@turboman:saying one of your favourite YouTubers is Ant***y Fa***no to this day is not a good look given the legitimately awful people he has given platforms to, as well as his own questionable content.
Some exciting announcements, especially Double Fine, but with hardly any direct feed gameplay this conference was kind of dull. There can only be so many CGI/trailers to make up a conference before attention wanes.
As a short gig I had in undergrad I helped facilitate chiropractic final exams. It's definitely not proper medicine, and the risks involved are not worth it at all. The standardized patients would often come out feeling worse after having been worked on, and receive additional pay because of it.
In addition, many of the friends my partner and I have work in medicine and none of them would ever in their professional or personal lives recommend seeing a chiropractor.
PewDiePie, given his gigantic audience, should expect his content to be scrutinized. Having a highly supportive fanbase can be insulating to other avenues of critique, leading to content that outside viewers find questionable.
There was no "hit-job". His content was covered and people found that without complete context it was offensive. With context, his jokes are poor attempts at satire and still deserve critique on both the content and how he used his position to make them.
Two articles I found enlightening on the subject from both a perspective of law and entertainment:
FinalCut's comments