🐱 Joji fans have learned the truth about Filthy Frank and it isn’t pretty

CatParty

Over the past two days "#JojiIsOverParty" has trended on Twitter, pulling in over 21,000 tweets. An account called "jinsolbi" tweeted out their shock that Miller had said the n-word in a song and found that song "offensive." The account is fairly small with under 30 followers and has since gone private. The hashtag seems to be mostly full of Joji fans aware of the singer's past controversies and shock, mocking those that might not be aware of Filthy Frank.


George "Joji" Miller is a singer and songwriter known recently for his melodic tunes like "Gimme Love" and "Run." Miller didn't start out as the clean swooner that many identify him as today, beginning his public career on YouTube as Filthy Frank in 2011. Filthy Frank's entire character was built around being as grotesque and offensive as possible to parody these sort of behaviors. His videos had him doing outlandish stunts, like eating a cake made of his own hair or dressing up in a pink morph suit to scare denizens of New York City.

The Filthy Frank persona passed through to the mainstream in 2013 when he posted the original Harlem Shake video. From the "DizastaMusic" YouTube channel, Miller and his friends created the dance craze that captured the nation and talk show hosts' attention for the next few months.

Miller had always wanted to be a musician first. In 2015, he released the "Pink Guy" album and followed it up with "Pink Season" in 2017. The songs were vulgar but contained the spark of instrumental and melodic creations that Joji would grow to be popular for years later. After "Pink Season" was released and charted on Billboard, Miller decided that he would be retiring the character to focus on less meme-related content. He signed to record label 88rising, which in October of 2018 released his "Ballads 1" album.


"It was a humor that I started when I was in high school," Miller said in an interview with Billboard. "So naturally as I got older, I got tired of that humor. People's tastes change. People's humor changes."

Miller does not like to talk about his past as Filthy Frank, instead focusing on his current music career and singles. He has made no statement on his Twitter about the hashtag.
 
Well look at that, he's got a song dedicated to these people already

I feel this songs more appropriate.

 
It's funny how this keeps happening. It's also funny how many people called it. Even le edgy 14 year olds understood this years ago.

You actually look up the hashtag and you'll see the majority of the posts are just people shitting on both the hashtag and the people who started it.
I remember seeing the hashtag yesterday over lunch and was "what people didn't know this?" ... only to be pleasantly surprised by all of the "OMG Clark Kent is Superman?!?!" style memes.
 
A kpop singer used to be YouTube's biggest comedian/shitposter? The party's not over, it just got started! :drink:

I'm happy Joji is doing something that makes him both happy and money. I bet the kpop fags who discovered his old videos really hate him because he called out their distant equally rictarded cousins, the weeaboos.

 
Over the past two days "#JojiIsOverParty" has trended on Twitter, pulling in over 21,000 tweets. An account called "jinsolbi" tweeted out their shock that Miller had said the n-word in a song and found that song "offensive." The account is fairly small with under 30 followers and has since gone private. The hashtag seems to be mostly full of Joji fans aware of the singer's past controversies and shock, mocking those that might not be aware of Filthy Frank.

Apparently they were trying to cancel him over a song that was taking the piss out of A&H posters and stupid racist rednecks as well.

Keep in mind, this album also had edgy songs about wanting to fuck Dora and songs about those girls on Nick.
 
You know you have some form of brain damage when you serach a person up and just now figure out the second row result is them despite them singing for well over two years now
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