Opinion | 'Inside The Manosphere' Exposes Online Empire Of Misogyny, But Dodges The Causes
Opinion | 'Inside The Manosphere' Exposes Online Empire Of Misogyny, But Dodges The Causes
Louis Theroux's 'Inside The Manosphere' probes "red-pill" influencers, their misogyny, trauma and political impact, but ignores cancel culture and bias against men
It is a documentary which will make even those opposed to aggressive feminism uncomfortable but unable to disengage.
Louis Theroux’s Inside The Manosphere, Netflix’s lead nonfiction right now, draws you into one of the world’s most provocative trends with raw, unfiltered interviews of influencers who make millions by tapping into the male sense of vulnerability and rage.
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It is astonishing how influential this “shut-up-and-nut-up" credo has been in Donald Trump’s victory in the last US elections, which has since been called the testosterone podcast election. The “manosphere" raged against the Democrats’ perceived anti-male bias.
Kamala Harris’s support for wokeness consolidated not just a big part of the male vote behind Trump, but also many women who disliked the assault on normal gender roles. The “red pill" influencers reaped the hay. Their calculated audacity for the sake of “views farming" and the sheer hypocrisy sometimes in their personal lives are ugly and staggering.
For instance, while they continuously berate women who do sex work on OnlyFans, one of the influencers, Harrison Sullivan, funds an OnlyFans creator house. His excuse: “It’s just business." He would never allow his own daughter to post on sites like OnlyFans, he says, declining to take any........
