Asenna Steam
kirjaudu sisään
|
kieli
简体中文 (yksinkertaistettu kiina)
繁體中文 (perinteinen kiina)
日本語 (japani)
한국어 (korea)
ไทย (thai)
български (bulgaria)
Čeština (tšekki)
Dansk (tanska)
Deutsch (saksa)
English (englanti)
Español – España (espanja – Espanja)
Español – Latinoamérica (espanja – Lat. Am.)
Ελληνικά (kreikka)
Français (ranska)
Italiano (italia)
Bahasa Indonesia (indonesia)
Magyar (unkari)
Nederlands (hollanti)
Norsk (norja)
Polski (puola)
Português (portugali – Portugali)
Português – Brasil (portugali – Brasilia)
Română (romania)
Русский (venäjä)
Svenska (ruotsi)
Türkçe (turkki)
Tiếng Việt (vietnam)
Українська (ukraina)
Ilmoita käännösongelmasta
You dont grow out of this shi.. at this age.
His original channel was dizastamusic, so I’m sure the filthy frank character was not intended to be his original career.
I’m not sure if it’s worth arguing, as your mind is pretty set that filthy frank was also never a character, power to you. As if filthy frank is the perfect ideal human. The reason why it received positive feedback was because, it had succeeded in what it was set out to do, although most people did not get the intended message.
‘Filthy’ Frank. It’s everything and embodies anything a person shouldn’t be, but more than that it echoes and mirrors the microcosm of social media, and what people would act, the jokes people would make, and what they’d do in order to achieve fame/popularity. They’d do anything just to stand out, and this character will carry this purpose, and it’ll prove that this theory is true.
This is in the bio of filthy frank, this isn’t just a preposition. This is how George Miller describes the character, and it’s very accessible information. He also stated that it was similar to his sense of humor in high school, which is another reason as the years went by, he got sick of it. George was 16 when he created dizastamusic, and throughout his entire career as filthy frank, he’d create music samples/parody songs, and he’d have some serious songs on his own personal SoundCloud. It just so happened that it was his YouTube channel that gained popularity, and would become his livelihood, probably until demonetization struck.
doing stuff you don't actually like for success is the essence of the college experience, and more or less what you're there to prove yourself capable of, so for his output to have become that as well in his eyes it isn't that surprising.
the main release for him seemed to be 'doing what you aren't supposed to,' as that's very much what you're not supposed to do in college. you're supposed to do the same intellectually engaging but still ultimately mindless tasks forever, day in and day out. that's what the degree represents to an employer, a minimum tolerance for that life.
a random washed up one at that