Coronavirus

Bolsonaro son tests positive for Covid-19

Twenty-two-year-old Jair Renan Bolsonaro, the fourth of President Jair Bolsonaro’s five children, has tested positive for Covid-19. He reportedly has mild symptoms, experiencing a loss of smell. The president’s office has yet to comment.

Back in April, Jair Renan was banned from popular video game streaming service Twitch after encouraging gamers to break social isolation and engaging in Covid-19 denialism. 

“Go to the streets, o.k.? What pandemic? This is a media invention to lock you inside your home, so you’ll think the world is crumbling. It’s just a little flu, brother,” Jair Renan told viewers during a live streaming session. He added that he would rather die having sex than coughing, before receiving a life ban, according to a post on his Twitter feed.

Jair Renan used to hold live streaming sessions of “League of Legends,” arguably the most popular esports game in Brazil. His Twitch channel had over 50,000 followers before his banning. His streaming content included frequent allusions to his father’s nickname “mito” (legend, in English) and to shooting members of the Workers’ Party.

Why it matters

While the banning of a 22-year-old gamer from a video-streaming platform might seem unimportant, streaming platforms have become crucial for the far-right (not only in Brazil) to disseminate extreme ideas. “The far-right has managed to create a propaganda machine associating its ideology to ‘neutral’ subjects, such as animes, make up, or games. 

Not directly, but using these networks’ ecosystems,” wrote anthropologist Orlando Calheiros. “Basically, through propaganda and sponsoring certain ‘influencers,’ [the far-right] managed to skew the algorithm. People that would go on YouTube to get gaming content would eventually be directed to far-right channels — and get far-right ads.”

Support this coverage →
Gustavo Ribeiro

An award-winning journalist, Gustavo has extensive experience covering Brazilian politics and international affairs. He has been featured across Brazilian and French media outlets and founded The Brazilian Report in 2017. He holds a master’s degree in Political Science and Latin American studies from Panthéon-Sorbonne University in Paris.

Recent Posts

Congress greenlights emergency funds to Rio Grande do Sul amid floods

Congress enacted a state of calamity that will be valid through the end of the…

1 hour ago

Pro-Bolsonaro lawmakers called out in U.S. Congress

U.S. Congresswoman Susan Wild, a Democrat from Pennsylvania, on Tuesday said that a House hearing…

19 hours ago

Brazil’s public accounts record slim Q1 surplus

The accounts of federal, state, and municipal governments, plus those of state-owned companies, recorded a…

21 hours ago

Rio Grande do Sul floods cast Brazilian football into uncertainty

With their stadiums under water and flights suspended, clubs in the state of got the…

23 hours ago

How to donate to Rio Grande do Sul flood victims from outside Brazil

For those who live abroad and want to help, well-known NGOs are making their channels…

1 day ago

Southern Brazil is in Groundhog Day climate

The flooding in Rio Grande do Sul is a harrowing example of how climate events…

1 day ago