Containment Random Chris Updates

I never thought a book would be made about Chris so early. I knew of a few research papers being made about him. I always thought there'd be a Netflix style doc before a book. As always, it goes over Chris' head, and the first thing he complains about is the cover. It would have been more funny if the cover was Sonichu stylized as one of Warhol's works.

Chris' ego isn't going to take this well and will write to the author/publishers about being Hating Trolling Stupids.
I can imagine him getting spitting mad if “unapproved” reprints of Sonichu comics are in the book and he wasn’t paid for it.

After taking a moment to look at the synopsis, this seems to be a legitimate piece of work and not a cash-grab based off Chris’ e-fame. I might pick it up myself.
 
Someone writes a book on Chris-Chan’s detachment from reality and he takes offense to the cover.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B095F3762...abc_E5ECV5KYAJXRWCQ0CJPD?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1

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Edit: I know nothing about Andy Warhol, but I’m certain Chris is not being shown in a positive light.

Edit 2: After rereading the title, I’m not 100% sure the “suppression of reality” is about Chris’ reliance on his delusions or if it’s addressing a larger encompassing issue regarding art and artists.
Andy Worhol was actually highly aware of himself to the point that he had body dysmorphia for being so ugly.

1621878662053.png

Chris thinks this is god's artistic gift from God.

You know, I don't think Andy was as bad as Chris. He was involved with some decent films and even got to bang one of hot stars of those films.


Chris on the other hand will never be taken seriously and couldn't get banged by a gang of niggos.

He carried a tape recorder everywhere and prophesized that in the future everyone would be famous just for being themselves.


He wasn't wrong. Allister Crowley predicted the same thing.
 
"Warhol worked to legitimize popular culture and give it the prestige of high art. But more recent generations have grown up breathing pop culture as if it were air. "Young at heart", people continue playing video games and collecting toys into adulthood, and favorite entertainment franchises are treated akin to religions. More than anyone else, Chris Chan emblematizes the excesses of this era."
This passage and the fact they chose a pickle for the cover makes me think it's just some pseud ween looking to get attention from mentioning Chris.
 
Someone writes a book on Chris-Chan’s detachment from reality and he takes offense to the cover.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B095F3762...abc_E5ECV5KYAJXRWCQ0CJPD?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1

View attachment 2197650
View attachment 2197651

Edit: I know nothing about Andy Warhol, but I’m certain Chris is not being shown in a positive light.

Edit 2: After rereading the title, I’m not 100% sure the “suppression of reality” is about Chris’ reliance on his delusions or if it’s addressing a larger encompassing issue regarding art and artists.
Chris judged the book by its cover. Not the title but the artwork itself.
Chris is still upset about the pickle. He should learn from TJ Kirk and his affiliation with bananas, embrace the joke.
 
Given Chris' surprise, I initially thought, the author worked with Chris in order to get the material. Now I know the author more or less went through the CWCki and some Geno videos. I can't wait for what the reviews say.

You just know the author's agent is looking at this and thinking "we should promote this book through every news outlet."
 
𝑰𝒔 𝒕𝒉𝒊𝒔 𝒂 𝒋𝒐𝒌𝒆? 𝑶𝒓 𝒊𝒔 𝒕𝒉𝒊𝒔 𝒇𝒐𝒓 𝒓𝒆𝒂𝒍?
A CRITICAL CONFRONTATION. What can we learn from comparing the two most unique cultural figures in living memory?

Warhol and Chris Chan: Both became famous while producing artwork that was often met with derision. Both became the focus of intense interest and curiosity. Their indelible personalities provoked fascination and laughter. In spite of their strangeness--or because of it--they reflect particularly pertinent aspects of the world around them. They are thought of as the oddest of oddities, and yet they represent the course of our society as a whole.

From bright Pop Art to sordid underground films, Andy Warhol portrayed an America that was both familiar and avant-garde. He carried a tape recorder everywhere and prophesized that in the future everyone would be famous just for being themselves. Several decades later, Chris Chan embodies Warhol's dream: Thanks to the internet Chris has become known worldwide, is constantly documented, observed, scrutinized, and made the subject of mass debate and media analysis.

Warhol worked to legitimize popular culture and give it the prestige of high art. But more recent generations have grown up breathing pop culture as if it were air. "Young at heart", people continue playing video games and collecting toys into adulthood, and favorite entertainment franchises are treated akin to religions. More than anyone else, Chris Chan emblematizes the excesses of this era.

This comprehensive study investigates the parallels and divergences between Warhol and Chris Chan, both of whom can be seen as bellwethers of cultural shifts. The two are compared in terms of how they relate to the following elements--from the fundamentals of life to the themes of our age:

● Names & Words

● Collecting & Hoarding

● Consumerism

● Technology & Media

● Women . . . Sex . Transgenderism . . Femdom

● Fame: Mythologies of Self & Multiverse

● Recording

A wide spectrum of knowledge is painstakingly drawn upon to analyze our two subjects from all angles. References and points of comparison are made to elements of:

● Art history

● Classic film

● Modernist literature

● Philosophy (from Plato to the postmodern)

● Popular music

● Psychology (especially psychoanalysis)

● Internet meme culture

Through pathos and ridiculousness, in an uncertain world that's constantly changing, we trace the human spirit as it passes from the golden age of Americana... through the high Warholian era... and now into Chris Chan's Poké Ball.

So: 𝑰𝒔 𝒕𝒉𝒊𝒔 𝒂 𝒋𝒐𝒌𝒆? 𝑶𝒓 𝒊𝒔 𝒕𝒉𝒊𝒔 𝒇𝒐𝒓 𝒓𝒆𝒂𝒍? Read slowly and see.

  • ASIN : B095F3762C
  • Publisher : Independently published (May 19, 2021)
  • Language : English
  • Paperback : 635 pages
  • ISBN-13 : 979-8739475275
  • Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
  • Dimensions : 6 x 1.44 x 9 inches
Apparently this was just released five days ago, has zero reviews, and there is only one copy for sale. Weird. lol @ hoarding being a bullet point topic. The author has also self-published a book about flipping comic books on eBay.
 
I was in Viet Nam back in 2013 and legit heard a man screaming into a microphone almost exactly like Chris is doing here except it had distortion effects and he had a guitar with him that blended with the sound to make a cool effect.

Here we just get to listen to something between Autistic Screams, a Cherokian Chant, and whatever he thinks will bring about his version of heaven.

I do think it would be funny though to drop this off to some Uncontacted Tribe with a Sonichu Medallion and a few Comic Pages and just see how they react to it. Like suddenly the Sentinelese convert to a religion.... DOCCS and they don’t even know what Sonic or Pikachu are or how to start a fire, but this somehow amazes them.

They probably have the same IQ as Chris.
Reminds me of the PsyOps Vietnam Ghost Tape that didn’t really work.
 
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𝑰𝒔 𝒕𝒉𝒊𝒔 𝒂 𝒋𝒐𝒌𝒆? 𝑶𝒓 𝒊𝒔 𝒕𝒉𝒊𝒔 𝒇𝒐𝒓 𝒓𝒆𝒂𝒍?
A CRITICAL CONFRONTATION. What can we learn from comparing the two most unique cultural figures in living memory?

Warhol and Chris Chan: Both became famous while producing artwork that was often met with derision. Both became the focus of intense interest and curiosity. Their indelible personalities provoked fascination and laughter. In spite of their strangeness--or because of it--they reflect particularly pertinent aspects of the world around them. They are thought of as the oddest of oddities, and yet they represent the course of our society as a whole.

From bright Pop Art to sordid underground films, Andy Warhol portrayed an America that was both familiar and avant-garde. He carried a tape recorder everywhere and prophesized that in the future everyone would be famous just for being themselves. Several decades later, Chris Chan embodies Warhol's dream: Thanks to the internet Chris has become known worldwide, is constantly documented, observed, scrutinized, and made the subject of mass debate and media analysis.

Warhol worked to legitimize popular culture and give it the prestige of high art. But more recent generations have grown up breathing pop culture as if it were air. "Young at heart", people continue playing video games and collecting toys into adulthood, and favorite entertainment franchises are treated akin to religions. More than anyone else, Chris Chan emblematizes the excesses of this era.

This comprehensive study investigates the parallels and divergences between Warhol and Chris Chan, both of whom can be seen as bellwethers of cultural shifts. The two are compared in terms of how they relate to the following elements--from the fundamentals of life to the themes of our age:

● Names & Words

● Collecting & Hoarding

● Consumerism

● Technology & Media

● Women . . . Sex . Transgenderism . . Femdom

● Fame: Mythologies of Self & Multiverse

● Recording

A wide spectrum of knowledge is painstakingly drawn upon to analyze our two subjects from all angles. References and points of comparison are made to elements of:

● Art history

● Classic film

● Modernist literature

● Philosophy (from Plato to the postmodern)

● Popular music

● Psychology (especially psychoanalysis)

● Internet meme culture

Through pathos and ridiculousness, in an uncertain world that's constantly changing, we trace the human spirit as it passes from the golden age of Americana... through the high Warholian era... and now into Chris Chan's Poké Ball.

So: 𝑰𝒔 𝒕𝒉𝒊𝒔 𝒂 𝒋𝒐𝒌𝒆? 𝑶𝒓 𝒊𝒔 𝒕𝒉𝒊𝒔 𝒇𝒐𝒓 𝒓𝒆𝒂𝒍? Read slowly and see.

  • ASIN : B095F3762C
  • Publisher : Independently published (May 19, 2021)
  • Language : English
  • Paperback : 635 pages
  • ISBN-13 : 979-8739475275
  • Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
  • Dimensions : 6 x 1.44 x 9 inches
Apparently this was just released five days ago, has zero reviews, and there is only one copy for sale. Weird. lol @ hoarding being a bullet point topic. The author has also self-published a book about flipping comic books on eBay.
Wo ho ho... This gonna be good :story:
 
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You know, I don't think Andy was as bad as Chris.
Someone writes a book on Chris-Chan’s detachment from reality and he takes offense to the cover.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B095F3762...abc_E5ECV5KYAJXRWCQ0CJPD?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1

View attachment 2197650
View attachment 2197651

Edit: I know nothing about Andy Warhol, but I’m certain Chris is not being shown in a positive light.

Edit 2: After rereading the title, I’m not 100% sure the “suppression of reality” is about Chris’ reliance on his delusions or if it’s addressing a larger encompassing issue regarding art and artists.
I don't know which conclusion is more horrible, Chris think the books is about how the two's arts are comparable.
The tweet continues. He still didn't read the book description and rambles about the artwork of the cover, assuming the premise is about his sex life which is it happened only once.
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Or it's all about his sex life
 
The tweet continues. He still didn't read the book description and rambles about the artwork of the cover, assuming the premise is about his sex life which is it happened only once.
View attachment 2198809
Because like dem setsy singers, Chris wants to be objectified like da Britney Spears, and da Ellen Paige. Except Ellen Paige trooned out to get away from perverts like Chris. He actually thinks that he did "porn".

Naturally, Chris thinks his porn is on par with this.

1621909658534.png
 
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"Warhol worked to legitimize popular culture and give it the prestige of high art. But more recent generations have grown up breathing pop culture as if it were air. "Young at heart", people continue playing video games and collecting toys into adulthood, and favorite entertainment franchises are treated akin to religions. More than anyone else, Chris Chan emblematizes the excesses of this era."
This passage and the fact they chose a pickle for the cover makes me think it's just some pseud ween looking to get attention from mentioning Chris.
I don't lknow they're not wrong. Warhol did a lot avant gaurde and surrelist work that was focused around combining pop culture with art. Chris, Kevin gibes, Moviebob, really the entire plethora of lolcows embody that passage. Though I can forgive the writer for not knowing who those cows are. The pickle cover? Eh IDK it would seem more weenery if they went with a bottle/glass of :fapcup: or a pair of chris's :briefs: for the cover.
 
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