Diseased #Comicsgate - The Culture Wars Hit The Funny Books!

Okay guys, I'm getting ready to record the video @Mister Dongs requested where I go through liam gray's "Nasser ruined Sway" stream and talk about liam's lies.

To make things easier when I do the video (and because you guys would probably like these) I've included in this post the screen shots I plan to use when going over the video.

I guess I'll begin with liam's accusation that I posted pictures of his dead dog on this thread. That is completely fabricated, and comes from the screen shots between him and the artist Joseph White. Joseph White was the artist on Sway, and these are dms between the both of them that Joseph sent me, because he was always complaining about liam. As you can see, the dog pictured is very much alive. The dog may be dead, but in this picture, the dog is ALIVE
View attachment 1755582
View attachment 1755584
View attachment 1755585

The first time I posted those screen shots, I hadn't even posted the 3rd one, so he was sperging about 1/10 of a picture that could be seen in the second.

Following DMs between me and Joe are in chronological order so that you can see the timeline of Sway falling apart.

Doesn't take long after following Joe before Joe is asking me about liam and David Jaxon. There's a couple other dms between these first 2 screen shots, but those are about a CG mashup piece he's drawing and asks me for a character to include.
View attachment 1755627
View attachment 1755629

Eventually I ask out of curiosity about liam and david:

View attachment 1755717
Vague talks about working together in the future when done with the liam project, but eventually Joe wasn't interested in my script--he wanted to work together, but after he would read my script and I'd want to discuss it, he got every detail and plot point wrong, as if he had only skimmed the script and didn't even pay attention, and I knew he wasn't going to be good to work with so after a while I dropped the idea of working together.
View attachment 1755638
Sway launches, and the writing is dumb.
View attachment 1755640
Joe admits liam changed the goal from $3k to $15k
View attachment 1755651
Sometime around now is when I had liam on my channel. Here is the stream, he pops on around 22:52
Soon, liam's crying video happened, to which J Ishiro made a response video:
To which liam messages J Ishiro.
View attachment 1755668
Aftermath dms between me and Joe:
View attachment 1755671
In Ben Hennessy's group chat for live stream hangouts links, liam sent this:
View attachment 1755675
Secret Comics Presents was originally gonna be an anthology with several artists before it became just me and Jason. I guess liam got mad that Joe wanted to do a short story in it, and went around telling Mindy Wheeler I stole his artist.
View attachment 1755681
Shortly after this is when those first 3 screenshots--the one with the dog in them--are sent to me.
adding this one here because I mentioned it in my video (premiering 5 central) but didn't have it pulled up on my computer (only my phone), in case anyone wants proof after it's mentioned.
Screenshot_2020-11-29 (1) Messenger Facebook.png
 
Sometime around now is when I had liam on my channel. Here is the stream, he pops on around 22:52
This stream is funny as hell in retrospect. I love the bit around 56m with Liam and Sketch interrogating you about your love of Scream. They're fucking right too, LOL. It's weird as fuck to get into horror from Scream. It's like a meta-horror, referencing other horror, so how did you even enjoy the meta aspect being unfamiliar with horror? It's a real mind-bender. But Malin is on point, it's all about that opening scene. I almost think of it as a standalone short film, in isolation that first scene is definitely a masterpiece of horror cinema. I don't remember much about the rest of the film except it being less and less scary as it went on, until the end where, as Sketch rightly says, it's more like a thriller than a horror. And of course we now know that one girl got raped by Harvey Weinstein IRL during the promotion of the film, which is gross. Everything is so tainted these days, everywhere you look is taint.
 
This stream is funny as hell in retrospect. I love the bit around 56m with Liam and Sketch interrogating you about your love of Scream. They're fucking right too, LOL. It's weird as fuck to get into horror from Scream. It's like a meta-horror, referencing other horror, so how did you even enjoy the meta aspect being unfamiliar with horror? It's a real mind-bender. But Malin is on point, it's all about that opening scene. I almost think of it as a standalone short film, in isolation that first scene is definitely a masterpiece of horror cinema. I don't remember much about the rest of the film except it being less and less scary as it went on, until the end where, as Sketch rightly says, it's more like a thriller than a horror. And of course we now know that one girl got raped by Harvey Weinstein IRL during the promotion of the film, which is gross. Everything is so tainted these days, everywhere you look is taint.
I had only begun getting into horror when I watched Scream, but it became my favorite because it introduced me to those tropes which have become my favorite tropes--all the slasher tropes, like you can't say "I'll be right back" "sex = death" etc.

I think Scream was a great entry point into horror, and it became even better when I watched the movies they referenced and understood it more.

It's not very scary at all, but that was the appeal when I was watching it when I was 16--I was always too scared to watch a horror movie, I didn't think I would enjoy being terrified. But I learned I did.
 
See that's good, you filled in some backstory while dropping tantalizing clues that have filled me with even more curiosity about your background. Sixteen is so late! Did you have a sheltered upbringing? Or were you just scared of horror?

What about scary aspects of other movies? Did you never see Terminator because it was scary? What about Jurassic Park, that's a horror for kids. Did you like that? Or were you too scared to watch it?

What about horror books and comics, did you stay away from them too?

What did you do on Halloween, when you were a kid? Hide under the bed?

I have so many questions now.

You could maybe further rehabilitate your reputation and connect with your viewers more by doing a video about yourself and who you are, your backstory. It will help to humanize you, as long as you tell your story well. Don't do it in a C3PO-like fashion, remember how C3PO was really irritating with his resume in the first Star Wars. You have seen Star Wars right? It wasn't too scary was it? Remember how C3PO eventually became a good storyteller, riveting the ewoks in Return of the Jedi. That's where we want to get you, we want to get the CG ewok village gathered around you to hear your stories.
 
Sixteen is so late! Did you have a sheltered upbringing? Or were you just scared of horror?
Just scared of horror, but then when I was in 7th grade I started going to this small, uptight Christian school and church, that was really just a cult, and they convinced me that being into most types of entertainment was bad (for example, they wouldn't let me bring my Harry Potter books to school because it was "satanic" etc). I had a teacher tell me once that if I watched horror movies, that "demons could come out the tv" and haunt me. That gives me an idea for a book.
What about scary aspects of other movies? Did you never see Terminator because it was scary? What about Jurassic Park, that's a horror for kids. Did you like that? Or were you too scared to watch it?
Never saw Terminator (I know, I know, I hear it's great). I saw Jurassic Park as a kid but remember covering my eyes. Rewatched it for the first time last year in all that time, and loved it.
What about horror books and comics, did you stay away from them too?
Yeah I mostly read Harry Potter, Magic Tree House, etc. as a kid. I did read some Goosebumps books--not a ton, but a few--and they didn't scare me because they were often so goofy I thought they were comedies.
You could maybe further rehabilitate your reputation and connect with your viewers more by doing a video about yourself and who you are, your backstory.
I've done that before, but the problem is so many videos and streams covering topics get so buried that everyone misses everything. Maybe I'll do it again.
You have seen Star Wars right?
Yes, I've seen Star Wars. Saw it around that same age, age 15 or 16. It took me from when I started at my school in 7th grade (I was 12) until I was about 15 to realize that my teachers were full of BS and it was a cult, and that there was absolutely nothing wrong with watching movies. They were only pro Disney movies, for the most part, or old wholesome movies like It's A Wonderful Life.

I know that whole backstory with my school sounded crazy (and my parents didn't care, they aren't weirdos and never really joined that cult church, it was just me listening to my school), but it's part of why I like Wes Craven so much (Directed Scream 1-4, the original Nightmare on Elm Street, Nightmare 7, Hills Have Eyes, Last House on the Left), because he has a similar story to mine except it wasn't just his school, it was his family too, and his upbringing was so much worse--he hadn't seen a movie until college. I was 16 when I finished high school (and a few months later when I started college I was hardly 17), and so that was around the time I really got into movies and stuff.

I feel I missed out on so much, since I basically dropped all my books I used to like to read because this school was a bunch of nutjobs, and it caused me to stay away from movies, so during the ages of 12 to 16 I hardly took in any type of art (I started reading comics a few months before turning 16), and I feel I missed out on very "formative" years. I didn't decide to write until I was 17, partway into my first year of college. And I had missed out on so much entertainment it depressed me.

But Wes Craven missed out on so much too, and went on to write and/or direct so many great movies, so he's a big inspiration to me, may he rest in peace.
 
Just scared of horror, but then when I was in 7th grade I started going to this small, uptight Christian school and church, that was really just a cult, and they convinced me that being into most types of entertainment was bad (for example, they wouldn't let me bring my Harry Potter books to school because it was "satanic" etc). I had a teacher tell me once that if I watched horror movies, that "demons could come out the tv" and haunt me. That gives me an idea for a book.

Never saw Terminator (I know, I know, I hear it's great). I saw Jurassic Park as a kid but remember covering my eyes. Rewatched it for the first time last year in all that time, and loved it.

Yeah I mostly read Harry Potter, Magic Tree House, etc. as a kid. I did read some Goosebumps books--not a ton, but a few--and they didn't scare me because they were often so goofy I thought they were comedies.

I've done that before, but the problem is so many videos and streams covering topics get so buried that everyone misses everything. Maybe I'll do it again.

Yes, I've seen Star Wars. Saw it around that same age, age 15 or 16. It took me from when I started at my school in 7th grade (I was 12) until I was about 15 to realize that my teachers were full of BS and it was a cult, and that there was absolutely nothing wrong with watching movies. They were only pro Disney movies, for the most part, or old wholesome movies like It's A Wonderful Life.

I know that whole backstory with my school sounded crazy (and my parents didn't care, they aren't weirdos and never really joined that cult church, it was just me listening to my school), but it's part of why I like Wes Craven so much (Directed Scream 1-4, the original Nightmare on Elm Street, Nightmare 7, Hills Have Eyes, Last House on the Left), because he has a similar story to mine except it wasn't just his school, it was his family too, and his upbringing was so much worse--he hadn't seen a movie until college. I was 16 when I finished high school (and a few months later when I started college I was hardly 17), and so that was around the time I really got into movies and stuff.

I feel I missed out on so much, since I basically dropped all my books I used to like to read because this school was a bunch of nutjobs, and it caused me to stay away from movies, so during the ages of 12 to 16 I hardly took in any type of art (I started reading comics a few months before turning 16), and I feel I missed out on very "formative" years. I didn't decide to write until I was 17, partway into my first year of college. And I had missed out on so much entertainment it depressed me.

But Wes Craven missed out on so much too, and went on to write and/or direct so many great movies, so he's a big inspiration to me, may he rest in peace.

ever thought about making a comic based on creepypasta characters? Plenty of story material right there and a lot of the authors that write the better stories can give you tips on how to improve your writing,
 
ever thought about making a comic based on creepypasta characters? Plenty of story material right there and a lot of the authors that write the better stories can give you tips on how to improve your writing,
Not really. I don't want to write anything that's based on someone else's creations. I can really only write my own--I have to come up with it or I can't.

And I know, immediately after I say that, people have been telling me "But Dracula--" Dracula's public domain, so I can make it my own, but typically it's not my preference to work with someone else's creations, public domain or not.
 
Doug celebrated and encouraged Preston by calling him a "manly man" who was defending Doug's (presumably a damselly damsel in this scenario) honor by trying to take down Cecil's DIRTWORM DUG satire book.

So it was Doug. And frankly, Edwin sent me a copyright strike for doing a commentary efap on one of his videos in which he was talking mad shit. So both of those guys, TenNapel and Edwin Boyette, are just as bad as Liam Gray.

Nah, I'm not going to blame anyone but the actual person who did the deed, or who told them to do it. If you have evidence of Doug TELLING Preston to strike Cecil, then he's guilty. But this guilt by association crap doesn't fly for most people, I would hope at least.

Edwin doing it to you is cringe AF, and wrong. I wouldn't put him on Liam's level of crazy though, because how many channels did Liam strike? Three in one day, and a couple before that? Bloke is a loose wire.
 
This stream is funny as hell in retrospect. I love the bit around 56m with Liam and Sketch interrogating you about your love of Scream. They're fucking right too, LOL. It's weird as fuck to get into horror from Scream. It's like a meta-horror, referencing other horror, so how did you even enjoy the meta aspect being unfamiliar with horror? It's a real mind-bender. But Malin is on point, it's all about that opening scene. I almost think of it as a standalone short film, in isolation that first scene is definitely a masterpiece of horror cinema. I don't remember much about the rest of the film except it being less and less scary as it went on, until the end where, as Sketch rightly says, it's more like a thriller than a horror. And of course we now know that one girl got raped by Harvey Weinstein IRL during the promotion of the film, which is gross. Everything is so tainted these days, everywhere you look is taint.
Is he no longer down with the coof?

Nah, I'm not going to blame anyone but the actual person who did the deed, or who told them to do it. If you have evidence of Doug TELLING Preston to strike Cecil, then he's guilty. But this guilt by association crap doesn't fly for most people, I would hope at least.

Edwin doing it to you is cringe AF, and wrong. I wouldn't put him on Liam's level of crazy though, because how many channels did Liam strike? Three in one day, and a couple before that? Bloke is a loose wire.

That sounds allot like people blaming Ethan for WC? I don't know. Sounds like Doug encouraged crazy people to do crazy things or at least was reckless with the crazy. Which hey, I'm fully meh on in terms of responsibility. Just get your standard straight is all. Is Doug responsible for Presticuck? Then so would Ethan be for WC? If not, then neither is Ethan.
 
  • Like
Reactions: TESTEFY-HD
This stream is funny as hell in retrospect. I love the bit around 56m with Liam and Sketch interrogating you about your love of Scream. They're fucking right too, LOL. It's weird as fuck to get into horror from Scream. It's like a meta-horror, referencing other horror, so how did you even enjoy the meta aspect being unfamiliar with horror? It's a real mind-bender. But Malin is on point, it's all about that opening scene. I almost think of it as a standalone short film, in isolation that first scene is definitely a masterpiece of horror cinema. I don't remember much about the rest of the film except it being less and less scary as it went on, until the end where, as Sketch rightly says, it's more like a thriller than a horror. And of course we now know that one girl got raped by Harvey Weinstein IRL during the promotion of the film, which is gross. Everything is so tainted these days, everywhere you look is taint.
Scream is the perfect poison for a person getting into horror.
The direction by Wes Craven is masterful. It is really tense and the kills are gruesome enough to make you wince, while not too graphic to turn them off. The opening is a classic, Malin is correct.
The jokes lighten the mood, so it is not unbearable for noobs. And the tropes make them go into horror to see those other movies.
It also has the mystery element many slashers dumped, so if you have seen any crime movie you are familiar with trying to guess who is the killer. Only this killer is trying to scare the shit out of their victims.
Scream 2, 3 and 4 are not that tense or scary, they are more funny/meta, but the first scream still holds up..

EDIT:

Just scared of horror, but then when I was in 7th grade I started going to this small, uptight Christian school and church, that was really just a cult, and they convinced me that being into most types of entertainment was bad (for example, they wouldn't let me bring my Harry Potter books to school because it was "satanic" etc). I had a teacher tell me once that if I watched horror movies, that "demons could come out the tv" and haunt me. That gives me an idea for a book.

Never saw Terminator (I know, I know, I hear it's great). I saw Jurassic Park as a kid but remember covering my eyes. Rewatched it for the first time last year in all that time, and loved it.

Yeah I mostly read Harry Potter, Magic Tree House, etc. as a kid. I did read some Goosebumps books--not a ton, but a few--and they didn't scare me because they were often so goofy I thought they were comedies.

I've done that before, but the problem is so many videos and streams covering topics get so buried that everyone misses everything. Maybe I'll do it again.

Yes, I've seen Star Wars. Saw it around that same age, age 15 or 16. It took me from when I started at my school in 7th grade (I was 12) until I was about 15 to realize that my teachers were full of BS and it was a cult, and that there was absolutely nothing wrong with watching movies. They were only pro Disney movies, for the most part, or old wholesome movies like It's A Wonderful Life.

I know that whole backstory with my school sounded crazy (and my parents didn't care, they aren't weirdos and never really joined that cult church, it was just me listening to my school), but it's part of why I like Wes Craven so much (Directed Scream 1-4, the original Nightmare on Elm Street, Nightmare 7, Hills Have Eyes, Last House on the Left), because he has a similar story to mine except it wasn't just his school, it was his family too, and his upbringing was so much worse--he hadn't seen a movie until college. I was 16 when I finished high school (and a few months later when I started college I was hardly 17), and so that was around the time I really got into movies and stuff.

I feel I missed out on so much, since I basically dropped all my books I used to like to read because this school was a bunch of nutjobs, and it caused me to stay away from movies, so during the ages of 12 to 16 I hardly took in any type of art (I started reading comics a few months before turning 16), and I feel I missed out on very "formative" years. I didn't decide to write until I was 17, partway into my first year of college. And I had missed out on so much entertainment it depressed me.

But Wes Craven missed out on so much too, and went on to write and/or direct so many great movies, so he's a big inspiration to me, may he rest in peace.
Dude, Nasser making videos about catching up to all those great movies he has missed out due to religious nutjob schoolteachers is a great series of videos.
Go on, watch the terminator and do a video about it, then take suggestions for other must-see movies.
 
Just scared of horror, but then when I was in 7th grade I started going to this small, uptight Christian school and church, that was really just a cult, and they convinced me that being into most types of entertainment was bad (for example, they wouldn't let me bring my Harry Potter books to school because it was "satanic" etc). I had a teacher tell me once that if I watched horror movies, that "demons could come out the tv" and haunt me. That gives me an idea for a book.

Never saw Terminator (I know, I know, I hear it's great). I saw Jurassic Park as a kid but remember covering my eyes. Rewatched it for the first time last year in all that time, and loved it.

Yeah I mostly read Harry Potter, Magic Tree House, etc. as a kid. I did read some Goosebumps books--not a ton, but a few--and they didn't scare me because they were often so goofy I thought they were comedies.

I've done that before, but the problem is so many videos and streams covering topics get so buried that everyone misses everything. Maybe I'll do it again.

Yes, I've seen Star Wars. Saw it around that same age, age 15 or 16. It took me from when I started at my school in 7th grade (I was 12) until I was about 15 to realize that my teachers were full of BS and it was a cult, and that there was absolutely nothing wrong with watching movies. They were only pro Disney movies, for the most part, or old wholesome movies like It's A Wonderful Life.

I know that whole backstory with my school sounded crazy (and my parents didn't care, they aren't weirdos and never really joined that cult church, it was just me listening to my school), but it's part of why I like Wes Craven so much (Directed Scream 1-4, the original Nightmare on Elm Street, Nightmare 7, Hills Have Eyes, Last House on the Left), because he has a similar story to mine except it wasn't just his school, it was his family too, and his upbringing was so much worse--he hadn't seen a movie until college. I was 16 when I finished high school (and a few months later when I started college I was hardly 17), and so that was around the time I really got into movies and stuff.

I feel I missed out on so much, since I basically dropped all my books I used to like to read because this school was a bunch of nutjobs, and it caused me to stay away from movies, so during the ages of 12 to 16 I hardly took in any type of art (I started reading comics a few months before turning 16), and I feel I missed out on very "formative" years. I didn't decide to write until I was 17, partway into my first year of college. And I had missed out on so much entertainment it depressed me.

But Wes Craven missed out on so much too, and went on to write and/or direct so many great movies, so he's a big inspiration to me, may he rest in peace.

That's hilarious and fascinating Nasser, see I already feel more glad to have met you now, having learned of this amusing quirk in your life story.

Is that where your swearing phobia comes from, is it a vestige of this weird cult-school upbringing?

You know a big part of the reason Liam was so riveting this summer is that he was like a spurting fountain of bullshit allusions to fantasized backstories of himself, one bit of nonsense after the other, creating a kind of kaleidoscopic symphony of lies and fraud. It was both appalling and fascinating. And your real life story has some of these same qualities, I think you maybe can't see the fascinating nature of your life because you're inside it. You need to figure out a way to look at yourself.

And like I said, humanness counts for a lot. As an example, you might be interested to know that a burp from your portly belly contributed to the destruction of Liam, this specific moment where you explained your burp:


This caused pathos in me, it was literally pathetic, in the proper sense of the word, meaning evocative of sympathy. It caused my blackened, microscopic little heart to crawl out to you against my will, and at that moment I decided to set fire to Liam Gray's bouncy castle of delusional bullshit.

And here we are! Best of luck to you with the show tonight. Orange half-man bad.

PS: You'll maybe feel encouraged to hear that Paul and Leonard Schrader (Taxi Driver, Blue Collar, The Yakuza etc) had similar strict religious backgrounds, Paul didn't see a movie until he was seventeen and Leonard Schrader actually hallucinated, he tells the story in Easy Riders, Raging Bulls:

"Since puberty, I had had these hallucinations. I would see things and hear things that I knew weren't there. So all of a sudden the screen peeled back, and it was the Last Judgment Day. I saw the Lord God Jehovah and hosts of angels coming down and I was gonna burn in hell forever, because I went to the fuckin' movies. I knew it was not real, yet I saw it, and heard it. I ran out of the theater, two blocks, five blocks, till I calmed down, furious at myself. This is your first movie, and you're having these fuckin' visions, you freaked yourself right out of the theater. How you ever gonna get outta this town if this is how you're gonna be. I still had the stub in my pocket, so I went back, and watched the whole thing. That was my first movie!"
 
Is that where your swearing phobia comes from, is it a vestige of this weird cult-school upbringing?
I just don't like to curse in general.
This caused pathos in me, it was literally pathetic, in the proper sense of the word, meaning evocative of sympathy. It caused my blackened, microscopic little heart to crawl out to you against my will, and at that moment I decided to set fire to Liam Gray's bouncy castle of delusional bullshit.
Hail Pilule Noire.
PS: You'll maybe feel encouraged to hear that Paul and Leonard Schrader (Taxi Driver, Blue Collar, The Yakuza etc) had similar strict religious backgrounds, Paul didn't see a movie until he was seventeen and Leonard Schrader actually hallucinated, he tells the story in Easy Riders, Raging Bulls:
That's actually a really cool story.
 
Is he no longer down with the coof?



That sounds allot like people blaming Ethan for WC? I don't know. Sounds like Doug encouraged crazy people to do crazy things or at least was reckless with the crazy. Which hey, I'm fully meh on in terms of responsibility. Just get your standard straight is all. Is Doug responsible for Presticuck? Then so would Ethan be for WC? If not, then neither is Ethan.
Was there a point in time where Preston swore loyalty to Doug, or where Doug publicly proclaimed that Preston fought people for him so that he didn't have to?

Slightly different circumstances, I think.
 
I just want to set the record straight re: Tim Lim and then I'll let it go. His victim narrative is irritating.
I follow Tim and Mark on Twitter, I occasionally watch a video of theirs. I don’t really see him saying much about him being attacked or they’re victims. Did you post proof earlier of Tim striking someone’s channel?
 
As I'm watching the Reignbow Brute launch stream (congrats on 180k) I can't help but be reminded of an old video game called "Raze's Hell". I looked up the game to refresh my memory and realized it's somewhat prophetic.

"For centuries the Kewletts, a cute and happy race, lived an idyllic existence inside the hallowed walls of Kewtopia. They never went outside the gates of their city because they had everything they needed inside: a wonderful princess, perfect weather, wealth, and privilege. The Kewletts parody different types of cute creatures found in the media. Before the events in the game, the Kewletts lived isolated from the rest of their world. Their first attempt at diplomacy with the creatures of the hinterlands was brief and failed. Afterwards, their Princess decided to launch "Operation Fresh Hope" to "cutetify" all of the monsters outside of Kewtopia. Because the Kewletts are intensely nationalistic, they support the idea of expanding Kewletts throughout the war have no problems with "cleansing" the hinterlands of all monsters. Their belligerent, racist worldview is in sharp contrast to their cute, gentle appearance. The Kewletts' increasingly vicious colonization efforts carry on until they meet Raze, an ugly, simple beast who is transformed when he accidentally stumbles upon ancient artifacts. Raze's heroics spark a swelling underground guerrilla movement."
 
Nasser's situation will take time.

2019's nonstop drama, gay ops, War Campaign's influence, and fighting will take a while to heal. I've already said that it's way too soon for Nasser to release an IGG campaign. He needs to rebuild trust with ComicsGate, but I think it will happen. I can't flip a switch and change everyone's mind instantly. I can slowly reintroduce Nasser and leave it to him to win people over. Or not.

I just think Nasser's return is not going to be in his favor. You guys shitted on the guy for sharing "tugs miscarriage", being a cherry traitor and yellow flash punked his ass and you uploaded the clip as a highlight. That damage has essentially killed nasser's prospects in comicsgate. Nasser probably killed his writing career in all fronts of the indie comics in this circle because no one is going to support a guy who got kicked out, went solo and then came back on the purpose of money, it makes him look more like a cuck like donal.


And if nasser gets kicked from cg again then he will be a laughing stock. It's nice you guys buried the hatchet but you gotta admit you guys ruined his stock in the Passion of Nasser stream. The fans are not going to take nasser back after years of live streams of how nasser revealed a miscarriage that was already tweeted but we know tug cries about everything.
 
Last edited:
I just think Nasser's return is not going to be in his favor. You guys shitted on the guy for sharing "tugs miscarriage", being a cherry traitor and yellow flash punked his ass and you uploaded the clip as a highlight. That damage has essentially killed nasser's prospects in comicsgate. Nasser probably killed his writing career in all fronts of the indie comics in this circle because no one is going to support a guy who got kicked out, went solo and then came back on the purpose of money, it makes him look more like a cuck like donal.

F Nasser means Forgive Nasser
 
Back