Jordan Miller

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== Profile ==
== Profile ==
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Jordan Miller is an eleven year old male living in Seattle. Before becoming a part of [[Red State Banjo]], Jordan ran a semi-successful website entitled "[[Sir and Gir]]" about robots that traveled the galaxy, being bossed around by space slugs and such. There was a hacking of this website by someone who claimed to be [[Aza Maza]], which provoked a long, painful internet war between [[PeanutFoot.net]], [[Sir and Gir]] and [[Aza Maza]]. It is still unknown who the hacker really was. However, Sir and Gir was active for a while until Jordan gave up and started playing "Oblivion". In 2007, as an April Fool's Day gag, Jordan Miller and [[Asher Wycoff]] staged an obviously fake hacking of [[Sir and Gir]], which, surprisingly, some people thought, and [[Zach Gottschalk]] insists, that it was real.
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Jordan Miller is an eleven year old male living in Seattle. Before becoming a part of [[Red State Banjo]], Jordan ran a semi-successful website entitled "[[Sir and Gir]]" about robots that traveled the galaxy, being bossed around by space slugs and such. Sir and Gir was active for a while until Jordan gave up and started playing "Oblivion". In 2007, as an April Fool's Day gag, Jordan Miller and [[Asher Wycoff]] staged an obviously fake hacking of [[Sir and Gir]], which, surprisingly, some people thought it was real.

Revision as of 02:00, 29 June 2007

Jordan Miller does the voice of Jimothy Muller on Red State Banjo. He also came up with the idea for Parent/Teacher Conferences.


Profile

Jordan Miller is an eleven year old male living in Seattle. Before becoming a part of Red State Banjo, Jordan ran a semi-successful website entitled "Sir and Gir" about robots that traveled the galaxy, being bossed around by space slugs and such. Sir and Gir was active for a while until Jordan gave up and started playing "Oblivion". In 2007, as an April Fool's Day gag, Jordan Miller and Asher Wycoff staged an obviously fake hacking of Sir and Gir, which, surprisingly, some people thought it was real.

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