Anthony Fantano: Why are we letting one man decide what is good?  

Anthony Fantano, or TheNeedleDrop on YouTube, made his fame for his brutally honest album reviews. With a cult following and a plethora of controversies under his belt, I want to know why he is considered an influential voice within music criticism. 

Some of his 10/10 albums include the sound of summer 2024, Charli XCX’s Brat (2024). Along with this, is the genre bending To Pimp a Butterfly (2015) by critically acclaimed rapper Kendrick Lamar. Both of these albums are no surprise to me. They’re inventive, whilst still dominating the mainstream. Songs like ‘360’ by Charli and ‘King Kunta’ by Lamar were popular with old and new fans alike. They also both performed well in the commercial charts and wider public sphere. ‘Brat’ peaked at number 1 in the UK Official Albums Charts as did ‘To Pimp a Butterfly’. 

In contrast to these well-loved popular records, is Death Grips’ album The Money Store (2016) which was also awarded a 10 from Fantano. As a big fan of the comedian James Acaster (this is related I promise), I became quickly familiar with many experimental albums from 2016. For those unfamiliar with Acaster’s podcast and book project, he became obsessed with finding, listening to and rating albums made in 2016. One of these included ‘The Money Store’, an experimental, aggressive, hard yet rewarding listen. The experimental nature of this album clearly strays away from the mainstream with a peak at number 18 on the UK Albums Charts. Although Death Grips have their fan base, a cult one at that, they haven’t particularly made it to the mainstream unlike other artists with albums that Fantano deems 10/10. 

I understand the notion that music critics are supposed to challenge listeners and highlight underground artists however, with Fantano it seems that his views are extremely personal to him rather than his intentions being to introduce new music to followers. Instead, he mass reviews new releases and decides what he likes about them and if he thinks it is deserving of a high or low score. In a way, I suppose that’s the point and that people have become accustomed to waiting for his own personal review of the work of their favourite artist. However, with a following of over 2 million, it feels that many may have fallen into the trap of swapping their own opinions for his. In order to understand how he has this enormous sense of authority as a ‘tastemaker’, it’s important to look towards another dominant force in the music review scene: Pitchfork. 

When some borrow from Fantano for their opinions, others look to Pitchfork. The popular music website scores albums from a 0-10 to one decimal place. When I was first attempting to understand the larger music scene (aka when I started listening to 6 Music instead of Heart), I took Pitchfork’s word as gospel. I trusted what they had to say because they were professionals and their position as critics is respected (mostly). But even they get it wrong. In 2021, they published a list of scores they wished they could change and included the rescores. There are many big names on the list including Lana Del Rey, PJ Harvey, The Strokes, Grimes and Wilco. 

However, the one which stands out to me is Charli XCX’s EP Vroom Vroom (2016). It probably comes as no surprise that I have been a fan of Charli’s work since her inception. Firstly, I managed to link almost every point in this article to her and secondly, I have taste. Her finally getting the respect she deserves in her industry warms my heart. However, her earlier, trailblazing work in the hyperpop sphere was largely looked down on as too leftfield. She worked tirelessly for people to finally understand her and a large part was this EP. Produced by the late SOPHIE and including other large names in the PC music scene such as Hannah Diamond, this EP helped popularise the genre that Brat (2024) took large parts of its inspiration from. The score given to Vroom Vroom (2016) was a 4.5 and Pitchfork wished they could change it to a 7.8 claiming that there was ‘nothing more homophobic’ than the original score, which is true. The issue with the flat number scoring means that there is no room for interpretation. A long form review of an album, EP or single can celebrate the successes and failures combined. However, when that nuanced review is paired with a score out of 10, people look at the score first. The scoring system makes it seem like a pass or fail test system. There shouldn’t be a mark scheme for artistry.  

The popularity of these scores is largely ‘rage bait’. People online, mostly on Twitter (now X) and Reddit, will likely disagree with the marks to some capacity. This conversation can obviously be a useful publicity tool by getting the fans and reader to do the work for the writer and artists. When a fan speaks on a score, this includes highlighting the artist and song as well as the writer and publication. Why should music fans trust scores that even the reviewers can’t get right? And why should we let one man decide what’s good? In my personal music utopia, Anthony Fantano is dethroned as a sort of ‘music god’ and stripped of his power. Instead, there are a variety of voices which are widely accessible and the work of artists isn’t distilled down to one number. 

Words by Kate Moxon

Youtube commits to removing anti-vaccine content

YouTube has committed to removing content promoting false information about approved vaccines, building on the ban around misinformation on the Covid-19 vaccine. 

 Videos falsely discrediting approved vaccines will now be removed alongside anti-covid vaccine content, according to YouTube. False claims against the vaccine have included causing autism, infertility and cancer, as well as a high mortality rate. The new policy will include the termination of high-profile anti-vaccine accounts. 

 The ban on Covid vaccine misinformation came into place last year, but has since been expanded. YouTube has announced that 130,000 videos have been removed since then. The false claims surrounding Covid vaccines have stretched to cover misinformation about vaccines as a whole. YouTube’s new policy will also target misinformation about long-standing vaccines, such as the measles vaccine and the Hepatitis B vaccine. 

 Large platforms such as YouTube have received criticism for not doing more to stop the spread of fake health news on their sites. In July, US President Joe Biden implored these platforms to resolve this issue, stating that social media platforms were primarily responsible for people’s mistrust and suspicion of vaccinations. 

 Regarding their new policy, YouTube released a statement on their official blog, saying: “Content that falsely alleges that approved vaccines are dangerous and cause chronic health effects, claims that vaccines do not reduce transmission or contraction of disease, or contains misinformation on the substances contained in vaccines will be removed.” 

 Personal stories about being vaccinated, information about vaccine policies and videos recounting historical success and failure of vaccine trials will not be removed, as they do not violate the new guidelines. 

 This new crackdown on misinformation follows the Fazze anti-vaccine scandal, wherein an influencer marketing agency reached out to several influencers and offered to pay them to spread misinformation about the Covid vaccine. These influencers included German YouTuber and journalist Mirko Drotschmann, and French science YouTuber Léo Grasset. Both pretended to be interested in the deal in order to learn more and blow the whistle on the organisation.

 Influencers were asked to share what was claimed to be leaked information that showed an inflated number of deaths among those who had received the Pfizer vaccine. They were told not to disclose that the video had a sponsor, which is banned by many social media platforms and illegal in Germany and France. The agency also instructed influencers to share links from a list of articles corroborating this false information. At least four other influencers have spoken out with similar stories since Drotschmann and Grasset made their stories public. Fazze is currently being investigated by both the German and French authorities. 

 Fazze is a branch of digital marketing company AdNow, which is registered in both the UK and Russia. Accusations have been levied against the Russian government, with many believing this to be a ploy to discredit existing COVID vaccines in order to promote Russia’s own vaccine Sputnik V. 

The Russian embassy in London denies these claims, stating: “We treat Covid-19 as a global threat and, thus, are not interested in undermining global efforts in the fight against it…”

Of the incident, Grasset stated: “If you want to manipulate public opinion, especially for young people, you don’t go to TV. Just spend the same money on TikTok creators, YouTube creators. The whole ecosystem is perfectly built for maximum efficiency of disinformation right now.” This further highlights the importance of YouTube’s new ban. Similar bans have been implemented by other social media platforms, such as Facebook and Twitter. 

Image credit: PA

THE LGBTQ+ YOUTUBERS YOU NEED TO WATCH

Joel Rochester
Image credit: Goodreads

Channel: FictionalFates

Bio: Joel identifies as a “bisexual Black British boy”. He is currently in his third year at university, studying English Literature and Creative Writing. He began his bookstagram and blog back in 2015 and this encouraged him to start his booktube account last year, which is already at 50.2k subscribers. Joel was particularly encouraged to start his channel because of BLM, as he felt “more empowered to use… [his] voice in spreading diverse reading and representation and showing that black lives matter”. Indeed, he also amplified his voice through the format of literature, as, in 2020 Joel wrote a short story, ‘The Boy & The Dragon, and is in the process of writing his first novel.

“Reading was probably my escape from reality, like a comfortable and safe space from a harsher world that didn’t like a queer British boy, a queer Black boy”

– Joel Rochester

Video Recommendation: ‘how I organise myself as a reader + student’ / ‘let’s talk about black books, baby

Rose Ellen Dix & Rosie Spaughton
Image credit: divamag

Channel: Rose and Rosie

Bio: Rose and Rosie are a married comedy duo; they have been married for 5 years and you can watch their beautiful wedding video their channel. They both had individual YouTube channels in 2011, before making their first combined channel, “Let’s Play Games”, which was a gaming channel. They then made their channel Rose & Rosie where they do comedy skits and along with more personal videos, including Rose’s experience of having OCD and Rosie’s experience of being a bisexual woman in their “BISEXY SERIES” (Rose and Rosie Vlogs). They have recently started their podcast “Rose and Rosie: Parental Guidance” which discusses their experience of trying for a baby through IUI.

Video recommendation: ‘Rating Gay Ships on Netflix/Discussing My Trauma | EMDR therapy | PTSD and OCD (uncut)

Melanie Murphy
Image Credit: YouTube

Channel: Melanie Murphy

Bio: Melanie is an Irish YouTuber, author, a mother. Her content centres around empowering others by representing her true self.  Melanie shares her bodily insecurities and mental health struggles. Along with this, she discusses and tackles “taboo” subjects such as: abortion rights, sex, sobriety and biphobia. Notably, her “PMS PARTIES” series portrays the often-overlooked subject of PMS, visually representing the struggles that people with periods face. Melanie also creates shorts, including FEMME, a spoken word film about her sexuality, and CHOICE, a film to tackle abortion rights in Ireland. She uses her creative format to speak-up for the LGBTQ+ community and actively tries to educate her viewers, including LGBTQ+ sex and relationships education which is very limited in the UK curriculums.

“I can’t silence all the voices swimming in my brain that question the validity and extent of my bisexuality”

Melanie Murphy

Video recommendation: ‘Why We Still Need Pride/FEMME

Header image credit: Metro Weekly