Video: Thousands overwhelm New York's Union Square for streamer giveaway, tossing chairs and pounding cars : The Tribune India
HomeHome > Blog > Video: Thousands overwhelm New York's Union Square for streamer giveaway, tossing chairs and pounding cars : The Tribune India

Video: Thousands overwhelm New York's Union Square for streamer giveaway, tossing chairs and pounding cars : The Tribune India

Jun 29, 2023

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Updated At:Aug 05, 202302:43 PM (IST)

People carry a person after popular live streamer Kai Cenat announced a 'giveaway' event that grew chaotic, prompting police officers to respond and disperse the crowd at Union Square and the surrounding streets, in New York City. Reuters

AP

New York, August 5

A crowd of thousands that packed Manhattan's Union Square for a popular livestreamer's hyped giveaway got out of hand on Friday afternoon, with some clambering on vehicles, hurling chairs and throwing punches, leaving police struggling to rein in the chaos.

Aerial TV news footage showed a surging, tightly packed crowd running through the streets, scaling structures in the park and snarling traffic. Shouting teenagers swung objects at car windows, threw paint cans and set off fire extinguishers. Some people climbed on a moving vehicle, falling off as it sped away. Others pounded on or climbed atop city buses.

80%+ of Manhattan voted for Democrat Eric Adams.Voters get the city they deserve. pic.twitter.com/sMdm3TFhmH

By 5.30pm, police officers in growing numbers had regained control of much of the area, but small skirmishes were still breaking out, with young people knocking over barricades and throwing bottles and even a flowerpot at officers. Police were seen wrestling people to the ground and chasing them down the street.

Police planned to charge the streamer, Kai Cenat, with inciting a riot, NYPD Chief of Department Jeffrey Maddrey said in the evening. Officers arrested 65 people, including 30 juveniles.

BREAKING🚨: NYPD is responding to large gathering of teens and young adults outside Union Square Park in Manhattan. Police tells everyone to avoid the area. pic.twitter.com/PYZdwb0uLo

A number of people were injured, including some officers. Details and numbers were not yet available.

"People were suffering out here," Maddrey said, adding that he saw people bleeding and having asthma and panic attacks. Some motorists were trapped as people climbed on top of their cars. Maddrey said several police vehicles were damaged, including his.

On his Instagram feed, Cenat had an image promoting a giveaway at 4pm in the park. People started lining up as early as 1.30pm. By 3pm, the crowd had swelled and was getting unruly. Some young people leaving the park said they had come expecting to get a computer for livestreaming or a new PlayStation.

Skylark Jones, 19, and a friend came to see Cenat and try to get something from his giveaway, which they said was promoted as a chance for things like gaming consoles or a gaming chair.

When they arrived, the scene was already packed. Bottles were being thrown. There was a commotion even before Cenat appeared, they said.

"It was a movie," Jones said. Police "came with riot shields, charging at people".

Cenat, 21, is a video creator with 6.5 million (65 lakh) followers on the platform Twitch, where he regularly livestreams. He also boasts four million (40 lakh) subscribers on YouTube, where he posts daily life and comedy vlogs ranging from 'Fake Hibachi Chef Prank!' to his most recent video, 'I Rented Us Girlfriends In Japan!'

His 299 YouTube videos have amassed more than 276 million (27.6 core) views among them. In December, he was crowned the streamer of the year at the 12th annual Streamy Awards. Messages sent to his publicist, management company and an email address for business enquiries were not immediately returned.

Livestreaming on Twitch from a vehicle as the event gathered steam, Cenat displayed gift cards he planned to give away. Noting the crowd and police presence, he urged, "Everybody who is out there, make sure you all (are safe.... We are not going to do nothing until it is safe."

Eventually, he and an entourage got out of the vehicle and hustled through an excited crowd, crossed a street and went into the park, where Cenat was at the centre of a cheering, shoving mob.

Maddrey said Cenat at some point in the afternoon was removed "for his safety" and police were in contact with him. Videos posted on social media and taken from news helicopters showed Cenat being lifted over a fence and out of the crowd and then placed in a police vehicle.

The police chief also said a city bus filled with people who were arrested came under attack, and more police had to be sent to protect it. Numerous people were seen in hand restraints, sitting on the sidewalks, and multiple young men were taken away in handcuffs.

"We have encountered things like this before but never to this level of dangerousness," Maddrey said.

Businesses adjoining the square closed their doors. Carina Treile, manager of Petite Optique, an eyeglass shop nearby, sheltered inside while police dispersed the crowd.

"Usually, with people giving away free stuff, it is never like this. It is very organised," she said. "And here we have a very chaotic scene."

Loud bangs at one point frightened some in the crowd.

"That was a little bit scary, especially when people started running," Treile said.

Police, some with batons, used metal barricades to push the crowd back and loudspeakers to repeatedly declare the gathering unlawful.

"Listen, we are not against young people having a good time, we are not against young people gathering," Maddrey said. "But it cannot be to this level where it is dangerous. A lot of people got hurt today."

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The Tribune, now published from Chandigarh, started publication on February 2, 1881, in Lahore (now in Pakistan). It was started by Sardar Dyal Singh Majithia, a public-spirited philanthropist, and is run by a trust comprising four eminent persons as trustees.

The Tribune, the largest selling English daily in North India, publishes news and views without any bias or prejudice of any kind. Restraint and moderation, rather than agitational language and partisanship, are the hallmarks of the newspaper. It is an independent newspaper in the real sense of the term.

The Tribune has two sister publications, Punjabi Tribune (in Punjabi) and Dainik Tribune (in Hindi).

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Updated At:New York, August 5