Unraveling one of the OP's sources:
(a)
Big League Politics - Wikipedia -
- Big League Politics is an American far-right media website founded by former Breitbart News employees. The site was announced in 2017 by one of its founders as an investigative outfit. In early 2018, Big League Politics was acquired by Mustard Seed Media which is owned by Reilly O'Neal and Noel Fritsch. On its about page, Big League Politics states "We are not conservative. We are not liberal". Its editor-in-chief is former Breitbart reporter Patrick Howley. The Wall Street Journal describes the website as "backed by Republican operatives".
- The website has promoted conspiracy theories, such as the QAnon conspiracy theory and Murder of Seth Rich conspiracy theories. The New York Times described Big League Politics as "an obscure right-wing news site [...] which has promoted conspiracy theories and written favorably about white nationalist candidates."
(b) Oooo, ... neat! "In early 2018, Big League Poliics was acquired by Mustard Seed Media owned by Reilly O'ONeal and Noel Fritsch."
(c) Timothy Reilly O'Neal and Noel Fritsch.
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/big-league-politics-patrick-howley_n_5bbe210de4b0876edaa4a1fd?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZ29vZ2xlLmNvbS8&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAMgVlN89lunzvm1vmKfwOXAjKBo_MP_ErU432bF8wvjFftvvVeYGtTO4vVWnIWwR3lMQv22MOIG-ttTp-impT4Z7PG7GJ68HWD2zoFaimOjhcgOBK-EbDnecxq6a5vJePUZK1A9F_uE2dRKISOl81J2TlofXkiKAr8O8z88YqTFh "The site, which now has nearly 80,000 Twitter followers, is owned by Reilly O’Neal, a North Carolina political operative whose clients include failed Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore, as well as Virginia Republican and Confederate monument defender Corey Stewart. Fritsch, a campaign consultant who has worked for many of the same candidates as O’Neal, doesn’t work for the site but appears in some of its biggest videos.
"But the website’s lodestar is Howley, a 28-year-old former Breitbart News and Daily Caller reporter.
Howley, a professed admirer of conspiracy peddler Alex Jones, has a long record of stunt journalism. As an assistant editor at The American Spectator, he infiltrated an Occupy Wall Street-linked group in Washington, D.C., during a 2011 protest and (unsuccessfully)
led a charge of Occupy protesters into the National Air and Space Museum to protest a drone exhibit. In addition to promoting political candidates O’Neal champions, like Stewart or Paul Nehlen, a white nationalist Republican candidate for Congress in Wisconsin, Big League Politics embraces the kind of coverage that made Howley notorious."
(d)
Roy Moore Consultants’ New Project: A Conspiracy-Theorizing Pro-Trump News Site "O’Neal declined to provide details about how BLP came into possession of the Moore campaign Twitter account. But he himself has business ties to the failed Alabama candidate. Moore’s
campaign paid two of O’Neal’s other companies more than $730,000, according to Federal Election Commission records. It paid another $130,000 in total to GOP consultant Noel Fritsch, a firm Fritsch runs, and another firm that lists his home in D.C. as its mailing address.
Both Fritsch and O’Neal have collaborated on a number of political projects and, a source familiar with Big League Politics’ operations says both are now heavily involved with the website.
Fritsch did not respond to requests for comment. Neither did Howley."
(e)
This New Right-Wing Site Falsely Blamed A UNC Professor For Heather Heyer's Death | HuffPost
"This New Right-Wing Site Falsely Blamed A UNC Professor For Heather Heyer’s Death
Patrick Howley’s Big League Politics is for people who find Breitbart too reasonable. And it’s just getting started.
(f) Me? LOL!!!