The Black Manosphere is Not An Ally To Black Women

In chat rooms and YouTube channels, Black men parrot conservative talking points and bunk social science to demonize Black women

Aaron G. Fountain, Jr.
LEVEL
Published in
8 min readMar 2, 2020

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Illustration: Richie Pope

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“W“White stuff.” That’s how Skyler describes his interests by the time he got to college. As a preteen, he had moved with his family from the entirely Black neighborhood he’d grown up in to a predominantly White suburb; the next few years were an exercise in cultural assimilation. In college, he even joined a majority-White fraternity.

But after the 2016 presidential election fueled racial tensions on campus, Skyler began distancing himself from his frat brothers — and seeking out the culture he had drifted from. Eventually, music and reading led him to YouTube, where he came across Red Pill Table Talk, run by a creator calling himself Angryman. Through Angryman, Skyler descended into a YouTube rabbit hole he never even knew existed.

The men he watched discussed a variety of topics, but seemed preoccupied with women. Some showed their faces. Others remained anonymous. Few used their real names. At first he thought they were harmless — but things changed, and…

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Aaron G. Fountain, Jr.
LEVEL
Writer for

Ph.D. Candidate in History at Indiana University and freelance writer. Bylines: Al Jazeera, The Hill, etc. Twitter: https://twitter.com/aaronfountainjr