He earned global plaudits for what some have labelled an act of "political defiance" — and now the teenager known as Egg Boy says his infamous egging of Senator Fraser Anning united the community in the wake of the Christchurch massacre.

Key points: The teenager, who identifies himself as Will, has appeared on The Project to explain his decision to egg Fraser Anning

The teenager, who identifies himself as Will, has appeared on The Project to explain his decision to egg Fraser Anning He says he went to Senator Anning's meeting to see if he could "change my mind", but became "disgusted" by his comments

He says he went to Senator Anning's meeting to see if he could "change my mind", but became "disgusted" by his comments He says he understands why he was restrained, but believes his actions helped raise money for Christchurch shooting victims

The 17-year-old was filmed breaking an egg on Senator Anning's head while he spoke to media at a political meeting in Melbourne's south-east earlier this month, before he was struck by the Queensland MP and restrained by his supporters.

Since images of the incident were beamed around the world, social media admirers of the Melbourne teenager have offered him a Ferrari and a 5-star holiday in Turkey — although others have cautioned against condoning any form of political violence.

In an interview with Channel 10's The Project, 'Egg Boy' — who identified himself only as Will — said he originally attended Senator Anning's meeting "to see if he could change my mind".

"After that tragedy in Christchurch, I thought the world should be supporting all those victims," he said.

"And the Senator released a statement that was pretty much a divisive hate speech blaming the victims for the attack — and I was just flat-out disgusted.

"I actually went in there to listen to him for an hour to see if he could change my mind. I'm a pretty forgiving person and in my mind I wanted to forgive him, but then he started saying some more things."

Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume. Watch Duration: 20 seconds 20 s The teenager made headlines when he was filmed breaking an egg on Senator Fraser Anning's head.

The teenager denied he was affiliated with any political party or activist group, saying he was "pro humanity".

He said he did not expect the Senator to react to the incident, which he believes has been blown "completely out of proportion", and maintained the stunt was intended to be "a few laughs with some mates".

"There's no reason to physically attack anyone", he said, adding that he could "understand why some people reacted the way they did".

While conceding his decision to egg the Queensland Senator "was not the right thing to do", the teenager then doubled down on his actions, pointing to an online fundraiser — originally started to bankroll his legal fees — that has now raised in excess of $75,000.

"This egg has united people and money has been raised, tens of thousands of dollars has been raised for those victims," he said.

"It's going to help people affected by the tragedy in Christchurch, every cent."

Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume. Watch Duration: 7 seconds 7 s In a video filmed after the incident, the teenager warned against egging politicians.

When queried on his newfound moniker, the unlikely internet sensation revealed he had actually been dubbed Egg Boy prior to the egging.

"I'd eat boiled eggs at lunch and all the girls would be like 'get away from me, that reeks'," he joked.

"I'm off the eggs now, officially off the eggs."