Faker by El Has. His face can be seen, angrily glaring at you while surrounded by the YouTube profile pictures of several people who stole his name, and the name of his show, The Problem. Some blurry handles (the @ symbol followed by text) used by the fakers are hidden among these images, which all blend into each other to an extent. The logo for the real The Problem is in the top left corner. To its right is a text box, which reads "It appears that you're requesting a username, rather than reporting an account that's impersonating you." In the bottom right corner are two elements of artwork for music released by the worst faker of them all, flaming text reading "Hot Eels", and clipart of a landline telephone handset in a circle. The colours of everything behind the text consist of black and various muted primary and secondary colours like red, green, blue, purple and cyan. Everything else is black.

Tracks

Faker

I Wanna Kill You

Release Date:
November 30, 2022
SuBSCRIBE STAR

In late 2022, El discovered just how bad the identity fraud situation has become. All over the internet, there are people stealing his name and the name of his show. He is pissed about this. Unrelated to Album 2, this must be finished by the time that gets released. You get 4 beats before all hell breaks loose. This song is a departure from the sound design of Humans Incarnate, the previous album. It's fucking metal, driven by El's rage at those who think they can get away with faking his identity.

There is no hiding because he knows where to look. He was there first, and he wants the fakers dead, especially the one publishing music on streaming services. There are loads of them that stole the name of The Problem, El's show which explains problems with society and the solutions. Its name often gets stolen and attached to channels it does not belong on, like gaming videos and shitposts. However, there are shows that steal the format too. All of them must go. THE FAKERS MUST DIE!!

Other Releases

Welcome to Their 2030 by El Has. Between horizontal grey rectangles displaying El's name and the title of the record, a silhouette of a long-haired man sits between a fire and the logo for the Ultimate Stalker Company, which is based on the logo of the World Economic Forum. Inside this silhouette is blue text, which reads: "Welcome to 2030. I own nothing. I have no privacy. I have no rights, and guess what! My life has never been better!"
Dehumanised by El Has. The artwork depicts two hands in restraints at the behest of the Ultimate Stalker Company, with a logo derived from the logo of the World Economic Forum. A visual feedback loop occurs behind the hands.
Stifled EP Artwork. It depicts El Has covering his mouth, and the right side of the image has superimposed fire on it.
Artwork for Intonation is Anger To You by El Has. Behind an intense vignette and and a red and yellow tint, a man wearing a maroon t-shirt walks up a narrow staircase holding a binbag. In front of him is text which says "We told her it was wonderful."
Artwork for the single Sustain My Existence by El Has. Behind the text there is a dark vignette around the side of the image. Within that is a red ring distorting a grainy image of some British cash, with a clenched fist superimposed on top of it.
Artwork for the single '239' by El Has. Large grey text is in the middle of the image, specifying that the title is said as 'Two Three Nine.' The background is cloudy, mostly blueish but red near the edges. There are weirdly-blended skulls near the bottom. In front of it is a lot of text and images from the '239 Apocalypse' website this song is based on. In front of that is more text. The messages read "Ignore my valid arguments and focus on the numbers," "HUMANITY IS DOOMED," "Chao Horo" meaning "Times of Chaos in Latin, "The existence of digits 2, 3 & 9 is all the evidence you need," and "2001, 2023, 2030," those being the years the website highlights as years of significant negative change.

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