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The rage bait economy is officially a public safety issue

Controversial streamer ‘Chud the Builder’ has been charged with attempted murder after a heated altercation with a stranger ended in a shooting outside a Tennessee courthouse.

If Dalton Eatherly, better known online as ‘Chud the Builder,’ has somehow escaped your feed, consider yourself lucky. His brand of rage bait is exactly the kind of content that keeps the attention economy thriving.

In the most predictable set of circumstances ever, the 28-year-old streamer is now facing severe charges including attempted murder, aggravated assault, and reckless endangerment with a deadly weapon. On Wednesday, a heated altercation with a stranger outside a Tennessee courthouse led to shots being fired, and Eatherly was booked into the Montgomery County jail.

The other man, yet to be identified, was allegedly shot in the stomach and Eatherly appears to have grazed his own arm with the single bullet he discharged. As of Thursday morning, both men are in stable condition, according to the county sheriff’s office.

It’s unclear exactly how the shooting unfolded or what led up to it, but ‘Chud the Builder’ livestreamed himself speaking to first responders in the aftermath of the incident saying, ‘I had to defend myself by shooting him’ and claiming that the man ‘started wailing’ on him.

What is most exasperating with this case is that anyone familiar with Eatherly’s MO saw it coming. It just went south way faster than expected.

Eatherly’s online persona wasn’t built around anything other than pure provocation. He would antagonise the public under the tenuous guise of preaching ‘free speech’ and his interactions were becoming increasingly heated by the day.

The patterned routine is as repetitive as it is disgraceful. He walks up to Black members of the public, asks them if they believe in free speech, proceeds to say ‘white people can say n***er right?), and then turns the camera onto selfie mode to laugh at how those being filmed are ‘chimping out’ when any sort of shock or bemused laughter ensues.

(Trigger warning for racist and offensive language)

If someone shouts back, he takes it as ‘proof’ they’re triggered, then uses their reaction to demean them further through bigoted stereotypes. If they say nothing, he simply repeats and escalates the racism, either to force a response or to perform some warped sense of dominance over them – all the while politely smiling like the most orderly citizen around.

In recent weeks, he has goaded anyone who bites back and approaches him with threats of macing or shooting them, all while continuing to vehemently shout n***** and mimic ape noises. Only last week he maced a man for juvenilely slapping his hat off his head.

You can understand why nobody is treating this shooting as an unimaginable twist, then. Eatherly’s content relied on walking up to the edge of real-world violence and daring people to push him over it. Someone finally did, and now a man has allegedly been shot while Eatherly sits in jail facing potentially life-altering charges.

Even Kick, a platform I have scorned constantly for its lax safety measures and enabling of real-world harm, had removed him earlier this month deeming him too radioactive. He then found a home on the crypto driven ‘Pump.fun’, a service with seemingly even less integrity.

There’s always another waiting to monetise what others refuse to host. The result is an attention economy where the only way to keep growing is to become more radical, more polarising, and more willing to push the boat out with whatever shocked people last week. In 2026, that model has become a nigh-on infallible way to generate clicks and make money.

In the last 12 months we’ve had people die on stream, seen countless fist fights, bystanders injured by reckless stunts, and now a shooting. At what point is the trust in these platforms to moderate completely eroded? Can we begin to concede that maybe monetised provocation is becoming a genuine public safety issue?

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