Based Camp | Simone & Malcolm Collins

OG Atheist Youtube Split: Why Did the Right Thrive While the Left Failed?

Apr 10, 2026
They trace how early online atheists split into rival internet cultures and name the two seed crystals that birthed today’s online right. They contrast upbeat, debate-driven creators with aesthetic, pessimistic left scenes and explain why some creators retained audiences while others faded. They also spotlight theatrical BreadTube and odd exceptions who kept crossover appeal.
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ANECDOTE

ShoeOnHead Kept A Right Audience By Staying Sincere

  • ShoeOnHead remained popular by projecting non-performative authenticity and upbeat energy while her audience drifted right.
  • Malcolm notes her optimism and perceived sincerity let her keep right-leaning viewers despite not fully adopting politics.
INSIGHT

BreadTube Normalized Socialism But Stayed Aesthetic

  • BreadTube normalized leftist socialism among youth but failed to reshape broader left intellectual norms because it emphasized aesthetics over rigorous debate.
  • Simone counters that BreadTube made socialism mainstream to millennials and Gen Z despite Malcolm stressing vibe over truth.
INSIGHT

Truth Seeking Distinguishes Rightward Trajectory

  • The early skeptic community prioritized truth-seeking and tearing apart widely held but false beliefs, aligning rhetorically with modern right critique of 'wokeism as religion.'
  • Malcolm and Simone frame conservative online content as the new atheism: challenging dogma publicly.
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