Fact Check

Video Shows Robert De Niro Yelling at Pro-Palestine Demonstrators?

Multiple news outlets and dozens of online posts spread the footage taken in New York City.

Published May 2, 2024

 ( Getty Images)
Image courtesy of Getty Images
Claim:
A video that circulated in early May 2024 showed actor Robert De Niro yelling at pro-Palestine demonstrators in New York City.

Video footage of American actor Robert De Niro on the streets of his native New York City went viral in May 2024 with the claim that it shows him yelling at pro-Palestine demonstrators. Versions of the video contained a text banner reading "Robert De Niro Stands with Israel" and a caption indicating he was speaking of Hamas' Oct. 7 attack on Israel when he said, "They are going to do it again! Again! You don't want that."

For instance, the pro-Israel X account @StandWithUs shared the claim, garnering more than 77,000 views and 2,400 likes. That post, as well as several others with the same message and video, were deleted shortly after they gained popularity.

(X user @StandWithUs)

Multiple posts on TikTok and X continue to spread the claim and have not been taken down, as of this writing.

But this claim was disingenuous and misleading, which is why we are applying a rating of "Miscaptioned." While the video authentically showed the actor looking upset (that is, it was not the product of digital editing or artificial-intelligence technology), he was not yelling at pro-Palestine demonstrators.

Rather, the video was taken on the set of De Niro's upcoming Netflix show, "Zero Day," and he was yelling at other people working on the series. An actor, Mozhan Navabi, posted on X he was "giving a speech as his character" — in other words, De Niro was acting in the clip, not genuinely upset. He plays a former president in the series.

"What was seen was erroneous reports of Robert De Niro supposedly yelling at a group of anti-Israeli protesters," a spokesperson for De Niro, Stan Rosenfield, said in a Variety Magazine article published on May 1, 2024. "De Niro's lines were 100% scripted."

The account @IMTItionism appeared to be the first to share the video with the incorrect caption, writing, "It's so refreshing to see more people not letting narratives take over their common sense. Well done Robert De Niro, thank you for supporting Israel!" That post has been deleted.

The Israeli newspapers The Jerusalem Post and Haaretz also shared the claim. The latter has deleted its story (archived here), while the former's story remained live (archived here), as of this writing.

(Haaretz)

In the video, De Niro can be heard saying:

This is not a movie. This is real. Right now you gotta listen, you gotta work, you gotta get your job done. Stand by all your support [...] like you talking nonsense then you gotta go home. [...] They are going to do it again! Again! You don't want that. None of us want that. Come on! Let's all get serious. 

It was unknown who recorded the clip on the set of "Zero Day." It circulated online in late April, days before it went viral with the misleading caption, because of a post by X user @ArtOfDialogue.

Getty Images' database of photojournalism contains dozens of photos of De Niro on the set, including ones in which he's wearing the same clothes as those in the viral video. Actor Jesse Plemons, who also stars in the series and can be seen in the miscaptioned footage, is also in the Getty Images. Those images were taken on April 27, 2024, according to their captions.

( Getty Images)

Years before the latest violence in Gaza, De Niro met with former Israeli President Shimon Peres. Also, in 2016, he was photographed attending a fundraising dinner hosted by Friends of the Israeli Defense Forces, according to Getty Images.

Sources

AFP News Agency. Robert De Niro Meets Israeli President. 2013. YouTube, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jxe_Hb_71-s.

Friends of the IDF - FIDF. FIDF Western Region Annual Gala 2016 - as Seen on EXTRA. 2016. YouTube, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MOVbvdvl2Oo.

'Https://Twitter.Com/Artofdialogue_/Status/1784710340241936668?S=46'. X (Formerly Twitter), https://twitter.com/artofdialogue_/status/1784710340241936668?s=46. Accessed 1 May 2024.

'Https://Twitter.Com/JewishWarrior13/Status/1785645627260469497'. X (Formerly Twitter), https://twitter.com/JewishWarrior13/status/1785645627260469497. Accessed 1 May 2024.

'Https://Twitter.Com/Nomarquee/Status/1785662894501470221'. X (Formerly Twitter), https://twitter.com/nomarquee/status/1785662894501470221. Accessed 1 May 2024.

'Https://Twitter.Com/StandWithUs/Status/1785645505122386393'. X (Formerly Twitter), https://twitter.com/StandWithUs/status/1785645505122386393. Accessed 1 May 2024.

Levy, Adam S. 'Robert De Niro Works on Netflix's Zero Day as Cameras Roll in NYC'. Mail Online, 29 Apr. 2024, https://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-13360283/Robert-Niro-Netflix-Zero-Day-NYC-president-political-thriller.html.

Puente, David. 'De Niro ha contestato gli studenti pro Palestina? Ecco perché la storia di Haaretz non regge'. Open, 1 May 2024, https://www.open.online/2024/05/01/de-niro-new-york-pro-palestina-studenti-haaretz-fc/.

Robert De Niro Immagini e Foto - Getty Images. https://www.gettyimages.it/immagine/robert-de-niro?assettype=image&begindate=2024-04-25&enddate=2024-04-27&family=editorial&phrase=robert%20de%20niro&recency=daterange&sort=newest. Accessed 1 May 2024.

Taija PerryCook is a Seattle-based journalist who previously worked for the PNW news site Crosscut and the Jordan Times in Amman.