Angus T. Jones, the actor who plays Jake Harper, the “half man” on Two and a Half Men, is urging fans to stop watching the show. A video was released today in which the young star laments his time on the series and encourages (begs) fans to stop watching, warning of the dangers of television.
“I’m on Two and a Half Men, I don’t want to be on it,” Jones says. “Please stop filling your head with filth.”
The Two and a Half Men rant begins at roughly 07:30.
The video is a part of a larger religious “testimonial” that Jones created with Christopher Hudson, AKA The Forerunner, a man who creates YouTube videos dealing with "spiritual" issues that focus on how the occult infiltrates both government and entertainment. Jones, who professes to have accepted the Seventh Day in the two-part video, concludes his plea to the Two and a Half Men viewers with the following: "I don't know if it means any more coming from me, but you might not have heard it otherwise. So just watch out.
A lot of people don't like to think about how deceptive the enemy is. He's been doing this for a long longer than any of us have been around. So we can't play around. There's no playing around when it comes to eternity." The highest paid teen actor on television, earning roughly $300,000 per episode, Jones joined the show when he was ten-years-old and for all intents and purposes grew up on the series. We have to wonder if the strange turn of events in his life have anything to do with the behind-the-scenes chaos he was witness to on Two and a Half Men.
The CBS sitcom is no stranger to public scandal, with the wild one Charlie Sheen replaced by Ashton Kutcher who has his own fair share of off-screen drama. The question now is: How much more can this one little (yet highly-profitable) series take? It’s unclear how the network will respond at this point, but we will keep you updated as those details emerge.
The video is a part of a larger religious “testimonial” that Jones created with Christopher Hudson, AKA The Forerunner, a man who creates YouTube videos dealing with "spiritual" issues that focus on how the occult infiltrates both government and entertainment. Jones, who professes to have accepted the Seventh Day in the two-part video, concludes his plea to the Two and a Half Men viewers with the following: "I don't know if it means any more coming from me, but you might not have heard it otherwise. So just watch out.
A lot of people don't like to think about how deceptive the enemy is. He's been doing this for a long longer than any of us have been around. So we can't play around. There's no playing around when it comes to eternity." The highest paid teen actor on television, earning roughly $300,000 per episode, Jones joined the show when he was ten-years-old and for all intents and purposes grew up on the series. We have to wonder if the strange turn of events in his life have anything to do with the behind-the-scenes chaos he was witness to on Two and a Half Men.
The CBS sitcom is no stranger to public scandal, with the wild one Charlie Sheen replaced by Ashton Kutcher who has his own fair share of off-screen drama. The question now is: How much more can this one little (yet highly-profitable) series take? It’s unclear how the network will respond at this point, but we will keep you updated as those details emerge.
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