![]() Video-game designer Garry Newman also donated to the fund. ![]() Ultimately, $170,765 was raised for their "defense fund" and various YouTubers including Daniel "Keemstar" Keem and LeafyisHere donated. In response to this, YouTube star Phillip De Franco created a donation fund on GoFundMe to help the Kleins with their legal costs. Two weeks after their drama with LeafyisHere, H3H3Productions posted a video entitled "We're Being Sued," in which Klein said that they were being sued by fellow YouTuber Matt Hosseinzadeh based on the allegation that their reaction video involving him violated US copyright law, as they used clips of his content. This is who I am.' And sometimes it's okay not to have an identity and a lot of times I'm a they, in the sense that I don't know.When h3h3 Productions said they were getting sued by Matt Hosseinzadeh, Phillip DeFranco made a GoFundMe to support them. And the more I was researching non-binary I was just like, 'Oh this is the label. For people to accept that I am no genders and all genders at once, or at different times. They continued: "This is what I've been struggling with for so long. However, Trisha has insisted that they didn't know what non-binary was back then and didn't mean to offend anyone. "I was born female, but even from a young age I had a hormonal imbalance where I knew I wasn't female."Īt the time, Trisha received a lot of criticism from the LGBTQ+ community for exploiting transgender people for publicity. "For me, saying I’m transgender was just a thing to say because it’s what people want to label me as – a female, who's a male," Trisha said during an episode of The Doctors. In October, Trisha announced they would be identifying as a transgender man but would continue to use she/her pronouns. Trisha has previously spoken about their gender identity, revealing they were transgender in 2019. Trisha Paytas came out as non-binary on via Twitter It's hard for me to fully let go of she/her because that's what I grew up with and that little girl still deserves a chance in life." I think anyone can tell when I put makeup up on and get glam I'm like a different person, it's like a character. ![]() "The drag or cosplay or whatever you want to call it of my girl side is really just me playing dress up and I love it. Trisha added: "I do have days where I really identify as he/him, I really identify as a man, and it makes me safe when I'm male But because my shell a lot of the times doesn't match that of a male, I'm more of a cis female or a girlie girl or a drag queen or whatever, people don't really understand it. They also touched upon how YouTuber Nikita Dragun's comment about "mocking the success of a trans woman" on Twitter had triggered them. Trisha described themselves as gender-fluid and said they feel more confident in their body when male. A lot of people will say, about my relationship now, 'Oh Trisha you look so happy and comfortable.' And I feel so happy, so safe and so comfortable and confident in my relationship." They added: "I never thought pronouns were that big of a deal but for me it really effects how I feel comfortable. Trisha also said that when they have children they would be raising them with they/them pronouns. ![]() When I was dating their wasn't labels of they/them." Most of my public relationships have been with straight men but I've been with gay men, I've been with bi men, I've been with women, I've been with trans women, and I've been with non-binary people but they didn't realise they were non-binary because they didn't really have a label. "Um, I think people look at me and think of me as a cis female that is heterosexual. Trisha now uses they/them via Instagram, Trisha Paytas via YouTube ![]()
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