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Patrick Lancaster
American YouTuber From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Patrick Lancaster is an American former member of the United States Armed Forces turned vlogger, podcaster and influencer.[2][3][4][5] Although described as pro-Kremlin, Lancaster has been referred to as a double agent, with his videos covering the Russian invasion of Ukraine while apparently attempting to spread Russian propaganda regularly revealing compromising Russian military information, which has been successfully used against Russia by Ukrainian forces, Western intelligence agencies, and Western media.[6][7][8] Lancaster's videos have also both promoted and caused internal conflict in Russia, and Lancaster has been called a 'provocateur'.[9][10]
Lancaster is known for filming staged scenes in his videos and attempting to pass them off as real, and has often been called a maker of staged videos / fake master.[11][12][3][5][13]
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Biography
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Early life and US Navy
Lancaster is originally from Missouri in the United States of America.[14][15] From 2001 to 2006 he was a sailor in the US Navy specializing as a cryptologic technician and rising to the rank of petty officer third class. He sailed on the USS Kitty Hawk (CV-63) from 2002 to 2006.[2]
Ukraine and Russia
According to Lancaster, he arrived in Ukraine in March 2014 to cover the aftermath of the Maidan revolution. He then settled in Donetsk later that year after meeting the woman who would become his wife, converting to Orthodox Christianity. In the early days of the War in Donbas, Lancaster worked for several Kremlin-backed media outlets, including RT and Zvezda.[3][15] From 2014-15 in Donbas, Lancaster worked as a cameraman for British journalist Graham Phillips. Writing of Lancaster in 2022, Phillips stated he is an “illiterate, grifting charlatan, with a journalistic acumen and ability lower than a potted plant.” From 2015 on, Lancaster has primarily created videos for his own YouTube channel.[3]
Lancaster's videos apparently attempt to promote Russian propaganda, yet they have purportedly exposed information of Russian war crimes, revealing locations, identities of perpetrators, and sensitive Russian military information.[16][6][8][11] In the early days of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Vice Media and NBC News described him as the most popular of the pro-Kremlin influencers spreading Russian propaganda and disinformation on YouTube.[3] Despite this, in his videos, Lancaster refers to the Donbas, Kherson, and Zaporizhzhia regions under Russian occupation as being 'part of Ukraine'.[17][18][19] Lancaster's videos from Ukraine gained considerable attention until July 2022, when Lancaster's output became sporadic, he then left Ukraine for an extended period, occasionally posting videos from Armenia. In October 2022, Lancaster returned to Ukraine, posting videos to his YouTube channel, and doing podcasts and interviews.[14][4] In June of 2023, Lancaster did a video report from Rostov-on-Don, where he expressed his support for the Wagner Group rebellion against the Russian Government taking place at that time.[20][21][22] Lancaster continued blogging from Russia, and Russian-occupied territories of Ukraine in July, and August of 2023, before returning to Armenia in September for an extended period.[23] In late 2024, Lancaster went to Georgia to do videos on the protests there.[13]
In the Kursk region in March 2025, in the context of the Kursk offensive (2024–2025), Lancaster recorded a video which sparked a conflict in Russia between prominent Russian tv presenter Vladimir Solovyov and representatives of the Chechen Republic in Russia.[9] Lancaster's videos from Russia's Kursk region also showed local residents speaking positively about the Ukrainian army.[10] In late April 2025, Lancaster gave an interview to Tucker Carlson where he dismissed claims of North Korean troops in Russia, stating that he had not found them 'not for the lack of trying'. However shortly after, both North Korea and Russia confirmed that North Korean troops had indeed been deployed in Russia.[24][25]
MH17
Lancaster has created and published multiple videos connected to the tragedy of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17, and has received strong criticism for his actions in relation to MH17. In 2017 Lancaster claimed to have found skeletal remains of victims of the shoot-down of MH17 and pieces of the wreckage[26] which he, after a request from the Joint Investigation Team,[27][28] turned over to the local mayor with the request to transport them to The Netherlands.[29][30][31] After investigation by the Netherlands Forensic Institute the remains were found to contain remnants of 7 passengers, 4 of whom were Dutch.[29] Lancaster has been criticised for making propaganda out of the tragedy, insensitivity towards victims, and exploitation of the tragedy for personal gain.[32]
The Dutch authorities have repeatedly urged Lancaster to turn over all his findings, but he has yet to do so.[33][34]
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
Over the years, Lancaster has sporadically done videos on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict for his YouTube channel.[3] Lancaster has been accused of producing fake news and staged videos on the conflict.[7][12]
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See also
- Eva Bartlett - Canadian pro-Russia activist
- Russell Bentley - American fighter, and vlogger
- Jackson Hinkle - American political commentator
- Alex Jones - American conspiracy theorist
- Gonzalo Lira - Chilean-American Youtuber
- Graham Phillips - British journalist
- Scott Ritter - American pro-Russian political commentator
- Russian information war against Ukraine
Notes
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