QAnon Anonymous | |
---|---|
Presentation | |
Hosted by | Travis View, Julian Feeld, Jake Rockatansky, Annie Kelly, Liv Agar, Brad Abrahams [1][2] |
Genre | News, investigative journalism |
Language | English |
Length | 40-100 minutes |
Country of origin | United States, United Kingdom, Canada |
Production | |
No. of episodes | 568 (276 Main, 242 Premium, 50 Miniseries) |
Publication | |
Original release | 11 August 2018 – Ongoing |
Related | |
Website | www |
QAnon Anonymous (QAA) is an investigative journalism podcast that analyzes and debunks conspiracy theories. It is co-hosted by Travis View (pen name of Logan Strain[3]), Julian Feeld,[4] and Jake Rockatansky,[1] alongside British correspondent: Annie Kelly,[2] Canadian correspondent: Liv Agar.[2] Inner Earth correspondent: Brad Abrahams,[2] and QAA Legal Analyst: Allie Mezei.
The podcast premiered in August 2018, around 10 months after the first couple of posts made by the person claiming to be 'Q' on the 4chan message board.[5] NPR called QAA "a podcast that tracks and debunks online conspiracy theories", initially focusing on the QAnon conspiracy theory but has since widened to discuss related conspiracy theories in general and the history of conspiratorial and reactionary thinking in other time periods.[6]
On April 11th, 2024, the podcast officially rebranded from Qanon Anonymous to simply the QAA Podcast, along with a new theme song and cover art.
The members of QAA have attended various QAnon live events, including the first ever Qanon conference, as well as events relating to other subjects of their journalism[7]
QAA describes QAnon as a "big tent conspiracy theory"[8][9] and a "meta conspiracy theory that provides an underlying narrative for other baseless theories".[10] Annie Kelly acts as the podcast's United Kingdom correspondent and joined the podcast as the conspiracy theory spread from the United States to other countries, such as when it was accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic.[11]
Liv Agar has covered conspiracy theories focused on Canada, as well as topics relating to modern-day adolescent internet culture. Brad Abrahams was a documentary filmmaker working on projects relating to new age conspiracies when he joined the podcast as an occasional host.
Julian Feeld has told Wired that QAnon is "a colorful expression of a broader and more worrying global trend towards 'information warfare' in the service of those seeking to consolidate capital and power".[12]
Travis View has written extensively for the Washington Post on the subject of QAnon.[13] The podcast's hosts and correspondents, and View in particular, have been quoted and interviewed extensively by media covering the QAnon phenomenon, including Salon,[14] Vice,[15] BBC,[16] Yahoo,[17] the Atlantic Council,[18] USA Today,[19] and the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC).[20]
The Washington Post named QAnon Anonymous as their Podcast of the Year for 2020.[21]
A number of limited miniseries have been produced by various members of QAA. Trickle Down,[22] hosted by Travis View, discusses the historical dispensation of bad ideas and their results. ManClan,[23] by Julian Feeld and Annie Kelly, is a deep dive into the emerging online manosphere and its various figures. The Spectral Voyager,[24] courtesy of Jake Rockatansky and Brad Abrahams, talks about aliens and related subcultures. Perverts[25] is the newest miniseries, hosted by Julian Feeld and Liv Agar, and is an exploration of "horny" online communities.
Qanon Anonymous has collaborated with a number of other podcasts, including Knowledge Fight, Boontavista and the Conspirituality Podcast.
... hosts Julian Feeld, Travis View, and Jake Rockatansky ...
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