Major streaming platforms have refused to distribute an award-winning Julian Assange documentary, fearing political blowback. The film’s director, Eugene Jarecki, says the work is legally sound, but the system is paralyzed by a handshake agreement between corporate media and the state to restrict public information.
Following advice from Jack Dorsey, Jarecki is turning the film’s audience into its financiers. He’s selling ‘Bitcoin Producer’ status for 0.01 BTC, offering supporters a film credit and two hours of sensitive, exclusive video material, including what he says is evidence of illegal spying and torture against Assange.
“When a filmmaker puts the system itself on trial, the traditional distribution pipes simply shut off.”
- Eugene Jarecki, Citadel Dispatch
This model directly addresses the financial censorship that crippled WikiLeaks over a decade ago. It aims to create a blueprint for funding and distributing any work on suppressed topics, from the military-industrial complex to pharmaceuticals, transforming passive viewers into active producers.
The film’s title, The 6,000,000,000 Dollar Man, refers to a specific bounty. Jarecki’s seven-year investigation uncovered that the U.S. government leveraged a $6 billion loan from the IMF and World Bank to pressure Ecuador into expelling Assange from its London embassy, turning international financial institutions into tools for what he describes as state-sponsored torture.
