Mang Kanor Jill Rose Mendoza Scandal New ✪
Their clothing line, "No Filter MNL," features streetwear with slogans like "Proud Past, Bright Future." It sells out within hours of drop. This is the tangible result of their new lifestyle branding—making the taboo fashionable.
Of course, the transition has not been seamless. Conservative parent groups and some mainstream celebrities continue to criticize their "new lifestyle" as a whitewashed version of vice. Comments like "Pinalitan lang ang damit, hindi ang ugali" (They just changed their clothes, not their character) flood their comment sections.
However, the duo has learned to weaponize this criticism. Jill Rose Mendoza frequently posts screenshots of hate comments with the caption, "Your noise pays my bills. Thank you for the engagement." This thick-skinned approach resonates with fans who feel the world has unfairly judged them. mang kanor jill rose mendoza scandal new
Mang Kanor, often silent in interviews, broke his reticence in a recent vlog:
"People change when the paycheck depends on it. But also, people change when they get tired of being the villain. We want to buy a house. We want to send our kids to school. That's the new lifestyle." Their clothing line, "No Filter MNL," features streetwear
Critics often ask: Is the change genuine, or is it just a marketing pivot? The answer likely lies in the middle. The duo has successfully built a multi-tiered revenue stream:
By segmenting their audience, they retain their original base while courting corporate sponsors. Recently, they have landed sponsorship deals with local vape shops, endurance supplements, and even a resort in Batangas—things unthinkable two years ago. "People change when the paycheck depends on it
Their weekly podcast, "Kanor & Chill," ranks in the top 100 Spotify charts in the Philippines. It features raw discussions on relationships, financial literacy for freelancers, and behind-the-scenes stories of the adult industry. They have effectively become self-help gurus for a generation of Gen Z and Millennials who feel judged by traditional media.

