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Jeremy Hambly

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American YouTuber and social commentator

Jeremy Hambly
BornApril 1983 (age 42)
Years active2012–present
YouTube information
Channels
Subscribers
  • TheQuartering: 1.9M[1]
  • UnsleevedMedia: 143K[2]
  • ClawStruck: 108K[3]
Views
  • TheQuartering: 1.8B[1]
  • UnsleevedMedia: 40M[2]
  • ClawStruck: 19M[3]
Last updated: September 16, 2025

Jeremy Hambly (born April 1983)[4] is an American[5] YouTuber andright-wing social commentator. Hambly runs several YouTube channels, includingClawStruck, a channel aboutclaw machines,Unsleeved Media, andTheQuartering, a channel which covers politics and pop culture.[6][7][8] Hambly was active within theMagic: The Gathering community until accusations of harassment and bullying led to his departure from the community in 2019. On TheQuartering, Hambly has criticized media and institutions which he perceives to be tooprogressive.

Career

[edit]

Hambly founded ClawStruck, a YouTube channel and website aboutclaw machines, in November 2014.[6] Hambly was interviewed byToday show hostJeff Rossen, where Hambly explained that claw machines could be rigged to change the rate at which customers won rewards.[9][10]: 151–152 

Magic: The Gathering

[edit]

Hambly operated the channel Unsleeved Media, aMagic: The Gathering themed channel.[7]

In 2017,Magic cosplayer Christine Spankle, along with otherMagic content creators, alleged that they were harassed due to Hambly's content, such as a video on Spankle and other cosplayers that was taken down by YouTube for violating its policies on harassment and bullying. In response, Hambly accused Spankle of pushing a false narrative and said that he had been harassed,doxxed, andreview bombed as a result.[7] Hambly also said that he told his followers not to reach out to the subjects of his videos.Wizards of the Coast (WOTC) banned Hambly from all futureMagic events.[11][12] Critic Alexander Adams argued that the ban was due to his unpopularity among some fans and criticism of WOTC rather than a specific policy infraction.[13]: 142 

On August 2, 2018, Hambly was attacked outsideGen Con, which Hambly attributed to his political beliefs. Hambly asked his followers to identify his attacker, and when he tweeted a photo of a man who he said matched his attacker's description, Hambly's followers posted links to hisLinkedIn page,Twitter account, and employer.[14] Gen Con banned Hambly for "targeted online bullying of attendees".[12] In 2019, Hambly announced that he would be quittingMagic, saying "I was probably a little too spicy. Now, I stand by a lot of what I've said."[15]

Politics

[edit]

In 2015, Hambly, a self-described "anti-social justice warrior", created TheQuartering, aright-wing channel which covers politics and pop culture.[16][8][17]The New York Times writer Jamal Michel and scholar Verity Ann Trott described Hambly's audience asreactionaries andincels, respectively.[18][17] According to scholar Christina Wurst, Hambly often used populist rhetoric and drew from and promoted conspiracy theories in his media criticism, such as his accusation thatDisney and politicians were attempting tobrainwash children through the use ofcritical race theory,gender ideology, and diverse representation in children's entertainment.[19]: 217 

In a video coveringGillette's adWe Believe: The Best Men Can Be, Hambly described the ad asanti-male and accused Gillette and YouTube of deleting downvotes. Negative comments on the ad deferred to Hambly as an authority figure or indicated that they were responding to acall-to-action from Hambly.[17] In 2023, Hambly released a video criticizing anLGBTQ resource center inKalamazoo, Michigan, resulting in hundreds of emails, calls, and messages to the center, which the center's director said were "[mostly] hate-filled, but some had veiled threats in them, and others were direct threats".[20]

In response to progressive streamerHasan Piker's ban fromTwitch due to his use of the word "cracker", Hambly argued thatprogressives and leftists worked to redefine racial rhetoric to excludediscrimination against white individuals, while also saying that "cracker" caused little harm compared to other slurs. Scholars Aisha Powell and Dana Williams-Johnson argued that he undermined his own arguments by showing that "cracker" did not carry the same systemic consequences as other slurs.[8]

In October 2024, during theGaza war, social media accounts circulated a video ofCNN journalists in Israel taking shelter whose audio was altered by a TheQuartering editor to add several explosion sound effects and a fake phone call between the journalists and the producer where the producer asked them to "look nice and scared". Hambly said that the audio alteration was meant to be satirical but maintained that the journalists were acting.[21]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"TheQuartering".YouTube.
  2. ^ab"UnsleevedMedia".YouTube.
  3. ^ab"ClawStruck".YouTube.
  4. ^Hambly, Jeremy (September 7, 2022)."I am 39 years old. I'll be 40 in April and I just, for the first time ever felt my age".Twitter.
  5. ^Kozlowicz, Cathy."Sussex YouTuber raises more than $75,000 to help rebuild Kenosha gaming lounge destroyed during protests".Journal Sentinel. RetrievedSeptember 17, 2025.
  6. ^abMinter, Casey (July 25, 2016)."Strange Crane YouTube Site".RePlay Magazine. RetrievedSeptember 17, 2025.
  7. ^abcAlexander, Julia (November 29, 2017)."Magic: The Gathering cosplayer quits over harassment, forcing Wizards to speak up".Polygon. RetrievedSeptember 15, 2025.
  8. ^abcPowell, Aisha; Williams-Johnson, Dana (March 1, 2025).""You dumb cracker b*tch": The legitimizing of White supremacy during a Twitch ban of HasanAbi".New Media & Society.27 (3):1318–1335.doi:10.1177/14614448231191776.ISSN 1461-4448.
  9. ^"Claw machine secrets revealed: Are they rigged?".TODAY.com. July 13, 2016. RetrievedSeptember 17, 2025.
  10. ^Rossen, Jeff (June 25, 2025).Rossen to the Rescue: Secrets to Avoiding Scams, Everyday Dangers, and Major Catastrophes. Macmillan + ORM.ISBN 978-1-250-11944-5.
  11. ^Wells, Adam (December 8, 2017)."Wizards Of The Coast Bans Bullies".Kotaku Australia. Archived fromthe original on July 16, 2024. RetrievedSeptember 16, 2025.
  12. ^abMaher, Cian (September 26, 2018)."The Quartering Star Banned For Life From Gen Con".GameRevolution. RetrievedSeptember 16, 2025.
  13. ^Adams, Alexander (March 6, 2019).Culture War: Art, Identity Politics and Cultural Entryism. Imprint Academic.ISBN 978-1-78836-006-7.
  14. ^Carter, Vic Ryckaert; Hays, Holly V.; Carter, Allison."Outside Gen Con, a punch in the street leads to a firestorm online".The Indianapolis Star. RetrievedSeptember 16, 2025.
  15. ^UnsleevedMedia (April 1, 2019).Goodbye Magic The Gathering. RetrievedSeptember 17, 2025 – via YouTube.
  16. ^Munger, Kevin (April 29, 2024)."The YouTube Apparatus".Elements in Politics and Communication.doi:10.1017/9781009359795.ISBN 978-1-009-35979-5.
  17. ^abcTrott, Verity Anne (June 1, 2022)."'Gillette: The best a beta can get': Networking hegemonic masculinity in the digital sphere".New Media & Society.24 (6):1417–1434.doi:10.1177/1461444820978293.ISSN 1461-4448.
  18. ^Michel, Jamal (October 18, 2024)."Gaming's Uneven Progress Toward Diverse Female Figures".The New York Times. RetrievedSeptember 17, 2025.
  19. ^Wurst, Christina (November 29, 2022)."Bread and Plots: Conspiracy Theories and the Rhetorical Style of Political Influencer Communities on YouTube".Media and Communication.10 (4):213–223.doi:10.17645/mac.v10i4.5807.ISSN 2183-2439.
  20. ^Boldrey, Ryan (February 9, 2023)."LGBTQ+ resource center in Kalamazoo receives hundreds of threatening calls, messages".mlive. RetrievedSeptember 17, 2025.
  21. ^Christensen, Sean (October 23, 2023)."Posts Use Fabricated Audio to Misrepresent CNN Report During Rocket Attack in Israel".FactCheck.org. RetrievedSeptember 18, 2025.

Further reading

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