Why is rebecca black hated so much
And then somehow I, like, gotta get myself to be able to apply and be accepted into, like, Tisch, which is a New York school for arts, or Juilliard or, like, Berklee School of Music or something like that. And so I had a friend of mine who was kind of similar to me in that and had done this project with this company over the summer. And they gave her a song. They created a music video. And that was that. How did you do this? And I don't think I even really cared if it was real or not, because I loved, like, the whole experience of trying out for these things and getting, like, some version of what felt like experience.
And it was this company that just, you know, kind of did this for kids. You know, you get your own version of a song and get to be in a recording studio and they'd shoot you a music video. And then there you go. And like, none of these kids were, like, pop stars at the time. They were just people I literally knew from, like summer camps and my middle school. And when we reached out to this company, they sat us down in their studio up in LA.
And I was very nervous. At that point, the biggest thing I was obsessed with was Justin Bieber. And so I was so, like, familiar with my idea of what his life looked like as Justin Bieber. I was walking into a backhouse in Sherman Oaks, which sounds very suspicious, but it's actually not. That's just a much more common way of making music in L. And I met these two guys and I mean, I definitely was too young to really understand anything about what I don't know, formalities people were talking about.
But at that point, I was like Okay, but in what world am I going to be able to get one hundred thousand views on this video?
Oh, my God, you were another level of, like, viralness. So I just remember being like, OK, whatever. Like, I'm here because I want to record this song. I want to try this out. I want to do this thing. And in terms of money and all of that, I think the way that it was spelled out was just very simply, which was almost like as if you can get a package of whether you are owning the song or you share the rights or you don't own it at all.
That right there — making sure you own the rights? And we are going to take a quick break. ARK produces songs and music videos mostly for kids. And Rebecca is about to record her first-ever music video! But still! She gets to shoot a video… at her house. Rebecca: I was definitely very nervous. I was excited because this was something that I had kind of made up in my head all of these things to expect and all of these, like, grand expectations.
And I got to be… it was like a fun day to be with my friends. Like all the kids that are in the video are people that I went to middle school with. And to have all these expectations of what the music industry looks like, this was not a glamorous day.
This was a day where my dad ran out in the middle of the shoot to go get green screen cardboard paper, or just cardboard paper that was green, to end up being like a green screen. And like, we used leaf blowers as a wind machine and we, like, rode around my neighborhood with this convertible with, like a I don't know.
It was very janky, for lack of a better word. And I at that point felt like I'd gotten what I wanted out of it. Like, I really had gotten to see what I thought this was all about. I got to be in a recording studio. I got to shoot this video and hear what I sound like on a recording and OK, cool. Like, I moved on with my day to day.
And it was just a random day that I got a notification in the morning when I woke up, and it said like Here it is. I didn't even know if this was going to come out! And I watched it, like, still in bed. And I just remember watching it in and being… like, not thrilled, but not disappointed. Like, I didn't really know what to think.
It was just kind of, like, OK. She records a song. Records a video. She tells her friends. Nobody really cares. She now had experience in recording a song AND making a music video. And she tucked that experience under her belt and moved on with her life. And then Rebecca: It was about a month after the video had first went live that I was on my way home from school.
And I got a notification on my phone that somebody had put a comment on, like, the I don't know, the website that it was on or something. Or maybe it was on the YouTube channel. Overnight, it would go from a few hundred views to tens of thousands. And to be honest, full disclosure, I used to really like it, and I saw him live once. Rebecca: And I looked at the post, and it was kind of making fun of the songwriting and just the video in general.
And I clicked on it to go to the page, and I definitely started to feel a bit of panic at this point. Talent scout Simon Cowell told People Magazine: "I love her, the fact that she's gotten so much publicity I want to meet her".
Not bad for a previously unknown artist with only one song, which many have derided as offering the worst singing and most awful lyrics of all time. A steady stream of parody clips and US television appearances is significantly extending her five minutes of fame. But while the sheer absurdness of the song has made it a viral hit, Black is now feeling the ugly side of internet fame. She says she feels "cyberbullied" and has received death threats. In just one comment that illustrates the reaction of the web to Black's song, SFGate.
It's so horrible, people are wondering whether the production is real or if it's an elaborate joke. In an interview with Good Morning America , Black said she cried when she first saw all of the nasty comments people had written about her. Along with the caption, Black shared two photos of herself: One taken recently and one from "Friday. In a interview with BuzzFeed , she recalled being a "Glee" fan who brought her friends along to star in the music video with a small production crew.
Black remembers the video getting 3, views in its first month, and then getting millions of hits in the weeks that followed. Her actions were, she said, all about venting her own sadness and aiming it, sort of ethereally, at me.
I can almost understand that sometimes, when someone is in pain themselves, they are not able to comprehend the level of hurt they are causing others. People still say hateful things about me, but it happens less often these days. And, as an adult, it is easier for me to maintain a sense of perspective. I do understand now that bullying also says so much about the pain of the bully; no one will ever bully others if they feel good enough themselves. What I can control is my ability to love myself and to take care of myself.
It is increasingly obvious to me that every single one of us is experiencing pain, and trying to deal with it. It is increasingly obvious to me that every single one of us is experiencing pain, and trying to deal with it in some way or another.
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