143

Alright, I wasn’t going to say anything, but the pattern is too obvious to ignore. Ever since 143 dropped, the internet has been flooded with reviews calling it “unlistenable,” “a disaster,” and “proof that pop music is a flat circle where we are doomed to suffer forever.”

But let’s think about this rationally: What if it’s actually good? What if 143 is revealing something the industry doesn’t want us to hear, and the major labels are running a coordinated disinformation campaign to convince us it’s bad so we won’t listen?

Consider the facts: • Every time someone in the subreddit starts pointing out the eerie similarities between 143’s lyrics and real-world events, their posts mysteriously get buried.
• The negative reviews are too unanimous. It’s like people are being fed talking points. (Where have we seen that before?)
• The vocal production seems… deliberately robotic. Almost as if Katy was forced to mask the raw truth hidden in her voice.
• The songwriting is so unnatural that it feels coded—like it’s meant to slip past industry censors and communicate something to those who are paying attention.

This isn’t just a pop album, people. It’s a message in disguise, and the powers that be are scrambling to make sure no one takes it seriously. They WANT us to dismiss it as trash so we don’t start asking the right questions.

I, for one, refuse to be gaslit by the music industry into ignoring what might be the most important album of our time. Stay vigilant. Stream 143. Take notes. The truth is in there somewhere—they just don’t want us to find it.