José covers conservative commentary and political media analysis, focusing on retrospectives and critiques of right-wing figures and media outlets. The channel appears to produce in-depth explorations and commentary on culture war topics, as indicated by video titles such as The Sharp Fall of Ben Shapiro and The Daily Wire's Decline, with a likely mix of reviews and retrospective-style videos. Upload frequency is implied by the 117 videos since 2018, and average views per video are about 393K.
Both target conservative audiences with political commentary and culture critiques, sharing high search overlap on queries like conservative commentary and Charlie Kirk legacy, while TPUSA’s content style diverges from José’s.
Share a focus on investigations and cultural issues within conservative discourse, with strong search alignment around Candace Owens investigations and popular conservative figures, though Owens’ content approach differs from José.
Both perform culture war analysis and debates, reflected in similar search queries on culture war analysis, with Tim Pool’s format differing in presentation and tone from José.
Ben Shapiro commentaryDaily Wire declineculture war debates
Similar emphasis on culture war debates and conservative commentary, evidenced by high search overlap on Ben Shapiro commentary and Daily Wire topics, though José diverges in stylistic delivery.
Both engage in critique of mainstream media and culture, with shared search interest in Tucker Carlson critique, while Carlson’s format and persona set a distinct style from José.
political media criticismconservative political analysispolitical opinion analysis
Shares political media criticism and conservative political analysis in search interest, but CrashCourse’s broader educational format differs from José’s opinion-focused approach.
Content Landscape
Top competitors include Ben Shapiro (76% match), Candace Owens (80% match), and Tucker Carlson (64% match). These channels share overlapping queries with José such as Ben Shapiro commentary, Daily Wire decline, Candace Owens investigations, Tucker Carlson critique, and culture war analysis. José has 344K subscribers, smaller than these major figures: Ben Shapiro (7.1M), Candace Owens (5.9M), and Tucker Carlson (5.5M), with Turning Point USA (6.7M) and Tim Pool (1.5M) also appearing as strong comparators. The common thread is conservative commentary and culture war analysis focused on prominent conservative personalities and media outlets.
conservative commentarypolitical media criticismright wing media analysisTucker Carlson critiqueBen Shapiro commentaryCharlie Kirk legacyCandace Owens investigationsDaily Wire declineopinionated retrospectiveanti-choice mediaculture war analysismedia bias analysisconservative culture critiquespolitical impact retrospectivespopular conservative figuresconservative political analysismedia bias critiqueright wing commentaryculture war debatesnews media accountabilityliberal media critiqueconservative podcast summariescultural issues commentarypolitical opinion analysismedia propaganda critiquecommentary on political polarizationtraditional values discussiondigital politics analysisidentity politics critiquefar right media trendsfree speech debatesmedia influence on electionspopular conservative narrativesopinion journalism critiquepolicy stance explanations
Frequently Asked Questions
Which YouTube channels are most similar to José?
Turning Point USA — 87% match, 6.7M subscribers; Candace Owens — 80% match, 5.9M subscribers; Tim Pool — 77% match, 1.5M subscribers. They share a political commentary/news focus and audience overlap with José.
What type of content does José make?
José creates political commentary-style videos, citing current events and public figures, with titles such as A Drab MAGA Game of Thrones: The Pendragon Cycle and The Sharp Fall of Ben Shapiro. He appears to post multiple videos; the average views per video are 392.9K, with recent titles ranging from 153.2K to 773.3K views.
How do we determine which channels are similar to José?
We analyze José's recent videos, generate topic-relevant search queries, check YouTube search results, and compare the meaning of each channel's content to measure similarity. The result is a ranked list sorted by SERP overlap, semantic similarity, and search appearances.