Twitch Streamer Ninja Uses Racial Slur While Improvising Song Lyrics

Twitch streamer Ninja has had a rollercoaster month, becoming one of the biggest names in online video streaming, playing games with superstars, and now finds himself humming a tune that has come up on the Twitch jukebox before.

During a stream last night, the prolific Fortnite streamer who has broken records for viewership, was performing his normal routine of streaming Fortnite for his retinue of fans. Ninja, whose real name is Tyler Blevins, was playing with his friend Matthew "Nadeshot" Haag when the two started listening to music together to go along with their Fortnite gameplay. 

Eventually, the two came across rapper Logic's 44 More.

Blevins starts to sing along with the song, but stumbles a bit here and there as he tries to keep up. Vibing on the music, Blevins starts to ad-lib lyrics, to Haag's amusement until Blevins improvised multiple uses of a racial slur within the lyrics. The lyrics Blevins made up are not anywhere in the song 44 More, nor likely to be mistaken for them easily.

We caution you that there is a strong language warning for this video, but the video taken from Haag's side of the stream can be found here.

The problem arises from Blevins pulling the lyrics from thin air, but also follows a frustrating pattern of streaming gaming personalities who claim to have accidentally used the same slur. Last September, popular Youtube personality PewDiePie did something similar during a PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds stream and later apologized. 

Thus far, Blevins, who has been active on Twitter since the incident, has not acknowledged or apologized yet. He has taken the night off from streaming the game, however.

 

Our Take
There is an argument to be made that Blevins simply repeated things he's heard in music before, but ignorance is only an excuse when acknowledged and regretted. Streamers are finding themselves in the unenviable positions of holding influence where they may previously have never had anything resembling that responsibility. In the case of Blevins, he became almost literally an overnight success and, while I sympathize, it's just so easy not to say racial slurs during streams. Apologizing for doing it is probably a lot harder than just not doing it at all, but it's also pretty damn important.