Doja Cat likes her fanatics finally.
The “Paint the Town Red” hitmaker denied the months-long rumor that she hates her fanatics, who name themselves “Kittenz,” in an interview with Apple Track’s Ebro Darden launched Thursday.
“One thing that I do want to set straight is that you’ll never see a direct quote of me saying, ‘I hate my fans.’ Not once,” she stated.
“But it’s a really big misquoted thing where everybody is saying, she hates her fans.”
Doja, 28, laughed off the gossip whilst talking with Darden and attributed it to other people now not working out her humor.
“It’s definitely something, and I know that people who get it, get it, and I’m fine with that,” she famous.
“I don’t need to have to explain my sense of humor or explain comedy to anyone.”
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“If people don’t see the joke, then they just don’t see the joke. It’s not my responsibility to have them understand.”
Doja misplaced greater than 250,000 fans in July after she refused to inform fanatics she liked them on social media, replying to at least one who asked the verbal affirmation with, “I don’t though cuz i don’t even know yall.”
After someone else accused her of being impolite to the individuals who made her a hit, she added, “nobody forced you [to support me] idk why you’re talking to me like you’re my mother … you sound like a crazy person.”
She additionally slammed her fanatics for naming themselves Kittenz, calling them “creepy” and telling them to “get a job.”
Sooner than that, the Grammy winner raised eyebrows when she apparently made amusing of fanatics for getting her first two albums, which she described as “cash-grabs.”
Her chat with Apple Track isn’t the primary time Doja has addressed the grievance she’s won from fanatics.
Talking to Harper’s Bazaar in August, she hypothesized that fanatics’ trust that they personal her by some means results in outrage when she does one thing sudden.
“My theory is that if someone has never met me in real life, then, subconsciously, I’m not real to them,” she reasoned.
“So when people become engaged with someone they don’t even know on the internet, they kind of take ownership over that person.”
“They think that person belongs to them in some sense.”
Doja endured, “And when that person changes drastically, there is a shock response that is almost uncontrollable… I’ve accepted that that’s what happens.”