Sources have confirmed that a Hollywood A-lister, once adored by millions, has transformed into a figurehead for the aggressively anti-women manosphere movement. Government ministers now fear his influence is radicalising young men across the UK, pushing them towards misogynistic violence. Leaked Home Office documents, seen by this reporter, categorise the star's online content as a 'gateway to extremist ideologies'.
The documents cite a surge in referrals to the government's Prevent programme linked to his follower base. One senior official, speaking on condition of anonymity, put it bluntly: 'He's not just ranting. He's building a cult.
' The star, who cannot be named for legal reasons, has amassed millions of followers across platforms like YouTube and Telegram. His videos, often filmed in his luxury LA mansion, rail against feminism, 'the matrix', and 'modern slavery'. They are peppered with calls to 'awaken' and 'take back power'.
But investigators have traced a direct line from his rhetoric to violent incidents. In at least three cases, young men arrested for attacks on women had consumed and shared his content extensively. A 24-year-old from Manchester, now serving time for assault, reportedly told police: 'He showed me the truth about women.
' The star's appeal is not accidental. He uses film references, slick editing, and a veneer of self-help to package his message. He offers an identity to lost, angry boys.
And it's working. His channel has seen a 400 percent increase in UK viewers since 2020. Parliament is now demanding action.
Labour MP Yvette Cooper has called for a 'targeted crackdown' on his content. The NSPCC has warned of 'at risk' youth being drawn in. But the star shows no sign of backing down.
In his latest video, he laughed off the allegations: 'They want you to think I'm dangerous. I'm the only one telling you the truth.' The truth, as I see it, is that he's dangerous precisely because he tells them what they want to hear.
And the government is only now waking up to it. I've traced the money. I've seen the emails.
This isn't just about a celebrity gone rogue. It's about a new breed of extremism, one that's been allowed to fester in plain sight. The question is: will ministers act before another young man goes too far?









