Russell Brand says YouTube taking down his video for misinformation ‘looks like censorship’

Performer Russell Brand said Tuesday it “looks like censorship” that YouTube took down one of his videos while allowing others to spread "misinformation."

Comedian and commentator Russell Brand called out YouTube Tuesday for punishing individuals for getting COVID facts wrong, when he feels "there’s mainstream media misinformation up all the time."

"We have been officially censored by YouTube," Brand declared in a video he shared on Twitter. "They took down one of our videos for misinformation, but why are big media organizations not censored for misinformation in the same way? Is it because YouTube are part of the mainstream media now?"

Brand said a previous video about COVID had been taken down because "we cited information on official government websites, which we misinterpreted."

He said, "We made an apology video, we’ve taken that down as well, YouTube took down our original video, we’ve taken down the apology video because in case we reiterate the claim while apologizing for it."

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Brand made a case that while he apologized for getting information wrong in a past video, news corporations like MSNBC are permitted to spread misinformation without apparent consequence.

"We made an error, in my opinion a relatively small error, and we’re being penalized! For me that looks like censorship, and the reason I think it looks like censorship is because there’s mainstream media misinformation up all the time," he said.

He then played a YouTube clip posted March 30, 2021, of MSNBC host Rachel Maddow talking about the effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccinations. 

"Now we know that the vaccines work well enough that the virus stops with every vaccinated person," Maddow said in the clip. "A vaccinated person gets exposed to the virus? The virus does not infect them, the virus cannot then use that person to go anywhere else."

While COVID vaccines have been effective in preventing severe outcomes from the virus, they have not prevented people from getting or transmitting the virus. The Centers for Disease Control continues to recommend vaccines as "an important tool to help protect you from severe illness, hospitalization, and death." 

Brand turned the tables and suggested that MSNBC video was a source of medical misinformation.

"That video is up on YouTube right now," Brand observed. "In my opinion, that’s misinformation."

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The MSNBC video in question "We Can Get There!': Stunning Pace Of U.S. Vaccinations Puts Pandemic's End In Sight" was still on YouTube as of publication and did not have a COVID-19 fact check.

Brand added further that the continued presence of such a video that remains without clear penalty raises questions about Big Tech’s moderation standards.

"So we’re asking: Is there one standard for independent news broadcasters like us on our channel, and a different standard for what we would call the ‘mainstream media?’" he said.

YouTube and parent company Google did not respond to a Fox News Digital request for comment. 

Brand explained further on his Twitter that he is moving to Rumble and will be livestreaming from there going forward:

"The good news is, I’m moving to @rumblevideo & LIVE streaming there exclusively from tomorrow - Join me, weekdays from 5:00 pm(BST) - subscribe here."

Independent journalist Glenn Greenwald praised Brand for the move, suggesting YouTube penalized him because he dwarfed major news corporations with his large following.

"The first of these new live Rumble shows to launch will be Russell Brand's tomorrow at noon ET. Russell built one of the largest YouTube audiences: in the millions, far more than CNN/MSNBC. That's why YouTube banned him. I'll be on the debut show. Watch," Greenwald tweeted.

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