YouTube has struck again. This week, the video streaming platform decided to ban Explosive Media, a pro-Iranian outfit that churns out AI-generated Lego-style animations poking fun at the United States and its allies.
Led by a sharp operator who goes by Mr. Explosive, the small team of fewer than 10 creators insists it operates independently, though it admits the Iranian government counts as a paying customer. Their videos have exploded onto social media, racking up hundreds of millions of views by blending American pop culture with biting satire on the US-Israel war against Iran.
The clip that finally drew YouTube’s red line surfaced right after the fragile truce between the parties involved. It depicts President Donald Trump with an oversized yellow head and a flaming backside. He clutches a sign that screams “VICTORY! I am a loser,” while the caption states “The way to crush imperialism has been shown to the world. Trump surrendered. IRAN WON.”
Other videos have scrutinized Trump’s Epstein ties and portray the US-Israeli alliance as a pedophile-run war machine.
YouTube yanked the channel over what it described as “violent content” and spam with deceptive practices. Explosive Media shot back on X by saying “Seriously? Are our LEGO-style animations actually violent?”
Pro-Western perspective: curbing foreign propaganda
Supporters of the ban view the move as common sense. Platforms cannot host slick Iranian “slopaganda” dressed up as harmless kids’ toys, in their view.
By celebrating fictional Iranian missile strikes on the White House and Tel Aviv, they believe the channel sows division among Western audiences already weary of foreign wars. YouTube is right to enforce its rules against misinformation and violent content to protect users from coordinated foreign influence campaigns that blur entertainment with state-directed narrative control, according to this perspective.
Nonetheless, opponents fire back, insisting the real violence lies in silencing uncomfortable truths about a questionable military campaign with highly debatable motives.
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Anti-Western perspective: truth faces censorship
Critics aligned against the West argue the animations expose raw realities that Washington and Tel Aviv prefer buried.
They spotlight the American-Israeli military apparatus, which initially launched strikes in February, as an aggressor that dragged ordinary Americans into another needless conflict while polls showed majority disapproval.
In this view, the videos rightly slam Trump for starting the fight to distract from Epstein scrutiny and for threatening to drag Iran “back to the Stone Age.”
Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei has condemned the ban as an effort to “suppress the truth about their illegal war on Iran” and shield a false narrative depicting Uncle Sam as virtuous.
To Western opponents like Baghaei, the Lego bricks build a legitimate critique of imperialism, humanize Iranian resilience and highlight hypocrisies that Western media ignores.
NEW 🇮🇷🇺🇸: Lego Style Music Video from Explosive Media
Title: Stone Age
This video highlights the ancient civilization of Persia to Iran versus USA https://t.co/fY9o7kjguS pic.twitter.com/1FnYYgcMvn
— Ryan Rozbiani (@RyanRozbiani) April 15, 2026
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