The site's critics' consensus reads: "White Noise pulls back the curtain on the morbidly fascinating -- and chillingly mundane -- private lives of far-right figureheads.
[10] Writing for Variety, Owen Gleiberman called White Noise a "lively and disturbing documentary" that exposes alt-right celebrities as "deeply shallow and self-deluded hypocrites", and wrote: "Lombroso did his homework, embedding himself with these people for several years, so that he won their trust and became privy to their private lives.
[12] Frank Scheck of The Hollywood Reporter wrote that the film "sheds a much-needed spotlight" on its subjects, but the focus comes at the expense of being more informative about the wider alt-right movement.
"[13] Eric Kohn of IndieWire wrote, "Lombroso has made the scariest documentary of the year without telling us anything new", and stated that the film "has a compelling message at its core, by daring viewers to see the worst of our society, and cautioning against the tendency to simply tuning it out.
"[19] Ben Kenisberg, writing for The New York Times, said: "While the film doesn't take a strict fly-on-the-wall approach — Lombroso can occasionally be heard offscreen challenging his subjects — it sticks close enough to inner circles that its message sometimes risks coming across as "extremists are just like us.
""[20] Barbara Shulgasser-Parker of Common Sense Media gave the film a score of 2 out of 5 stars, writing: "Director Daniel Lambroso [sic] thinks that fair reporting in White Noise means letting the racist activists he's profiling speak for themselves in the hopes that viewers will see through their hatred.
Given that his subjects have already proven themselves experts at exploiting social media to spread lies to millions (Pizzagate, Hillary Clinton is dying, etc.