A viral nightclub clip has pushed Kick streamer Braden Clavicular into the center of a fast-moving online backlash. The controversy erupted after footage surfaced showing Clavicular singing along to Kanye West’s banned track “Heil Hitler,” also known as “HH,” inside a Miami nightclub while streaming live. Standing nearby were some of the internet’s most polarizing figures, including Andrew Tate and Nick Fuentes, amplifying the reaction almost instantly.The video went viral on X and Reddit in several hours, and it was not only the selection of songs that was criticized, but the setting and the company as well. In response to the outrage, Clavicular later that day responded to the wave of social media backlash and commentary with a Just Chatting livestream, acting in real time to the resultant outcry.
Clavicular reacts on livestream after Kanye West song controversy explodes online
During the stream, Clavicular appeared amused by the scale of the response and said: “Yeah, this is viral. This is fking everywhere, man. ‘This is the sort of thing a nine-year-old boy finds funny.’ It’s funny because we literally got a Jewish club in Miami Beach to play Heil Hitler. Right? That’s what makes it funny, it’s that we have enough status and influence to literally get them to play fking the most… like, you can’t even find the song on a single platform. We had to play on f**king Rumble.”He also pushed back at critics who mocked him personally, adding: “So funny. So funny! ‘Awkward kid requests a song.’ Yeah, awkward kid, but we had the… yeah, look at this section. Look at this section! We’re so awkward, bro. Look at this fking section. Fking bch a n*****. You know what I mean? Like, so funny! Actually, comical as s**t. Extremely funny.”
As the clip continued circulating, Vendôme, the Miami venue where the incident took place, issued a public statement distancing itself from the broadcast. In an Instagram post, the club said:“We are aware of a video circulating online from one of our venues that includes content and imagery that are deeply offensive and unacceptable. We want to be unequivocally clear: Vendôme and our hospitality group do not condone antisemitism, hate speech, or prejudice of any kind. These values are fundamentally opposed to who we are and the environments we strive to create.”The venue also confirmed it is conducting an internal review and promised immediate action against those responsible. As reactions continue to pour in, the incident has reignited debate around livestream accountability, platform boundaries, and how far shock-driven content is allowed to go before consequences follow.
