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Nadeshot claims of The Mob’s poor work ethic are ‘straight up lies’ says Froste-Radina Koutsafti-Entertainment – Metro

Former The Mob streamer Froste has responded to Nadeshot’s claims that the group had a poor work ethic and didn’t stream as much as they should have while working under 100 Thieves.

Nadeshot claims of The Mob’s poor work ethic are ‘straight up lies’ says Froste-Radina Koutsafti-Entertainment – Metro

Froste claimed the group had to skip meals to pay rent (pic: YouTube)

Former The Mob streamer Froste has responded to Nadeshot’s claims that the group had a poor work ethic and didn’t stream as much as they should have while working under 100 Thieves.

Erind ‘Froste’ Puka has put 100 Thieves on blast through a series of tweets, claiming that he and The Mob members were forced to rent a luxurious Los Angeles home while making less than $2,000 a month per person. He also said that the group was severely underpaid because 100 Thieves took almost all their revenue from sponsorships.    

Matthew ‘Nadeshot’ Haag, who is the CEO of 100 Thieves, addressed Froste’s accusations on his Twitch channel, blaming The Mob’s lack of resources on their own poor work ethic and revealed that 100 Thieves staff had to chase them around to get them to stream. He also explained that the only reason the organisation claimed any money from sponsorships was to pay back the agencies that brokered these deals.  

The four friends, Froste, Mako, Avalanche and Class, were the first content group to sign with 100 Thieves in June 2019. They stayed with the organisation until 2021 and disbanded shortly after leaving. 

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In his own stream, Froste accused Nadeshot of ‘straight up lying’ and claiming that he didn’t take into account the stream collaborations between The Mob members when calculating his working hours.  

During his live stream, Nadeshot pulled up a tracker to show the hours Froste spent streaming on Twitch while he was with 100 Thieves and even compared it to his own tracker. At the time, Nadeshot was also working as a full-time CEO, besides streaming, and he showed he managed to clock in more hours than Froste. 

“In the two years from start to finish, Froste averaged 40 hours a month streaming. That’s one week of work for one of our employees who’s making less money than Froste,” Nadeshot said.  

In April 2020 Froste streamed for 129 hours (pic: YouTube)

Froste rejected Nadeshot’s comments and claimed his statistics don’t explain the full picture. He also said he could have ‘grinded’ a lot more, but the organisation was ‘not the place that makes you want to grind.’ 

Froste ended his Twitch stream after going live for more than two hours and said that he wouldn’t stream again for ‘some time.’

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