This man was arrested and robbed on a Twitch live stream

A Twitch streamer named Mr. Big had a very bad night. After 12 hours of live-streamed gaming, Big got a noise complaint from his neighbors that would escalate into two different arrests and one low-level robbery — most of which was caught on tape.

The complaint began with a friendly knock on the door, visible at 13:43. Big responded erratically, saying, “I will scream freedom all night long.” After the conversation finishes, he kicks his door shut, slamming it. The police arrive an hour later, at 14:44, in apparent response to the noise complaint, although audio is silenced until 14:47. Asked for his name, he responds, “my last name is America” and refuses to give his name. He also informs the police that they’re visible on Twitch, with 65 viewers watching their interactions. After another 10 minutes talking with the police, he’s arrested, with police closing the door behind him — but the action isn’t quite over. At 14:59, Big’s neighbor can be seen entering the unlocked apartment and stealing Big’s shoes, headphones, cellphone, lighter, and wallet.

“Thankfully he was caught on my live stream and my mods called the police,” Big wrote on YouTube after the event.

“Now he is in jail on felony charges. My property was returned to me and I’m currently fighting for my erroneous charges to be dismissed.”

Note: The video is only accessible on his YouTube channel.
mr-big-video

Video Timeline:

Minecraft Streamer “CaptainSparklez” Buys Swank Mansion For $4.5M

It turns out that Notch isn’t the only guy who can afford to splurge on some swanky digs thanks to the magic of Minecraft. 23-year-old YouTuber Jordan “CaptainSparklez” Maron recently splurged on a $4.5 million pad above the Sunset Strip in Hollywood, and while it may not be in the league of Casa Notch, Maron didn’t make Minecraft—he just plays it.

The house is 4100 square feet, according to Variety, with three bedrooms, five baths, glass-railed terraces on each of the three floors, an outdoor fireplace, sunken wet bar, and a terrace with a stainless-steel barbecue, “party-sized spa,” and infinity swimming pool. Suddenly John Carmack’s Ferrari seems a bit trite, doesn’t it?

Business Insider has the photos from the Nicholas Property Group listing. Keep on streaming, kids. Keep on streaming.

Minecraft streamer buys $4.5 million mansion

Minecraft streamer buys $4.5 million mansion

Minecraft streamer buys $4.5 million mansion

Minecraft streamer buys $4.5 million mansion

Minecraft streamer buys $4.5 million mansion

Minecraft streamer buys $4.5 million mansion

Minecraft streamer buys $4.5 million mansion

Minecraft streamer buys $4.5 million mansion

Minecraft streamer buys $4.5 million mansion

Minecraft streamer buys $4.5 million mansion

Rinse and Repeat creator speaks out against Twitch after ban

Robert Yang, the developer and scholar behind the locker room-set, playable social commentary Rinse and Repeat, has called a Twitch policy that resulted in his game’s prohibition from the service “fucking disgraceful.”

As he did in a pair of tweets acknowledging the game’s addition to Twitch’s blacklist, he noted in a post sharing his thoughts on the ban that while the censorship is, in a way, “validating,” “the Twitch policy about sex and nudity is shitty… and also really unhealthy for video games as an artform.”

Twitch’s rules of conduct state that “nudity can’t be a core focus or feature” of a streamed game, and Rinse and Repeat’s shower-based gameplay fits that description. Yet Yang feels that the rule “erases the context of the work and ignores how the nudity is presented,” he writes. “Instead [Twitch focuses] on a nonsensical formal distinction where ‘nudity is OK if it’s only a fraction of the game.'”

Mass Effect, Metal Gear Solid and Dead or Alive are a few of the titles which he considers to unfairly receive an OK despite their tendency towards what he considers to be “unnecessary exploitative bullshit.” This is because games from these series feature bodies, particularly female, on display in a manner he considers overtly sexual.

Twitch’s prerogative to completely remove streams featuring a major amount of nudity regardless of “why” differs from how other video services operate. Yang referenced YouTube and Vimeo’s policies specifically, as each of these sites feature language allowing the artistic or non-gratuitous display of the human body in their rules.

In his write-up of the game’s development, which he shared to accompany its launch, the queer scholar addresses its central themes of male homosexual social constructs, such as the hierarchy of power and structure of consent within the community. These ideas qualify what is, in Yang’s view, a warranted deployment of nudity.

Ultimately calling for a nuanced revision of the livestreaming site’s policy, the developer argued that “the idea that nudity and sex are allowed on Twitch, only when it’s tangential and exploitative, is a… rather regrettable policy.” He added that “it sends conservative messages for what is allowed to be a ‘real game’, and discourages artistic experimentation from developers for fear of being banned from Twitch.”

This is apparently not the first time the provocative developer has been subject to Twitch’s steadfast anti-nudity clause: His game Cobra Club, “a free photo studio game about body image, privacy, and dick pics,” is also banned. Both games are available for download.

We have reached out to a representative for Twitch for comment and will update with more as we receive it.

Update: Regarding Yang’s comments, a representative for Twitch stated via email that “Our Terms of Service address our stance on content that is not allowed.”

Originally posted on Polygon.

How Snickers Got Famous Gamers on Twitch to Become Unrecognizable From Hunger

“You’re Not You” keeps on giving

Snickers’ “You’re Not You When You’re Hungry” campaign continues to prove fertile ground for social campaigns. A few months ago, Snickers got YouTubers to post terrible videos as if they recorded them hungry. Now, the candy brand has moved on to Twitch. Continue reading How Snickers Got Famous Gamers on Twitch to Become Unrecognizable From Hunger