This story includes descriptions of sexual assault that may be distressing to some readers.
Russell Brand doesn't want you to trust the mainstream media.
Which is convenient, because the mainstream media just published a lengthy investigation into his actions from 2006 through 2013, involving one rape allegation and three sexual assault allegations from four women.
Brand, 48, has had many lives: the comedian first rose to prominence as a presenter on MTV and then moved into movies like 2008's Forgetting Sarah Marshall and 2010's Get Him to The Greek, became an author and a speaker passionate about reforming drug policy, mental health awareness and spiritual wellbeing.
His most recent shift was towards 'freedom thinking' on platforms like YouTube, where he pondered 'the truth' and fostered a community based on distrust of the world – and especially the media – as we know it.
Over the weekend, three British news outlets reported accusations of rape, sexual assault and abuse against Brand from four different women – an investigation that The Sunday Times news editor Becky Barrow stated on X (previously Twitter) began in 2019.
Brand denied the allegations, saying all of his relationships have been consensual, and posting a video online denying the then-undisclosed allegations from a "mainstream media" television company and a newspaper.
"Amidst this litany of astonishing, rather baroque attacks are some very serious allegations that I absolutely refute," he said.