

TRISHA PAYTAS TWITTER PHOTO FREE
So I think that’s where I’m at, and I feel really free and liberated…I think it’s important that you can identify as masculine and feminine, you can identify as male and female if you choose.” Do I identify with my natural born gender? A thousand percent. In conclusion, Trisha told her subscribers, “Do I think I’m transgender? Yes, a thousand percent.

Trisha did brace herself for the backlash this video would probably receive, and also acknowledged that she came out as gay and bisexual in the past (for this reason, she said she didn’t “like labels in general”).

I’ve always been attracted to gay guys,” making her think that maybe she’s a “gay man.”

The YouTuber added that just as “a lot of gay men do,” she loves “glam and voluptuousness.” With that, Trisha announced, “So in my head I feel like I’m a transgender female to male, but also like a drag queen.” Fans continued to scratch their heads as the singer-social media star added, “I’ve always just been attracted to guys but not straight guys. That led Trisha to declare that she identifies “with men better,” but more “as a gay man” because she likes guys (on a side note, gender identity and sexual orientation are two different topics). 2018 - for context, she recalled memories of being teased as a child for her hair and lips, and being called “a man.” The YouTuber started off the video by revealing that she “didn’t feel like identified as a girl” right before dating her ex, Jason Nash, around Jan. That they’ve grown since this, the screenshots were old, and they just needed them as receipts.Trisha Paytas, 31, confused - but mostly angered - the thousands of viewers who watched her YouTube video “I AM TRANSGENDER (FEMALE TO MALE).” For the proper definition, “ transgender” is a “term used to describe people whose gender identity differs from the sex they were assigned at birth,” per GLAAD- so Trisha lost fans as she attempted to explain her gender identity with a string of controversial comments throughout the 15-minute video. Trisha then tweets that they’ve come a long way, once again trots out that they’ve dated Jewish men, that they’re converting, and that they’re sorry. And in the texts, Trisha refers to Ethan as being “Jew-y,” which is a deeply anti-Semitic thing to say. Eventually, as the argument over who was making what money and how the crew of Frenemies are being paid or not paid, Trisha releases a whole bunch of text screenshots to show a conversation between them and Ethan Klein going back and forth on just how much profit share Trisha would get. Meanwhile, Ethan Klein is tweeting out about how he doesn’t know what to do, he’s so sorry, he tried to save the show. Kircher: Paytas records this 22-minute video on their kitchen floor, and in the video, they talk about how they wanted to be equal partner in the show and that Klein only ever treated them as talent. There’s No Parallel for What Deion Sanders Is Doing Right Now But It Does Tell Us All About Someone Even Worse. The New Elon Musk Biography Doesn’t Tell Us Much About Him. An Insider’s Look at the Bizarre Corporate Culture That Brought Us
