Following Miami Club Ban
After "Heil Hitler" Debacle, Myron Gaines Doubles Down | WATCH
Podcaster Myron Gaines shamelessly escalates antisemitism with vile Jewish cosplay after Miami club ban for Nazi antics. This pathetic grifter peddles hate for clicks, mocking suffering while aligning with neo-Nazis

In a brazen display of escalating antisemitic rhetoric, podcaster Myron Gaines, whose real name is Amrou Fudl and co-host of the controversial "Fresh & Fit" podcast, broadcast a live stream on today, where he donned stereotypical Jewish attire and performed a rap laced with hateful tropes.
During the stream on his show "The Debrief," Gaines appeared dressed in a tallit (a Jewish prayer shawl), a black hat, and a fake beard, mimicking the appearance of an Orthodox Jew. He then launched into a rap that invoked classic antisemitic conspiracies, including repeated exclamations of "Oy vey," references to "shut it down," a meme often used to imply Jewish control over media and institutions and lines such as "make a call and turn up the heat." The lyrics grew more inflammatory, with Gaines rapping: "I got my seven, seven, $7000 / I don't give a shit about dead kids / I've got my 777 thousand dollars / I love getting paychecks from Zionists." The setup included an American flag backdrop, posters proclaiming "Blacks Are American," and promotional overlays for his platforms, underscoring the performative nature of the act.
This video is a direct response to Gaines' recent ban from Miami Beach nightclubs, stemming from a scandalous incident on January 17, 2026, at the upscale Vendôme venue. Gaines was part of a group that included influencers Andrew Tate, Tristan Tate, white supremacist Nick Fuentes, streamer Sneako, Clavicular, and Justin Waller. According to circulating footage, the group requested and sang along to Kanye West's antisemitic track "Heil Hitler" from his album Vultures, with some members reportedly performing Nazi salutes.
The event sparked immediate backlash, leading Vendôme to issue a public apology, fire three involved employees, and impose a lifetime ban on the influencers from its properties and those owned by hospitality mogul David Grutman.
Jewish advocacy organizations, including the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) and StopAntisemitism, condemned the nightclub episode as "deeply disturbing," while local officials like Miami Beach Mayor Steven Meiner and Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava demanded accountability. The bans were framed as a necessary stand against hate speech in public spaces.
Rather than reflecting or apologizing, Gaines chose to escalate his behavior through the cosplay, seemingly as a form of defiance or provocation against the criticism and consequences he faced.
Fuentes and Tate, known for their histories of promoting hateful ideologies, have long been associated with such rhetoric, and Gaines' alignment with them suggests a deliberate embrace of controversy to maintain relevance.