Jewish Fine Brothers Try to Jew YouTube, Incite Hatred Against Selves

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
February 2, 2016

attends Kari Feinstein's Style Lounge presented by Aruba on January 25, 2015 in Park City, Utah.

No one could have predicted Jews would try to rip people off.

Here’s a feel-good story.

The Jewish Fine Brothers got rich and famous on YouTube making “react” videos. That is “X” reacts to “Y.”

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Their channel is called “React.” It features gimmick videos where they show a group of people – kids, teens, old people – something and then film their reactions to that something.

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It’s not clear whether these Jews invented the concept of a reaction montage (presumably they didn’t, Jews aren’t especially known for their inventiveness; also, not sure you can “invent” that anyway), but they did popularize it.

Other people were making this same type of reaction montages on YouTube, and the Jews became outraged. They attempted to assert a copyright on the word “react,” and started demanding that YouTube shut down all channels using the word.

Along with the mass copyright trolling program, which they announced on January 26, they also told the stupid goyim that they could pay them for the right to make these “react” videos, calling this program “react world.”

I’m not even clear as to whether they claimed to have some legal grounds for doing this, or if they just decided that if the copyright trolled everyone using the word they would develop a de facto legal copyright once people started paying them to use the word.

This Jewish plot resulted in a massive backlash, given both that it was bizarre and illegal as well as sick and wrong. Hundreds of thousands of people unsubscribed from their channel.

Now, they’re really, really sorry.

The Verge:

Having invited the ire of the internet by trying to trademark their reaction videos, YouTubers the Fine Bros have backed off, canceling their controversial React World initiative and apologizing for building “a system that could easily be used for wrong.” In a Medium post today, Benny and Rafi Fine said they have now rescinded all trademarks and applications for brands related to reaction videos (such as Teens React and Elders React). “The reality that trademarks like these could be used to theoretically give companies (including ours) the power to police and control online video is a valid concern,” the brothers said in the post. “Though we can assert our intentions are pure, there’s no way to prove them.”

You can trust us, goyim – we’re God’s chosen people.

As part of the pair’s now-discontinued React World program, anybody who aimed to produce a reaction video — in the vein of one of the Fine Bros’ well-known series — would have had to license the format from Benny and Rafi Fine and their company. News of the program — and its evasive delivery in a YouTube video — led to the brothers losing tens of thousands of subscribers, becoming the target of jokes by fellow YouTubers, and facing a barrage of abuse from commenters. A subsequent attempt to clarify the “confusion” only made matters worse, as Benny and Rafi tried to justify why it would be beneficial for everyone if they were forced to pay to use a generic video format.

In addition to the cancelation of the React World initiative, the Fine Bros say they’re releasing all of their channel’s Content ID claims. The brothers say that most claims through Content ID — YouTube’s own technology that scans uploaded files to see if they belong to someone else — are legitimate, leveled against re-uploaded versions of their own videos, but ask those who’ve had their own original reaction videos removed to contact them.

Sorry, goyim! Sorry! Please continue to watch our gimmicky crap content! Don’t angry, goyim! Goyim! Don’t angry at us, goyim!