
Today’s post about narrative control is a continuation from yesterday’s post about Missoula’s power couple, Sheriff Jeremiah and hospital Barbie. In that post I referenced EWU Media and their desire to obtain and distribute footage from two Montana cases, but this effort is being legally challenged by the Missoula County Attorney’s Office, citing CCJI (Confidential Criminal Justice Information) as the reason to deny EWU’s request.
To better understand this Nevada-based media company, let’s look at their website:



Is this “media” company monetizing public record requests for commercial use? It appears so. They also make documentaries and do “investigative journalism” while feeding the insatiable appetite for “True Crime” content, which is an audience dominated by primarily women in various stages of wine intoxication.
When I started looking for online criticism of this business approach to online “storytelling” I found some interesting criticism, like this article from Vox:
If you’re arrested in America for a minor charge — say, for speeding or loitering — the punishment from the legal system might end up being the least of your worries. You might wake up a few months later and see your arrest, filmed through a police body camera, with a million views on TikTok or YouTube. A few days later, it might have 5 million views, or 20 million. Your face would be next to dozens of other faces of the recently arrested, all on monetized, for-profit social media channels. And it would be almost impossible to get the videos taken down. Like so much of the algorithm-driven internet, this particular subsection can be easy to miss. But it’s massive.
A popular YouTube channel like Code Blue Cam averages over 10 million views a video, and has totaled more than a billion across hundreds of videos. Another, Midwest Safety, has totaled over 1.5 billion views. There are dozens like this, all with similar names: “Body Cam Watch,” “PoliceActivity,” “EWU Bodycam.” At least one channel is represented by an agency that represents more traditional influencers. These channels are now well-known enough that recent arrestees have posted specifically about the fear of ending up on these channels. “I literally have panic attacks about this,” one posted on Reddit. “If my video was released I’d go off the deep end.” Another: “I feel like it will not only affect my chances of getting into a good career, but that millions of people would see me acting like a drunken idiot.”
Body-camera footage was supposed to create a layer of objective accountability for the benefit of citizens, not create an exploitive, for-profit industry of media exploiters, but that is what apparently happened, and it happened while Missoula law enforcement attempted to play the same exploitive game by directly collaborating with Live PD, a collaboration that resulted in this criticism of Bill Burt’s performance for the cameras (the image is not directly related to the Missoulian article):

In its first weekend putting the Missoula County Sheriff’s Office on live broadcast, Live PD and the production crew’s accompanying deputies have drawn allegations of “hamming it up” for good television — but the Sheriff’s Office strongly defended a stop in question as appropriate.
Anna Baldwin described her son’s Sept. 21 experience in a letter published in the Missoulian on Tuesday. Baldwin, the 2014 Montana Teacher of the Year, expanded on her son’s experience in a phone interview with the Missoulian on Tuesday.
Baldwin, of Arlee, said her son was parked at the Wye, “collecting himself” and preparing to drive home up Evaro Hill after receiving some distressing personal news, when he was approached by a deputy sheriff. Her son, 15, told Baldwin the encounter had been friendly and professional until camera crews rolled up on the scene.
Then, she said Capt. Bill Burt became aggressive with her son. Her son said the officer repeatedly told him “Don’t lie to me” about how much he had been drinking and conducted field sobriety tests outside his car.
“The biggest thing I worry about is the effect of the camera on the person who is being filmed,” Baldwin said in a phone interview with the Missoulian on Tuesday, “whether that’s the office, maybe hamming it up a little bit for effects, or the person being sought, in this case, my son. And he was humiliated. He thought he was going to be on TV for all the wrong reasons.”
Moving on, the woman going viral for getting tased by Missoula police officer, Lucas Bighouse, recently went on a Libertarian podcast to pitch her GoFundMe account, which is being run by a woman with the Tik Tok handle “406Revolutionized”.

The woman running “406Revolutionized”, Amanda McKnight, got into this work after her husband, Joshua McKnight, was arrested and prosecuted for meth possession after a car crash in Sanders County. Now Amanda is an “advocate” for those moving through “the system“.
In this episode of Unpacking Injustice, we’re joined by Amanda McKnight, founder of 406 Revolutionized, a growing Facebook group supporting incarcerated individuals and their families across Montana.
Amanda shares how her husband’s incarceration led her to become what she calls an “unwilling student of a broken legal system.” What began as a personal search for answers quickly evolved into a statewide advocacy effort focused on helping families navigate Montana’s criminal legal system, access reliable information, and find community during some of the most difficult moments of their lives.
Amanda discusses the challenges families face when a loved one becomes incarcerated, the importance of making legal systems easier to understand and navigate, and the role lived experience plays in advocating for change. She also shares her concerns about the parole board, prison conditions, communication barriers, and the need for greater transparency and accountability within Montana’s correctional system.
While I don’t doubt Amanda McKnight is doing some positive advocacy work for families with incarcerated loves ones–like her tweaker husband who walked out on his own trial, then used his absence in a failed attempt to appeal his conviction–I shudder at the thought that we, as a society, will be increasingly relying on digital content creators and social media algorithms to identify worthy “victims” of this dysfunctional system for the normies to throw some digital donation-dollars at so they can sleep better at night.
In the case of the tased victim of Missoula PD, it’s Northwest Liberty News doing the victim vetting. Who is Northwest Liberty News? Just some Bundy boosters doing their part to save America from itself:

NorthWest Liberty News was founded in 2013 by James White, who still serves as editor and host of the podcast that bears its namesake. White, a Network Engineer by trade, moved to the picturesque landscape and open skies of Northwest Montana just over 10 years ago with his wife and two daughters.
NorthWest Liberty News was quickly thrust into the world of alternative media shortly after its inception when Oath Keeper Founder and January 6 Political Prisoner Stewart Rhodes asked White to provide video coverage for the Oath Keepers’ journey to Nevada in defense of Cliven Bundy’s Ranch.
After listening to the interview, where the victim explains how nice the cops were in all the other instances where she got caught driving on a suspended license, I realized there was much more to this story than what was being presented to the public. Seeing “Liberty News” get involved only increases my suspicions.
Is everything a grift?

While I try telling myself that not everything is a grift, evidence of grift is all I ever seem to find when I start digging into, or try to collaborate with, different media efforts, like the podcast collective I got kicked out of after calling out Mark Steeves for being a grifter who did NOT do what his email said he would do when I was “onboarded” to “Alt Media United”.

While I haven’t given up on collaborating with other media efforts, like providing an interview to the Peaceful Sea Network/Hodler Media Group about the Missoula County Sheriff’s Office euthanizing and executing two black men, I have to admit that I might not have the tits or the temperament to be a successful content creator for the Libertarian crowd.


Should I apologize to the Stevenson family for not having the tits or temperament to make the murder of their family member by the Missoula County Sheriff’s Office sexy enough for people to care about? Or should I perhaps apologize instead for being an insufferable asshole who misread the room about the worthiness of the dead black men I’ve written about dozens of times over the last six years?
If you think I’m being unfair, here’s a suggestion of what you can do: simply claim to be a reasonable person in fear of my existence and I’m sure there’s a Missoula judge out there who will gladly give you a restraining order and, when you get that restraining order, just go somewhere that you know I’ll be and get me arrested. This strategy is now a proven recipe that will continue happening as long as I continue to physically exist, with the added crime of publicly talking about the deep and disturbing corruption I’ve found hiding behind the illusion of this liberal mountain college town.
Maybe some day a Travis with tits will appear to find a more marketable victim to unlock the dark heart of Missoula with so that it’s finally understood why David Lynch was marked from birth, and why Robert CIA Redford was welcomed with open arms.
Until that day arrives, I’ll keep puttering along the remaining patches of ground I’m legally allowed to exist on and pitching my own GoFundMe page, since no “406 Revolution” is knocking on my digital door to help out.
Thanks for reading!






















