Shane West Trisha Paytas

Shane West Trisha Paytas




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Shane West Trisha Paytas
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Certified Internet troll Trisha Paytas is known for getting involved in some wild drama, even when it has nothing to do with her. It's part of why the Intenet seems to both love and hate her. She's known to be problematic but represents redemption, in a way. Paytas still has a fruitful YouTube and TikTok career, despite being "canceled" hundreds of times.
Paytas's time in the spotlight began in 2007 with the birth of her YouTube channel. Since, she's branched into music, TikTok and porn, each of which has involved its own unforgettable drama.
And the controversial moments started early. From her use of the N-word while singing "F*** Tha Police" back in 2011, to causing widespread outrage and offense over her "coming out" as transgender, but still a woman, in 2019, Paytas continuously commands the spotlight for things that, intentionally or unintentionally, offend someone.
Things have changed a bit for Paytas, though. It appears, over the years, that she's grown some.
In 2020, Paytas not only denounced using the N-word, but she also voted for the first time. Going to the polls, in her view, was a step in the right direction—using her voice for good. She also admitted to starting therapy in 2020, which led Paytas to remove some longstanding controversial videos from her YouTube channel.
On Friday, Paytas spoke on her personal changes via her TikTok account.
That doesn't mean that her posts are entirely lacking drama, though. Her recent flare-up with James Charles , which took place on Twitter on Thursday and Friday, was just one of the many questionable things that Paytas was a part of this year.
As the creator continues to apologize for, and attempt to make up for, past wrongdoings, let's review some of her biggest 2020 Internet flops.
In March, Paytas uploaded a video claiming that she had Dissociative Personality Disorder (DID) and had multiple personalities. The video, titled "Meet My Alters," was uploaded on March 12, according to Insider , though it's since been removed.
Some people who have actually been diagnosed with DID claimed that Paytas' description of DID was harmfully misleading. They also argued that Paytas endorsed offensive stigmas about the disorder. Criticism continued when the content creator uploaded a second video showing how she could "switch identities" on camera.
Things accelerated even more when a DID YouTuber, DissociaDID, called out Paytas for self-diagnosing the condition. Paytas shot back with criticism, calling the YouTuber "crazy." That choice of words further upset many mental health advocates.
While Paytas has a rocky history with famed YouTuber David Dobrik, she called him out again in August for apparently being a bad friend. Paytas didn't dive deep into the claim, she was simply following a TikTok trend when she brought up Dobrik. "You think you can hurt my feelings?" her video text read. "I was friends with David Dobrik."
Their feud started in 2019 when Paytas compared Dobrik to the late serial killer Ted Bundy. In that same video, Paytas claimed that Dobrik made his friend, Jason Nash, dump Paytas earlier in 2019.
"Even though Jason's creepy and disgusting, David's on a whole other level of being an actual horrible person," Paytas said in the since-deleted YouTube clip.
Much like with the recent Charles commentary, some fans assumed that when Paytas brought up Dobrik with no real prompt, she was attempting to step into—or start—drama between herself and the famous YouTube "Vlog Squad."
YouTuber Shane Dawson was publicly canceled this year over past, offensive jokes, one of which involved him pretending to masturbate over a poster of 11-year-old Willow Smith. Even the Smith family became involved, and subsequently, Dawson stepped off of his YouTube platform.
People weren't thrilled when Paytas swooped in to defend him.
"Shane is YouTube," Paytas said of her friend. "He's the most f**king creative and most talented person on planet Earth. But aside from that, so f**king nice and so f**king empathetic. Honestly, f**k the internet. And I can't wait for his comeback, and it may not be YouTube, but his creative comeback. And I can't wait for all these fake-a** b***hes to come back around and praise him and s**t. No."
Paytas targeted Jada Pinkett Smith, too, with personal attacks and allegations that suggested actor Will Smith has a past with some of her friends. "Jada Pinkett Smith, really?" Paytas said. "How about worry about your daughter being naked in bed at 13 with her 20-year-old boyfriend on the Internet? How about worry that? How about worry about your f**king cheating husband f**king my male dancers when they didn't want to."
In September, Paytas was slammed by some people online who took offense to her calling her lunch from a Jewish store a "Jew lunch" and "Jew food." YouTube comments on the video asked Paytas to consider her wording. "[I]t's middle eastern food... not 'jew' food... literally grow a brain.." wrote one YouTube user.
September brought more views and criticism for Paytas, who rose to TikTok fame when she started her own trend. In a clip, Paytas dressed in an Egyptian-inspired costume and boogied to Steve Martin's song "King Tut," which was dueted across the platform.
What really picked up from the video, though, was Paytas's slightly self-aware caption. "[W]ill prob delete. Prob offensive," she wrote alongside the video, which had over two million likes at the time of this article's publishing. The video became a meme on TikTok, and app users couldn't seem to escape Paytas's version of the song for weeks, no matter how much they scrolled. It's remains one of TikTok's inside jokes as 2020 presses on.
#euphoric will prob delete. Prob offensive
Paytas jumped into the conversation around Charli D'Amelio's sudden follower drop on Thursday. While D'Amelio didn't respond to Paytas, makeup YouTuber James Charles did. The pair entered into a social media exchange in which Paytas called Charles, who's 21 years old, "predatory" for his friendship with 16-year-old D'Amelio.
Charles fired back with a TikTok that called out many of Paytas's career-spanning controversies. She later claimed on Twitter that Charles had used the N-word.
To catch up on their full drama, you can read more here .

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After years of headline-making scandals, long-time YouTube provocateur Trisha Paytas' departure from one of the platform’s most popular podcasts landed the non-binary internet celebrity at the top of YouTube’s most disliked creators over the past week.
Trisha Paytas enters the Celebrity Big Brother house at Elstree Studios in Borehamwood, ... [+] Herfordshire. (Photo by Ian West/PA Images via Getty Images)
Paytas, who has over 8 million subscribers across their four YouTube channels, tallied seven of the top 10 videos with the most dislikes on the platform over the past week, according to data from social media tracking firm Newswhip. 
The most-disliked video on YouTube this week—and the source of the broader controversy—was the 33-year-old media personality’s announcement of their departure from the weekly podcast “Frenemies.” 
Launched nine months ago with fellow YouTuber Ethan Klein, “Frenemies” quickly became one of the video streaming site’s buzziest podcasts, spanning the duo’s personal dramas as well as contributing to controversies around other top creators like David Dobrick, Shane Dawson and James Charles.
Frequent sparring between the hosts, including an on-air battle in their final episode , devolved into the June 8 revelation of Paytas’ quitting over a lack of creative control Paytas said had caused them to feel “a lot of anxiety.” 
Klein responded on Twitter, and later in a YouTube video, contesting Paytas’ account of the podcast breakup and apologizing to the show’s millions of fans to whom he vowed he had done everything he “humanly could to save it.” 
Ultimately, the YouTube community appeared to respond to Paytas’ exit with frustration, delivering over 56,000 dislikes (nearly 10,000 more than the number of likes) to Paytas’ initial announcement—and a similar show of distaste to the slew of videos that followed expanding upon the still-evolving drama.
Responding to the frustrations outlined by many of the videos’ viewers, Paytas wrote in a comment on the initial video that they had seen the feedback from fans who “think I’m making a mistake, or being unreasonable.” “I’m sorry so many of you are disappointed in me,” Paytas wrote. “This is without a doubt the hardest decision I’ve ever made.” 
Paytas acknowledged in their response to the video that the “Frenemies” podcast had helped recover some of the fans lost through years of different controversies. After joining YouTube in 2007, Paytas, a California native and then-aspiring actor, gained a following by purposefully “trolling” the internet through videos like a monologue about how dogs don’t have brains and a colorful endorsement of Mitt Romney in the 2012 presidential election (Paytas said Romeny had her vote because he was “super gorgeous” and shared a name with their cat, Mittens). Though many of the attention-grabbing videos were light-hearted in nature, others drew waves of anger and offense on the internet, such as Paytas’ racist cosplaying of a Japanese popstar dubbed “Tishii” and their 2016 “coming out” as a chicken nugget . This gained renewed scrutiny in October 2019 when they came out as a transgender man in a widely criticized and since-deleted video in which they also said they “100%” identified with their birth gender of female. Paytas has since apologized for the video and announced their gender identity as “non-binary.” 
1.9 billion. That’s how many views Paytas’ main channel, “blndsundoll4mj,” has accrued in the decade-and-a-half since it was launched. 
Though Paytas is one of YouTube’s best-known creators, they claimed in a March 2021 interview with Vulture that 70% of their income comes from OnlyFans, a content subscription service popular among sex workers. Paytas said their content on the platform is bringing in around $1 million a year, making up for a drastic decline in their YouTube revenue since its peak in the mid-2010s. In addition to these platforms, Paytas has made guest appearances in numerous movies and television shows, including Celebrity Big Brother , released and gone on tour for albums, published books and sold their own perfume, entitled Trish.
Though Forbes does not have an estimate of Paytas’ net worth, top YouTubers can make tens of millions of dollars a year through ad revenue on their videos and other business ventures. With around double Paytas’ following and 600 million views between June 2019 and June 2020, beauty guru Jeffree Star earned $15 million in 2020 from his YouTube channel and makeup line, landing the #10 spot on Forbes’ list of top-paid YouTubers . The highest-paid YouTuber of 2020 was 9-year-old Ryan Kaji, who pulled in $29.5 million from his child-oriented toy review and vlog channel, Ryan’s World.  

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