YouTube's biggest star is still PewDiePie, who just reached 70 million subscribers.

Researchers have predicted that PewDiePie, aka Felix Kjellberg, would be dethroned by the Indian music channel T-Series, but that has yet to happen.

Kjellberg has still seen support from fans and popularity in the YouTube community despite a long history of disparaging racist and anti-Semitic remarks.

The pundits predicted that a new content creator would be crowned YouTube's biggest star come November, but the title still belongs to the Swedish vlogger PewDiePie.


PewDiePie became the first YouTuber to reach the 70-million subscriber mark, beating out the Indian music channel T-Series who has been quickly gaining ground . Research firms predicted that T-Series would overtake PewDiePie - who real name is Felix Kjellberg - by the end of October, but the content creator still led Monday by almost half a million subscribers.Kjellberg has managed to keep his spot atop YouTube despite a history of making offensive remarks in his videos. Most recently, Kjellberg landed in hot water this summer over a (since deleted) Twitter post. Following Demi Lovato's hospitalization for an apparent drug overdose, Kjellberg tweeted out a comic that depicted Lovato asking her mom for money to buy a burger, then instead using it to buy heroin.

Although his subscriber base has remained loyal throughout his controversial past, YouTube itself has punished the creator for his actions. News surfaced in February 2017 that nine videos published on PewDiePie's channel featured Kjellberg making anti-Semitic comments, and the video platform responded by cancelling the second season of Kjellberg's original series on YouTube Premium.


This sordid history hasn't stopped other YouTube influencers from calling on their fans to support Kjellberg in securing his spot atop YouTube. Tubefilter reports that fellow YouTube creator MrBeast campaigned heartily for Kjellberg through stints on local radio and purchases of advertisements on TV, websites, and billboards.


It's worth nothing that this title of "YouTube's biggest star" is based on the number of subscribers. Based on viewership, PewDiePie sits down at No. 7 on a leaderboard from research firm Social Blade . T-Series, however, leads all of YouTube in terms of viewership with more than 53 billion all-time video views.As of Monday, research firm Tubular Labs revised its estimates to predict that T-Series would overtake PewDiePie for the most subscribers on November 30.

Meanwhile, PewDiePie posted on Twitter that he's already eyeing 100 million subscribers.

100 mil next lol, this is craaazyy pic.twitter.com/LO2q5Yggv8 - ƿ૯ωძɿ૯ƿɿ૯ (@pewdiepie) November 10, 2018