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A jovial South Brisbane boy has today treated a relatively busy train carriage to the entire discography of prominent drill rap ensemble, OneFour.

Despite having cords to his Beats By Dre headphones visibly hanging from his backpack, the hyperactive young fella is opting to play the music out of his struggling iPhone speaker.

Dubbed ‘The Logan Bose’ by Brisbane commuters, the practice of blaring hardcore rap music through you iPhone speaker while in a public space is wildly popular among both Polynesian and non-Polynesian Australians with spikey haircuts on the Southern side of the Brown Snake.

It is believed to have been started by a group of Marsden High students during a school excursion to the Queensland Art Gallery in 2005, after one classmate decided to bluetooth ‘Get Low’ by Little Jon to his mate with a jet black Motorola Razor.

Between sharing high-pitched giggles with his accompanying schoolmates, Joseph has the attention of the whole carriage by his slow lock-and-pop neck and shoulder dance moves.

This isn’t the first time Joseph Kingi has drawn the attention of his local community, just last month the aspiring NRL fullback had Broncos scouts show up to one of his matches for the notorious Logan Brothers u16s – and he’s already batting off offers from Gold Coast Titans executives.

“I’ll play Reds before I play for the Titans [high-pitched giggles]”

But for now he’s still toying with becoming a gutter rapper and getting millions of views on Youtube.

“Retaliation is a must!” he tells reporters.

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