British public broadcaster BBC interviewed an individual who goes by the moniker "Mr Explosive," responsible for creating pro-Iran AI-generated propaganda videos using Lego figures in a podcast episode published on Saturday.

"Mr Explosive" is a representative of Explosive Media, which has been publishing such videos nearly daily.

While he initially denied working for the Iranian government, and said in previous interviews that he is "totally independent," BBC questioning led to "Mr Explosive" admitting that the Islamic regime is a "customer" of Explosive Media, which the report claimed he had never previously confirmed publicly.

The propagandist appeared silhouetted, flanked by red and green light to mirror the Iranian flag, with a green-feathered helmet on his desk - associated with Husayn ibn Ali, one of the Shia Imams, who frequently features in pro-Iran propaganda.

He said that his team consists of fewer than 10 people, and they chose to use Lego-style graphics "because it is a world language." This choice appears to have led to various countries, including Iranian and Russian state media, regularly sharing them on X/Twitter.

President Donald Trump mimics firing a gun during a news conference in the White House briefing room about the war in Iran on Monday, April 6, 2026.
President Donald Trump mimics firing a gun during a news conference in the White House briefing room about the war in Iran on Monday, April 6, 2026. (credit: Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/JTA)

He also regularly shows the Epstein files being used, alleging that US President Donald Trump launched Operation Epic Fury in order to distract from the prevailing conversation around his alleged association with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

He told BBC that he does so in order to show the audience the "kind of confrontation they are witnessing," which is between Iran, who he claims seek "truth and freedom," and "those who associate themselves with cannibals." This references a theory that the Epstein files link the Trump administration to cannibalism, of which there is no credible evidence, BBC explained.

The propaganda videos also use other factual inaccuracies, including the Iranian military capturing a downed US fighter jet pilot, and successful Iranian strikes on key locations across Israel, the Gulf States, and the US military deployed to the region.

"Possibly, there was no lost pilot; there was no rescue operation. Their main goal was to steal uranium from Iran," he claimed.

The BBC cited US officials saying that the airman is now receiving treatment in Kuwait, to which "Mr Explosive" retorted that "Only 13% of what Trump says is based on facts."

Anti-regime protests in Iran were 'Trump-funded coup,' AI propagandist claims

"Mr. Explosive" also defends his relationship with Tehran, saying it was "honorable to work for the homeland," and dismissing the anti-regime protests countrywide from December 2025 to February 2026 as a "Trump-funded coup."

He also defended accusations of being antisemitic. "Our videos are not antisemitic; our videos are anti-Zionist," he said, despite the recurring antisemitic tropes that appear in most of his videos.

One such image includes a depiction of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as drinking blood, which "Mr Explosive" says highlights Netanyahu's "atrocities."