plagiarism,</i> <i>and that word
has been tossed around a ton</i> <i>and it's not something
to be taken lightly,</i> <i>and I just want to take a minute
to define this word.</i> - She begins by sighting
the many dictionary definitions of plagiarism,
which is very funny. <i>BLAIR: On screen are definitions
for the word "plagiarism"</i> <i>as defined by Merriam-Webster,
dictionary.com,</i> <i>and the University of Oxford.</i> - But then she disregards all
of them anyway and invents
her own special definition with a loophole in it. <i>BLAIR: I'm showing
multiple sources</i> <i>defining plagiarism
but the overall definition</i> <i>is gonna boil down to this:</i> <i>plagiarism is to take
someone else's idea</i> <i>as their own or
to not credit the source.</i> - The actual definition--
you know, the thing that is wrong--
passing off other people's work or ideas as your own has had
this new thing grafted onto it to do with crediting of sources. The other definitions
do bring up not crediting people as part of it but Blair
has made it central to her definition. Remember what I said about
plausible deniability? This is Blair trying
to cash that in. She objectively has passed off
the work of Brian Deer, the Fyre Festival
documentarians, and countless others as her own, up to and including reading out
entire paragraphs from articles without even
telling you she was quoting anything, but in this new definition, as long as you hide or link
in a document no one will read or mention once
you used it as a source, it magically becomes
not plagiarism anymore. She then gives the defense
that she did cite Deer in that Pastebin of hers, but her video demonstrating this
actually shows why this is a cheap trick <i>BLAIR: When you go
to my sourcing page</i> <i>for this particular episode,</i> <i>you can also see that
the documentary</i> <i>is listed as a source.</i> HBOMB: iilluminaughtii's
Pastebin full of disorganized links
is embarrassing to watch her scroll through. I assume she was trying
to show how easy it is to find the documentary
in her list but then she couldn't find it. She cited it as a contextless
YouTube link, so she has to have text appear
on the screen saying which of these sources
was the documentary. What really surprises me about
the response is how deliberately manipulative
it is. She makes a big show
of how thorough she's being in her response. <i>BLAIR: With that definition</i> <i>being clearly identified,</i> <i>let's go ahead and take a look
at what Harris brought</i> <i>to the Twitter table.</i> - She shows my tweets about the situation, obviously, and she reads them all out
which makes sense. She's used
to reading people's words for a long time. But she doesn't show the video she's actually responding to. <i>BLAIR: Harris posted
this video saying, and I quote:</i> <i>"Personally, @iilluminaughtii,</i> <i>I would define plagiarism</i> <i>as something
a bit more specific.</i> <i>For example, copying someone
else's documentary directly</i> <i>into your script," end quote.</i> - After slowly
and painfully reading out the entire surrounding context, why doesn't she show any
of the video? Well, because it would make
her look really fucking bad. If she showed
the video directly comparing her with Deer,
she wouldn't be able to defend herself at all. It's obvious what she did
was wrong. Instead, she shows
this one screenshot which just happens to be
the part where she's technically quoting something on the screen, and then she gives
the defense that, "Look, you can see I
was quoting it!" <i>BLAIR: However,
in his own video,</i> <i>he shows where
I'm audibly quoting</i> <i>a direct line from
the documentary</i> <i>and even visually you
can see it on the screen with</i> <i>the quotation marks.</i> HBOMB: A direct line
from the documentary? The video says it's
from a lawsuit with the FDA. I have to admit, this is some pretty
clever sleight of hand. She's showing specifically
the one section where she technically
is quoting something. <i>BLAIR: At the time of recording,</i> <i>it was really obvious</i> <i>to me that it was a citation</i> <i>of the documentary.</i> - You know she's pretending to quote a lawsuit while actually reading someone else's words, but the audience
watching doesn't. Her official response on YouTube
has way more views than the Twitter video
she's responding to here. More people have seen
a manipulatively-framed single image from
the video than the video itself. I got some replies from people
who had clearly just seen her video
and not seen mine trying to defend her on the basis
that she did put it in quotes. She just didn't cite
the source correctly, and you can find it in
the description. Some poor iilluminaughtii fans
out there think I'm mad at her for quoting
some words slightly wrong because they assume
in good faith that the YouTuber they like
wouldn't tell them an obvious lie. Sadly, iilluminaughtii isn't
a unique story. She's just
the most prominent tip of the iceberg of content mill
video essay garbage. If you want
to see these extremely poor practices in action, you need only watch the videos
about iilluminaughtii. You know, drama YouTube. The worst part of YouTube. <i>BOWBLAX: Koba says,
"point of view,"</i> <i>showing a picture of a man
with a hatchet</i> <i>who I assume is Hbomberguy</i> <i>but I'm not too sure,
to be honest.</i> Drama YouTube
is its own sub-ecosystem of content mills, grinding out infinite buckets of slop about
whatever's happening in that moment. <i>CB2: So I'm not gonna milk this</i> <i>any more after this video, okay?</i> - These people
are so busy making the videos, they don't even have time
to find out what Blair did. They're finding
the most popular tweets on the topic and hitting
the record button. <i>BOWBLAX: "Not enough that
they steal ideas,</i> <i>"they have to go out
of their way</i> <i>"to slander others' work
for having</i> <i>the most banal similarities."</i> HBOMB: Yeah, that's ri--
wait, "bay-nal?" And in their most evolved form, they're not even doing that. They're watching other
drama videos and making their own version. I've seen the compilation I made
of Blair copying Deer in, like, 40 different places
at this point, but what's really amazing
about it is that it's now crossed
the drama mill event horizon. So instead
of being credited to me, it's credited
to the other drama YouTubers the current drama YouTuber got
it from. In this instance the previous drama
YouTuber's name isn't even spelled right. That's the level of research
we're dealing with here. I don't really care
about getting credit for a video I made
in five seconds. The point I was trying to make
was that Deer is the guy who deserves the credit, but there's still
an irony to it. I was trying to make
a point about the importance of crediting people correctly
and now my Twitter video has "Human Centipeded"
its way out of the anals of drama YouTubers
into the mouths of second order drama YouTubers who don't even know where
it's from, but are ready to reheat
and serve it. This is the lowest effort shit
you can imagine. They can't even spell
plagiarist right. Information itself deteriorates
in the process of producing industrial
quantities of content. The mask has fallen
and the gears of the mill spin naked before us as they wheel
and crunch all meaning to dust and "Raid: Shadow Legend"
sponsorships. Go to
audible.com/repentharlequin to enter a coma
and escape this madness. Anyway, thank you for taking
the time to reply, Blair. I disagree. I don't think your new,
special definition of plagiarism with a loophole in
it is plagiarism. I think plagiarism is plagiarism
and you are a plagiarist, but thank you for taking
the time to respond, and good luck with all
that other stuff. We should probably move on. Let's talk about
some good videos. Remember my video about the
"Roblox" oof? That one did pretty well,
didn't it? There's a bunch
of stuff I needed to do for a follow-up video but then I got distracted
by this, but I'll do that eventually. But I'm really happy with
the reaction to it. A lot of people I deeply
respect seemed to enjoy it, and it was even jacksfilms third
favorite video of 2022, which for me
is an incredibly high honor. Far higher than all
the real awards I didn't win. His second favorite video
was "Man in Cave" by someone called
Internet Historian and that thing got, like,
ten million views, so I'm not surprised. Personally, I'm not
a big Internet Historian fan. Years ago I saw a video
of his about Dashcon-- a failed tumblr convention-- and it was really just a bunch
of jokes about SJWs and how bad tumblr is, and it was really disappointing. You know, he had the opportunity
to talk about a really interesting moment
in history and he just used it
to post cringe. But that video was eons ago
and I don't like to judge people by super old stuff they made, and a lot of people
I really respect seem to like him so I'm sure
he's way better now. Anyway, let's finally watch
"Man in Cave" and see what the hype
is all about. No, I mean it. Pull up your phone,
open up "Man in Cave," and let's watch it together. No, just--just type
"Man in Cave." I--It's the top one.
It's got ten million vie-- Oh, you can't find it? It's not there? As of present recording, "Man in Cave"
mysteriously disappeared months ago and has yet
to reappear. What happened to "Man in Cave?" [cackling] <i>[ominous music]</i> "Man in Cave"
is about Floyd Collins, a cave explorer who
in 1925 got trapped in a cave. Nice one, Floyd. The video is an hour
and ten minutes long and pretty detailed, covering the events hour by hour as they happened. What a unique way
of telling the story. The video implies
a deep level of research and understanding, and that animation's
pretty cool, too. The video was uploaded
on September 29th, 2022 and was extremely successful, garnering, like,
10 million views in the few months since
it went online. It was deemed so entertaining
it became the thing every Twitch streamer
put on while they went and did something else
to keep their audience busy. Ooh, that's a good chunk
of change right there. But then in March of this year,
the video disappeared. Any links to the video took you
to a blank page saying it was unavailable because
of a copyright claim. Usually with really
popular videos, though, YouTube resolves this quickly
to avoid negative attention, but this was down for a while
and then it stayed down. What's going on here? Let's look into this a bit. "This video
is no longer available due "to a claim
by Pro Sportority Ltd. doing business as Minute Media." That's what dba means,
by the way. Aren't I clever? Minute Media is a publisher
of digital content. One of their brands
is Mental Floss, a digital news
and entertainment site, which also
has a YouTube channel. So did he use some
of their copyrighted images or the YouTube
channel's footage? Well, it doesn't look like the channel
has ever covered Floyd Collins. The Mental Floss web site,
however, has. In 2018 Lucas Reilly wrote
a story about the 1925 cave rescue that
captivated the nation. Uh-oh. This article
is an extremely detailed summary of the story of Floyd Collins.
Uh-oh! In fact, it makes
the unique choice of covering the events hour
by hour. Oh, he didn't.
He did not just-- <i>- Floyd tried to breathe calmly.</i> <i>His left arm was pinned
underneath his torso,</i> <i>his right wedged by
the rock ceiling above.</i> <i>Beneath him, sharp crystal
shards dug into his skin.</i> <i>When he did attempt to shuffle,</i> <i>more gravel and rocks
would tumble from above</i> <i>and plow onto his feet.</i> <i>"He should try untying
his shoes," said one.</i> <i>"Ah, no, we should send
him down with a contortionist</i> <i>who's got a mallet
and a chisel."</i> <i>"Hey, how about using dynamite?"</i> <i>One clique formed insisting that
it was a great idea.</i> <i>Well, they started arguing
about gas torches,</i> <i>but by far
the most common suggestion,</i> <i>of course,
was amputation.</i> <i>So he removes his suit,</i> <i>drapes himself in coveralls,</i> <i>and grabs a lamp.</i> [clapping]
- Whoa! <i>- But Floyd didn't really
answer any of his questions.</i> <i>In fact, he was incoherent.</i> <i>So Miller took
a few mental notes</i> <i>and he left.</i> <i>Somehow Homer mustered
the strength</i> <i>to altogether wrench the cord
from the other men's hands.</i> <i>The rope went slack.</i> <i>Homer, Floyd, and the rope
lay limp on the cave floor.</i> <i>No progress had been made.</i> HBOMB: For the first time
in YouTube history, a copyright claim is real. Internet Historian stole
Lucas Reilly's article, used it as a script
for a 70-minute video, gave him no credit, and uploaded it for money. But let's consider
an alternative explanation, just to be fair. This was
a real historical event. They're both telling
the same true story so of course they're going
to be similar. That's a good point.
You're very smart. But there's
a difference between using the same sources or recounting
the same history and telling the exact same story
in the same way using the same words, and if going hour by hour
didn't make it obvious, the fact he copies the rest of the structure makes
it blatant. The opening which covers Floyd
entering the cave even uses the same image used at that point in the article. Soon after when Floyd
first becomes trapped, the article flashes back
to Floyd's childhood. The video copies
this narrative framing and does the same thing, flashing back after
he's trapped, and even tells the same
anecdotes about his past. <i>- Floyd has been exploring
the caves of Kentucky since he</i> <i>was merely six years old,</i> <i>and as he grew up,</i> <i>he gained a reputation</i> <i>for being a very daring caver.</i> <i>He would dive into some hole
on one side of town</i> <i>and emerge miles away
on someone else's property.</i> HBOMB: This one's
interesting because the words are quite
a bit different. Instead it's copying
the article visually by having him literally pop
his head out like a gopher. You know how in
the previous segments I've been showing all
the really obvious examples to get the point across? "Man in Cave"
is over an hour long. If I showed
the funniest examples, we'd be here all day. <i>- Gerald knew more about
cave rescues than most.</i> <i>In fact,
just that summer prior,</i> <i>he had helped untangle Floyd
from a different snag.</i> - Whoa!<i>
- Everybody was shaken</i> <i>by the experience.</i> <i>Burdon fainted
as he crawled towards the exit.</i> <i>Most of the other men had
to be carried away.</i> <i>"World of Tanks" is not only</i> <i>the best game
I have ever played--</i> HBOMB: Okay, that one
was a joke. Sorry, I couldn't resist. There are some differences between
the two, though. Internet Historian's video
has mistakes. He gets the weight of the rock pinning Collins'
leg down wrong. He says it's 33 pounds while
the article lists 27. Every credible source I
can find has it listed as around 27 pounds,
give or take, and the Wikipedia page lists 26. The rock weighs about
26 ½ pounds. How do I know this?
We still have it. We've weighed it.
It's 26 ½ pounds. How did he make this mistake
when all his sources-- including the one he
was plagiarizing-- say otherwise? It's almost like when he
was loosely rewriting the script
to seem more original, he accidentally changed some
of the facts of the story. Or maybe it was on purpose. It's slightly harder to say
it was plagiarized now. I mean, how could he be ripping
anyone off if he got the facts wrong? "Man in Cave" is also
a little confused about the fucking cave? In 1917 Collins discovered
a beautiful cave full of stalagmites on
his family's land which he named Crystal Cave. They tried to turn it into
a tourist attraction but this didn't pan out. He then tried looking
for a new cave on his neighbor's property
and this is the cave he got trapped in
while clearing out, which was later named Sand Cave
once he became trapped. This is covered in the article as well as being common
knowledge about this story. Internet Historian treats
them like the same one cave and calls it Sand Cave. So now the story
has insane shit, like Floyd advertising Sand Cave
to tourists which literally never happened because he died in it before
it could open for business. That's what the story is about! This isn't nitpicking.
Okay, it is, but this is
the cave in "Man in Cave." It would be nice if he got
the cave right. This is the place most people
my age are going to learn about Floyd Collins and it's a shame they're
learning history that's not true. Here's a funny thing I noticed
because I'm one of those weird cave people. Uh, we prefer the term
"amateur speleologists." But he keeps using this picture
to represent the grotto Floyd is trying to reach. <i>- On the other side is this.</i> <i>Until he found this hollow.</i> HBOMB: This isn't a picture
of that hollow. There are no pictures.
No one's even seen it, apart from Floyd,
and because I'm insane, I recognize this picture. It's from the web site
of Crystal Onyx cave in Kentucky which
is about 12 miles away from the Mammoth Cave system
the video is talking about. This cave is often confused
with other nearby caves because the names are similar
and they're so close by, so it's
an understandable mistake to use this image instead
of one from the right cave system, but I do find it really funny
a picture being used to represent part
of Mammoth is from a site whose title reads,
"We're not mammoth." Like, they tried to warn you,
buddy. And I saw people congratulate
this video for the effort
that went into it. I assume they're talking about
the animation which is pretty decent. Internet Historian's team did
a good job with this, especially considering
its length, a compliment I've received
myself many times. That's one reason this
is all so disappointing. This could have been good
and not been stolen. We can do both. Reilly is a really talented
writer and researcher. He was the articles editor
for Mental Floss back when it had a physical magazine
with folks who worked on it calling him
its beating heart. Reilly is a very well-regarded,
award-winning writer with a skill
for telling gripping stories, and I can tell Internet
Historian agrees with me, so it's a shame he
gave him no credit for his work, even as it contributed
to what must have been a huge amount of income for him, doubtless more
than Reilly ever made for writing it in
the first place. Internet Historian
sometimes cites his sources when they come up. He'll have text saying where
it's from, and that's a good practice, but this makes his choice
to never cite or mention Reilly obvious.
He's trying to hide it. Sometimes the way he tries
to look like he's done research and wrote this video himself
is very funny. There's a bit where he's reading
the article out loud as usual, then pauses
and acts like he's about to read something else
and just keeps reading the fucking article. <i>- Near the final squeeze,</i> <i>large cracks had formed.</i> <i>The ceiling was beginning
to droop.</i> <i>All right, so the following
is a recounting</i> <i>of events from one
of Carmichael's men,</i> <i>Casey Jones.</i> <i>Casey and another worker spend
about an hour in the cave</i> <i>but he heard Collins
moaning ahead,</i> <i>so he pushed himself on.</i> <i>He managed to make it through
the squeeze</i> <i>and he arrived
at the ten-foot pit.</i> <i>Seeing Floyd trapped,</i> <i>he tried to ignore
the pebbles</i> <i>that were tumbling behind him.</i> - Internet Historian wants you
to think he's telling you a story he made after doing
a lot of research. He doesn't want to read you
a good story he found. He wants to pretend he wrote it. But this--the obvious fact
it's plagiarism and it's wrong--
that's the easy stuff. What's interesting
is what happened next. I've been standing on my feet
for agest. I'm gonna have a sit down. Ah, that's better. This is my living room where
I keep all the books I pretend to have read
and also my board games. Yes, I'm one of those people. I even have
a board game about caving. Uh, this is quite hard
to find nowadays so I had to get it from Germany. They love board games there
because they're not afraid to look one another in the eye. I can't wait
to spiel this cave game. For my money, that's
the best joke I've ever written. Hold on. We're doing
a video about plagiarism. Let's, uh--
let's get this set up properly. Uh--ah-hah! But then... [light switch clicks] Ah! This is a whole style
of video now, and by style I mean
one person did it first and then a bunch
of boring people ripped her off. Stealing from lots of places
is inspiration, but stealing from one place
is plagiarism unless you call it
the BreadTube Style, and then it's fine. I don't even know what
a BreadTube is. I just woke up one day
and was told that I was in it and that people hated me
for being in it. I don't even know what it is.
Anyway, when someone
from Mental Floss noticed the plagiarism and filed
a copyright claim, Internet Historian tweeted about
the video's disappearance but in a kinda suspicious way. He obviously knew why
it got claimed but he chose not to say why so his audience
could freely speculate amongst themselves
for hundreds of posts about all the ridiculous reasons YouTube
takes things down. Some of them noticed
Pro Sportority is based out of Israel
and got anti-Semetic about it. But ironically,
so it's fine. What an interesting audience
he's built. All this needless speculation
has helped to create a smokescreen. People assumed the video
was taken down for a bullshit reason and there
is no clear explanation, when there is one and he didn't
give it to them on purpose. Internet Historian
has taken videos down before. A lot of them, in fact. Like, dozens. None of these seem to be because
of plagiarism. He says he just doesn't think
they're very good anymore. I think he got a bit of, uh,
what we in the business call "Troll's Remorse." Oh, maybe this video
was inappropriate and normal people would judge me
for it. And he got rid of that video
that's just a bunch of Tucker Carlson clips, and reading a hentai
in an extremely racist Japanese man impression. That's not advertiser-friendly. And we want those "World
of Tanks" bucks, don't we? But since his fans are,
you know, normal cool people, they saved all those old videos
and there are several channels dedicated purely
to reuploading all his old, inconvenient stuff, and some of them tried
to reupload "Man in Cave" and instantly got hit with
a copyright claim as well, because the video
is in YouTube's system now. Here's a screenshot that
was posted of one of these claims. "The infringing video blatantly "and unlawfully plagiarized
verbatim text from our article "and the placement, pacing,
and presentation of content is almost identical
to the article." Speaking from experience, normally claims aren't anywhere
near this detailed. The article's owners
are not messing around. This is how we found out about
the plagiarism. Kat was browsing
her drama reddits as she does a lot
and she saw a post with this smoking gun in it. It's amazing how easy it is
for a story like this to not get spread
to a wider audience, even when it's
for a video this popular. The furthest the story
has got so far is the thread proving it just sitting
in a random subreddit with, like, 90 upvotes. If Kat hadn't seen this
I wouldn't be talking about it and you wouldn't know
it happened, either. So, thanks, Kat. You're so cool.
I love you. Most YouTubers in this situation
would fight a copyright claim publicly, arguing their case where
everyone could see it, which would force YouTube
to take notice and do something about it. People @ YouTube
on Twitter all the time and get responses
and see things fixed. I once tweeted randomly about
an old test video I deleted getting copyright
claimed somehow. I didn't even
@ YouTube about it, and they still found it
and asked me for more information. They're pretty diligent
about responding to people messaging them
on social media with problems. Internet Historian can't start
a public case about this because he's in the wrong. He stole an article for money, and bringing attention
to it would just broadcast to his audience he did
70 minutes of plagiarism. Right now not many people know
about this although some of his viewers
have noticed how strange it is he's avoiding
talking about it. Why isn't he telling
his audience who to get mad at and go after? Why isn't he giving his completely normal fans
marching orders? Uh, because he ripped
someone off and he doesn't want you
to find out. That's why. In May, two months after
the video disappeared, a new version was uploaded, claiming to be a reupload
of the previous one. But then two days later,
it went private. On the Internet Historian reddit
post about the reupload, the big guy himself wrote about
there being some complications, again being vague
about what's going on. This new version
would remain private for about two months.
It's not clear why. In July while I
was making this video, it finally came back up,
but only unlisted. You can watch it but it doesn't
show up in a search or your recommendations. You can't watch this video now
unless you know it exists and go looking for it and get
the link from somewhere else. This new version has quite
a few changes. It opens with this new clip
explaining what happened but in the vaguest way possible. <i>- Sorry for the reupload,
fellas.</i> <i>The original got copy-struck.</i> HBOMB: Again, we have a comment
about it being copy-struck but no explanation why. He's still hiding what happened, in a pretty sneaky way
this time. You see, this graphic
of the copy strike has been edited. The notice on the video actually
looks like this. It shows who made
the copyright claim, but obviously he doesn't
want people looking up the company behind it because
then people will find out why the video is unavailable. So now he's editing screenshots
to try to hide what he did. The reupload uses mostly
the same animation and tells the same story
but lots of the voice over has been rewritten to try
to sound less like the article. Here's a section
I showed you earlier. <i>- His left arm was pinned
underneath his torso,</i> <i>his right wedged by
the rock ceiling above.</i> HBOMB: Now here's
the HD remaster. <i>- His right arm
is wedged against the roof</i> <i>of the cave and his left</i> <i>is stuck in place underneath
his torso.</i> HBOMB: He flipped the order
he talked about the arms and reworded how
he talked about them. He hasn't really solved
the overall plagiarism. He just changed the words more
than last time. <i>- Beneath him,
sharp crystal shards</i> <i>dug into his skin.</i> <i>He can feel the sharp crystals
on the ground</i> <i>poking into his back.</i> <i>Floyd tried to breathe calmly
in the concentrated dark.</i> <i>Floyd took slow,
steady breaths.</i> <i>So he removes his suit,
drapes himself in coveralls,</i> <i>and grabs a lamp.</i> <i>Miller thinks for a moment...</i> <i>Then says,
"Yeah, all right."</i> <i>He grabs a lantern--</i> all: Whoa!
[booming] HBOMB: In the past we've seen
people reword stuff they stole and hope they don't get caught, but now we're getting
a special treat. We get to watch someone go back
and try to change it even more. Like, no, we already know
you stole this now. You can't take it back
and pretend you didn't. <i>- But Floyd didn't really answer
any of his questions.</i> <i>In fact, he was incoherent.</i> <i>So Miller took
a few mental notes</i> <i>and he left.</i> <i>But Floyd didn't really</i> <i>answer any of his questions.</i> <i>There's nothing Miller can do.</i> <i>So he hurriedly turns around.</i> <i>Homer, Floyd, and the rope
lay limp on the cave floor.</i> <i>Floyd fell back down.</i> <i>Homer, Miller, Burdon,
and the other three men</i> <i>were flat on their backs.</i> HBOMB: I wanna get across how
much worse written this version is. Reilly's article
has a chilling section about Floyd spending
an entire day trapped, screaming for help. "He began a tormenting routine: "Sleep, wake, scream;
sleep, wake scream; "sleep, wake, scream. "Minutes melted into hours.
His voice disappeared. His arms tingled numb.
Pain radiated up his ankle." This is vivid storytelling. I can feel myself going insane even imagining
being trapped there for 25 hours. It's a really good passage. Internet Historian liked it,
too, so he stole it. <i>- He's at the start
of a very tiring loop.</i> <i>Sleep, wake, yell.
- [yelling]</i> <i>- Sleep, wake, yell.
- Hello?</i> <i>Hours passed.
His voice gave in.</i> <i>Arms tingled number,
pain radiating up his ankle.</i> <i>Here he remained in the dark
for the next 23 hours.</i> HBOMB: Now, in the remake, he has to tell the same story
but with completely new words. So we get this. <i>- So there's Floyd in the dark
yelling out for help.</i> <i>Yelling into the pitch black.</i> <i>After a while his voice
would give out</i> <i>and he would have to sleep
to recuperate.</i> <i>He would then wake
sometime later,</i> <i>remember where he is,</i> <i>and begin yelling again
for help.</i> <i>Here he remained in the dark
for the next 23 hours.</i> HBOMB: It's just not
as effective. The feeling of being stuck in
that cycle for dozens of hours is gone. It's quite difficult
to take a story you got from an article
and tell it again without using any
of the words you liked. <i>- Floyd has been exploring
the caves of Kentucky</i> <i>since he was merely
six years old.</i> HBOMB: Oh, I guess I can't
mention Kentucky now. That makes it obvious.
Better re-record. <i>- Floyd started
his caving career</i> <i>at the tender age of six.</i> HBOMB: Some of the changes give
away how uncreative he was-- just how much he relied
on Reilly's work even with the most basic shit. He used his words about
someone's hands being bruised and purple. <i>- Parts were harder
to navigate than before,</i> <i>especially now with their
bruised and purple hands.</i> HBOMB: So in the new version,
this had to be changed. <i>- Parts were harder
to navigate than before,</i> <i>doubly so with their bruised
and rock-shredded hands.</i> HBOMB Why would you not
just write a new description of some hands in
the first place? This is so lazy. What is wrong with this guy? And despite all these changes, the factual errors about
the cave and the rock are still the same. It's like this version
was made to annoy me. It's especially hard
to make major changes when you already made
the animations. It's almost impossible
to remove Lucas' influence without doing so much work,
it's not even worth it. For example, the gopher section has been completely
removed since it was directly copying
an anecdote from the article. He's replaced it with
a new segment which is just C-tier
reference humor. <i>- He would go off on his own,</i> <i>disappearing into the caves
for many hours at a time.</i> <i>Have you seen that movie,
"The Descent?"</i> <i>It was a lot like that.</i> HBOMB: Holy crap, Lois.
This is just like that movie. Some of Reilly's article
was too short and simple to meaningfully change
so those parts have just been taken out. <i>- And all they could do</i> <i>was leave for now and reassess.</i> <i>Everybody was shaken by
the experience.</i> <i>Burdon fainted
as he crawled towards the exit.</i> <i>Most of the other men had
to be carried away.</i> <i>And all they could do
was leave for now and rest.</i> <i>[record hissing and popping]</i> HBOMB: Since it can't use any of the clever words
it stole anymore, the whole thing's
been dumbed down. <i>- Now, Floyd was trapped in
a supine position.</i> <i>So Floyd is trapped laying down
like this.</i> HBOMB: Imagine sitting down
to watch a favorite show and the streaming services
replaced it with a different cut where all the characters talk
like idiots now. - You made me look bad
and that's not good. HBOMB: I feel bad for the people
who enjoyed the original. People in the comments
and on the reddit page are asking why he changed it and why all their favorite lines
are missing. They don't know why because
he didn't tell them. Why is the new version
of the video unlisted and not public? Well, it could be because it's
a lot worse, but mainly by being
so much worse it kind of gives away
what he did. This video's fans obviously want
it back up but if it goes back up and it's obviously
much worse written now, the ten-plus million people
who saw it the first time-- potentially even more
than once-- will wonder why it's different
and look into why and maybe find out. But if it stays down people will wonder why it's down
and look into why and find out. It's like he's trying to delay
the inevitable wider discovery of what he did by letting
the video exist but as quietly as possible, so no one wonders where
the video went but not too many people see it
and notice the differences. It's a precarious situation
and I don't envy him. But he does deserve it. Right now he looks like
a plagiarist and a liar and a coward who's willing
to ruin his own video and let it gather dust unlisted
in the corner to try and hide what he did. To be fair, the new version now
actually cites Reilly's article. Whenever a section
was too difficult to change but too significant to remove, he keeps it in and cites
the article at the bottom. In the original there were
several places where he quoted the same sources Reilly quoted
and in this version just to be safe he also cites
the article to make it clear that's where he got it. The description of this version
also acknowledges the talented Mr. Reilly
and links to his work. This would have been cool
if he'd done all this the first time and not tried
to hide it, but this is like
if Filip reuploaded a very slightly changed version
of the plagiarized videos and just put,
"Thanks to Boomstick Gaming," in the description. It's too late
to hide what he's done, though that hasn't stopped him
from trying. Oh, late-breaking update. A couple weeks ago
the "Man in Cave" reupload became public again. I wondered how he would
stop people noticing its weird changes.
Then days later, he uploaded
this year's new video so people's attention is onto
the next thing now. The only people
who really noticed the video coming back
are the, uh, hardcore fans. This was a real clever boy move. If I wanted to sneak my weirdly
changed reupload back out without too many
people noticing, this is how I'd do it, and all I'd have to do next
was hope no one ever makes the video I'm making right now. Oops.
Right. My eyes have gone fuzzy
so it's time to get back up. Ah, my knees really hurt, too. Okay, I threw out an IKEA POANG
to make room for this beanbag chair
and it's rubbish. I love sacks full of balls
but not this much. Don't get a beanbag chair. Oh, God!
Jesus! [microphone rustling] Hey, the mic's still out
of frame! That's nice.
That never happens. I dunno, a proper apology
would be nice, and maybe an explanation
for why it happened. As far as I can tell this
is the only video where he's just ripped
something off like this, I hope. You know,
why did he do it for this one? Really, I just wanna know where
he got 33 pounds. I'm a simple man
with simple needs. Yorkshire puddings with
a little bit of gravy on top and explanations
for discrepancies in numbers. My parents never took me
to see a psychologist so I assume that's normal. In the meantime, I'm very happy to accept
the award for jacksfilm's second best video of 2022. The version from 2022 is gone.
Get it off the list, Jack. Bump me up!
Now, what's the first place one? And how do I destroy it? Oh, it's the Steamed Hams one where an animator did, like, a million different styles. That one's really good. And it even tells you which styles it's doing and when in the description. This cartoon cites
its sources better than half the stuff I covered
in this video. Well, I guess I'll settle
for second place. This time. So, there we have it. A bunch of examples
of plagiarism, why it happens,
why it's wrong, and all the ways it can result
in destructive results. With these four examples, I think I'm ready
to reach some kind of conclusion.
Just don't touch the screen or move the mouse a--
[exhales sharply] There's no way you haven't seen
the run time. You've probably guessed
what's coming. "Where's the part where
he turns out "to be on a green screen and the video's
about someone else?" Congratulations.
You figured it out. You know all my tricks. The student becomes the master. Master of shit. It was real the whole time! [screams] Last time I wanted
to research one thing and tripped
and learned too much. This time I had the breakdown
and worked backwards. We understand why this shit
is wrong now and the damage it can do. The piles of money people make from stealing
other people's words and ideas and work. But there's one group
more important than historians or journalists
or anyone else with a real job, and that's gay people. You know what's worse
than stealing from established journalists who
in the end are doing okay? Stealing
from small queer writers or creators
from marginalized groups who weren't even paid
for their work in the first place. Stealing from the writings of dead people
who passed away doing the activism you pretend to do. Stealing from the very people
who fund your videos. The people you claim
to be defending. This video
is about James Somerton. <i>[orchestrated
horror music sting]</i> <i>♪ ♪</i> James Somerton is a gay YouTuber with a degree
in business administration who frequently refers to himself
as a marketing expert. - I'm a YouTuber,
marketing expert, and film school grad. I'm also gay.
HBOMB: Cool. In 2014 he briefly made videos
about geek stuff reviewing Marvel movies
and so on. Several years later
when video essays became a popular format,
he started making those, with a focus on queer characters
in media and LGBT film history, and occasionally anime, such as this really successful
video about the fascism of "Attack on Titan" which
has mysteriously disappeared. Where did it go?
I wonder what happened there. Somerton is doing great by
the standards of queer YouTube in terms of views,
ad revenue, sponsorships,
Patreon income, and donations on
his live streams. The man is doing extremely
well financially in a field where people
generally struggle to do this full time. In many ways James Somerton
is a success story our entire community should
be proud of. Not to rain on
this pride parade, but whenever I saw a video
by James in my recommendations, I would have to stop watching
because it quickly became clear to me he didn't know what he
was talking about. The first video
of his I ever saw was about Disney's relationship
with the queer community and in it he claims Disney
set up an event called Gay Night and claimed to give
the profits to charity but actually kept the money. - During the 1990s
Disney's parks also tried profiting
from their LGBT fans by creating Gay Night--
a one-night-a-year event for the parks where LGBT folk
would be the main guests. It was a big hit. Initially the revenue was all
to be donated to the Aid for AIDS Foundation
but by 1995 donations to the charity
had dried up. Disney was keeping all
of the profits for themselves. He's misremembering
a really well-known event. Uh, Gay Not was not set up
by Disney. They didn't sanction it. A travel agency rented
the park out for the night and they kept the money they
were supposed to have donated. This is a bit sloppy
but then he claims the more progressive CEO
Bob Iger expanded Gay Nights into full Gay Day events. - Under his stewardship
Disney switched <i>from the once-a-year Gay Night
at Disney parks</i> <i>to the full Gay Days event,</i> <i>rebranding the occasion to
a more family friendly affair.</i> Now, obviously Iger
couldn't rebrand something Disney wasn't doing
and had no control over. Gay Days is actually
a completely separate event which is also unofficial
and unsanctioned by Disney. Also it started before Gay Night
and 15 years before Iger became CEO. It's kind of impressive
how wrong this was. He's giving fucking
Disney credit for the actions
of independent queer people. It really downplays the work
that people put into organizing stuff like Gay Days. It's super disappointing,
honestly. The first official Disney
pride night happened this year, three years after
he made this video. That's how far off the mark
he was on this. Whenever I saw another Somerton
video in the wild, I'd give it another shot and quickly have
to give up again. In his "Yuri on Ice" video
he claimed the show never went into explicitly gay territory
because it aired early in the evening
on Japanese television and there's a law on
the books preventing showing homosexuality
that early. - Japan has certain laws such
as what time of night a queer-centric show can
actually be aired on TV. This show was slated
for an earlier time slot in the night because it's first
and foremost a sports anime. <i>In order for the quiet part
to be as loud</i> <i>as the creator wanted,</i> <i>it would have to have had
a much later time slot</i> <i>than the network wanted.</i> - This is a common myth made up by western fans of the show
to explain why it wasn't gayer. "They wanted to,
but it was illegal." How convenient. But that law doesn't work
that way and even if it did, "Yuri on Ice" aired
at 2:30 a.m. in the morning, the gay witching hour. They could do whatever
they wanted. But now I see people continuing
to spread this lie, linking Somerton's video
as proof it's true. James is helping
to reinforce misinformation by not checking whatever
he hears on Twitter before he spreads it,
which is a bit concerning. Basically, I can't really watch
James's videos because I care a lot about
the stuff he talks about and I can tell he's not really
checked what he's saying. And that really gets to me. Normally in this situation I would just not watch
his videos and live my life but over the last couple
of years Somerton has been repeatedly accused
of plagiarism. In response Somerton has claimed
he never ripped off anyone and the times he did
weren't even that bad anyway. .I--If I have been
plagiarizing videos... I wouldn't have a channel. I would be called out all
the time by people saying,
"He stole my shit." But I don't plagiarize. The one time that there actually
was plagiarism, it was by mistake
and I fixed it immediately, and it is no longer in my video. And the other two accusations,
one was silly-- - That's an interesting way
of saying you didn't do it. - Uh, "When three or four
separate videos have three or four separate plagiarism
controversies attached-- There's not three or four. - Somerton is telling
the truth here. There are not three
or four accusations. Whenever these allegations
are brought up, however, A fan of his
will normally pop up to accuse them of harassing
a gay man and claim this is all part of a deliberate
homophobic campaign against a queer creator. And as an open bisexual who knows what the internet is like, I'm vigilant to the possibility
the 'phobes are making a fuss about nothing again
to take down a fellow gay boy. It does happen. So keeping this possibility
in mind, I looked
at what he'd been accused of for myself,
weighed up all the evidence as objectively as I could, and it quickly became clear
he did do it. He's a massive plagiarist. In fact there's a bunch of stuff
no one else has found yet. He's just convinced his audience to attack people
when they notice. And the worst part is they do
it in the name of defending
a gay creator when many of the people he
has financially benefited from stealing
from are queer themselves. I've never seen anyone try
to put together a full explanation
of what exactly happened here because his fans will threaten
you into silence for trying which means there
is no solid body of evidence to point to so James can freely lie about
what happened without anyone
to contradict him. I'd like to take the opportunity
to go through what happened here so people can see
what happened without it being filtered through James
and make up their own minds. So let's clear all this up once
and for all, shall we? <i>[Masakazu Sugimori's
"It Can't End Here"]</i> In July 2020 Somerton uploaded
"Evil Queens: A Queer Look
at Disney History--" a one-hour
and eight-minute video about Disney's relationship with
the queer community. This original upload
of the video has since been deleted for reasons which
will become clear As the video reached
its audience, some viewers began
noticing similarities between the video
and the book, "Tinker Belles and Evil Queens" by Sean P. Griffin. James opens with
a present-day example of Disney being bad about
gay content on their platforms and then says, "We need
to explore Disney's history of doing this." The next 45 minutes
are almost word-for-word taken
from Griffin's book. <i>- Fantasy is often described
as a method of escape</i> <i>from the trials and tribulations
of everyday reality.</i> Living in a society that
has outlawed homosexual desire, categorized it
as a medical dis-- <i>Smee is constantly
at Hook's side</i> <i>and although Hook
is the manacle master</i> <i>of the relationship,
Smee is obviously--</i> His prospect brighten, though,
when he overhears of a young man cub who's
wandering alone in the jungle. He whispers to himself... - How delightful. - And vows to arrange
a rendezvous with the boy. HBOMB: Most of this video
is just James reading a book into the camera. <i>- In the number,
Ursula uses various methods</i> <i>to convince Ariel
to sell her soul,</i> <i>from looking sorry and saintlike</i> <i>to shimmying madly
in excitement.</i> HBOMB: Throughout this video
James uses parts of the book where Griffin quotes
someone else, like here. This is from an essay
by Cynthia Erb. James just keeps reading
and doesn't tell you he's quoting anyone, and even changes it slightly. Almost like he knows it's wrong
and is trying to get away with it. - In its use of vocalist
Pat Carroll's ability to slide up and down
the musical register, from shrieks to baritones, "Poor Unfortunate Souls"
is an unmistakable send-up of the campy female
impersonation numbers of underground queer films in
the early days of Hollywood. HBOMB: When he rips off Griffin
quoting more well-known writers like Susan Sontag,
he reads them out and puts the quote on
the screen. It looks like when he thinks he
can get away with it, he passes obscure writers'
words off as his own. He's already stealing
from Griffin. Why stop there? Somerton reuses a section of the book where Griffin quotes
gay journalist and activist Jack Babuscio
who passed away of AIDS in 1990. Griffin explains who he is
and discusses his quote, mentioning by name repeatedly. You know,
the way you quote someone and discuss what they said. Somerton removes all mention
and discussion of Babuscio but he still steals everything
he says. - And amping up that depiction
to an 11. Camp by focusing on
the outward appearance of a role implies that roles
and in particular gender roles are superficial--
a matter of style. HBOMB: He then skips
a few paragraphs since the book discusses
what Babuscio meant by this and that would give away James
didn't write it. I didn't even think it
was possible but somehow James managed to steal two
queer authors' words at once. He copied a book word-for-word
and even removed mention of the people being quoted so
it sounded like he was saying their words, too. That's not something
you do by mistake. That's something you do
when you want to take the credit,
which he does. In future videos, James talks about "Evil Queens" as if it was all his ideas. - But other movies require
a bit more digging. In "Evil Queens" I talked about
the queerness of the '90s renaissance
Disney movies, especially "Aladdin"
and "The Lion King." When I first mentioned this
to people, they thought I was crazy. Then I explained it to them
and they came around to seeing it my way. HBOMB: And everyone clapped. James claims this video
is his work and a weird, bold new approach to media when
it's word-for-word from a 20-year-old book. It's ridiculous. He appears
to have find-and-replaced words like "gay"
and "homosexual" to "queer" or "LGBT." - Another narrative strand
in Disney's films that would have a great appeal
to the queer community is the tale of the outsider-- --Labeled it
as a sin against God and allowed and often encouraged violent acts against
LGBT people, <i>queer culture
has unsurprisingly embraced--</i> <i>Queer culture--
particularly gay male culture--</i> <i>has long held
a fascination with fantasy.</i> <i>The close association
of gay men</i> <i>to the world of fantasy
has attributed</i> <i>to some
of the most common insults</i> <i>for gay men in western culture.</i> HBOMB: Somerton never mentioned
the book or its author anywhere. There was nothing in
the credits, the description,
no citations, no mention of his name--
nothing. When YouTubers use a book
as a major source of research, usually they mention it
or put it in the background on their set. He did film himself next
to a book but it's not "Tinker Bells."
It's "Disney War--" a commonly-cited source
in videos covering Disney stuff. He's trying to look like
he did research without giving away where he
got all the words he's saying. Eventually a twitter user
who noticed the similarities
started comparing the works closely
and wrote a thread showcasing hundreds and hundreds
of words-worth of examples of the video directly copying
Griffin's book. She eventually asked him why
he didn't credit it and he responded
that he hadn't started crediting source
materials yet when he made the video. He then finally added
a reference to the book to the description
almost two months after it had been uploaded. He'd gone with
the Internet Historian method. Put an acknowledgment
of your theft in the description later and pretend
that makes stealing okay. The thread's author thanked him
for admitting it but pointed out adding
a line of text near the bottom of the description
is deceptive, considering the sheer amount
of writing he copied. It looked like he was trying
to get away with it by hiding some text somewhere
no one would see. In response he did
the professional adult thing and blocked her
and started tweeting vaguely about being wrongly accused
of plagiarism, even though he always
credits authors in the video description, which is a very funny thing to say when he didn't
do that until the person he's currently
complaining about pointed out he didn't. In just over a day James went
from saying, "Whoops, "I'll put his name in
the description. Learning as I go,"
smiley face, to, "I always credit authors
in video descriptions." "Fuck off
with your accusations." He also made
a YouTube community post with the same text as the tweets. However, this turned out
to be a Streisandian bargain because people started
asking what he was being criticized for. Here's where
it gets really interesting. James responded to one
of them with a new example. Something like this
had already happened before. James had made
a video called "Unrequited: The History of Queer-Baiting"
and this video had also been accused of stealing
from a documentary called "The Celluloid Closet." So this wasn't even
the first time he'd been caught
doing something like this. The author of the thread noticed
this comment and looked at the description
of the "Unrequited" video and there
was a note hidden towards the bottom thanking
"The Celluloid Closet" in a familiarly vague way. Somerton had been caught
stealing something before and he tried to get away with it
the same way, by hiding something in
the description. The comments section was full
of people saying thanking the documentary in
the description wasn't good enough since
he copied a shit ton of it. She then tweeted she
was considering comparing "The Celluloid Closet"
and "Unrequited" side-by-side like she'd done
with "Evil Queens." It looks like James saw
this tweet and realized someone
was about to prove he'd done plagiarism
in multiple videos because suddenly
he set both "Unrequited" and "Evil Queens" to private
so no one could watch them and made a post announcing this. The thread's author mentioned
this happened and included these screenshots
of the announcement. Let's put this on a timeline. This tweet came almost exactly
12 hours after saying she was thinking of checking
the other video. In her screenshot
the announcement was only 11 hours old. James hid "Unrequited" within
an hour of someone saying they were thinking
of checking it for plagiarism. That's not suspect at all. In his post he explained he
was the victim of a targeted
harassment campaign, had received death threats, and he hid these videos because
he didn't want people who want him dead seeing them. In the comments section
he also claimed the thread's author
had had been harassing and attacking him
for the last 48 hours on Twitter and her followers
had been hunting down his home and work addresses. Any harassment
or threats Somerton may have received
are unconscionable and wrong. I want to clarify right now that
if anyone harasses Somerton on my behalf, they are worse than him and will not see
the light of Heaven. I must underscore, however, the original author
was not unnecessarily rude in her criticisms, was straightforward and polite when speaking to James directly, and when he talked
about harassment, she was very clear where
she stood on that as well. Somerton accused her of personally
stalking him anyway and starting
a harassment campaign against him,
threatening his life, and trying
to track down his address with her obscure thread
of tweets. The author's account
was very small at the time with less than 150 followers
and barely anyone had seen the thread until
Somerton accused it of trying to kill him. Instead of addressing
his mistake head on and holding himself accountable, Somerton span
a narrative about how the most polite critic
he could have possibly gotten was the head of a targeted campaign
against him, while trying
to hide the evidence. On the other hand, the author of this thread
has received a lot of harassment from Somerton's fans over
the years to the point
they eventually changed their username
and locked their account. You literally can't see
these tweets anymore. When I managed to contact her
with questions, she asked me to reference her
as little as possible because she's afraid
of it starting again. Somerton's fans believed they
were defending him from someone threatening
his life, remember, so they were pretty
fucking vicious about it, and that is what he
was telling them. When he made a video addressing
the plagiarism, he titled it,
"About Those Death Threats." - Somebody watched
my "Evil Queens" video-- my video about Disney-- and realized that there
are quotes in the video that are directly taken
from the book "Tinker Bells and Evil Queens." They went ahead and started
accusing me of plagiarism. Somebody read their thread
and decided to message me some death threats
as you do on the internet. I think she has something like
154 Twitter followers, something like that, and... Some of the people
of that 154 decided, "Hey, let's threaten
to kill him." But, yeah, that's the situation. That's why I was--
that's why I-- someone doxxed me
and threatened to kill me. HBOMB: He claimed
he simply forgot to credit the book which made up
the vast majority of his script. - I'm kind of flighty when a video is done
on putting the credits together so I don't always remember
to, uh, put everything in the credits. That's kind of been a problem
with me in the past. That has happened before. HBOMB: He then compared
his video to serious documentaries and how they're often based
on books. - You know, like a lot
of documentaries, they're based on books
that come out and so, yes, going forward
I just want you to know my videos may well be based off
of books. HBOMB: Um, normally
you get permission to adapt people's books
into documentaries before you make them
and release them to the public for money. It's really hard not
to see this for what it is-- a guy making up a series
of bad excuses after being caught plagiarizing. Let's just think about this
for a second. If James was honestly adapting
a book, why would he film himself
on his set for an hour sitting next
to a different book and not even think to mention the book he's adapting
even exists? Somerton went out of his way not
to mention his primary source so people wouldn't read it
and realize he copied it. - So, yeah, I guess what
I'm just trying to say is that, yes, there
are quotes in the video and sections of the video that
are taken from the book. It's not entirely based off
of it. There's, mm, you know-- most of what's in the video
is my own original content. How does he explain what he did
to the quote from Babuscio? He doesn't even try. - And if you don't want
to support me anymore because... Not everything is... Entirely my original thoughts,
then... That's fine.
I never have had the time to do that amount of research
for a YouTube video. HBOMB: This video and all his
YouTube posts about the plagiarism accusations
were deleted soon after. I think Somerton realized there
was no decent explanation for what he had done so trying
to explain it made him look worse. Instead he started tweeting that he'd sent the video
to the author to ask for permission
to put the video up again. He was finally asking permission to do what he already did
months ago. I'm curious how he explained all
of this to Griffin. It sounds like Griffin asked
to be credited properly because the old version
of "Evil Queens" never came back up. Instead, a new one was uploaded. This version is exactly
the same as the old one except it has "Based on the book
by Sean Griffin" hastily added
to the opening credits. In the span of a few days, the video graduated
from not acknowledging the book anywhere to using it
as a major source of "research," to finally being based on it. In the years since
this happened, Somerton has come up
with new lies about it to try to make himself
look better. On a recent live stream someone
brought up the old allegations
and his version of the story is that he always
had permission from Griffin before he even made
the video. - For the "Evil Queens" one,
like I said, that was based directly on
the book. That was word-for-word
from the book. And that's why before doing
the video I got permission from the author to do it. And--but I did have
full permission from him before making
the video. HBOMB: The tweet about how he
literally had to take the video down
and ask permission afterwards is still up.
Anyone can fact check this. I want to observe that if this
was an honest mistake, James had the opportunity
to be honest about it and chose to lie. Looks a bit like
a dishonest mistake to me. He also pretends
he credited Griffin in the description in
the first place and the person
who criticized him simply didn't notice. - In the original version
of "Evil Queens," the citation was in
the description of the video and not in the video itself, and that was the issue. They didn't read
the description. Um, and so I took down
the video and I put it back up. And somebody didn't see... Didn't acknowledge
the "based on the book by" in the comments so I took
the video down and put it back up with the author in
the opening titles. HBOMB: Again, his reply
to her where he acknowledged he hadn't and was going to
is still up. For reasons I don't understand, James likes to tell obvious lies
that make him look worse. This is why I felt it
was important to make this video documenting
the evidence. Currently the only version
of events people are likely to hear is his. Even if it's easily disproven,
who's disproving it? The person who noticed
the plagiarism in the first place was threatened
into non-existence by his fans, leaving his lies
as the last story standing. There's also another reason why
I'm not buying the, "It was based on a book,"
excuse. - And then there
was a video I made about Disney that was based directly on
a book that I got the permission from the author
to make the video. - Let's take that at face value. Okay, so this video
is based on this book. Based on it,
word-for-word. - That was word-for-word
from the book. HBOMB: This is a lie,
of course. He changed quotes so it sounds
like he's saying them, and altered a bunch
of other words to try to make
it sound different, but let's pretend
it was for a second. Is it possible he really
was just trying to adapt the book? James insists this is the case. But at this point, I'm not sure I can trust him
when he says things. The author of the thread
was just comparing the video to the one book she noticed
and mentions around the 53-minute mark he moves on to stuff not covered widely by
the book, like Mulan. - Disney's "Mulan" is--
however unintentionally-- a queer narrative. - First of all it's
a little bit weird that his video word-for-word
adapting the book stops adapting it
and starts winging it part way through.
But let me ask you this. Wouldn't it be really
fucking bad for him if it turned out he also stole the new stuff
from somewhere else? Yeah, it is bad!
Because he did! - Disney's "Mulan" is--
however unintentionally-- a queer narrative that explores
both gender identity and sexual orientation. <i>It is not--as it is often
simplistically described--</i> <i>a story about
a disempowered woman</i> <i>who becomes empowered
by masculinity.</i> - It's almost impressive
how hard he leaned into something he knew
was a lie people could check. James, what were you thinking? What was your plan here? The section on "Mulan"
is taken from an article at Shondaland by Asian-American
trans person Jes Tom about how the film speaks
to their experience with gender. This section
is almost word-for-word stolen from this article. <i>- Mulan as Ping progressively
works their way</i> <i>toward achieving manhood which
is defined by catching fish,</i> <i>carrying heavy things,
and of course wielding</i> <i>a big stick.</i> HBOMB: He makes
a few changes. Since this article
is one specific queer trans person writing about how they related
to the film, Somerton removes their
personal experiences and moves onto
the next sentence. <i>- First in "Honor to Us All,"</i> <i>the village women attempt
to sculpt Mulan into</i> <i>an ideal woman
and more specifically,</i> <i>an ideal wife.</i> <i>Mulan fails the test
of womanhood when her meeting</i> <i>with the Matchmaker
goes horribly awry.</i> HBOMB: Sometimes, though,
he keeps the stories in and makes a slight change. - Mulan's gender journey over
the course of the movie feels very familiar
to many trans and non-binary people. HBOMB: Jesus,
is he really doing this instead of just crediting the person
he got all this from? Well, yeah,
he does this repeatedly. <i>- Many trans men
in particular feel</i> <i>a kinship with Mulan
as the character prepares</i> <i>to convince everyone they're
a man--</i> practicing they're swagger, affecting their voice
to a lower register, and scrambling to settle on
a boy name. HBOMB: Somerton doesn't
just steal another article when he's done
stealing from a book. He deliberately changes it
to avoid acknowledging the original author
and their experiences so he can pretend he wrote it. Just for the record, I found an article
on another web site that quotes this article by Tom. Here's how quoting works, James. It's clear who wrote this, and even links to it as well
for the reader's convenience. Meanwhile, James just pasted
these words into his script and read it out loud
like he came up with it. <i>- As Mulan acknowledges
this failure in "Reflection,"</i> <i>she poses a question that most
trans people know intimately.</i> <i>"When will my reflection show
who I am inside?"</i> HBOMB: It goes without saying, you shouldn't just take stuff and reuse
it without crediting them. Write your own videos, man! Well, maybe he shouldn't
do that, either, because if you've been
paying attention-- which you have--you notice this
is the video where James said Gay Night was Lord Disney's
brilliant idea because he loves gays so much. Is this part stolen? Well, kind of, yeah. Griffin's book
correctly explains the Gay Night situation. The part where James talks
about this is in a brief section
that appears to be written by him, connecting the parts written
by Griffin and Jes Tom. We're graced with a whole minute
and 30 seconds actually written by James.
How nice of them. It seems like when writing
his own new section to connect the two writers
he stole, he wrote a half-remembered story
about Gay Nights he got from the same book. So the part of the video that
was technically his was full of obvious mistakes. This is--
well, it's not a good sign. There's a bit
of a theme developing. These guys don't know
their history. They're copying
it without really learning it. So when they try to be unique, they have nothing to say and none of what they say
is accurate. HBOMB: Around the time
he reuploaded "Evil Queens," acknowledging one of the people
he plagiarized, Somerton also unprivated
the Queer Baiting video with what seemed
to be no changes except an acknowledgment
at the top saying the stolen portion is based on
"The Celluloid Closet" and its documentary counterpart. Before the video went down the description didn't look
like this. It just had a special thanks
hidden at the bottom, so while it was down
he'd changed it. Looks like he settled
on using "based on" as an excuse for stealing things
when he's caught. I guess we should take a look
at exactly how "based on" it is. <i>[Masakazu Sugimori's
"It Can't End Here"]</i> "The Celluloid Closet"
is a documentary about the portrayal
of homosexuality across the history of Hollywood
with plenty of interviews with film historians,
writers, directors,
and actors. The structure and narrative
is based on the book of the same name by Vito Russo
who passed away from complications
of AIDS before the documentary could be made. The first 30 minutes
of "Unrequited" is just "The Celluloid Closet." James iilluminaughtii'd it. He downloaded a copy
of the documentary, loosely paraphrased it, and as footage for the video
he uses the same clips the documentary used
of the movies it talked about. He also reuses
the more pivotal interviews, adding his own titles so
it looks like he got them from somewhere else. James wants to pretend to be a scholar of film history when in fact he watched
a documentary and is now pretending it's his. He never credits the documentary
as a source when he's doing this. He even pulls my favorite trick which I've come to call the Blair Classic. He quotes film historian
Richard Dyer. [speech played at rapid speed] HBOMB: Um, it's actually
Richard Dyer. Would you like
to know how I know that? <i>- Your ideas about who you are
don't just come from inside you.</i> <i>They come from the culture.</i> <i>And in this culture they come
especially from the movies.</i> HBOMB: He has his own special
spin on this trick, too. - The lesbian experience
isn't really expressed in the film at all
and even Shirley MacLaine has gone on record in 1996
saying William Wyler-- the director--
never even spoke <i>to her about
the lesbian elements.</i> HBOMB: What he's neglecting
to mention is the place MacLaine "went on record in 1996"
is "The Celluloid Closet." <i>SHIRLEY: At the time that
we made the picture,</i> <i>there were not real discussions
about homosexuality.</i> None of us were really aware. - James is dimly aware
what he's doing is shit so he's taking baby steps
to avoid it without solving
the actual problem. He's remaking a documentary
using their ideas and footage. <i>JAMES: Gore Vidal--
screenwriter on the film--</i> <i>said this in 1996--</i> <i>GORE: Let's say these two guys
when they were 15, 16</i> <i>when they last saw each other,</i> they had been lovers
and now they're meeting again and the Roman wants
to start it up-- HBOMB: He's flipped the footage
and added weird filters to try to avoid triggering
the YouTube bots, which correctly would flag
this video as just large chunks
of a copyrighted documentary. I doubt he's even seen many of the films he's talking
about here. He's just showing clips
from the documentary, quoting the documentary, or straight up repeating what
it said himself. <i>JAMES: Homosexuality is a thing,
it does exist,</i> <i>but it's not something good
moral people should talk about.</i> <i>- Homosexuality was
finally being talked about</i> <i>on the screen.</i> <i>But only as something nice
people didn't talk about.</i> HBOMB: I know a lot
of documentaries are based on books but not
a lot of them are based on other documentaries
someone already made, James. "Celluloid Closet" ends
with a heartfelt acknowledgment of Vito Russo--
the book's late author. James' video--which takes pains
to tell you was written, filmed, and edited by James Somerton-- also ends by saying it
is in memory of Vito Russo. This one line of text
is the only acknowledgment of Russo or the documentary
in this entire fucking video. For those keeping track, this is the second gay writer and activist who tragically
passed away of AIDS in 1990 whose words
James has passed off as his own. There were obviously comments on
the video pointing out he's just remade a documentary
for 30 minutes and James' reply
was to insist it was impossible not
to plagiarize "The Celluloid Closet" because
it's such a good history lesson. This is his main defense
when this comes up. Of course it's derivative. It's the only place I could get information on the topic, which implies James
has not engaged with the last 65 years
of writing about gay people in the film industry. He also claims
he hasn't simply posted it as his own even though
he never acknowledged the documentary until someone
caught him and then had to sneak one into
the description. If he wanted to pay respect
to his main source he could have said,
"in this documentary," instead of "in 1996,"
but I won't say where! In this reply he says something
very funny. He insists he expanded on some
of the ideas in this section, implying he did some
of his own work. One thing did stick out
to me as new. The documentary covers
"Rebel Without A Cause" but not for very long. When James talks about it, he goes on for longer in ways
that aren't paraphrasing the documentary for once. So this must be the new section. All that original work
that proves he didn't just rip off a documentary. Wouldn't it be really
fucking funny if it turned out he stole
this part, too? Oh, you bet your ass he did! <i>JAMES: Dean's character Jim</i> <i>is a teenager kicking
against authority</i> <i>and parental neglect who becomes
both friend and fascination</i> <i>to Mineo's Plato--
a lonely younger kid.</i> HBOMB: Despite being "based on"
an existing documentary, Somerton takes a break in
the middle to steal from someone else. He stole Peter Howell's article
on "Rebel" word-for-word, not even trying to cover it up with find-and-replacing
text this time. <i>JAMES: If you don't pick up
on that from the photo</i> <i>of hunky Alan Ladd that Plato
has taped inside of his locker</i> <i>or the looks of adoration
he gives Jim,</i> <i>it becomes abundantly clear when
he makes a coded declaration</i> <i>of love to Jim late
in the film.</i> HBOMB: "It's not like
I lifted it and posted it as my own,"
my foot. He changes one thing--
the current date. <i>JAMES: Plato is obviously gay
although it's easier</i> <i>to say that in 2020 than
it was in 1955.</i> - Peter Howell--
whose shit he jacked-- is not acknowledged in the video
or the description or anywhere else
and never has been. Like with Jes Tom, this section
was never caught until now so he hasn't had the chance
to go back and pretend it's "based on" it. It starts to feel like Somerton is just
an extremely cynical loser with a business degree who--
like Blair-- and around the same time, even-- saw the success of video essays
and decided to half ass his way into them
by stealing shit. This is on the whole how
business people see creativity. They don't respect it.
It doesn't matter. It's beneath them. So they can take it and say it's theirs
if they want. But at this point my interest
was fully peak weed (piqued). I was just looking
at the original allegations to see if they were true
to check for myself, but even in just looking
at those two, I found two more places
he stole from that other people
hadn't even found yet. And if it was that easy
to find more, how deep does
this rabbit hole go? These videos were made over
two years ago. Did James learn his lesson from being repeatedly
caught plagiarizing and at least stop? Well, his next video--
"Society and Queer Horror--" has a script supervisor in
the opening credits, and this person would go on
to be his co-writer for many future videos. That doesn't necessarily mean
the videos are better, though. I mean, first of all, that's not how
you spell supervisor. So write that down,
but he even has another writer now
so surely-- surely he started making
his own original videos and things got better. Well, things got much,
much worse. <i>[Masakazu Sugimori's "It Can't
End Here" plays terribly warped]</i> "Society and Queer Horror--"
or as the video calls itself, "Deep Cuts: Society
and Queer Horror--" steals so many words
from so many writers, it genuinely makes me think
I've traveled to an alternate dimension
where plagiarism is fine! <i>JAMES: More girls end up
in the same school</i> <i>and find each other essentially
by cruising the hallways.</i> Given Carrie's
simultaneous status as horror film victim
and monster alongside the narrative concerning
her burgeoning sexuality and attraction to boys-- or when Ripley asserts authority in the team after Dallas
is caught by the alien, <i>Ash the male robot
feels threatened</i> <i>and attempts
to dominate Ripley,</i> <i>regaining his masculinity.</i> It's fun, messy, mean, sad, campy, and self-aware. That's the key variable that
makes "Hellraiser" so special. HBOMB: I can't show you
how messed up this is without ruining
this video's run time even more than I already have, so let's use visuals. Here's a transcript of all
the words James says in this hour
and 25-minute long video, and here's all the parts that
are plagiarized. Each author's name is in
a different color for convenience. This video steals
roughly 10,000 words from 18 different places, and this is just
the stuff I found. There could be more! A truly staggering portion
of this video is James staring into
his prompter, reading words he got by Googling
"movie name" "gay." I wish I could show you
everything he copied but we'd be here forever. This is just one video
and he makes so many of these! And now we know how! But Somerton thinks
he's figured out a loophole. It's a familiar spin on
an old classic. .It opens with a horror-themed
credit sequence, claims the video is based on
the works of, and briefly shows
a bunch of names. These are some
of the people he plagiarized. So if any of his plagiarism
is noticed, he can say, "No, I name dropped them
in the opening for literally one second
so it's fine! This is the stupidest thing
I've ever-- anyone watching this video would assume this is Somerton showing his sources or people whose work
he read while writing the video, not people whose writing
is the video. Based on the works
of Colin Arason. What does this mean? There's no way of knowing
what Colin's contribution to the video was. Does this mean he inspired
a section? That he gets quoted? That James read him
and used some of those ideas? This mention means
21 minutes into the video, the next five full minutes
are word-for-word copied from an essay he wrote. <i>JAMES: Benshoff recognizes
"Hellraiser"</i> <i>for some of
its visual characteristics</i> <i>but comes to the conclusion
that too often</i> <i>the representation
of Barker's monster queers</i> <i>seems similar to those produced
by right-wing ideologues.</i> HBOMB: I don't think I need
to tell you, this is just plagiarism with an even stranger excuse
than normal. Somerton never tells you when
he's just reading other people's word because then
people would know he didn't write anything. He's hidden their name
at the beginning and in the end credits
at the very bottom after a long list of patrons, so he can make a video out
of other people's words without ever saying when
he's actually doing it. Four minutes is just Andrew
Park's article about the film, "The Craft" with slight changes
to try to hide it and his usual LGBT/queer
word-swapping. <i>JAMES: The film follows
the story of four teenage girls</i> <i>who each grow up
feeling different</i> <i>in one way or another.</i> <i>Special and above the fray
of their peers</i> <i>or rejected by them entirely.</i> As so many queer teens
have experienced. <i>The most memorable character
by all accounts</i> <i>is Nancy and she's already out
as a witch,</i> <i>openly practicing the craft.</i> <i>She wears goth lipstick
and black,</i> <i>laced-up Stevie Nicks boots.</i> <i>She has a sexual history</i> <i>and a noose hanging in
her locker.</i> <i>Bonnie is a girl
with self-image issues</i> <i>due to scars that cover
her arms and back.</i> HBOMB: Swapping "back"
and "arms" to "arms" and "back"
doesn't work. We can still tell. <i>JAMES: Chris--your typical
teenage movie football jock--</i> <i>persists in making bullying
comments about</i> <i>the three spiritual deviants
who he calls</i> the Bitches of Eastwick. Because he's just so clever. HBOMB: Wow, what
a great addition, Jimmy. You really spiced up
that anecdote. Made it your own.
Put your fuckin' spin on it. Oh, well,
this is a bit skeevy, but at least Park's name
is in the credits so people can at least see
his name and check him ou-- No, he's not in the credits. Half the people James
plagiarized in this video didn't make it in.
He forgot. This whole "it wasn't
plagiarism, "I said it was based on them
at the start" excuse really doesn't work
when you forget to put half their
fucking names in. My personal theory
is James came up with this phony excuse during
the "Evil Queens" fiasco when he was already making
this video so when he made this list
he'd already forgotten half the people he plagiarized. The segment about "Aliens"
is completely taken from Bart Bishop's essay, "Queering James Cameron's
Aliens." <i>JAMES: "Aliens"
is curiously progressive</i> <i>in its sexual politics overall,</i> <i>especially
for a movie released during</i> <i>the Reagan years.</i> <i>Take for instance the exchange</i> <i>between Hudson and Frost.</i> This isn't just queer behavior
being portrayed in a positive manner but one
of the many ways that the movie obfuscates gender
and supports a pansexual ethos. HBOMB: My favorite part
is when he reuses an extremely long quote
from author David Greven along with Bishop's exact commentary
on it with a very slight change. JAMES: David Greven in "Demeter
and Persephone in Space" observes, "Bishop,
the cyborg re-- <i>[speech played at rapid speed]</i> Greven further suggest that
the aliens-- and especially the Alien Queen-- represent a cis-gendered, heteronormative status quo
that resents the changing times. <i>[speech played at rapid speed]</i> <i>So while Greven suggests that
the conservative Alien Queen</i> <i>has contempt
for the queer family dynamic,</i> <i>the metaphor could go
even further.</i> Cameron creates
a future where gender norms have all but disappeared. HBOMB: He changed
"I'd go even further," to, "the metaphor could go
even further," suggesting he
is at least uncomfortable using someone else's words
in first person. The copying of Bishop's
"Aliens" essay was eventually pointed out on
his web site. Bishop responded calling
this very strange. Bishop also made a Facebook post
about being plagiarized, +which is disheartening to read. This situation
demonstrates perfectly the way respect and social status factor
into stealing. James fundamentally doesn't
respect the people he's copying. He knows to quote people
when they're well-known but when he thinks he can
get away with it, he doesn't. A lot of queer analysis
is sadly unrecognized and James exploited
this obscurity for clout and hid a little excuse
where people will miss it, but only for about half of them. As with several
previous authors, Bishop was not credited. However, the video's credits
do contain David Greven-- one of the authors
Bishop quoted. At first I thought Greven
was in the credits because he quotes him by name
in this section But no, he's in here because
he also stole from Greven. <i>JAMES: In terms as resonant
as they were phobic,</i> <i>Scream was a cry of despair over
an apparent amorality</i> <i>in the millennial
or late Gen X youth,</i> especially in
the male population. <i>The homoeroticism
of the Billy-Stu relationship--</i> <i>which the film develops into
an all-but-explicit</i> <i>queer love affair--</i> shows both the unpredictable,
anarchic, bewildering behavior
of the generation and the shifts in male gender
roles synonymous with it. HBOMB: By complete coincidence, the competent writers
he's plagiarizing are familiar
with each other's work and sometimes even quote
each other. Greven doesn't actually come up
by name when James reads his words out loud for five
and a half fucking minutes. The authors James steals
only get their name mentioned in the video if someone else he
was stealing happened to mention them!
I'm losing my fucking mind! When he quotes Bishop
quoting Greven, he puts this text up like
he's quoting them. However, like iilluminaughtii, he doesn't list
the source in any useful way. This is because he doesn't know
the source. He got it from this article, and he can't list the article
as a source because he doesn't want you checking
and finding out what he's done. It's the same reason he
didn't film himself next to "Evil Queens."
He'd be giving the game away. Ironically, this is how
the Bishop plagiarism was discovered in
the first place. Someone was trying to find
the source of one of these quotes and Googled it
and discovered the whole segment was a quote. Somerton's videos
are anti-educational. They go out of their way
to hide where they come from or where to learn more. But this gives me an idea
for a hot new game. Go to a random section
of Somerton's video and just Google
the words he's saying. Okay, I'm gonna literally click
on a random part of the video right now. I'm gonna hold my mouse up
to the microphone so you can hear it.
[mouse clicks] <i>JAMES: Dedicates
an entire subplot</i> <i>to romance between Richie
and Eddie.</i> HBOMB: Okay.
[keyboard clacking] And here we go.
One result. Well, that was easy! <i>JAMES: "It" by Stephen King
was published in 1986</i> <i>and has made
a lasting cultural impression.</i> <i>The novel inspired a miniseries,
two movies,</i> and ruined clowns
for generations of children. And adults, frankly. HBOMB: Ha ha, good one. This one is an analysis of Stephen King's "It"
by Rachel Brands. He reads this article for about
four and a half minutes. And Brands is one of many people
whose name didn't make it into his dumb fucking credits. I reached out to Brands about
her essay being used in this manner
and she told me she'd never been asked permission
to use it but she already knew
it happened. You see, she was a fan
of Somerton's work and even supported him
financially on Patreon so she saw this video
as soon as it went out and realized it was copying her. This is so fucked up. A queer writer who
supported James financially because she thought he
was making original work discovered she was funding
the plagiarism of work like hers,
including literally hers. Brands was never paid by the web site she wrote
this essay for since at the time she was writing
for exposure, which she definitely didn't get
when James didn't even fucking credit her! Somerton makes a lot
of money doing this. Tens of thousands of dollars
in Patreon income, ad revenue,
his many sponsorships, and another massive payday
we haven't even gotten to yet. Brands has never
been compensated for her contribution
to James' financial success and she's not the only person
James plagiarized in the section on Stephen King's
"It" alone. After reading Brands without
crediting her for almost five minutes, suddenly he starts saying
new words. - Childhood trauma looms under
the skin of the Losers Club well into adulthood. HBOMB: Wow, did James write part
of his video all by himself? [mouse clicks]
Nope! [laughs] It's from "The Hollywood
Reporter!" We've seen this song
and dance before. It goes on for ages. I'm just gonna highlight one of the parts he changed because it's so funny. - Like every person on
the planet, the Losers remain trapped in
their trauma. They've just found new ways
to cope. <i>Richie ended up telling jokes</i> <i>and becoming rich
and successful...</i> But always alone. HBOMB: Somerton specifically
removed mention of a character finding success
using other people's material. That probably hit a bit
too close to home, huh? - The plagiarism thing,
I don't-- I'm not--that's not--
it's not a thing. HBOMB: After several minutes of stealing Joelle Monique's
article, the video still has a bunch
of run time left to talk about "It." - It is the hate
that's unnatural. The hate that is evil. [keyboard clacking]
HBOMB: Oh, for fu-- <i>JAMES: When we get into the head
of Don Hagarty--</i> <i>Adrian's boyfriend--</i> <i>and the author lets
the reader know him...</i> He's sympathetic. He's smart and loving. He also sees the town
for what it is-- sees its evil clearly
and wants to leave it. HBOMB: The entire 12-minute-long
"It" section is copied from three different
articles back to back to back, and only one
of the three authors is even in these shitty credits. Somerton didn't thank Brands
or Monique for the articles about
Stephen King's "It" he stole for money. He did, however, take
the opportunity to thank Stephen King! I love it when small
indie writers finally get the acknowledgment
they deserve. It boggles my tiny mind just
how much every tiny thing is stolen in this video. He really briefly, like,
for 30 seconds discusses the appeal of witchcraft
to queer people and he steals an article
for that, too! <i>JAMES: Witchcraft,
on the other hand,</i> <i>offered a spiritual space where
queer people could step into</i> <i>their personal power
and explore otherness</i> <i>without shame, guilt, or fear.</i> Furthermore, the idea
of a coven creates a space for community. HBOMB: Based on the works
of whoever wrote this sentence. Of the 18 authors
I found him stealing from, only nine of them make it into
the opening or closing "based on" credits. So at least half the people
he copied didn't even get a bullshit credit,
and that's just what I found. I'm pretty sure I missed some. Maybe he reworded
some parts better than others so it's harder
to check. But after seeing how much shit
he stole for this video, I have no doubt the blank spaces
are just someone else I missed. After this video came out
I think he decided he'd gotten away with
it so he stopped using the "based on
the works of" excuse and just went right back
to stealing shit. <i>[Masakazu Sugimori's "It Can't
End Here" plays terribly warped]</i> Here's one of his next videos: "Codebreakers: Queer film theory
(and why it matters)." This videos opening credits
are just James and the description thanks
no one but it's still full
of plagiarism. Zink Hero of YouTube loved
this line by Somerton so much! What am I willing
to bet he stole this line, too? Place your bets... Directly into my pocket because
yeah, obviously, you fucking piece of shit! - It also bears mentioning
that if a filmmaker doesn't choose
to queer history, that doesn't mean they're
telling history like it was. It just means they're
straighting history. Replacing the gay agenda
with a straight agenda does not mean that there's
no agenda. Somerton's fans praise him
for the quality of his writing, unaware it's not his. Since the true author's names
have been erased from the story, they are prevented
from learning who they actually enjoyed
and being able to go read more. I find this genuinely sad. I know how!
At one point he starts explaining basic film theory. Not basic by nerd standards. I mean, it's like he's
just reading Wikipedia. Actually... Not like. - Today there are many different
schools of film theory. So let's talk about them. The structuralist film theory
emphasizes how films convey meaning through the use
of codes and conventions, not dissimilar to
the way languages are used to construct meaning
in communication. An example of this
is understanding how the simple combination
of shots can create an additional idea. The blank expression on
a person's face, an appetizing meal, and then back
to the person's face. While nothing in this sequence
literally expresses hunger or desire, the juxtaposition
of the images convey that meaning to the audience. Marxist film theory is one
of the oldest forms of film theory. Sergei Eisenstein
and many other Soviet filmmakers in the 1920s expressed ideas
of Marxism through film. In fact, the Hegelian dialectic
was considered best displayed in film editing through
the development of the montage--
a Russian invention. Eisentein's solution
was to shun narrative structure by eliminating
the individual protagonist in favor
of telling stories where the action is moved by
a group and the story is told through a clash of one image against
the next, whether in composition, motion,
or idea. Formalist film theory
is a theory of film study that is focused on the formal
or technical elements of a film, i.e. the lighting,
scoring, sounds, set design, use of color, shot composition,
and editing. It's a major theory
of film study today. Formalism at its most
general considers the synthesis or lack of synthesis
of the multiple elements of film production
and the effects-- emotional and intellectual
of that synthesis and of the individual elements. For example, let's take
the single element of editing. A formalist might study how
standard Hollywood continuity editing creates
a more comforting effect and non-continuity
or jump cut editing might become more disconcerting
or volatile. - Cringe.
There's no other word for it. This makes me cringe.
It's embarrassing. It speaks volumes
what James thinks of video essays as a format. To him, reading Wikipedia
is equivalent to what everyone else is doing. I don't know why you
would make videos like this unless you were just in it
for the money. Where's the joy
of doing your own research, your own learning, and getting to share it
in your own way? These videos are a cash grab with absolutely zero
original thought or soul. I didn't think YouTube videos
could have souls but now I've experienced ones
that don't. The end credits don't thank any
of the people or wikis who wrote this video. Just James
and his co-writer Nick. Oh, and he thanks all
his patrons who give him thousands
of dollars to read Wikipedia to them without telling them. And this puts us onto
a related problem with his videos. This might be obvious but James is a little bit lazy. In "Codebreakers" in between
the rest of the stealing, he brings up the potential
gay overtones in "Legend of Korra"
between Prince Wu and Mako. <i>JAMES: Mako's
will-they-won't-they</i> <i>with Prince Wu--</i> HBOMB: But I thought the clips from "Avatar" looked
a bit blurry for a video from 2020 when much higher quality sources
were available. Did he just Google an old AMV
shipping these two characters and download it
and slap it in here? Nah, that would be ridi--
yes, of course he did. It was this one.
It took two minutes to find. He just added black bars
to the top and bottom because he's trying
to pretend his shit is cinema. This is probably
the laziest moment in video essay history. He's downloading
other people's videos to use as backing
for a voice over he probably didn't write about
characters whose names he can't pronounce. It's like staring into
a low bit rate abyss. But it doesn't stare back. James stares back. The phrase "by James Somerton"
is doing so much heavy lifting he probably stole that
from fucking Atlas. There's a section where
he just reads the Stanford Encyclopedia
of Philosophy's explanation of what homosexuality is. <i>JAMES: As has been
frequently noted--</i> [speech played at rapid speed] HBOMB: He looked up
homosexuality in an encyclopedia and pasted
it into his fucking script! Oh, my God! The lack of effort
is a running theme. James doesn't really care what
he's saying and is just Googling
"movie name" "gay" so the quality of some
of the places he's copying are not very good. His coverage of "Alien 3" in "Society and Queer Horror--" yeah, there's more people
I didn't show you yet-- is taken from, uh,
the "Cracked" article "Five Terrible Movies
With Awesome Hidden Meanings." People sometimes
compliment James for his fancy opening titles
with 3D movement and graphics but he just bought these.
Anyone can. Look, here's the place
he got "Society and Queer Horror's" opening. I bought it.
Now it's mine. Whee. The opening of "Evil Queens--" the highest production
value part of the whole affair
is just more stuff he bought. I'm not criticizing him here. This is normal and fine. He buys the fancy-looking bits
and gets the rest from an AMV. Presumably he hired a co-writer
so he could stop pretending he does any, but that makes
the fact they're still full of plagiarism
even more shocking. Kat looked at
his video about Jeffrey Dahmer and found about five places
he plagiarized without even checking too hard. JAMES: Thus the term
"homosexual overkill" served to normalize heterosexuality, even heterosexual
serial killers while pathologizing
homosexuality. HBOMB: Look how much effort
he put into rewriting the thing he stole to hide it. His dedication to not coming up
with his own ideas is almost creepy. This video
was a couple months old when I started looking
into James. This is recent
and I can't believe how much he's still stealing. The first words in
the fucking video are stole. - We all like true crime. It's very suddenly become one
of the most engaging forms of contemporary entertainment. HBOMB: He's really extruding
the original words here. He's put so much work
into changing it, it might have been easier
to write something from scratch. But this is James
we're talking about. He stops putting in the effort
after the first few sentences. <i>JAMES: Again, both Bundy
and Dahmer</i> <i>were serial killers who tortured
and murdered dozens</i> <i>of people whose families
are still alive</i> <i>and can see these tweets
and posts on TikTok.</i> HBOMB: He actually copies
the previous section of the article right before
but Kat asked me before I play this part to ask you
to pay specific attention to the change he makes here. - There is a thirst
for Dahmer made apparent on TikTok
and Twitter with hordes of white women droning
over how attractive he is. HBOMB: This change is part
of a running theme throughout Somerton's work. Um, misogyny? <i>[Masakazu Sugimori's
"It Can't End Here"]</i> [booming] In the parts of James' videos that he actually writes himself
or rewrites after stealing, he really doesn't like women. I didn't wanna open this can
of worms, but the thesis of the stuff
he stole for this video gets completely fucked up by his rants about women
being attracted to serial killers. He argues women
are only attracted to Dahmer because he killed gay men
and not women, which makes it easier for them
to ignore the brutality of his crimes,
and if he'd killed women, they wouldn't be so thirsty. <i>JAMES: Despite his cannibalism,</i> <i>despite the decades-long erasure
of his victims,</i> these women
and mostly teenage girls are swooning over him. And why not? To our knowledge Dahmer never killed any teenage girls
or any women at all so there's a level
of disconnection. HBOMB: Women are attracted
to the wrong serial killer. How terrible. But he couldn't stop himself from also complaining
about women being into Ted Bundy
who did murder women. He goes off script from the article
he's stealing for that section to complain about it even more. JAMES: Navigating the ethics
of true crime content is tricky. [speech played at rapid speed] A whole new generation
of girls fell head over heels
for the infamous killer, which was a grim remake
in itself of the real life
Ted Bundy trial. He had fan girls defending him
in the press and even begging to marry him. Netflix's social media team
actually begged viewers to stop stanning Bundy. HBOMB: He added a whole new bit
fantasizing about millennial girls' attraction
to a serial killer when, like, no, they were attracted
to Zac Efron, the famously attractive
celebrity actor. This was a stupid tangent
to begin with but now his own video
contains examples of women fancying
a serial killer who killed women so his rant
about women loving Dahmer because he didn't kill women
makes no sense Really, he just wanted an excuse
to complain women see their gay friends as disposable. - Because unfortunately
to this day many women still see gay men
as nothing more than a fancy accessory, especially teenage girls
who lust for the perfect gay best friend. A boy whose sex life
is secret so you never have
to hear about it, but he's always there
to tell you if your boyfriend's being
a jerk. Gay men and boys as a purse
or a fancy iPhone case. Something to show off but
ultimately something disposable. HBOMB: What teenage girl
did this to you in high school, James? And why are you inserting
fan fiction about her into an article you stole instead
of going to therapy? This is the only new stuff
he wrote. The rest is stolen.
This is all he has to say. What the fuck
is wrong with this guy? These insecurities affect how
he talks about gay women. The videos
are continuously punctuated with tangents about how lesbians
have it easier than gay men. In one video he claims
gay women historically saw less legal persecution
and his example is made up. - And if you're wondering
why this section is so man-centric, this is because
the vast majority of legal persecution
of early queers was focused on men. In the legal case
of Radcyffe Hall, she in her book "The Well
of Loneliness" depicted World War I
ambulance drivers as being primarily lesbians. English courts were really
not pleased with this depiction, but women who love women
was such an uncomfortable topic for them that they
threw her case out of the courts and just let her
carry on in her happy life. HBOMB: Over here in reality, Radclyffe Hall was found guilty
of obscenity and all copies of her book
were ordered destroyed. He's rewriting history
to pretend women had it better. This approach
to female queers reaches a territory where he doesn't even accept other
people's identities if he has a bone to pick. In one video while trying
to argue queer women have it better than men
in Hollywood, he misgenders two show runners. JAMES: So why don't gay men get to represent themselves
in media? At least media that's widely
accepted by the mainstream. Queer women get
to represent themselves at least sometimes. <i>Look at animated hits
like "Steven Universe"</i> <i>or "She-Ra and the Princesses
of Power."</i> HBOMB: ND Stevenson
and Rebecca Sugar are trans masculine
and non-binary respectively, but for the purposes
of James' point, they count as women, and if he really doesn't
like something, he just assumes
a straight woman did it. <i>JAMES: The only way I
can possibly account</i> <i>for anyone saying that this
is straight is a bunch of women</i> <i>and girls who are experiencing
the most willful ignorance</i> <i>I've ever seen.</i> HBOMB: His "Yuri on Ice" video
just guesses anyone who interprets
the characters not being gay must be
a dumb ass woman. He's shockingly committed
to this principle. In a video that just came out
he claims he still gets comments on that video
from straight women denying the gay anime is gay. - Then again that video still
gets comments from usually straight women--
no hating, but still-- who incessantly deny that
there's any queerness coded or otherwise present
in that series. HBOMB: James, how do you know
they're straight or women? Did they all say so
in their comment? If you don't like something
so you assume a woman wrote it, you're doing misogyny. There really isn't another word
for this It's pretty straightforward. Also I just went through
the last year of comments on that video and none exist that make
this accusation. He's lying. He just made up
straight women to get mad at. As arbiter of gender, James also gets
to decide who's queer and who isn't. I don't know who gave him
this power, but it means he has a lot
of fascinating opinions about "Love, Simon." The film is based on a book by Becky Albertalli-- a bisexual woman who
was not public about her sexuality when
the book was published. Albertalli
was subsequently harassed for years,
accused of writing a book about being gay without
being queer herself and being a straight woman
profiting off the queer community. In 2020 she came
out publicly with a quite powerful essay
about how she was doing it specifically because
of this type of shit. This event hopefully serves
as a lesson not to make assumptions
of people's sexuality and then write criticism based
on those assumptions. But James didn't get the memo. In 2022 he managed to write
a video complaining that many stories
about gay people are written by straight women
and used "Love, Simon" as the only example. - Because their life experiences
did not match the experiences about gayness set
by straight women with a kawaii idea
of two gay people. <i>You have mass consumption media
which takes gay emotions</i> <i>and removes gay experiences,</i> <i>leaving a husk of empty gestures</i> <i>and unanswered questions</i> <i>which feels more like</i> <i>a gambling addiction than</i> <i>even implied representation.</i> HBOMB: James was years late
to the party and still accused
the openly-bi author of being a straight pandering
to the gays. I'd say I wonder
what Becky Albertalli thinks about this but I know
what she thinks because she left
a comment on his video explaining how shitty
it feels getting lumped in with the straights yet again
years after coming out specifically after being treated
poorly by people like James. When this happened this
is how he complained to his fan Discord about her. "She isn't happy
I included her in "the straight female
authors section. But I never said she
was straight." James is still sore about
this mild push back. He now refuses to acknowledge
"Love, Simon" by name, referring
to some unspecified incident. - This is compounded through
several other high profile instances
of gay media, specifically one
which made waves in 2018 but that I will
not explicitly mention for reasons.
If you know, you know. HBOMB: Someone asked what
he meant by this in the Discord and he clarified he meant
"Love, Simon," and in true James fashion
made up a story where he didn't
do anything wrong. He simply mentioned
he wasn't its biggest fan and the author ripped into him
on Twitter and stuff. As far as I can tell
Becky never tweeted anything or said anything anywhere
about him except his comments section. He's having to twist
the story pretty hard to seem like he didn't do
a shitty thing here. He called a bi author a straight
with kawaii ideas about gay people,
didn't think she would see it, and she criticized him
for doing it. So this is the non-stolen work. The stuff he writes himself. Open bitterness about women,
lies, and grievances over being
criticized for this. I'm gonna regret saying it
but he should have stuck to the plagiarism. He complained on Twitter
about being criticized for being so harsh on the women
who thirsted after Dahmer, not realizing he
was actually being criticized for a pattern of behavior. These criticisms
were valid already but I would like to supply
the context that he stole the words he
is saying here and reworded them
to be more mad at women specifically. James, what the fuck
are you doing? I am trying to maintain focus
for once in a video and stick to the plagiarism
but I just can't get away from how this guy fucking sucks. James doesn't
get caught stealing as often as he should do because
he's cultivated an audience of younger queer people
who don't read the kinds of stuff he's stealing from
and don't recognize open misogyny as long
as it's qualified as "white" women. But on the rare occasion
that he is caught, his solution is to private
or delete the video and reupload
a slightly changed version and hope no one digs into this extremely
suspicious behavior. For example... <i>[Akemi Kimura's
"There's No Sleeping Tonight"]</i> While I was doing
preliminary research late last year, a funny thing happened. Somerton's YouTube
community page was wiped. Hundreds of posts
from over several years disappeared overnight. At this point I'd spoken
to a few of the writers Somerton
had stolen from and I wondered if maybe one
of them had publicly accused him but after doing
some more looking it turned out, no, someone else
had independently noticed they'd been plagiarized because
there was still more! Seldomusings--a Wordpress blog-- had made
a post accusing Somerton of plagiarizing a blog post
about "Attack on Titan" from 2013,
and then I thought, "Wait. "Doesn't Somerton have a video
from September 2022 called, like, 'Attack on Titan and
the Death of Media Literacy?" Well, he did. Finding a link,
it was suddenly set to private. Over a million and a half views
had been wiped from his channel. Huh. I already had a copy downloaded
because, well, Somerton has deleted
inconvenient videos before and I figured something
like this would happen again. I'd been going through
his videos chronologically so I hadn't got to that one yet
but what's kind of funny is I know I would have noticed
this plagiarism myself if I had. That blog post
has gone viral multiple times. It's one of the main sources
for western awareness of "Attack on Titan's" author's
right-wing views. If you're deep
on anime fascism discourse, this is a classic post. I've seen it linked
and referenced dozens of times over the years. It would make sense to point
to this post if you were discussing
the political implications of "Attack on Titan," or you could even quote it and cite it as a source. Well, wouldn't you know it? Somerton doesn't link the post or quote it anywhere or acknowledge its existence. He just copies it. - This outrage should come as no surprise knowing the history between Japan
and Korea, but that is exactly what most
people may not be aware of. <i>Korea was occupied by Japan
from 1910 to 1945--</i> [speech played at rapid speed] HBOMB: James doesn't acknowledge
the writing he's stealing at all though he does find the time
to make a long opening sequence. "James Somerton presents, "directed & edited
by James Somerton, written by Nick Herrgott
and James Somerton." This site was active briefly
in 2013 with a post in 2016 clarifying
the blog was done. They came back six years later to talk about James stealing
their work. HBOMB: Somerton saw the author
call him a plagiarist and panicked and hid the video,
deleted all his community posts so there was nowhere
to leave a comment asking what happened this time. He was preparing
for his plagiarism to go public and locking everything down. If what Somerton was doing
was a defensible artistic choice he'd be defending it,
wouldn't he? He'd say,
"This is a normal thing to do and I'm going
to keep doing it." Instead, he does it secretly
and hides the videos when people notice. It's clear he knows what
he's doing is wrong and would just rather
keep stealing than actually do any work. But while we're talking about
the "Attack on Titan" video, you know he didn't
just steal one thing. The video's an hour long. No self-respecting
marketing expert would do all that work himself. In this video
and only this video, he quotes several YouTubers, like he has their text on
the screen and he reads it out, and he would never normally
do that. He would just steal their words and pretend he came up
with them, which means he must be stealing
from someone who quoted them. And, uh, yeah! - For a long time anime fans
had no way of knowing what
their favorite writers and artists even looked like, let alone what
they thought about the world. HBOMB: Three and a half minutes
of this video comes from Gita Jackson
at Vice Motherboard. And, yeah,
when he quotes YouTubers, he's actually quoting
Jackson quoting them. I can't believe
I fucking called it. - YouTuber Geoff Thew argues: HBOMB: Now, this isn't just
an article quoting someone. Jackson reached out
to Geoff for his opinion on this topic. There's no where
else James could have got this quote, and this time he really fucked
it up. At one point he uses
a quote Jackson got from historian
and scholar Andrea Horbinski but remember how he sometimes
find-and-replaces words like gay or trans to queer
or LGBT to hide it? He accidentally did that
to the quote. - As they put it: - This is the most amateur shit
I've ever seen. This is sub high school level
plagiarism hiding. You don't find and replace text
in the quotes, James! People in Somerton's official
Discord server were asking what happened
to the video. On January the first this year
he said the video was coming back up that day
and that it had to come down because of a missing source. That's a very strange way
of saying someone noticed me plagiarizing them
and criticized me for it and I deleted
fucking everything. The new version he uploaded
is a minute shorter. He just cut out the sections
where he directly read the blog post. The video is even more stilted and strangely written
than normal. The point Somerton was trying
to make here was so important he was willing to steal it
from someone else. Now that point is missing
and the surrounding conversation makes no sense. The new version opens saying
the original had a citation error,
but if that was the problem, why didn't he add
a citation instead of deleting
the section completely? Well, one reason might be
he wants the credit for himself, but the other is if he added
their name now, anyone who checked would see
the author's new post saying he plagiarized them. Somerton's only way out
is to hide it and hope no one notices. He doesn't want
to stop stealing. He just wants
to not get caught doing it. If he thinks he can get away with keeping something in,
he does. The three minutes
of the video written completely by Gita Jackson are still in
the new version completely unchanged. As of recording this video, no one else seems
to have noticed this yet but if anyone does
he'll doubtless delete the video and reupload
a new version with that piece missing, too,
and call it a day. James has done this repeatedly
in the past. Several other videos open
with text claiming they had to be reuploaded to avoid
a mysterious and unexplained
"copyright issue." One of them was "Codebreakers." At some point it was taken down, altered to hide some but not all
of the stuff he stole and reupload it
with a new title. "Queering Cinema
(by any means necessary)." The opening titles still call
it "Codebreakers," though. Every time he reuploads
the video, the name is different.
It's very confusing. And his well-meaning fans assume
that his constantly taking down of video and reuploading
with pieces missing is a sign of his integrity. They talk about how much more
they respect him every time he reuploads
a video like this. Every time because he has
to do it a lot. The reality is Somerton
has had years' worth of chances to be the man
of integrity his audience wants him to be, and despite this being
his full-time job, which he makes thousands
and thousands of dollars doing, he would rather keep stealing. By the way, that reupload
of "Codebreakers"-- "Queering Cinema--" around the time
of the "Attack on Titan" drama, it disappeared again. As far as I can tell it's still
gone nearly a year later. Maybe some authors noticed
what he did and said something. Maybe so many pieces had
to be taken out there was nothing left. The frequency with which
he's had to hide videos to cover this up
is staggering. Scrolling up his Discord's video
announcement page you can see right away
a shocking amount of stuff that mysteriously
went missing without any explanation given. For some reason Nick wrote
a joke on this page about how to tell who wrote what part
of each video. It's cute but I'm gonna take it
as confirmation that if a section
doesn't contain these words, neither of them wrote it. While I was browsing
his public fan Discord I found myself wondering
about Nick, his co-writer. Does he know? <i>[dramatic suspenseful
musical sting]</i> Nick Herrgott--
also known as N.T.Herrgott-- is a writer mostly
for James's videos but he does have a self-published
young adult novel. So, there we go. He's a better writer than James as far as I can tell in
the sense it doesn't look like he steals things. So does he know what his boss
is doing? I checked the fan Discord
to see if they talk about the writing process
and I found Nick has a special section dedicated
to previewing part of the scripts
for upcoming videos, which is a really nice feature. Or, it will be
if they wrote them. Nick showcases parts
he's written and as far as I can tell
they're actually his. And they're pretty decent, too. And sometimes he shows things
James wrote. This is part of the script
for a video called "How Disney Tore Down
'The Owl House'." And it actually made
it into the video. Let me play it to you. - [inhales sharply] [claps]
Nick literally says, "James wrote this." So at the very least--
at the very least-- James Somerton wrote this text,
right? Right? No! HBOMB: It's an article
by Julie Tremaine for the "San Francisco Gate." I wonder how she feels about
having her work reposted to an audience being told it
was written by James Somerton. Holy shit!
If it's any consolation, Julie, James Somerton's Discord thinks
your writing is harsh but true. "I love any time y'all talk
about Disney." Jesus Christ, it wasn't y'all!
It was someone else! It was them'll! But the way this post
was phrased implies Nick has no idea James did this. He probably saw the text
his boss put in the shared script
and assumed he wrote it because if he didn't that would
be really fucking bad. And it's not just
these two paragraphs. A solid four minutes
and 40 seconds are taken from this article. What's weird is James
actually acknowledges in the video he has no idea why
he went on this tangent. So, what does all this have
to do with "The Owl House?" Well, I just wanted to point out
how big of a tool Bob Chapek is. HBOMB: He stole a bunch of words
for literally no reason. They don't even connect
to his point. He just needed to pad
his run time, I guess. Here's another section
of a script Nick shared. This is from a draft
of the "Attack on Titan" video. Wait, what's this?
"Shonan?" Okay, "shonen"
is a Japanese word. There's, like, five ways
to spell it in English and this isn't any of them. Here's how we translate
"Bessatsu Shonen Magazine" where "Attack on Titan"
was published. Has he never seen a single issue
of "Shonen Jump?" This video sucked, by the way. He didn't know anything about
the genre he was discussing and now it turns out
he can't even spell it. I hope this section
was plagiarized. Then again maybe this time Nick
found something he liked in the script
that James actually wrote. Uh, nope!
It's also stolen! Again! It comes
from culturalreview.com, the web site-slash-
personal blog of Tyler Hummel who hopes
to bring thoughtful and enjoyable commentary on
popular culture and entertainment from
a culturally conservative and religious perspective. In case you're wondering
what that means, he thinks Batman is too woke. Right before
the section James copied into a document and told Nick
he wrote all by himself, Hummel complains about Marxism
and critical race theory and then randomly whines
about people who criticized "Game
of Thrones'" final season before posting Lindsay Ellis'
video about it as an example
of people he hates. In his quest to seem like he
knows what he's talking about, he's willing to borrow the words
of a guy who hates him and everything he stands for, including Lindsay Ellis
who he credits for getting him
into making video essays. Another crime Lindsay
should pay for. Wait a minute. Did he film himself next
to "Disney War" because Lindsay did? Was he copying that, too? Normally I would think I
was overreacting but he's stolen everything else. I don't know anymore! At least that means he didn't
get "shonen" wrong. That must have been
the nutcase he copied from. No, that's one
of the few new words he added to the stolen segment. James Somerton
is the dumbest motherfu-- To be completely fair, this piece
of the script didn't make it into the final video. So it seems Somerton
thought better than to steal from one
of the most insane people in the world. But the fact Nick
keeps accidentally showing pieces
of the script James stole, assuming he did write them
implies even his co-writer has no idea
he's doing this. I feel kind of sorry for Nick. His trust has clearly
been violated here. He's been made a liar without
his knowledge because he trusted his boss
and I assume friend. That's a messed up situation
to be in. Seriously. I thought it would be worse
if Nick was in on it but it's the opposite
way around, isn't it? It's so violating imagining
people work for James and I assume make most
of their income from working for him
and don't know what they're signing up for. I don't know how I would feel
in his position, but not good. This sucks.
Worst of all, I think James might
be using Nick as a shield. Whenever any mention of the old plagiarism stuff
comes up, James immediately brings up
how Nick actually writes the videos and there's no way he
would plagiarize. - I have a co-writer who came
from academia who--where--plagiarism in academia gets you
kicked out of school. Like, it gets you fired. Um... Nick co-writes my videos. There is no plagiarism. It's like he's trying
to redirect possible negative attention onto
his unsuspecting co-writer. Whenever plagiarism comes up, James brings up how great
Nick is for writing all the videos in
a totally not suspicious way. - Because if it was like
somebody accusing me of plagiarism
especially recently, the videos are so heavily
written by Nick that there are--they would be
accusing Nick of plagiarism and I will not
fucking tolerate that. HBOMB: Remember, James knows
there is plagiarism in his videos because he did it
so when he responds by saying, "No, Nick writes the videos,
and he would never do that," it's like he's setting him up
to take the fall. - Nick is an angel
for tolerating me and writing the videos
as well--like-- with his fantastic talent so
that I would just not tolerate. - So either Nick is plagiarizing
as well and that's why
the new videos still have a ton of plagiarism, or James is doing it
and now when it comes up he throws Nick under the bus. But James isn't
content pretending to make video essays.
No. He wants to wipe on
a bigger canvas. <i>[dramatic suspenseful
musical sting]</i> In 2022 James Somerton started
an IndieGoGo for a film studio he wanted
to open called Telos Pictures, which intended
to produce films focusing on LGBT characters and stories. His video pitching
Telos included a series of ideas
for miniseries', feature-length movies,
and short films. For example, "Final Girl--" a short about a woman who
had survived a typical slasher story. The initial goal of $6,000
was to make two of the short films but with
stretch goals for making more. The campaign made enough money
to make almost all of them, over $86,000 Canadian dollars, so a bit over 63,000 in USD. Telos has been
a runaway financial success for James.
As of today, 18 months after raising
over $64,000-- more than ten times
its initial goal-- Telos has made nothing. For people who supported Telos, updates on what's happening
have been few and far between. A few months after
the campaign ended, he claimed "Final Girl--"
one of the short films on the slate--
was in pre-production and had been expanded into
a full movie, but they were having trouble
with casting and were considering relocating
to another part of Canada. The next update would come
seven months later with the announcement James had moved
to Toronto to try to find actors
and they dropped "Final Girl" and moved on to a new project, one which wasn't on
the original list people funded, called "The Listener." He'd be spending 20 to $30,000 of the Telos money on it
and as an apology for the lack of updates, he would be adding
an update page to the Telos web site later
that week to keep people informed. Ten months later,
this hasn't happened. The Telos web site does,
however, have a working donation page
where you can give him more money
for rewards up to and including getting
to make requests about the films.
Uh, what films? Months later this July
he announced Telos had finally been incorporated
as a real company. He called this a long
and pricey process. Incorporating in Canada
is a few hours of paperwork and costs $200 Canadian. He claimed an update
was coming within a week. This was almost
three months ago. The Telos Twitter account hasn't
been updated in well over a year but he recently opened
a Telos Bluesky page which has made one post with a poster for a new movie supposedly
coming in 2024 which isn't "The Listener"
or any of the previously-mentioned
films. Every time I look in on Telos, I find no updates
on what's happening but I do find out about
a new movie they announced. The web site is currently
claiming another new film called "The Sub," estimated release
of 2023, is in pre-production. Better get a move on, then. Telos keeps announcing
new projects with a new poster to go with
it consisting of a stock photo
with text over it and then not making any of them. This one's already being used
for a real show that exists. He keeps putting text
on stock photos and pretending it's a real film
in pre-production. It doesn't exactly
inspire confidence how fast new films
are being dreamed up. One of them even
had a teaser consisting entirely of stock footage only
to never be spoken of again. This one isn't even mentioned on
the web site at all anywhere. Movies take time to make,
even short indie films. And for the record,
so do video essays. But the lack of updates on what
is happening or which film is even being made
is a little disconcerting. Continuing the trend of James' work
not really being his, we need to talk about
"Final Girl--" the first project which
was canceled. "Final Girl" was
at one point coming this fall which at the time was 2022. The people who funded
this film were told to expect
it by autumn last year. They got pretty far on this one. In late June James tweeted
the script was done but then all of a sudden James
moved on to "The Listener" and the five other films
he started since then. But unlike many
of James' other announced projects
which still have a poster and a tentative
release date on the site, "Final Girl"
disappeared completely. What happened here? He claimed he gave up because it
was too specific to Nova Scotia and he had
to move to find actors but there could be
another reason. The name and synopsis
of "Final Girl" are extraordinarily close
to a book which already exists: "The Final Girl Support Group"
by Grady Hendrix. I wonder if Somerton is aware
of the similarity. It would be weird
if he wasn't because it was one of his favorite books of 2021. He started the IndieGoGo
with this short film idea a few months after making
this post. You'll be shocked to discover
but something of James' turned out
to be stolen and evaporated. The 18-month journey
of Telos consists of Somerton being paid $65,000 to make
a dozen fake movie posters. So far James
has ripped off bloggers, novelists, authors-- anyone who writes text
for a living, really. Oh, and Wikipedia
and AMVs because watching Korra for himself was too much effort,
apparently. If you're queer
and you wrote something good, no you didn't.
But now we need to talk about
the time he somehow went even further than that. Let's talk about
the time he ripped off another gay YouTuber. Remember "Unrequited--"
the video that ripped off "The Celluloid Closet
and plagiarized Peter Howell? Before any
of "The Celluloid Closet" stuff had even been discovered, James had already been caught
ripping off someone else with the same video! How?
How are there still more? <i>[upbeat electronic music]</i> A later section covered examples
of queer baiting in various TV shows including
BBC's "Merlin," the recent "Teen Wolf"
TV series, and "Sherlock,"
whatever that is. But people began
to notice these sections were suspiciously similar
to one another YouTuber had already made. Alexander Avila
whose channel used to be called "AreTheyGay"
has a series of videos exploring the queer implications
between characters of various shows
and he's covered "Merlin," "Teen Wolf,"
and "Sherlock." The part of Somerton's video
covering "Merlin" feels like he watched
Avila's video and very slightly rephrased it, but what made it really obvious
was the footage he used. They weren't just similar. They were exactly the same. Avila had this one part
where he fades between several different scenes
across different episodes to show the evolving
character dynamics. This is Avila using editing
and his knowledge of the show to make a point. That same sequence
appears exactly in Somerton's video. Avila's video puts text over
the footage to explain the character's thoughts
and justify his interpretation of the show.
This text is still in there in Somerton's version. This is sloppy even
by James standards. He even keeps in
a joke Avila made. - If I wasn't a prince--
- What? - We would probably get on. <i>- ♪ Let's get it on ♪</i> HBOMB: Um, in case
it wasn't obvious, uh, Marvin Gaye's
"Let's Get It On" wasn't in the original show. Avila put that in there
for a joke. And, uh, you're not
gonna believe this! - We would probably get on.<i>
- ♪ Let's get it on ♪</i> HBOMB: Uh-- Somerton stole Alexander Avila's
video essay and reused it and just recorded
his own very similar version of the voice over and jokes. <i>ALEXANDER: It really is like
a romantic comedy.</i> - Oh, come on.
You've seen a romantic comedy. You know how this works. HBOMB: This is the worst
and laziest example of plagiarism I've ever seen. Reusing other people's work
like this is not right, especially when,
you know, you make a living making
these videos. He only said things about
the show Avila also said. It's extremely clear Somerton
hasn't seen "Merlin." He just reused Avila's work. The other sections covering
"Teen Wolf" and "Sherlock" also
had extremely similar-looking sequences. He'd downloaded
and reused several of Avila's videos. When this was discovered, Avila tweeted
to Somerton about it, asking for proper credit
and in the future to ask people permission before
doing something like this. He also left a similar comment
on the video which finally
got James' attention. The next day Somerton
set "Unrequited" to private and contacted Avila on Twitter. I reached out to Avila and asked him what
they discussed, and he gave me permission to share these messages
with you. Somerton apologized for using his material
without asking, claiming he intended
to reach out but forgot to and he had been in a rush
to finish the video before the end of pride month,
and in this rush, he ended up using a lot more
of your content than I ever intended. He then offered to credit Avila
in the description of his video.
Ah, yes. That old trick. He also perplexingly asked Avila to delete his comment because
he put an awful lot of work into his videos
and felt discredited by it, which, frankly, is a wild thing
to say to someone you just admitted
you stole from. You're not the one putting
the work in, buddy! Avila said he would
rather Somerton upload a new version that credited him
in it directly or perhaps he could watch Merlin
and make his own arguments. He also reminded him that
passing someone else's work off as their own
is far more discrediting than pointing out
someone did that. Somerton never replied. Somerton admitted
he plagiarized Avila's work but he had an explanation. He was too busy. To busy doing what? You don't do anything! The video was never unprivated. Instead, a few days later, it was reuploaded
with pieces missing, of course. This reupload was also
in three parts saying the video had been edited
to remove content owned by other parties. The reuploads also say
which part of three they are, except for part three which
is also called part two. Somerton had put in about
as much work as you'd expect from someone who copies
for a living. In the new version
the "Merlin" section was completely removed. However,
this was the only change. So later parts of the video
still refer back to it. <i>JAMES: Much like with "Merlin,"</i> <i>the pair start the series off
of a bad paw.</i> HBOMB: The "Teen Wolf"
and "Sherlock" sections were kept the same so all
the video sequences got from Avila for those parts
were still in there. He didn't accidentally use any
obvious parts where Avila's text or jokes came up so I guess
he decided it was fine to keep it in. The way James treated
Alexander-- stealing several of his videos
then when caught offering to hide a credit in
the description like that would change
what he'd done and then reuploading the video
with half the stuff he stole still in it--
is a clear indicator how little he thinks
of his fellow queer creators. He does not care
about doing right by other people
in his community. He cares about making money
by any means necessary What makes this even clearer
is how publicly he does not admit fault or even
pretend he learned anything. To this day he lies
about what happened. When the plagiarism allegations
came up on that live stream, he made up a completely new
story that contradicts the apology he gave
to Alexander. He claims he downloaded
a highlight reel of "Merlin" clips
from somewhere else and that highlight reel stole
from Avila's video so technically he didn't steal
from him and it was all just
a misunderstanding. - In the original "History
of Queer Coding" video, I used a highlight reel
from the show "Arthur" that another, um... Uh, YouTuber had, um... Used and I thought it
was just a highlight video but apparently it actually came
from another video, um, from the channel AreTheyGay. HBOMB: He repeats
and refines this story throughout the stream. - And there was one where
I took a highlight reel... In 2020... From a highlight video
that happened to be from a video from... Um, a YouTube channel-- HBOMB: The only problem
with this story is we have receipts. - And I took a highlight reel
to highlight the queerness in the "Arthur" show--uh, no,
"Merlin" show and... It was pointed out
to me that that didn't come from a highlight reel. That came from... Uh, an actual video
and it had been stolen from that video
for the highlight reel that I took it from.
Um... Nick co-writes my videos. There is no plagiarism. There was--as I said
and I will say one more time-- a highlight reel
from the show "Merlin" that I took from
a larger highlight reel video that was apparently sourced
from a video from the channel AreTheyGay. HBOMB: James admitted directly
to Avila that he took from his work on purpose
although he intended to steal less.
How considerate of him. James is lying directly
to his audience to protect his reputation. He can't even own up
to his behavior. He just keeps lying, and he didn't
even stop stealing. A little while after
the stream where the allegations came up, he made a post on Patreon
to try to explain the allegations for people
still asking about them. You have to be a Patron
to see it so avert your eyes if you're not
giving James money. In addition to repeating
the lie he got permission from Sean Griffin to adapt
"Tinker Belles and Evil Queens" before making the video, he again states he got
the clips from a highlight reel which got them from AreTheyGay. Left to his own devices, James will just make up
what happened, and since his paying customers
haven't seen the evidence of him admitting he did it, they have no option but
to assume it's true. James did this on purpose
with multiple videos and is lying to his backers
so they continue to support him financially. James, you've been
to business school. You know there's
a word for that. And even if I hadn't reached out
to Avila and got that woefully hilarious confession, I could still have
objectively proven he did it. <i>[suspenseful music]</i> <i>♪ ♪</i> There's one last missing piece
of the puzzle here. Ignoring
for a second he admitted to Avila he took
from more than one video, ever since he's always pretended
it was just "Merlin." If I could somehow prove he also
used Avila's other videos for those sections, that would show the extent
of the copying and how much he's lying
to cover it up. But like I said, the "Teen Wolf"
and "Sherlock" sections aren't as obvious. He doesn't steal any jokes. He just very boringly
spouts arguments similar to Avila's while playing what
looks like the same footage. It's harder
to prove he downloaded his video to make this which
is probably why he feels comfortable pretending
he didn't. I was thinking
of watching both videos closely side-by-side
and contrasting the clips to show they're all the same, wasting even more
of my precious life watching "Sherlock" than I
already have, but then I was reading
James' tweets from when he was making this and I saw that he posted
a picture of him editing this video
with his timeline visible. Forgive me but the opportunity
to do something like this comes once in a lifetime. [pinging] <i>[Masakazu Sugimori's
"Pressing Pursuit - Cornered"]</i> <i>[beeping]</i> <i>[whip cracks]
[beeps]</i> Before you'd even uploaded
the video, you posted a picture
of the Sherlock section of your timeline
and the source footage is clearly labeled,
"Are They Gay?" You had proven
you plagiarized Avila before the video was even done. Also, delete your channel. Let's get a big picture look at how much stealing James
has done. As of making this motion graphic
there are 56 video essays on his YouTube channel dated
after October 2018. A minimum
of 22 contain some amount of plagiarized material. He also has two essays
exclusively to his Vimeo page. According to him YouTube
flagged them not safe for work. These have a ton
of plagiarism in them, too. Several videos were taken down
and then reuploaded with parts removed
like "Attack on Titan" and a few others. I don't know how
I should account for reuploads on this list, but we should
at least include videos which were deleted
and never came back, like "Codebreakers" and, hey,
welcome back, "Unrequited." He took that reupload down, too,
at some point. I wonder why. And let me be clear, this is just the plagiarism
we know of. We could have easily missed
the stuff in the other videos or there could be more
deleted ones we don't even know about. That's a minimum
of 26 videos that steal stuff. Like James said, there's not three
or four examples. There's hours of examples. An entire channel's worth
of examples. This isn't a one-off mistake
or a misunderstanding or a citation error. This is a pattern with no sign
of stopping. There's no fixing this, and there's no undoing
the damage he's done directly and indirectly by using
so many people's work without credit for money. A lot of people have been burned
by James. Not just in terms
of having their writing or videos stolen, one even giving him money
to find out he was stealing from them. But on a basic level, liking someone's work
and funding them only to realize you're funding
plagiarism is humiliating. James has become one
of the biggest LGBT YouTubers in the room essentially
absorbing all the support and attention
that would have otherwise gone to people who actually do work. Other gay video essayists have
to come up with their own opinions
and actually write them. They can't compete on volume
with a guy who's willing to rip off dozens and dozens
of other people. Many of the people he's copied
were paid very little and in some cases not at all
for their original material when they wrote it. They were hoping their writing
would be recognized and result in future work
and more of a career, and in a way their good work
was recognized but only by James. How much recognition
do you think they got when James read their words
without crediting them? And on the other hand, how much money has James made
from them? How much money has he made
in fundraising to start a film studio on
the back of this career he got from them
while making no films? Gay writers are already
poorly recognized for their work
and contributions. It's a common problem. James should know about this. In "Codebreakers"
or "Queering Cinema" or whatever it'll
be called next time, James has a surprisingly
eloquent section about how gay people
keep going missing from history
and being forgotten. This part was stolen, too. - So as we start out on our
lifelong personal journeys, how do we discover
our queer identity if we don't know much about
those who came before us? HBOMB: Steven Spinks' column
is extremely moving to read and genuinely important. And no one watching
James' video had the chance to learn his name. James made a lot
of money repeatedly reuploading a video about the erasure
of queer people and he did it
by erasing queer people. I guess when he renamed
it "Queering Cinema (by any means necessary),"
he meant it. Every reupload,
the credits get longer. The list of people
he's conned grows. The works he's stealing from
aren't doing quite so well. This column was written
in 2019 for "Midlands Zone" magazine, the UK's biggest regional
gay publication. Due to the impact
of the pandemic, "Midlands Zone" ceased
production in 2020. This year their official site
went down along with its archive
of articles like this one. Googling the words
James stole now gets you no results. I only found this plagiarism
because I noticed it before the web site fell off
the internet. Good writing about queer living
is hard to find and easy to lose, and in obscurity
it becomes even easier to pretend it was yours. None of the money he makes
will go to the people who wrote the great lines
his viewers enjoyed. They get to rot in
the very obscurity he pretends to criticize. While James takes all
the oxygen for himself to promote only himself
and position himself as a crusader
for real representation while giving a speech he stole
about how gay people keep going missing
from the story, I wonder how that happened. - It provokes a deep
and meaningful question, I think. What is the real,
tangible impact of gay erasure? HBOMB: There is something
a little bit soul-crushing about watching
a man be paid thousands and thousands of dollars
to literally plagiarize the phrase, "What is the real
tangible impact of gay erasure?" This is the impact. I don't know what I'm supposed
to do about this. I don't even know if I
should be making this video. I was just trying
to double check two or three old
plagiarism accusations and I ended up finding
a whole bunch more and I have functionally made
a drama video about some guy. And worse, if this video goes up
and is monetized and gets views, I have been paid--
financially rewarded-- for making this. I don't find that acceptable. Especially not when the story
is really about people who were never compensated
for their work being stolen. So to make sure I have
no financial incentive to make a video like this again, I'm going to be dividing any
of the ad revenue this video makes among
the creators James stole from. I'll be conducting
a thorough examination of every video James
has posted including the many he has deleted I
can find archives of and contact everyone I can. At least the stuff he got
from that weird right wing guy isn't in the video so he
technically wasn't stolen from and doesn't need to be paid. You dodged a bullet
for me there, James. It also occurs to me now
that I will have to make a substantial donation
to Wikipedia. Something that really got
to me researching this video is watching James pitch himself
as the queer creator to support. Making YouTube queerer entails
giving him and his movie studio your money and not
the other talented people who have a fraction
of his support. He extremely rarely recommends
or speaks positively of any other creators
as if to him fellow members of his community
are competitors. He acts like no one else
is talking about these issues and no one else sees things
his way even though he stole
those observations so obviously people do. The trickle-down effect
of this behavior is a little upsetting. From the look
of his comment sections, his devout fans believe him
when he says there's no one else doing what he does. It's a manipulative strategy. Some young queer people feel
underrepresented because the main guy they watch
says they are, and that sucks to see happen. So I want to recommend some
of my favorite queer creators in case James fans who made
it this far need to know someone else they
could watch and support. Matt Baume
is a brilliant creator who--to put it bluntly--
is the platonic ideal of "What if James Somerton
was good?" His videos are entertaining
but also well-researched. He doesn't need to steal
from books to discuss the evil queens
of the Disney canon. He writes his own books because
he actually does his own work. His video about Disney villains
is a favorite of mine and a palette cleanser after
watching someone reconstitute other people's observations into
smug hamburger. Khadija Mbowe's ability
to be energetic and funny when handling
sensitive topics is incredibly refreshing
and instantly makes the conversation at hand
so much more useful. Their video about the politics
of coming out, the evolution of the concept, and whether maybe we fixate
a little too much on what it's come to mean
in modern culture is great. Give it a shot. Lady Emily's videos
are all made for me. But the one about Harley Quinn
and Poison Ivy explores the history of two of DC canon's
most important characters and why they make such
an engaging couple in stories. I recommend it especially
if you've not seen any of the good stuff coming out
of DC lately, which does exist,
like "Teen Titans Go!" Or the Snyder cut. Shanspeare covers a broad range of issues from AI to Lolita
but their video about true crime is a great tour of our species'
long-term morbid fascination with gruesome stories. Shanspeare asks
"why are we fascinated with true crime" with real
curiosity rather than judgment. They don't even make up
any white women to get mad at. Amazing!
RickiHirsch has made a ton of videos about media
and gender over the years. Kat only found her by searching
"queer horror" on YouTube and scrolling down
for several minutes to see what was buried under
the huge pile of James Somerton and X and Y being gay
for Z-minutes straight I recommend her recent one about
body horror which explored gender's role in it in a way
that made me say out loud, "Oh, right, yeah. It's good.
Give it a shot. I just found out
about Verity Ritchie and their channel verilybitchie.
Good one. But their videos with the help
of co-writer Ada are really entertaining. I should recommend
the video about the lesbian gaze just
to offset the baggage I had to experience making this, but the one about "Doctor Who"
and women is great and also deals with gayness,
so it counts. And after all this
I'd be amiss not to recommend Alexander Avila
whose latest videos have been real bangers. The type of content he makes
has evolved in the last year or so from funny
queer-oriented media analysis to funny queer-oriented
life analysis. "TikTok Gave Me Autism"
is really good and I'd plagiarize it if I could
get away with it at this point. There's a ton more queer
creators out there covering the topics James pretends to
and they manage to do it with their own words even
without his massive budget. Linked in the description
is a playlist with these and more video essays
on queer media or history or politics
or philosophy or queer anything, really, from creators you should
consider giving a look if you haven't.
It's been reassuring, putting this part
of the video together and getting to fully realize
there's plenty of us out there, and most of them are very cool. James was the exception
to a group of entertaining, thoughtful,
and kind human beings. I'm proud of us. Yeah, I guess that's the word,
isn't it? Anyway, let's try to pull
a rabbit out of this bloody mess of a hat. I'm gonna put my wall back up
and try to come to a wider conclusion
about plagiarism real quick. One sec.
[groans] Rachel, you haven't even held
the camera. Can you help me with this
at least? That's right.
She's real. You don't know me. [grunting]
To me, to you. [grunting] It's on!
Thanks for that. [laughing] We've talked a lot today about
what plagiarism is but we should also talk a little bit about what
it isn't. It's completely fine
to be inspired by someone or build on ideas
you got from somewhere else, especially if you're
open about it. Famous big boy YouTuber Ludwig
has a thing he calls the Yoink and Twist where
he gets ideas from existing videos
and openly broadcasts he's doing his own spin on it. In his video about
that one guy copying the capsule hotel video, he happily says where he got
the stuff he drew on for his own work. - This is me trying
silly chess ideas. And--and look at all
the tweets beside me with the "Your ideas suck."
Genius. Genius thumbnail. I got it from Fundie.
I got it from Fundie. I made your dumb ideas
from Minecraft and then he has a bunch
of tweets next to him. HBOMB: It's hard for anyone
to feel ripped off when he's open about where
he got the ideas. I'm old enough now that when I
was yay high, I was here for the first time this conversation happened
on YouTube. It's easy
to get rose-tinted about the early days, the 240p wiki-wiki
Wild, Wild West before anyone had sponsorships or even qualified
for ad revenue. There was no money in it
so people just made what they liked making. Things were better.
More original then. This was never the case. There wasn't capital
but there was social capital and that spends almost as good. The AVGN--one of the subjects
of this video-- had dozens of knock-offs vying
for his spot. The Irate Gamer,
The Game Dude, The Sega Kid,
Urinating Tree, Armake21,
Acoustic Rocker, Undercover Filmer,
The Pissed-Off Angry Gamer Man. - Nintendo Shit Cube. - Even before there
was any money in it, we were drowning
in people competing to be the guy calling
NES "Batman" a shit load of fuck. But even back then, you could draw
a line between people who cynically wanna be the guy
and people who wanted to be themselves but inspired
and informed by ideas they liked. Second generation critics
like The Spoony One are open about drawing
inspiration from Armake21, one of the better
angry reviewers. And how many people
claim inspiration from Spoony One today? Too many. Stop Skeletons From Fighting
who-- unlike everyone
I just mentioned-- is still around today because
he developed his own new ideas,
started out by taking inspiration
from all these people, and then deliberately doing
the opposite with the Happy Video Game Nerd, being positive about games
he liked. Now that's a Yoink and Twist. YouTube is a beautiful cesspool
of inspiration, remixing, riffing, parody. Drawing on existing ideas
is a great way of making something new
and unique. It's only wrong
when you add nothing and try to pretend
it was yours in the first place. And you don't have
to cite your sources like a rocket scientist, either. Sonic lore YouTuber Cybershell
frequently uses information and images he got from web sites
like "The Cutting Room Floor" and just explains where
he's getting it from and often asks permission
to use it. A coward would hide their source
in a Pastebin and not mention
it anywhere else, but his videos are great because he shows you where you
could learn more and maybe even makes fun of you
for not reading the web site yourself in
the first place while explaining the topic in his own way. This is why Kat is forcing me
to tell you his channel video is objectively
the best thing on YouTube. Uh, thanks a lot, Kat. Fittingly, when Cybershell
inspires someone, they're equally open about it. When one of his videos led
Allen Pan to invent a device to steal soda
from Universal Studios, he tells you right
at the start he found out about the original
from Cybershell's video. This is the community spirit
I love to see on this web site. It's kind of beautiful watching
a wider story unfold. One generation
of Baja Blast thieves passing on their designs
to the next. If you're honest about it, there's not even anything wrong
with adapting a book or telling people what you found
on Wikipedia. Different people like getting
information in different ways. Wikipedia lets people record
and upload readings of pages so you can learn about
Bhutanese passports through audio and they do it
for a reason. <i>- Bhutanese passport.</i> Some people might even prefer
a video version. It would practically be
an accessibility feature. Making video adaptations
of interesting books or Mental Floss articles
is an idea with potential. It's a way of spreading writing
and ideas to a new audience and all you have to do
is be honest about it. That also forces you
to be accountable. You'd have to ask permission
and get the approval of the people who wrote
what you're adapting which clears up
any potential criticisms or infringement on
the existing work. Speaking of adaptation,
what about different languages? This is another way of sneaking
plagiarism under the radar. - You might be wondering why
I am subtitled in Portuguese. A few years back Geoff Thew-- the guy James quoted
someone quoting-- covered how a Brazilian YouTuber
had been stealing dozens of videos from him
and other English-speaking creators
but in Portuguese so us [speaking foreign
language] would never notice. This sucks but it also points
to one of the core barriers to accessibility for creators. Most videos are trapped
in their mother tongue, making them hard to watch
in other languages and therefor easier to steal. This is why some clever creators
very smartly let their producer trick him into paying people
to do proper captions for the vaccines video
in Portuguese, Spanish, and French so more people
could engage with the facts of the story. And "Pathologic" into Russian because I know who watches
that video. Translation is a big part
of video discovery in more ways than one. For Spoony fans a lot
of his old videos used to be missing as non-YouTube
video hosts died and their content didn't make
the jump. Many of his videos weren't
viewable on YouTube were it not for TheSpoonyRUS. A Russian fan of Spoony
reuploaded his videos with Russian subtitles, and some of these were
the only versions of those videos that existed
on the net, at least for a while. Subtitling his videos didn't
just make him accessible to a new language but
to the original language, too. That's pretty cool. But you can go deeper than sub.
You can dub. <i>- [speaking in Russian]</i> HBOMB: CounterStrike tuber
3kliksphilip dubbed two of a Russian creator's videos
about mods they made into English with permission,
of course. It's very cool that a video
about game development got to cross the language barrier
for us [speaking foreign language]
to enjoy. There might actually be a market in adapting videos like this. I'm sure some
of my videos would do very well if someone translated them
into English. I think a lot
of people are inclined to protect creators they like
on the grounds that plagiarism is a very academic-sounding
problem, like something that happens
in research papers or journalism not something that you can do
in a silly video made for entertainment purposes. Why are we holding YouTubers
to "standards?" That would be like expecting
accurate history from someone whose name
has "historian" in it. Because YouTubers often project
a sense of being scrappy, do-it-yourself amateurs, it feels almost wrong to expect
them to be professional but a lot of them
are professionals, regardless how authentic
their persona might be. YouTubers are now among
the most recognizable faces on the planet and have become
immensely wealthy doing this. Some are so influential we
literally call them influencers. Maybe it's a good idea
to have some standards for not stealing. Maybe. In current discourse YouTubers
simultaneously present as the forefront
of a new medium, creative voices that need
to be taken seriously as part of the next generation
of media and also uwu small beans
little babies who shouldn't be taken seriously
when they rip someone off and make tens of thousands
of dollars doing it. YouTubers who act
like serious documentarians gain a shroud of professionalism
which then masks the deeply unprofessional
things they do. We just saw that with James. I think he's partially got away
with what he's doing for so long because he acts
so professional about it so people assume there's no way
he could just be stealing shit. So they don't check. And on top of that a lot
of James' videos contain obvious mistakes
and made-up facts which we haven't even had
the time to get into in this video. But because
they're often presented next to well-researched stuff
he stole, no one questions it. I've seen James repeat
a lie in his videos and then other people claim
it's true and link his video
as the proof. He has helped
to solidify misinformation by seeming like he's doing
his diligence. To quote the great philosopher
Daniil Dankovsky, "Truth does not do as much good
in the world as the appearance
of truth does evil." Just kidding,
he actually stole that from François Deelarozièracoes.
Sight your sources, Bachelor! This becomes extremely glaring
once you've seen how the other side lives. At he last VidCon I went to,
like, four years ago, I was taking an Uber and a bunch
of people came in it with me 'cause we were all going
to the same place. A bunch of big YouTubers
who I don't know super well, including really massive one,
like way more important than me, you know?
And we were all just making small talk
and I made a joke that was actually
quite funny about the topic we were talking about, and this big YouTuber,
she laughed... And took out her phone
and tweeted it. She heard my joke
and just casually went, "Ooh, I'll have that."
And it became her joke. And she just took it. People really liked
the joke, too, which felt kind of good
but not really. What are you gonna do?
Complain? And start a massive public fight with someone extremely famous and get smashed into dust
by thousands of fans? No, thanks.
And that was my Uber, too! I paid money to have one
of my jokes stolen by a multi-millionaire! When people hit a certain level
of celebrity they start to think the world
actually revolves around them and they can just take something
if they want and say it's theirs. I don't have
a clever analysis here. Some people
are just fucking weird. I'm not smart enough
to know what we're supposed to do about plagiarism. I think trying to fix it
in any systemic way could risk making it worse. Let's imagine YouTube introduced
some kind of plagiarism claim system. We'd be expecting someone
at YouTube to be able
to decide whether something is plagiarism or not
and I don't like the idea of YouTube having any more power
than they already have. If there was a system
for handling plagiarism the iilluminaughtiis
of the world wouldn't stop. They'd find ways around it. We've seen in this very video
how easy it is to get away
with copyright infringement. Just blur the logos
and slap a filter over it. These systems
are so untrustworthy, when Internet Historian
correctly got copyright claimed for stealing an entire article, people automatically assumed
it was some kind of mistake because YouTube
is quite fairly viewed as bad at handling this. Just as likely to shut down
perfectly fair use work as it is actual infringement
of copyright. A system like this would also
allow bad actors to falsely accuse people which
would create a lot of problems for their targets. People falsely copyright
claim videos they don't like all
the time already. It's happened to me. I almost had to give a Nazi
my home address so that
a video would go back up. I'm half expecting some
of the people this video was about
to try it with this one. Maybe let's not give YouTube any more
easily-exploitable features. I want my joke back
but I can live without it if it means not giving
the bad guys another toy. Simply being able
to talk about plagiarism and bring attention to it
and let people decide if something is
and who they want to support going forward,
that's good enough for now. But don't take my word
for it on this. I'm certainly not. Someone smarter than me might come up with a better idea so let's keep
our eyes peeled for that. As technology progresses, the methods of plagiarism
are getting strangers and more complex. The hot new tool in the stealing
tools box is generative AI like ChatGPT, Stable Diffusion,
or Midjourney, which can produce new art
or words on command using a process known as stealing. Sorry, that's
an over-simplification. The process is called, um...
[papers rustling] Complicated stealing. Theoretically,
generative AI works by training on a large data set
of existing material to figure out how
to make new things. Before we even ask whether stuff
generated by this counts as original we have to ask, how did they get
all that material? Well, by taking a lot of stuff
without its creator's consent. ChatGPT has intricate knowledge
of copyrighted works it shouldn't legally
have access to and when you ask it
to write something original, it's just smooshing all
the stolen data together and using pattern recognition
to try to guess the next word. It can't actually intuit things
based on context. Here's what ChatGPT thinks I'd
say about ChatGPT. "It's like having your own
personal tutor, therapist, and fact-checker
rolled into one." "So whether you're here
for the knowledge, the banter, "or just to see how deep
the rabbit hole goes, buckle up!"
[laughing] It knows I say "buckle up."
I'll give you that. None of the people whose stuff
was stolen to create this were asked permission
or compensated. I certainly wasn't. But you bet they're charging you
a monthly subscription for the privileged
of using theft machine 4.0. What you look into what
a large language model actually does it boils down to a slightly
more advanced version of mashing the predictive
text button on your phone which makes it
especially dangerous when it comes to writing
reliable information. AI frequently hallucinates
imaginary people, books, and historical events, because it doesn't actually know
any facts, just what facts look like. It's like asking James who came
up with Disney Gay Days. You can't trust it. They had to put
"Don't trust me," at the bottom so they don't get in trouble
for inventing a machine that makes up lies. But because it has copied
a lot of text and can guess a lot of new ways
of saying it, the power this tool brings
specifically to thieves is tremendous. ChatGPT's one truly
impressive feature is how well
it enables plagiarism. You could just pasted a bunch
of stolen stuff you got from Wikipedia
or someone else's video in there and tell it to rewrite it
so it sounds different. I wouldn't be surprised
if James' videos suddenly stop having easily-detectable
plagiarism in them right around the time computers
become able to launder this type of theft. Now it's a machine accidentally
changing the quotes. Some creators have
found people copying their work using
this exact method, feeding their videos'
transcripts into a GPT, asking for a different-sounding
version, and using it as the basis
for a new video. While it's scary to consider
a world where machines crank out videos copying
your work and replace you, the plagiarism
is extremely obvious. It's just someone's script
reworded badly. The thumbnails are just
a thesaurused version of the originals that doesn't
even make sense. And the videos themselves
actively demonstrate they're using footage
from the original video. It's sloppy.
The videos are unwatchably bad, so no one watched them. When someone finally did,
they were caught immediately. Not to downplay the chance
for these to be successful, or the possibility
of a more sophisticated version in the future, but it's heartening to recognize that these aren't
even really AI. A person had
to make these videos. It's still just people doing
the stealing here. Pointing out AI was involved
is almost a misdirection. A human being stole a video
and made his own. All the AI did was speed up
the process of making a shitty,
obviously-stolen video by doing the bad rewriting
for them. People have been ripping
each other off long before AI happened
and for now it's still people. So why do people plagiarize? We've talked a lot
of superficials in this video, wanting money or prestige
or clout or to get one over on
your enemies by jacking their stuff, but these are small things. There's other ways
of getting those. The reasons humans copy
like this I think goes a bit deeper. We don't exactly live in
a world built for humans,
do we? There's no guide book
for happiness or success or a sense
of place in the world, and the people claiming
to have one for you are really just trying
to sell you something. We spend most
of our little lives struggling to make these feelings fade away
or find something to placate them. It's either ennui
or being on weed. [laughs]
I know it's a little pretentious but we're all searching
for a sense of meaning and purpose on our lives
and those things are hard to come by. There's a little bit of nothing
in all of us, and we'd like to fill
it with something. Opening your web browser
and seeing someone who seems to have
it figured out, making you feel better
and entertaining you, and seeming to attract
an audience on this roulette wheel
of a planet, that's powerful. There's someone who seems
to understand what they're supposed
to be doing. And it's working. That's all anyone really wants. Sure, in retrospect, a bunch of people wanting to be exactly like the AVGN sounds silly but he knew
who he was. He was the angriest gamer
you've ever heard. We can laugh.
In fact, you're supposed to. But that's a human being
with purpose. There's someone who's not
anxious about their place in the world anymore. It's very difficult not
to want that completeness for yourself,
not to just be like someone, but to be them-- to attain that sense of knowing. In real life James Rolfe
is a human being with all sorts of problems
and fears, but that doesn't stop people
from wanting to be like the person he seems. Someone who knows their place
in the world. A know this is getting
a bit pretentious and heavy for a video
about plagiarism. But I do worry there
are people out there who will never get the chance
to become who they are because they're too busy trying
to be like someone else who at best has it figured out
for themselves just a little bit. I feel like I know who I am
and how to live my life, and that makes me feel happy
and somewhat complete. And I don't think I'd
have ever found myself if I was trying
to chase someone else's sense of completeness.
Basically, no one knows how
to live your life. And you might not, either. But the only person who's
gonna figure it out is you. And you won't find that
by trying to be the next that person. You can only be the first
of whoever it is that you are. Other people help
in small ways, though. They give you pointers
to who you could be, and I think what makes
me happiest in the world is feeling like
I might have helped some people with that. People take inspiration
from my work sometimes, and that is very cool. It's the ultimate flattery
and let's be honest, the closest I'll ever come
to having children. If you find any happiness or success making
something creatively, and you think I helped... Thank you. Feeling like I can do that
for someone makes me happy in
a way I can't describe. And, uh, if you find a lot
of success doing it... Give me all of your money. <i>[cheerful music]</i> <i>♪ ♪</i> Wow, the boom mic is still out
of frame. Oh, the light literally just
went off right now. Went out of battery. Pretty good timing that it went off just right then. I'm just gonna leave it off. Thanks very much for making it all the way through
this video. And a big thank you
to my patrons whose names should be going past
the screen right now in some form, uh,
for keeping the lights on and allowing me
to keep making stuff like this. Not literally this, though. This shouldn't have happened. I have good videos coming that I've also been working on. Those are happening as well. I didn't just make this
for ten months. I promise. I have a video about "Myst"
that's 90 minutes long and it's just up for patrons.
Check it out! That video is actually good! <i>♪ ♪</i> <i>♪ ♪</i> <i>♪ ♪</i> <i>♪ ♪</i> You know, uh, the review
in "Film Comment" of "28 Days Later" that
was ripped off in the Cin--
[thuds] In the Cinemassacre section?
I knocked it over. The "Film Comment"
web site claims that that was printed in
the physical magazine. "Film Comment"
has an actual magazine edition. Um, so obviously I thought,
"Well, if I could get "a copy of that, "that would be great
for some footage. "I should get some--
get some shots of it for the video." So I painstakingly tracked down
a copy of a 20-year-old magazine. Which I just knocked on
the floor. One second. Here we are. Um... And I have footage of me opening
this to get the shot of the review
and it's not in it. [laughs]
I thought, "Oh, "maybe they messed
up which issue of the magazine it was in on
the web site." But then before I did any more
searching for ancient magazines, uh, I e-mailed Professor Sayad
and just asked if it was ever printed
and she said no, it wasn't. So I wasted a lot of time trying to get a shot that
I ended up not getting. And that's why videos
like this take this long. Imagine something
like that happening once a week. This is why people steal things. Doing your own research
is life-ruining. Tune in next time when I make
a doughnut. That's not a joke. That happens in the next video.
Bye.