Hasan Piker
Piker in 2026
Born
Hasan Doğan Piker

(1991-07-25) July 25, 1991 (age 34)[1]
New Brunswick, New Jersey, U.S.
Other name HasanAbi
Education Rutgers University (BA)
Occupations
  • Twitch streamer
  • political commentator
Relatives Cenk Uygur (uncle)
Twitch information
Channel
Years active 2018–present
Genres
  • Political commentary
  • reaction
  • gaming
Followers 3.1 million
YouTube information
Channel
Subscribers 1.87 million
Views 1.06 billion
Last updated: April 14, 2026
Signature

Hasan Doğan Piker[a] (born July 25, 1991), known online by the name HasanAbi, is an American Twitch streamer, influencer, and left-wing political commentator. His content primarily consists of political and social commentary and media consumption.[3] As of 2026, Piker's Twitch channel ranks among the platform's most-subscribed.[4] Piker has been called one of the biggest voices on the American Left.[5] He began streaming on Twitch in March 2018, while working at The Young Turks (TYT). In January 2020, Piker left TYT to focus on his career as a Twitch streamer. He has regularly spoken about the Gaza war, advocating for Palestinians and criticizing the Israeli government.

Early life and education

Hasan Doğan Piker was born on July 25, 1991, in New Brunswick, New Jersey, to Turkish parents. He grew up in Istanbul and was raised as a Muslim.[6][7] His father's family emigrated from Thessaloniki and Crete, Greece, to Turkey.[8] His father, Mehmet Behçet Piker, is a political scientist and economist who served on the board of directors (and as vice president) of Sabancı Holding, and who is a founding member of the conservative Future Party in Turkey.[9][10] His mother, Ülker Sedef Piker (née Uygur),[11][12] is an art and architectural historian who teaches at the New Jersey Institute of Technology.[13][14] His uncle, Cenk Uygur, is a political commentator and co-founder of The Young Turks, a left-leaning news network.[15]

Piker returned to the United States and attended the University of Miami, then transferred to Rutgers University, where he joined the Theta Delta Chi fraternity. In 2013, he graduated cum laude from Rutgers with a double major in political science and communication studies.[16][7][17] Piker then moved to Los Angeles, California.[18] In 2021, he bought a $2.7 million house in West Hollywood.[19]

Career

2013–2018: The Young Turks

During his senior year of college in 2013, Piker interned for The Young Turks. The network's ad sales and business department hired him after he graduated. He asked to host the show when a fill-in was needed and later became a host and producer.[7][17]

In 2016, Piker created and hosted The Breakdown, a TYT Network video series that aired on Facebook and presented left-leaning political analyses targeted, at the time, at millennial supporters of presidential candidate Bernie Sanders.[16][17] Piker also contributed political content to HuffPost from 2016 to 2018.[1][20][21]

2018–2020: Early Twitch career and The Young Turks

Piker started streaming on Twitch on March 23, 2018, while working at TYT.[6][22] In January 2020, he left TYT to focus on his career as a Twitch streamer.[23] Piker said he shifted his attention from Facebook to Twitch to reach a younger audience and because of what he saw as a preponderance of right-wing commentators on YouTube and a lack of leftist representation among streamers.[3][24][25] He became a popular left-wing political commentator and was invited to appear on KTTV's The Issue Is and the political podcast Chapo Trap House.[3][26][27] His YouTube channel features highlights of his streams, and reached over 1,000,000 subscribers in 2022.[28] Piker also streams gameplay and commentary on video games.[23][29][30] Sometimes he role-plays as "Hank Pecker", an ethno-political caricature of a "right-wing redneck".[31][32]

During a Twitch stream in August 2019, Piker criticized American foreign policy and made controversial comments about the September 11 attacks, including "America deserved 9/11."[33][34] Piker called his comments satirical and said U.S. foreign policy made an event like 9/11 possible but acknowledged that he should have used "more precise" language.[33] Piker received a short-term ban for his comments.[34]

2020–present: Prominence on Twitch

After leaving TYT, Piker became one of Twitch's most-watched political livestreamers, hosting news commentary, interviews, and gameplay streams.

On October 19, 2020, U.S. representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez collaborated with Piker and fellow Twitch streamer Pokimane to organize a stream of Ocasio-Cortez playing the popular multiplayer game Among Us for the "Get out the vote" initiative for the then upcoming presidential election.[23][35] The stream aired the next day, featuring both Ocasio-Cortez and U.S. Representative Ilhan Omar playing the game with Piker and other popular Twitch streamers, reaching a total concurrent viewership of almost 700,000.[36][37][38]

During the first 2020 United States presidential debate on September 29, over 125,000 viewers watched Piker's commentary on the stream, the highest viewership for the debate on Twitch.[39] Piker's stream covering the results of the 2020 United States presidential election peaked at 230,000 concurrent viewers and was the sixth most-watched source of election coverage on YouTube or Twitch, comprising 4.9% of the market share.[40][41][42][43] He was the most watched Twitch streamer during the election week; his 80 hours of streams were viewed for a cumulative 6.8 million hours by an average of 75,000 concurrent viewers.[6][44][45] Piker's stream reached a new high of 231,000 viewers during the January 6 United States Capitol attack.[46]

In 2021, Piker was banned from Twitch for a week after using the slur "cracker" in reference to white people, after two of his chat moderators were banned for using it.[47][48][49] He argued the term should not be considered a slur since a person using it is "powerless" and would be "doing it as someone who has been historically oppressed blowing off steam."[47] A paper in New Media & Society criticized Twitch for punishing Piker while epithets aimed at minority groups were prevalent on the platform.[50]

Piker in 2019

Piker was given credentialed access and livestreamed at the 2024 Democratic National Convention,[51] and his 2024 election night coverage stream had 7.5 million viewers.[52]

On February 28, 2025, Piker said that if Republicans "cared about Medicare fraud or Medicaid fraud, [they] would kill Rick Scott," in a reference to Scott's involvement in Medicare and Medicaid fraud when he was the CEO of Columbia/HCA. Piker was banned for 24 hours by Twitch on March 3 in relation to the comment.[53] On May 25, Piker received a 24-hour ban from Twitch for "improper handling of terrorist propaganda" after showing an alleged manifesto by Elias Rodriguez, the perpetrator of the 2025 Capital Jewish Museum shooting.[54]

In May 2025, Piker was detained by U.S. Customs and Border Protection at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago after returning from a trip to France. According to Piker, the officials who questioned him during his detainment knew who he was and asked him detailed questions about his views on Donald Trump, Israel, Houthi rebels, Hamas, and his Twitch bans. Piker believes he was detained due to his political views and that his detainment is part of the Trump administration's intimidation tactics to silence political opposition. Assistant Secretary of the United States Department of Homeland Security Tricia McLaughlin accused Piker of "lying for likes" and said it was a routine inspection that any traveler could be subjected to.[55][56][57]

In the 2025 New York City mayoral race, Piker expressed support for Zohran Mamdani, and Mamdani appeared on Piker's stream.[58] During the campaign, Mamdani's political opponents used Piker's past remarks, especially his 2019 comment that "America deserved 9/11", in attacks against Mamdani, including in a televised advertisement aired by a pro-Andrew Cuomo super PAC.[59] Mamdani disavowed Piker's comments during a mayoral debate, calling them "objectionable and reprehensible".[60]

Piker called a sect of Orthodox Jews in Israel "inbred".[61] He later said the term was "a pejorative against ethno-religious and racial supremacists of all different varieties. It has nothing to do with Judaism".[62] In another interview, he said he regretted using it in reference to ultra-Orthodox Jews.[63]

Piker speaking at a rally for Chris Rabb in West Philadelphia in 2026

During the 2026 Democratic Party primaries in Michigan, Piker campaigned for Democratic candidate Abdul El-Sayed. Two of El-Sayed's opponents, Mallory McMorrow and Haley Stevens, criticized Piker's involvement based on past remarks, particularly about the Israel–Palestine conflict.[64][65] Democratic State Representative Carrie Rheingans decided not to participate in the event with Piker while continuing to support El-Sayed.[66] Piker's involvement in the Michigan primary became a source of division within the Democratic Party.[67][62] Piker also rallied in Philadelphia with state representative Chris Rabb during the primary for Pennsylvania's 3rd congressional district.[68][69]

Fundraisers

During the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Piker, in partnership with CARE International, raised over $200,000 for Ukrainian relief funds while playing Elden Ring, with an average of over 70,000 people watching his coverage of the conflict.[70][71][72]

In the aftermath of the February 6, 2023, Turkey–Syria earthquake, Piker organized a fundraiser that was also contributed to and promoted by other streamers and content creators, including Jacksepticeye, Valkyrae, Ludwig Ahgren, and IShowSpeed. As of February 10, the fundraiser had raised over $1,200,000 for charities such as CARE International's Turkish and Syrian branches, as well as two Turkish NGOs: the AKUT Search and Rescue Association, and Ahbap, which was founded by Turkish musician Haluk Levent.[73][74][75]

During the Gaza war, Piker's charity drive on his channel raised over $1,000,000, as of October 21, 2023, for the Palestine Children's Relief Fund, American Near East Refugee Aid, Medical Aid for Palestinians, and the Palestine Red Crescent Society.[76][77]

In June 2026, Piker was refused entry to the UK.[78]

Other ventures

Since 2021, Piker has hosted the podcast Fear& (formerly Fear&Malding) alongside his friend and fellow Twitch streamer Will Neff.[79] Streamers QTCinderella and AustinShow joined the podcast as co-hosts in 2022.[80]

From September 26, 2021, to October 12, 2023, Piker co-hosted the left-leaning political podcast Leftovers with Ethan Klein.[79][81]

Views and political beliefs

Piker has been most commonly identified as a leftist, a socialist, and a Marxist.[6][28][82][83] He has advocated for workplace democracy,[84] universal health care,[85] LGBTQ+ rights,[85] anti-Zionism,[82] and gun control.[86] Andrew Marantz of The New Yorker described Piker as anti-Trump but "hardly a loyal Democrat". Instead, Marantz classified Piker as an "old-school leftist", critical of the "American empire".[82] In an interview with GQ magazine, Piker said his goal was to push the Democratic Party to be more progressive.[87] Intelligencer called Piker "the AOC of Twitch".[34]

Piker has cited his upbringing in Turkey under the premiership of Recep Tayyip Erdoğan as an influence on both his left-wing views and willingness to speak out about them.[28][17] He has mentioned Amy Goodman, Jon Stewart, Aaron McGruder, and Bill Burr as influences on the content and style of his streams.[88]

American politics

Piker supported the presidential primary campaigns of Bernie Sanders in 2016 and 2020,[85] and has been an outspoken critic of both the Democratic and Republican Parties.[7][89] Piker opposed Donald Trump's travel ban in 2017.[17][90] After Luigi Mangione—the suspect in the killing of Brian Thompson, the CEO of UnitedHealthcare—was arrested, Piker supported him and praised the tactic of the propaganda of the deed on his stream but avoided breaking Twitch's terms of service rules about glorification of violence.[82] Citing Friedrich Engels, Piker later said that Thompson had committed social murder.[91]

World affairs and conflicts

Views on authoritarianism

In 2021, Piker said he became interested in politics after Recep Tayyip Erdoğan sued a cartoonist for depicting him as a cat, which Piker considered "suppression of freedom".[92] GQ described Piker as "fighting back" against authoritarianism through livestreaming. In the profile, Piker said Donald Trump could "take out or erode" constitutional protections, including "due process, birthright citizenship, and the First Amendment", before rebuilding the legal system to advance what Piker called a "white nativist agenda".[87] In an October 2025 interview with Morning Edition, Piker said he worried that if the Trump administration succeeded in suppressing speech it deemed unacceptable, the United States would "end up in an authoritarian nightmare" in which "one of the last bastions of liberalism is eroded".[93] In April 2026, during a debate at the Yale Political Union, Piker positioned himself against the "dying American Empire". He said capitalism had built things worth keeping, but that those things had been built through labor and the benefits had not been evenly distributed. Piker concluded, "If a dictatorship is inevitable, I'd rather have it be a dictatorship of the proletariat."[94][95]

Regarding international affairs, both The Atlantic and the Dispatch have characterized Piker as sympathizing with left-wing authoritarian governments, claiming that he expressed admiration for China as his preferred model of socialism,[96][97][98][99] likened China's absorption of Tibet to the Union's defeat of the Confederacy,[96][99] called Uyghur detention facilities "re-education camps"[96][97][99], labelled Mao Zedong "one of the great leaders of this world",[96][97][100] and called the collapse of the Soviet Union "one of the greatest catastrophes of the 20th century".[96][94][95] Both publications have also said that Piker's worldview leans toward "broad sympathy for China, Cuba, Russia, and authoritarianism in general".[97][101] Vox argued that the best label for Piker's international relations stance is campism (a position that judges foreign movements and regimes more by their degree of hostility toward the West than by their values), and outlined a series of specific positions that Piker holds that point to campism, such as his stated "lack of issue" with Hezbollah[100][82] and support for Mao despite the Great Leap Forward's death toll, something Vox set against Piker's stated position that regimes should be judged by how many civilians they kill.[100]

Russian invasion of Ukraine

During the February prelude to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Piker said Russia would not attack.[102] Piker apologized, saying he "didn't think a regional power would act so irrationally. I've admitted my mistakes. I got things wrong." He has said that the US paved the way to the invasion and compared Russia's invasion with the US's history of invasions.[70]

Gaza war

Piker has regularly spoken about the Gaza war, advocating for Palestinians and criticizing the Israeli government.[103][104]

In November 2024, Congressman Ritchie Torres criticized Twitch for alleged "amplification of antisemitism" and called for an investigation into Piker.[103] Piker said he had criticized Israel, not Jewish people.[103][104][105] A campaign by various commentators pressured advertisers to leave Twitch due to the alleged platforming of antisemitism, including Piker's political commentary on the conflict.[103][104] Both Torres and the pressure campaign posted clips of Piker's channel they alleged were antisemitic. Piker denied the charge, saying the clips were taken out of context.[103][104][105] Because of the controversy, some advertisers pulled advertisements from Twitch.[105]

China

In November 2025, Piker visited China and appeared on the state-run China Global Television Network, saying he wanted to see what the US could "adopt and emulate" from China. He called the trip a "dream come true". During a livestream at Tiananmen Square, police briefly questioned him after a ceremony, an interaction that attracted media attention.[106] During the trip, Piker displayed a copy of Mao Zedong's Little Red Book, which he said he had received as a gift and called "really, really special".[107]

In a December 2025 interview with The Guardian, Piker said that despite "its flaws and repressive attitudes towards certain groups", China had "greatly improved the material conditions of the average Chinese person".[5]

Reception

Piker has been described as Twitch's "de facto political commentator" who uses an unabashedly ideological framing.[108] Followed by approximately 3 million people on Twitch, he has emerged as a prominent commentator among young American leftists since 2025, largely due to his critiques of the Trump administration.[5][109] Outlets dedicated to video game culture and youth culture have covered Piker's streams positively. In particular, journalists have noted his ability to "combine information and entertainment",[17][108] and to approach left-wing political coverage in a way that is relatable and accessible to Twitch viewers, who may feel out of touch with cable news.[40][110][111][70] Some authors also cite Piker's vulgar, animated style of expression and his physical appearance as notable factors in his popularity.[17][110][112]

In July 2024, Alex Mahadevan of the Poynter Institute for Media Studies cited Piker as an example of the "online chattering class" who do not hold themselves to journalistic ethics, in contrast to their peers in traditional media, saying Piker "shares as much misinformation as anyone on the [political] right."[113] A September 2024 article in the academic journal Digital Journalism discussed a similar theme, characterizing Piker as emblematic of an emerging "newsfluencer" class (influencers who mainly cover news) with a tendency toward "problematic behavior" that conflicted with journalistic objectivity.[112] In April 2024, a contributor to the same journal noted that Piker is familiar with journalistic mechanics such as sourcing, framing, and objectivity but rejects these as methods used for "manufacturing consent for elites".[108] Instead, Piker mainly sources his information from social media, often supplied to him by his audience.[108] The Washington Post has also categorized Piker as a news-based influencer who does not feel bound to journalistic objectivity.[70]

Andrew Marantz of The New Yorker noted that Piker was controversial on both the political left and right: "When Piker is criticized by the right, it's usually for soft-pedaling the brutality of Hamas, or the Houthis, or the Chinese Communist Party... By the left, he is more likely to be dismissed as a limousine socialist who lives in a $2.7-million house."[82] According to Kieran Press-Reynolds, writing for GQ magazine, Piker is also controversial among liberals and the Democratic Party, which Piker attributes to his criticism of Israel.[87] Marantz also wrote that Piker's tolerance of controversy and appeal to young men made him an ideal candidate for the "Joe Rogan of the left".[82]

In a GQ profile, Piker cited when he had previously been criticized for playing other content creators' videos on his streams while he was off-camera as an example of a time he handled criticism poorly and later adjusted his behavior.[87]

Awards and nominations

Gaming website Kotaku selected Piker as one of its "Gamers of the Year" in 2020, calling him a major figure in the mainstreaming of political commentary on Twitch, a platform that in the past was seen as discouraging political discussion.[45][111][114] Piker won a Streamy in the News category at the 10th annual awards in 2020 and was nominated again in the same category for the 2021 event.[115][116] In 2022, Piker was nominated in the categories News, Just Chatting, and Streamer of the Year, winning the News award for the second time and being nominated for three consecutive years.[117][118]

Award Year Category Nominated work Result Ref.
Shorty Awards 2018 Web Series The Breakdown[b] Nominated [119]
Webby Awards 2018 News & Information Nominated [120]
theScore esports Awards 2020 Like & Subscribe HasanAbi Won [121]
The Streamer Awards 2021 Best Just Chatting Streamer Nominated [122]
2022 Streamer of the Year Nominated [123]
Best Just Chatting Streamer Won
2023 Nominated [124]
2024 Nominated [125][126]
Streamy Awards 2020 News Won [115]
2021 Nominated [116]
2022 Streamer of the Year Nominated [127]
Just Chatting Nominated
News Won
2023 Won [128]
Streamer of the Year Nominated [128]
Just Chatting Nominated

Notes

  1. ^ English: /ˈpkər/ PY-kər, Turkish: [haˈsan doˈan piˈcæɾ].[2]
  2. ^ Co-hosted with Francis Maxwell

See also

  • Turkish Americans

References

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