
By Rebecca Martin
TikTok has permanently banned Danesh Noshirvan, the controversial content creator whom a federal judge found uses his platform to “incite harassment and intimidation” and “incite his followers to commit harm.”
The ban came on January 28 — less than 24 hours after the Frank Report published my story: ‘How Danesh targeted a Navy veteran and military rape survivor: ‘I Was Supposed to Become One of the 22’
The Timeline
I documented how Noshirvan weaponized his two-million-follower platform against me after I spoke out about his tactics.
Without going into details, I sent a message to specific platform monitors and US authorities, including sending the story and the judge’s sanction ruling.

I told them, “You might want to look into this guy. A federal judge said he uses his platform to incite harassment and intimidation and incites his followers to commit harm. This goes against your terms of service — and he’s still on the platform, still being fed by the For You Page algorithm.”
I attached the court documents. The next morning, Noshirvan woke up permanently banned.
His Excuse? “Israel Banned Me”
Noshirvan is spinning a different story. He claims TikTok banned him for posting satirical videos targeting Charlie Kirk, including one where he allegedly Photoshopped a gun onto a microphone Kirk was holding. He’s claiming it was sarcasm, satire — that he was just using MAGA’s words against them. And he says that’s why he got banned because ‘Israel banned him.’ Complete lunacy.
Note the pattern: He screams ‘gun’ at every single person he targets.
A Victim Claims His Username
In a twist of poetic justice, Jeremy Wilson, one of his victims, who is currently suing him, now controls Noshirvan’s username @ThatDaneshGuy.
Noshirvan’s videos are gone. Even third-party duets featuring his content appear to be disappearing. TikTok is scrubbing him because of the foreseeable harm he poses. It is not merely a ban; it is an erasure. It is a consequence, like his Consequences Song. TikTok did not debate his intentions. It removed his capacity to reach others.
From 2 Million to 1,500

After the ban, Noshirvan resurfaced on Upscrolled, a little-known social media platform, where he has posted four times and attracted 1,500 followers. The drop from an audience of two million represents a decline of more than 99 percent.
Although he remains on Instagram, Threads, and YouTube, his engagement has sharply decreased. He doesn’t have the bots he used to. He doesn’t have the troll army he used to. A lot of the people who were trolling are trying to lay low because of the lawsuits. He doesn’t want to get caught purchasing followers and bots.

He knows discovery is still open. Two million followers became fifteen hundred. What vanished was not influence but artificial amplification. Without bots, without intimidation, without fear, the audience did not remain.
The Shah of Daneland is a Fraud

Danesh Noshirvan’s screen image as ThatDaneshGuy

Imagine a king without a kingdom, a broadcaster without an audience. An influencer without influence. Meet the new Danesh.
The followers are few. The illusion has ended. This is what happens when the crowd was never real to begin with.
Already Banned from X
TikTok was not the first major platform to permanently remove Noshirvan.
X previously banned him after he doxxed Supreme Court justices. He is unlikely to return to either, even under a new name. He’s highly identifiable. His pattern was consistent: violate rules, deny wrongdoing, attempt evasion, and claim persecution. If he tries to reemerge under a new name, he will be spotted immediately and reported.
“Everyone’s Going to See You Ass Up”
I warned him once of this. In my second response video to Noshirvan, I had a message for him: “Everyone’s going to see you ass up.”
He claimed I was sexually harassing him. The phrase was crude, but the meaning was not.
I told him, “I wasn’t saying I’m going to post your ass on the internet. I was saying you’re going to fall on your face, and everyone’s going to see it.”
He built up this persona that he was so popular. When it crumbles, it’s like the emperor with no clothes, stuck in a crumbling castle.
The “You Lie Like a Rug” Bot Army
The Frank Report has previously reported Noshirvan’s use of bot networks to amplify harassment campaigns. I experienced it myself. He had over 100 “You Lie Like a Rug” accounts — sockpuppets used to harass me (and other targets.)
He can’t use them now. With his multiple lawsuits and law enforcement watching him, the use of bot networks could constitute a more serious form of cyberstalking. He has been exposed. It is not random people independently making death threats or encouraging suicide. It’s he himself, through bots. That’s classic cyberstalking.
The Mob Was Imaginary

The angry mob, it turned out, was largely imaginary. A hundred voices speaking as one is impressive—until you realize they all belong to the same man. In that realization lies the end of the illusion and the beginning of accountability. His accountability.
Banned from TikTok. Banned from X. Bot army in retreat. Lawsuits mounting. Discovery ongoing. He still owes a $62,000 sanction in federal court based on a judge’s finding that he incites followers.
TikTok was his identity. He was the big shot, the man to be feared. Now he’s a man with 1,500 followers on a platform nobody’s heard of, watching one of his victim claim his username.
Without amplification, intimidation fails. Without intimidation, influence disappears. What remains is accountability, which was his term, “accountability culture.”
Indeed, Danesh has been canceled.
MK10Art’s paintings of Danesh:

TikTok star Danesh ‘That Danesh Guy” Noshirvan

Danesh by MK10ART

Danesh Noshirvan by MK10ART

MK10Art’s depiction of Danesh Noshirvan.

