Absolute Proof

Last updated
Absolute Proof
Absolute Proof title card.png
Title card
Directed by Mike Lindell
Produced by
  • Mike Lindell
  • Brannon Howse
  • Mary Fanning [1]
Starring
  • Mike Lindell
  • Brannon Howse
  • Mary Fanning
  • Phil Waldron
  • Matthew DePerno
Distributed by One America News Network
Release date
  • February 5, 2021 (2021-02-05)
Running time
120 minutes
LanguageEnglish

Absolute Proof is a 2021 political film directed by and starring Mike Lindell. It was distributed by One America News Network and promotes the conspiracy theory that Donald Trump won the 2020 presidential election instead of Joe Biden. The documentary was removed by video hosting sites YouTube and Vimeo for violating their community standards.

Contents

Absolute Proof won two awards: the Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Picture and the Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Actor (for Lindell). Lindell has since released three sequels: Scientific Proof, Absolute Interference, and Absolutely 9-0. [2]

Premise

In the documentary, Lindell hosts numerous cybersecurity experts and anonymous persons whose testimonies allegedly support his claim that Chinese and Iranian hackers hacked into voting machines in order to influence the results of the election in favour of Biden. [3]

Participants

Lindell in December 2020 Mike Lindell (50755882433) (cropped).jpg
Lindell in December 2020

Background

On November 7, 2020, Joe Biden was declared the winner of the 2020 U.S. Presidential election. [6] [7] Alleging that voter fraud switched several million votes for Joe Biden, Trump's campaign and Republican allies challenged the election results. At least 63 lawsuits were filed, although none were successful. [8] [9] Trump and his allies unsuccessfully urged officials in states that Biden won to disqualify some ballots and to challenge vote certification processes. [10] Even after Biden was inaugurated as the 46th President of the United States on January 20, 2021, Trump and others, including Lindell, continued to maintain that Trump had actually won the election. [11]

Release

On February 5, 2021, One America News Network live streamed the film on its website. Introduced with a disclaimer, [12] the film shortly afterward went viral. Several hours after the live stream, YouTube and Vimeo removed all recordings of the film from their sites, citing violations of their community standards, [13] but not before it had tens of thousands of views. [14]

Reception

The film was widely criticized by fact-checkers as being full of "debunked, unsubstantial claims." [15] [3] Mainstream news outlets such as The New York Times disputed its claims as well. [5]

Lindell's staff confirmed in August 2021 that the data shown in the film was given to Lindell by Dennis L. Montgomery, a software designer with a documented history of fraud. [16]

Awards

In April 2021, Absolute Proof received two Golden Raspberry Awards, which parody traditional awards by honoring a year's worst films. [17]

YearAssociationCategoryNominee(s)ResultRef.
2020 Golden Raspberry Awards Worst Picture Mary Fanning, Brannon Howse and Mike Lindell Won [18]
Worst Actor Mike LindellWon

Sequels

In the months following the release of the film in February 2021, Lindell released Scientific Proof, an hour-long interview with Douglas G. Frank; Absolute Interference, a two-hour-long documentary starring Michael Flynn, which The Dispatch fact check says "recycles many familiar voter fraud claims that lack evidence"; [19] and Absolutely 9-0, a 26-minute-long interview with an anonymous "white hat hacker" who purported to show packet captures from voting machines used in the 2020 election. [20] In reality, the data presented was a hex-encoded version of publicly available voter registration data from Pennsylvania. [2] [21]

"Cyber Symposium"

On August 10, 11, and 12, 2021, Lindell hosted a "cyber symposium" in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, which he promised would produce "irrefutable evidence" for his claims that the election had been stolen by foreign hackers. However, the cyber expert he had hired to analyze his evidence said he could not confirm that claim. [22] Lindell promised to make the purported packet captures available to attendees and offered a $5 million "bounty" to any attendee who could prove that they did not originate from the 2020 election. [23] Just as the symposium was about to start on August 10, Lindell's website, LindellTV, was inoperative for about an hour – a problem Lindell says, without providing proof, was the result of a hack. [24] Lindell had predicted that because of the irrefutable evidence his symposium would reveal, Trump would be recognized as the true winner of the 2020 election and reinstated as president on August 13, the day after his symposium ended. When that did not occur, he moved the predicted date of Trump's reinstatement to September 13, which also did not result in Trump being reinstated. [25] The packet captures were never presented at the symposium and one attendee described Lindell's supposed evidence as "random garbage that wastes our time". [26] Renowned election cybersecurity expert Harri Hursti, who attended the symposium, characterized the data presented as "a big fat nothing and a distraction". [26] In April 2023, an arbitration panel unanimously awarded the $5 million "bounty" to cybersecurity expert Robert Zeidman, agreeing with Zeidman's assertion that Lindell had not produced any valid data from the 2020 election. [27] Lindell subsequently refused to pay, resulting in Zeidman suing Lindell in an attempt to recover the award. [28] [29]

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