I was first exposed to Team 10 — video blogger Jake Paul's stable of would-be YouTube stars — on the Wildwood, New Jersey, boardwalk this past June. At the T-shirt stalls, alongside all the other ultra-confrontational T-shirts, amid the nationalistic slogans and the butt shorts that read "E-ZPass," were a smattering of Team 10 shirts. I didn't know what Team 10 was, but guilt by association told me it had to be something that inflammatory and divisive.
The Happiest People in the World
The Happiest People in the World
The Happiest People in the World
I was first exposed to Team 10 — video blogger Jake Paul's stable of would-be YouTube stars — on the Wildwood, New Jersey, boardwalk this past June. At the T-shirt stalls, alongside all the other ultra-confrontational T-shirts, amid the nationalistic slogans and the butt shorts that read "E-ZPass," were a smattering of Team 10 shirts. I didn't know what Team 10 was, but guilt by association told me it had to be something that inflammatory and divisive.