Close Menu
geekfence.comgeekfence.com
    What's Hot

    Designing trust & safety (T&S) in customer experience management (CXM): why T&S is becoming core to CXM operating model 

    January 24, 2026

    iPhone 18 Series Could Finally Bring Back Touch ID

    January 24, 2026

    The Visual Haystacks Benchmark! – The Berkeley Artificial Intelligence Research Blog

    January 24, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    Facebook Instagram
    geekfence.comgeekfence.com
    • Home
    • UK Tech News
    • AI
    • Big Data
    • Cyber Security
      • Cloud Computing
      • iOS Development
    • IoT
    • Mobile
    • Software
      • Software Development
      • Software Engineering
    • Technology
      • Green Technology
      • Nanotechnology
    • Telecom
    geekfence.comgeekfence.com
    Home»Technology»Nick Shirley and his viral right-wing videos, explained
    Technology

    Nick Shirley and his viral right-wing videos, explained

    AdminBy AdminJanuary 9, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read4 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Email
    Nick Shirley and his viral right-wing videos, explained
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    This story appeared in Today, Explained, a daily newsletter that helps you understand the most compelling news and stories of the day. Subscribe here.

    The video opens with a question and a slamming door. Nick Shirley, the 23-year-old right-wing content creator who rose to sudden infamy and influence last week, confronts two Somali women as the camera rolls.

    “Hello, we’d like to ask where the money is going,” Shirley says as the women scramble away. It’s a scene that repeats again and again throughout his wildly viral 43-minute video — published to YouTube on December 26 — that purports to “investigate” widespread fraud in Minnesota’s publicly funded daycare centers.

    Issues in the program were already well-known. But the video, with its 3.4 million views, kicked off a wider national scandal. The federal government promptly froze child care payments to the state. On Monday, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz abruptly dropped his reelection campaign. The Trump administration also surged hundreds of ICE agents to the Minneapolis area as part of a major enforcement action that left one woman dead.

    Since Shirley’s video came out, copycats have descended on daycare centers across the country, eager to capitalize on the unprecedented attention they’ve received from both the public and the Trump administration.

    For a growing class of right-wing news influencers, the Minnesota fraud scandal represents a major coup: “I ENDED TIM WALZ,” Shirley gloated earlier this week. But what does their rising power mean for politics, news, and the quaint concept of consensus reality?

    A watershed moment for right-wing creators

    Nick Shirley is one of a growing cast of viral, quasi-journalistic posters “just asking questions” on YouTube, TikTok, and X. As a genre, these videos cater to the incentives and biases of the attention economy, hacking complex issues into slick montages, sound bites, and reactions. They also frequently adopt the aesthetic trappings of conventional journalism — man-on-the-street interviews, live-at-5-style narration — without actually adhering to norms like independence, transparency, or balance.

    This type of figure has existed since the social web gave every wannabe Woodward a platform. But the rapid collapse of trust in media, the new dominance of algorithmic platforms, and a second, emboldened Trump administration ushered in a new era for citizen media. Right-wing creators now sit in the White House press corps and attend high-profile White House events. Their posts are regularly shared by the likes of Vice President JD Vance, FBI director Kash Patel, and — of course — President Donald Trump himself.

    Trump has historically and famously favored mainstream conservative media, like Fox News. But he’s increasingly leveraged the incendiary, attention-grabbing work of sympathetic creators to justify his policy moves. This is essentially what propaganda looks like in 2026, said Jay Caspian Kang, a columnist for the New Yorker who frequently covers politics and the media.

    “You can pick any type of political argument you want, and you can find somebody who is presumably independent who is making that argument,” Kang told Vox’s Noel King. “All you kind of have to do is point them to that person and be like, ‘Hey, here’s just a guy who’s saying something. We’re not influencing him. He’s just a guy out there figuring this stuff out. And then that person becomes, in some ways, an authentic and pure version that doesn’t feel like propaganda.”

    Before Minnesota, that dynamic played out most clearly in Portland, Oregon, where Trump used misleading and selectively edited footage of last fall’s anti-ICE protests to justify a full-scale National Guard deployment.

    As my colleague Cameron Peters wrote at the time, the deployment addressed “a completely made-up set of facts, contrary to the wishes” of city leaders. But you wouldn’t know that from videos like “Portland has Fallen… ANTIFA Take Control of City,” a Nick Shirley production that later earned him an invite to a White House roundtable.

    Shirley’s blockbuster video on Minnesota’s fraud scandal takes a similarly urgent tone. To be clear, no one disputes that fraud has long vexed Minnesota’s social programs. “This is a story that we’ve been covering for years now,” said Max Nesterak, the deputy editor of the Minnesota Reformer, an independent, nonprofit news outlet.

    Unlike the reporting of Nesterak and his colleagues, however — or the multiple, ongoing, much-publicized state and federal investigations that have netted more than 50 fraud convictions since 2022 — Shirley’s video was splashy. Dramatic. A spectacle tailor-made for YouTube.

    Shirley visited almost a dozen daycare centers and confronted staff about fraud in Minnesota’s public child care program, sometimes asking to see the kids on-site or to come inside without an appointment. He interpreted any refusal as proof of malfeasance, which later reporting has not backed up: State officials and local media who have since visited the daycares found they were operating as normal.

    But to many viewers, it hardly mattered that footage of closed child care centers or uncomfortable workers did not constitute incontrovertible evidence of fraud. “This dude has done far more useful journalism than any of the winners of the 2024 @pulitzercenter prizes,” wrote JD Vance, in a December 27 post to X.

    Sure enough, as in Portland, the Trump administration put Shirley’s video to immediate and remarkable use. In the days after Christmas, it instituted funding freezes and new reporting rules that could disrupt child care programs nationwide, Vox’s Anna North reports. The federal government also surged hundreds of ICE agents and other law enforcement officers to Minneapolis this week as part of an immigration crackdown tied to allegations of fraud.

    On Wednesday, one of those ICE agents shot and killed 37-year-old Renee Good as several bystanders looked on. And the cycle is already continuing: Eyewitness videos of that shooting have since become fodder for other right-wing content creators, some of whom also style themselves as journalists or documentarians.



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    India smartphone shipments were flat YoY at ~153M; Apple shipped 14M iPhones, raising its share of shipments to a record 9%, up from 7% in 2024 (Jagmeet Singh/TechCrunch)

    January 24, 2026

    Today’s NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints, Answers for Jan. 23 #487

    January 23, 2026

    The Fork-It-and-Forget Decade – O’Reilly

    January 21, 2026

    AI Data Centers Face Skilled Worker Shortage

    January 20, 2026

    How to Clean Your Keurig (and When)

    January 19, 2026

    Can Congress rein in Trump on Greenland?

    January 18, 2026
    Top Posts

    Understanding U-Net Architecture in Deep Learning

    November 25, 202511 Views

    Hard-braking events as indicators of road segment crash risk

    January 14, 20269 Views

    Microsoft 365 Copilot now enables you to build apps and workflows

    October 29, 20258 Views
    Don't Miss

    Designing trust & safety (T&S) in customer experience management (CXM): why T&S is becoming core to CXM operating model 

    January 24, 2026

    Customer Experience (CX) now sits at the intersection of Artificial Intelligence (AI)-enabled automation, identity and access journeys, AI-generated content…

    iPhone 18 Series Could Finally Bring Back Touch ID

    January 24, 2026

    The Visual Haystacks Benchmark! – The Berkeley Artificial Intelligence Research Blog

    January 24, 2026

    Data and Analytics Leaders Think They’re AI-Ready. They’re Probably Not. 

    January 24, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    About Us

    At GeekFence, we are a team of tech-enthusiasts, industry watchers and content creators who believe that technology isn’t just about gadgets—it’s about how innovation transforms our lives, work and society. We’ve come together to build a place where readers, thinkers and industry insiders can converge to explore what’s next in tech.

    Our Picks

    Designing trust & safety (T&S) in customer experience management (CXM): why T&S is becoming core to CXM operating model 

    January 24, 2026

    iPhone 18 Series Could Finally Bring Back Touch ID

    January 24, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.
    Loading
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    © 2026 Geekfence.All Rigt Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.