Miami (Parliament Politics Magazine) January 18, 2026 – Far-right activist Nick Fuentes appeared alongside controversial influencer Andrew Tate at a Miami nightclub, rejecting an offer for female company with the viral phrase “Nah, I’m good.” Footage shared widely on social media platforms captured the pair socialising with other online personalities over the weekend. The encounter has drawn attention amid their documented histories of platform bans, hate speech allegations, and ongoing legal proceedings.
Incident Details at South Beach Venue

Video clips from a popular South Beach nightclub in Miami showed Nick Fuentes, 25, seated next to Andrew Tate, 38, during the weekend of January 17-18, 2026. As reported by Chelsie Napiza of International Business Times UK, Fuentes dismissed a suggestion to have women join him at his hotel, responding simply, “Nah, I’m good.” The phrase quickly circulated online following posts on X and Reddit.
The footage captured an exchange where an individual proposed bringing women to the group. KaizerRev said in X post,
“Yo Nick, I’m gonna bring some Girls over” Fuentes – “Nah, I’m good” 🤣
“Yo Nick, I’m gonna bring some Girls over”
Fuentes – “Nah, I’m good” 🤣 pic.twitter.com/Z6XXv8nhI2
— KaizerRev (@Kaizerrev) January 18, 2026
The footage, including screenshots from Piers Morgan Uncensored/YouTube, depicted Fuentes alongside Tate and figures identified in social media discussions as Sneako and Clavicular. A Reddit thread in r/LivestreamFail, posted by user provider305, amassed over 4,300 upvotes and 800 comments, referencing user-submitted videos from the event.
Comments noted additional presences such as Myron from Fresh and Fit, though no independent media verification beyond clips was available.
Neither Fuentes nor Tate issued press releases or statements about the incident by January 18, 2026. The original posts provided brief context, focusing on the interaction without identifying the person making the offer or extending the exchange.
Nick Fuentes’ Documented Background
Fuentes, a self-described leader of the “Groypers” movement, has faced suspensions from major platforms for hate speech. X banned him before Elon Musk’s acquisition, with reinstatement occurring later under revised policies. YouTube terminated his channel in 2020 for violations, and TikTok maintains restrictions.
Civil rights organisation Anti-Defamation League records instances of Fuentes’ rhetoric, including Holocaust denial, antisemitic remarks, and sexist comments. He attended the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville and has advocated positions minimising historical atrocities.
Event organisers removed him from CPAC in 2023, citing misalignment with their standards.
Fuentes engaged in public debates, such as with Piers Morgan on Piers Morgan Uncensored, where exchanges highlighted his views on race and politics. His online footprint persists on reinstated accounts, sustaining engagement among followers. Public reactions on X have noted his personal life choices in response to the clip. Larry Conger said in X post,
“Bros locked in gotta kind of respect it 🤣 sometimes you have to make a choice between pursuing your own thing or just going with the normal cookie cutter life with a wife and a dog 🐕 Nick Fuentes has never dated!?”
Bros locked in gotta kind of respect it 🤣 sometimes you have to make a choice between pursuing your own thing or just going with the normal cookie cutter life with a wife and a dog 🐕
Nick Fuentes has never dated!? pic.twitter.com/8ZOQ9pZP0f
— Larry Conger 🇺🇸 (@eMTBrides) January 13, 2026
Andrew Tate’s Rise and Legal Controversies

Andrew Tate, a British-American former kickboxer, built fame through social media commentary on masculinity and gender dynamics. He appeared on Big Brother UK in 2016 but exited after video surfaced showing him striking a woman with a belt, which he described as consensual. Platforms later restricted his accounts for policy breaches.
Romanian authorities arrested Tate and brother Tristan in December 2022 on charges including human trafficking, rape, and forming an organised crime group to exploit women via pornography. Prosecutors allege coercion through psychological control and violence;
Tate denies all claims, asserting political motivation. Assets worth millions, including luxury cars, were seized.
In July 2024, a Bucharest court barred Tate from EU travel pending trial. UK prosecutors authorised 21 charges against the brothers in 2025, covering rape, actual bodily harm, and trafficking involving multiple women, with extradition warrants issued.
Civil suits by alleged victims continue, including defamation counters where lawyers claim Tate enlisted investigators to intimidate accusers.
Tate’s content aligns with “manosphere” communities promoting anti-feminist ideologies. Reports detail associations with US figures, including messages hinting at Trump administration support for his release, though unconfirmed. Romanian probes persist into 2026, with Tate maintaining visibility through permitted channels.
Social Media Spread and Public Responses
The Miami clip proliferated on X, Reddit, and YouTube, with r/LivestreamFail users noting Ye’s song “Heil Hitler” played at the group’s request, per clip mirrors. Comments ranged from mockery—”A Mexican, a gypsy, a methhead, and a Filipino heiling Hitler”—to observations of Tate appearing uncomfortable.
Supporters framed the footage as innocuous nightlife, while detractors pointed to ideological overlaps. One comment highlighted Myron’s prior rejections from white supremacist groups, underscoring group dynamics. Engagement exceeded 4,000 upvotes within hours.
No mainstream outlets beyond IBTimes UK published on-site verification. Piers Morgan Uncensored imagery aided dissemination, but full video context remains social media-dependent.
Overlaps in Online Extremism Narratives

Watchdog groups link both men to criticised ideologies. ADL documents Fuentes’ promotion of white nationalism, anti-immigration, and gendered abuse themes. Tate’s influence persists post-arrest, galvanising “manosphere” defenders on platforms.
Romanian DIICOT agency outlined Tate’s alleged pyramid scheme for adult content, involving US-UK-Romanian women. Four plaintiffs advanced civil claims to summer 2025. Fuentes’ bans followed similar hate content patterns.
The Miami sighting underscores real-world intersections of online personalities barred from mainstream spaces yet visible via selective reinstatements. No charges stem directly from the event.
Comparative Platform Histories
Nick Fuentes
- Platforms: X (pre-Musk), YouTube (2020), TikTok
- Status: X reinstated post-Musk
- Documented rhetoric/allegations: Holocaust denial, antisemitism, sexism
Andrew Tate
- Platforms: Multiple platforms post-2022
- Status: Active on permitted sites
- Documented rhetoric/allegations: Human trafficking, rape charges (denied)
Legal and Public Scrutiny Contexts
Tate’s Romanian case involves 35 alleged victims, with prosecutors detailing a structure where women were recruited under false romantic pretences. A 2025 house arrest extension followed initial detention. UK charges span 2012-2015 incidents, authorised after Romanian proceedings advance.
Fuentes’ rhetoric drew congressional attention, with reports labelling him a white nationalist influencing youth. His 2022 dinner with Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago amplified scrutiny, though no formal ties resulted.
The nightclub event, while casual, reignited discussions on their public personas. Social media amplified the clip, with X posts capturing immediate reactions to Fuentes’ response.
Broader Implications for Online Figures
Encounters like this highlight how reinstated accounts enable offline networking. Tate’s US travel aligns with eased restrictions post-2025 developments. Fuentes’ presence ties to ongoing political commentary.
Experts tracking extremism note sustained engagement despite bans. No immediate policy shifts followed the footage, but it exemplifies platform moderation debates.
The video’s virality stems from the figures’ notoriety, with X serving as primary dissemination vector. Coverage remains confined to digital spaces, lacking traditional media follow-up as of publication

