The good part starts at 3:58 , runs for about a minute.
"August 2016, an article in
The Daily Telegraph said
The Rubin Report "understands the importance of open debate", had a "rebellious appeal" and "outspoken-but-interesting" guests such as
John McCain,
Ayaan Hirsi Ali and
Tommy Robinson.
[25] Fans of the show support Rubin for his willingness to have open dialogue with academics, ex-Muslims, disaffected progressives, as well as fringe
alt-right figures.
[12]
According to an article in
The Daily Beast, Rubin has "positively platformed and appeared with bigots, ultra-nationalist identitarians, and hoax conspiracy theorists".
[12] An article in
Der Spiegel said Rubin's show "provides a platform for alt-right voices in a pseudo-credible setting."
[26] Guests on
The Rubin Report have included alt-right figureheads such as
Stefan Molyneux,
Milo Yiannopoulos and conspiracy theorist
Paul Joseph Watson.
[27]
An article in
Tablet said Rubin "almost never tries to convince his guests that they're wrong".
[7] Journalist
Cathy Young, who has been a guest on
The Rubin Report and praised Rubin's interview with
James Damore, said Rubin's style of "asking his guests sympathetic questions, almost never challenging them, and often reinforcing their answers with enthusiastic agreement" was unsuccessful when interviewing guests who were unreasonable or misrepresented themselves.
[12] Young gave the example of
Stefan Molyneux who, despite his "long record of misogyny and racism", "masquerades as a rational 'new centrist'."
[12] According to
The Daily Beast, Rubin's show hosted an "uncritical" interview with
Lauren Southern where she accused the
Canadian Nazi Party of being "backed up and egged on" by a Jewish organisation that wanted more "hate crimes to point out".
[12] The
Daily Beast article said "at its worst moments, [
The Rubin Report] is essentially a re-packaging of reactionary disinformation in a shiny, smiling, high-definition talk show pageant."
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