Brittany Venti

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Person.png Brittany Venti Bitchute Facebook Instagram Patreon Telegram Twitter Website YouTubeRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(YouTuber)
Brittany Venti.png
Brittany Venti in a YouTube video.
BornBrittany Dier
14 February 1997
New York, USA
NationalityAmerican
Victim ofInternet censorship
Interests • Cancel culture
• Censorship
• Sex trafficking
PartyRepublican Party
An American internet celebrity, who has been deeply affected by censorship on social media.

Employment.png YouTuber Wikipedia-icon.png

In office
May 2015 - Present

Brittany Venti is an American internet personality, commentary YouTuber and “professional troll”. Venti’s comedic style of content has been affected by Internet Censorship, with her being banned multiple times from different platforms.

With an internet history dating back to the Gamergate controversy era, Venti is an internet celebrity best known for the comedic character she portrayed in her streams and videos. Formerly a streamer on Twitch, she now mainly uploads content on YouTube.

She voted for Donald Trump and makes videos talking about the political online discourse. She is opposed to porn and sex trafficking and is critical of Black Lives Matter. She has been described by the media as an “online provocateur” and has been demonised for her Hate speech in her “controversial videos”. Other false accusations of Antisemitism, racism and White Supremacy have also been made.

As of July 2021, Brittany Venti has over 150,000 subscribers on YouTube.

Early life

Venti was born Brittany Dier in New York and grew up in Connecticut. She is an octoroon, being one-eighth black. She was orphaned in her childhood.

Early career

2014 to 2015

She started her online career on the streaming platform Twitch in late 2014 when she was 17. Her screen name comes from the size of drink available at Starbucks. She used a "basic bitch" online persona in order to troll her Twitch audience. Venti pretended to be and over emotional E-girl, who would regularly scream at her viewers for “hate speech” and acting dramatic whenever her stream was raided. She would create her own vocabulary and mispronounce words on purpose as part of her ditzy character. Her character was personified by her exaggerated comedy that pushed the boundaries of Twitch’s Terms of Service. Her channel was covered in an article by Vice News.[1]

2016 to 2017

Her claim to fame was a video in 2016 in which she pretended to freak out when another player “raped” her character in Grand Theft Auto.[2] Later in 2016, she was banned from Twitch for using the text to speech function. She was accused of Anti-semitism after the AI read out an offensive comment in the form of a voice donation. [3]

After her ban from Twitch, she carried on trolling people on Twitter and YouTube. Venti was shadow banned by the former. In early January 2017, she achieved notoriety after attending He Will Not Divide Us in New York, making speeches and trolling the crowd. During one of her appearances, she asked people to chant "shadilay", which is the Jewish call to prayer. The protestors chanted it and the video went viral.[4] She also “rheeeeeeed” when there was a large crowd.[5] The same year, Venti attended the May Day protests.[6] She was arrested by NYPD after getting attacked by Antifa.[7] She went on Rebel News and talked about it with Gavin McInnes.[8]

In August 2017, she attended the Unite the Right rally and filmed it for her YouTube channel, before it was wiped. [9]

Censorship

2018 to 2019

Brittany Venti's tweet dated April 10, 2020, exposing the hypocrisy of YouTube's terms and conditions.

By 2018, her two-year ban from Twitch had ended.

On 4 April 2018, she had a strike on her Twitch channel for a stream she did about the YouTube shooting.[10]

Soon after, she was issued a 24-hour suspension. Venti was accused of Online hate crime and was effectively accused of being a white cultural appropriator for her stream entitled “Ethnic girls Kitchen Stream”. In the video, she made traditional Haitian mud cookies. She did this after Trump called Haiti a sh**hole.[11]

Twitch accused her of producing “racist content” as her stream supposedly included “racist and offensive stereotypes”. Venti released screenshots of emails she exchanged with Twitch Staff. [12] She tweeted out “I got banned for having an African cooking stream today on Twitch because they thought it was offensive. My mom is black, I was raised by her –a black woman. They just assumed my race and banned me. I have DNA testing to prove this.” This was yet another racial controversy involving Twitch.[13]

2020 to present

Harley Dean & Brittany Venti - Censorship in the Adult and Gaming World (interview with Chrissie Mayr) on 8 Jan 2021

In early 2020 she faced YouTube/Censorship. She had a livestream on YouTube taken down mid-stream when she was speaking critically about pornography and sex trafficking.[14] Venti tweeted about the hypocrisy of the YouTube’s policy enforcement as many cam-girls are actively promoted by YouTube to children.[15]

She received a second strike from YouTube during a livestream which was titled “A Stream That Violates NO RULES”. The stream was Venti sat in front of the camera reading a book in silence. The microphone was muted so there was no sound. Behind her was a sign that said “N Word Pass”. Despite the innocence of the video, YouTube removed the stream stating that it was “harmful and dangerous”. The book she was reading was “How To Be Black”, a comedic memoir by American comedian Baratunde Thurston.

The livestream was intended to combat Cancel culture, as people have been cancelled for saying the N-Word, despite its constant use in popular culture. Being a black woman, Venti believes that Political correctness and double standards are being pushed by Silicon Valley in order to silence people. Venti even shared a childhood photo of her with her mother, proving her black identity. Still, YouTube rejected her appeal and the video was deleted. As well as that, her channel received a strike despite her not breaking any of YouTube’s rules.[16]

Venti praying on livestream in April 2020. This stream was flagged as "dangerous".

In April 2020, she received her at least seven takedowns of her livestreams after they were flagged for being “harmful and dangerous,” only for them to be reinstated a few hours later.[17] One of the most notable of these streams was one in which Venti was praying. YouTube said it was a mistake and blamed it on automated systems due to the coronavirus pandemic. It was reported on by Reclaim The Net.[18]

In late 2020, she was suspended from Twitter. She has since had her account restored.[19]

She questioned the official narrative around the 2021 Washington D.C. Riots.[20]

As of 2021, her YouTube channel is completely demonetised.

Views

Brittany Venti on her YouTube livestream in March 2021.

Venti advocates for Freedom of speech, and ridicules Political correctness.

Venti opposes Black Lives Matter, and has criticised their corporate sponsors. For this opinion she has been labeled an Uncle Tom by RationalWiki.

She is anti-pornography and makes YouTube videos about sex trafficking.

Personal life

She is a registered with the Republican Party. She lives in New York City with her cats, and has plans to move to Texas in Summer 2021.[21]


 

Quotes by Brittany Venti

PageQuoteDateSource
He Will Not Divide Us“The Jewish word for "division" or "to divide" is Soros. #NoSoros #Shadilay”January 2017YouTube
PewDiePie ADL controversy“Reinstalled Twitter to talk about PewDiePie's betrayal by donating 50k to the ADL. The company working with places like Twitter to get rid of anything "Offensive" @pewdiepie

You just supported a group that even ruined even YOUR deal to Disney. Wtf?

PewDiePie literally paid $50,000 to not be called racist anymore. And in turn- he just got so many people in the future censored off of places like Twitter and YouTube.

Anytime someone gets banned for now on, I'll be sure to say

"Thanks Pewdiepie"”
11 September 2019X

 

Related Document

TitleTypePublication dateAuthor(s)Description
Document:Weekend Clashes Emblematic of Political Violence Around the CountryArticle16 October 2018Anti-Defamation LeagueThis ADL blog post from 2018 outlines instances of "terrorism", blamed mainly on the Proud Boys during first two years of the Presidency of Donald Trump. Since then, they were revealed to have links to FBI informants.
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