Sneak(o) attack!
Controversial, Hitler-praising “manosphere” influencer Sneako was taken out by a stranger while he was livestreaming in Manhattan on Tuesday — seconds after stating that masturbation should be punishable by public execution.
The far-right provocateur, whose real name is Nicolas Kenn De Balinthazy, was marching through downtown Manhattan Tuesday afternoon when a stranger suddenly swung his arms around his neck and dragged him to the ground in a chokehold, as captured on his own livestream.
Sneako jumped #kick#livestreampic.twitter.com/rE2rC6qGxx
— Danni (@Danni0246415006) April 14, 2026
Moments before the unidentified man took the contested influencer down, Kenn De Balinthazy was ranting about male masturbation, which he asserted warrants death.
“[If] you put your life-force into a sock, yeah, you deserve to be publicly executed, yes,” he said.
The 27-year-old streamer was silent for a few seconds and started to reiterate his point when the beanie-wearing stranger jumped him out of nowhere.
The men appeared to scuffle for several more seconds off-camera, swapping expletives, before eventually going their separate ways.
Far-right streamer Sneako was attacked while recording in Manhattan on Tuesday afternoon. Sneako
The man grabbed Sneako in a chokehold and dragged him to the ground. Sneako“Im fine we got it handled,” Kenn De Balinthazy wrote on X shortly after.
The clip, which appeared to be removed from his archived livestream, went viral online — as other “manosphere” affiliates weighed in on the takedown.
“Sucker punch didn’t even land. What a coward,” Nazi-loving troll and 27-year-old virgin Nick Fuentes, who has collaborated with Kenn De Balinthazy, commented.
Sneako later tweeted that he was “fine” and “got it handled.” SneakoCritics of the Hitler-praising streamer, meanwhile, flooded the comments with memes making fun of Kenn De Balinthazy and praising his assailant.
Kenn De Balinthazy, who boasts upward of 1.3 million subscribers on YouTube, is widely regarded as a mouthpiece for young misogynists in the vile “manosphere,” helmed by other controversial figures like Andrew Tate and Fuentes.
Last week, the native New Yorker told The Post that the secret to his success is his willingness to say what he believes others are thinking, no matter how offensive it is.
He bizarrely used the example of people who “can’t say ‘Hitler had aura’ because they’ll get fired.”
His other repugnant tenets include — but are not limited to — an insistence that women shouldn’t be able to vote and an endless collection of antisemitic dog whistles supplemented by his Nazi sympathies.






