The woman in your video is expressing legitimate concerns. Many that are mirrored by me and my tiny little blog all the way up to Stephen Totilo and his... much larger little blog. The problem is that it's run right along side trash like ShortFatOtaku's video which I have already called "at worst misogynist" because of the "quinspiracy" blurb in the beginning and the fact that the 'content' of the video is limited to... once again... baseless accusations with no evidence to back it up.
Why would I accuse the woman in the video above as anything but a concerned consumer? She's not claiming that there's a secret indie cabal run out of Zoe Quinn's vagina, she's just saying that we need to hold the press in video games to a specific professional standard.
Great, lets hold these guys to a standard.
It seems Kotaku is, as in many areas, taking the lead on this by being as transparent as possible in their coverage and response to accusations... but does anybody who is recording videos about #gamergate have specific demands or standards that need to apply? Is this agreed upon? Or is the hashtag really just a large group of concerned consumers glued together by a small group of legitimately vile human beings who have co-opted real people and their real questions into a virtual witch hunt. This isn't, at it's core, about legitimacy in press. This is about a simmering hatred of indie games and the social issues that many indie devs and the press are attempting to tackle.
So no, I'm not going to take anything with #gamergate seriously because it's not serious. It's a bastardization of a real issue and has set the cause of journalistic integrity back by miring it in slut-shaming and misogyny. Jim Sterling, the most boisterous and one of the most respected voices of integrity, is being targeted by #gamergate... does that seem like the way to go forward?