Why is rebecca black so ugly




















She has managed to gather quite a following through this method, and even moved in with a fellow YouTuber who she met through the network. She talks about a variety of subjects on her channel, including how to deal with bullies — allowing her to become a role model for younger kids and teens who are going through adversity themselves.

This has also allowed her to retain a following, which is good news considering she waited to work on new music until after graduating high school.

Did we mention that all of this happened to a girl who was stupidly young? Can you imagine being a year-old girl who just wanted to pretend to be a singer for a day, only to have the whole world turn around and tell you how awful you are? Granted, the song was very annoying, and nothing about it was done well. But it must have been a lot to take in for someone who was only just old enough to be called a teenager.

Add in the stress and hormones coursing through her body at that age from natural causes, and it would have been a very difficult way to grow up. That was long enough ago that she is now 20, and seems to have learned to deal with it while remaining down to earth and maturing.

She was able to demonstrate back in that she had the makings of a decent singing voice, although it required training and discipline to get it into good shape. Maturity had also deepened her voice, which definitely makes it less annoying. When she releases music now, she is determined to stay away from autotuned. She has even done videos on YouTube where she sings a cappella or directly into the camera, showing clearly that there is no editing on her voice.

This was definitely a wise move for the singer, unlike her early attempts to have another hit, which ended poorly. It seems her management team at the time wanted to capitalize on "Friday" by releasing song after song which was nearly identical. The endless dispute between Rebecca and her family and the ARK team was ugly. The two central players at ARK, who were involved in the disputes in a very public way, both ended up splitting from the company and going their separate ways.

These days, the company is defunct, with the contact page on their website changed to an ominous message about how users can delete their accounts. It was an ignominious end to a company that successfully gained more of a profit than they were really entitled to. At first, there were a lot of negative comments on the video, including people telling Rebecca to go die or kill herself.

Her mother suggested that they take the video down so that she did not have to face any more attention. Rebecca surprised her, however, by insisting that the video stay up. Why should I have to take my video down? From that point on I was like, 'You go, girl. We got this. She had been through that before, and it had given her a thick enough skin to endure a little more.

Because the video was taken down and then put up again later with a fresh slate, the view count started from 0 again. If the legal issues had not taken place, Rebecca might have a much stronger place in YouTube history. It has close to a shared million views across the two official versions. Profiles of some of Ark's other aspiring artists can be found here.

Black is now on Twitter with almost 15, followers, thanks to entertainment personality Ryan Seacrest, who helped her set up her account. Bieber has not responded to her request for a duet but he did reference her song in a tweet when he wrote: "sunday comes after saturday? But still make Friday jokes. Julian Cole, digital strategist at the social media firm The Conscience Organisation, said Black's rise reminded him of Senegalese rapper Bangs, who lives in Melbourne, and his song " Take u to da movies ".

The music video received 5 million views in and was popular mainly because it was so bad. She ticked off all the reasons why people pass on music videos. Cole said that with the trend of cookie cutter online popstars, Black helped to highlight everything that was wrong with this style of music. People passed on the song to convey their own views on what music shouldn't be. And the fact that it was a real attempt at hitting the bigtime, as opposed to a satirical clip, meant it had all the ingredients for a viral hit.

This reporter is on Twitter: ashermoses. Please try again later. You've read the caveats -- watch the YouTube video if you wish.

As all viral videos do, it has inspired a host of spoofs and parodies. Personal favorite: "Bob Dylan" reworks the tune. And while there were some positive comments on the video, they're far outnumbered by digital disses. Even the "Harry Potter"-inspired Lord Voldemort Twitter account , not known for playing nice, chimed in. Others were far more personal and far nastier. Some of the response videos posted on YouTube were profanity-laced tirades taking shots at not only the song, but Black herself.

All that directed at a girl who, according to her page on Ark's website , is a "fun, loving year-old" in eighth grade who's proud of her lead role in her school's production of "Oklahoma! You've made a lot of people really happy Gossip blogger Perez Hilton slammed the song as "HIGHlariously bad," but added that she "looks like a sweet girl" and shouldn't "let the bad reviews get to you too much!



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