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TheQuartering Jeremy Hambly

Drawn and Quartering: How Right Wing YouTuber, Jeremy Hambly, Nuked His Career

The past ten years have been a roller coaster for right wing commentators on YouTube and other major streaming platforms. Without any warning at all, large channels could disappear overnight for violating nebulous Terms of Service (TOS) guidelines. One account that was able to weather this storm to YouTube success was that of Jeremy Hambly, known online by his moniker The Quartering. However, now that TOS guidelines have relaxed in recent years (due in part to Elon Musk’s purchase of Twitter but also Susan Wojcicki’s exit), the Quartering is no longer the only game in town. Facing dwindling views and reduced cash flow, Jeremy is now lashing out at other channels over embarrassing information coming out about him from another account called the Kino Casino.

Background: The Quartering

After about ten years of failed hobbyist channels, Jeremy Hambly aka The Quartering switched his focus in 2015 to pop culture, gaming, Hollywood, comics, and politics. He is mostly known for his outspoken anti-woke and anti-SJW viewpoints, often criticizing what he sees as progressive overreach in media and entertainment. He has a habit of running topics into the ground for as long as they are profitable, for example, the wokeness of actress Brie Larson and (ironically in this case) the fall of Jack Murphy. In recent years, Hambly has become a prominent Rumble supporter and partner. In 2023, Rumble added his live show to its lineup of gaming and cultural content, describing it as “authentic and comedic” social commentary. After Charlie Kirk was murdered, Jeremy declared himself to be a born again Christian, which given his behavior on and off stream is quite a dubious claim. Up until 2025, he had always claimed to be an atheist.

Background: Kino Casino

Kino Casino is a weekly comedy livestream show and podcast hosted by Andy Warski and Ashton (known online as PPP, People’s Populist Press, or Power of the Truth). It airs primarily on an alternative streaming platform called Kick, with clips and highlights often posted to YouTube (via an associated clip channel owned by one of their editors). The show specializes in high-energy, chaotic commentary on internet drama, “lolcows” (eccentric or self-sabotaging online personalities), grifters, failed provocateurs, and e-celebrity feuds. Jeremy Hambly is a regular target of the Casino’s “felting,” a gambling term that refers to someone losing all of their chips at a casino.

Kino Casino’s Coverage of The Quartering

Kino Casino’s commentary on Jeremy Hambly (The Quartering) has been a recurring segment for several years, often framing him as a declining or hypocritical figure in the anti-woke commentary space. The show hosts would consistently point out what they perceived to be as personal inconsistencies in Hambly’s life and on-stream behavior. For example, Hambly will often complain about his financial problems and beg his audience for a bailout, while also bragging about lavish purchases.

The commentary would also frequently highlight what Kino portrayed as a loveless or strained marriage. Clips from Hambly’s own streams where he discussed his wife (sometimes publicly by full name) were replayed and analyzed. Kino interpreted these as evidence of an unhappy or distant marriage, with jokes about Hambly’s personal life and hypothetical scenarios where he pined after other women. Hambly has pushed back by saying he does not mind jokes about himself but drew a line at anything affecting his family’s safety or privacy, despite the fact that Kino Casino does not actively target his wife or other family members.

PPP and Andy Warski would also air segments that involved alleged creepy behavior toward female co-hosts and guests. One widely discussed clip from a Turning Point USA event showed Hambly attempting to arrange a private dinner and drinks outing with employee Melonie Mac while sidelining other co-hosts. Mac was seen mouthing “help me” to female co-host Hannah-Claire, who then inserted herself into the plans. The look of dismay on Jeremy’s face was all too obvious. Such incidents only fueled speculation that the Hambly marriage was in fact open and a sham.

The Final Straw

The coverage reached a new level with the revelation when the Kino Casino highlighted that Hambly’s longterm friendship with someone named Adam, a Wisconsin-based man active in the swinger community. Jeremy had even made drunken on-stream references to socializing with him (e.g., darts, hot tub invites). The Kino boys used this association to fuel speculation about Hambly’s marriage, including cuckoldry allegations. All of this was found out via public statements by Jeremy on stream or by Adam on public forums, which were aggregated and presented on Kick by PPP and Warski.

Jeremy Hambly’s Retaliatory Actions and the Clips Channel Termination

In early April 2026, as Kino Casino continued its segments on Hambly’s marriage and friendship with Adam, the situation escalated into direct threats. Leaked direct messages between Jeremy Hambly and Kiwi Farms administrator Josh Moon, dated around April 6, showed Hambly expressing rage over the personal nature of the coverage. He reportedly warned that if Kino Casino did not stop discussing his family and friends, he would pursue “scorched earth” measures. In the messages, Hambly allegedly referenced his influence and connections at YouTube and even Kick, stating he could have their channels removed entirely and would “take everything they have” without apology. He framed the commentary as crossing a line into harassment of his personal life.

Shortly after the leaks surfaced, on or around April 10, 2026, the Kino Casino Clips channel was terminated. YouTube cited TOS violations, specifically “ban evasion,” even though neither Andy Warski nor PPP were banned on the platform at the time. Kino Casino hosts publicly accused Hambly of orchestrating or directly participating in mass flagging (sometimes referred to as “gay ops”), leveraging his large subscriber base and YouTube contacts to trigger the enforcement action.

Hambly initially responded to the channel’s removal in ways that many interpreted as unapologetic or even celebratory. However, he later issued public denials on his streams and social media, claiming he had not personally flagged or reported the Kino Casino channels through any of his own YouTube accounts. He attempted to demonstrate this by showing account details indicating no reports originated from his channels.

These denials were undermined by his earlier text messages as well as an errant screen share on Hambly’s Rumble livestream, when he accidentally left his web browser visible on screen. Screenshots captured by viewers and Kino Casino showed recent emails from YouTube support addressed to accounts linked to him (including one associated with his older MTGHeadquarters branding). The emails contained standard “Thank you for your report” language confirming that flagging actions had been submitted and reviewed. Kino Casino and others presented this as definitive proof that Hambly had been actively involved in the reporting process, contradicting his earlier statements and denials. The incident continues to be debated across drama channels, with calls for YouTube to review the termination.

Conclusion

Jeremy Hambly’s aggressive response to Kino Casino and its allies, marked by the subsequent termination of the show’s primary YouTube clips channel, has produced the opposite of the intended effect. Rather than silencing criticism, the episode has galvanized widespread condemnation across the streaming/commentary community. Creators who previously had little overlap with or outright animosity toward Andy Warski and PPP have joined the chorus of criticism, framing Hambly’s alleged use of platform enforcement as hypocritical for a longtime opponent of censorship and “cancel culture.”

The result is an unusual coalition: longtime rivals, neutral drama channels, and former allies now openly discussing Hambly’s decline in relevance, audience erosion, self-inflicted reputational damage, and even more embarrassing revelations about him. As this is a developing story, it is not yet known whether the Casino’s channels will be restored, but PPP and Warski show no signs of backing down on their weekly Kick streams.

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One Response

  1. Quartering may be a grifter but he’s a necessary evil as without him Normies would not even know what’s going on in the world. Jon Del Arroz has always conplained that Quartering just reads his articles. Sure, but if he didn’t Normies would never find their way to them.

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