She has amassed nearly as many "dislikes" as she has YouTube viewers since unleashing her debut song Friday earlier this year, but now Rebecca Black's detested single has been removed from the international video site owing to a dispute with her record label.
Ark Music Factory, the company behind the teenager's single, has given few details about what the dispute involves, but TMZ quotes a spokesperson for the singer as saying: "We can confirm that we submitted a Take Down Notice to YouTube as a result of the dispute we have with Ark Music regarding the Friday video."
The issue is thought to involve Ark's sudden decision to make Friday a "rental" video, in which users pay $2.99 (£1.85) to watch Black parading around in a convertible and generally looking forward to the weekend. This is thought to have caused disagreement between Ark and Black's representatives over who owns the rights to Black's image. Black's mother originally paid Ark to write and produce the song and its accompanying video for her daughter.
Friday was released in March and became a viral hit either because of or despite its vacuous lyrics. Its chorus repeats the words Friday, and its verses list the many things Black does on that day: eat cereal, go to school, say Friday over and over again in anticipation of an amazing weekend. However, despite achieving 167m YouTube views, Black was also the subject of sustained internet abuse.
For those who have not yet watched the video for Friday, the song still appears in some forms on YouTube, including this acoustic performance.
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Well, thats my Friday ruined.
campdave - why, did you just watch the video?
Well, that's Friday sorted, only another six days of Rebecca Black's week to censor now.
I'm okay with this.
More than anything else, this is an excellent example of just how dense record labels are, and how they are completely failing to both anticipate and react to developments in digital technology and media.
This planet's cultural wealth just plummeted sharply. Put the video back up or I'm leaving to find a new one...
will this momentous event also feature in one of rosie swash's top 50's.
is the guardian abosolutely certain that it is properly reflecting the interests of its readership in giving us news about music?
or is this the children's section?
Friday, Friday, gotta get taken down on Friday.
We so excited.
Hard to believe, but sounds like a record company trying to rip someone off. Who'da thunk it?
The whole unsavoury Black Friday incident is part of the brave new world of instant meaningless celebrity.
You can actually still catch snippets of the masterpiece in this Rebecca-bashing review:
REBECCA BLACK - WORST SONG EVER?
http://www.viddler.com/explore/toastedrav/videos/273/
Hang in there Rebecca, they'll be making (very short) musicals about your life, just like SuBo sometime soon.
How can it be the worst song ever, though, in the face of competition like this:
LOSING YOU - JAN TERRI
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OE2l6CPna4M
@FrancesSmith- Probably.
Although I did once get to write a story about Mick Hucknall apologising to all the women he'd ever slept with. Then there was the time Google paid homage to Lennon by playing Imagine when you went to their page.I wrote about that too. And the thing is, writing news stories takes me ages because I can only type with two fingers. But then it just makes the victory even sweeter, you know?
My impression was that she'd actually bought the song from Ark, and they retained no rights in it at all. Perhaps not.
167m views though, insane. She must have made a good chunk of cash out of it. Fair play to her; I couldn't quite work out quite why there was such vitriol about it. It was no worse or more lyrically vacuous than plenty of other stuff in the charts.
This is a massively moronic move by the record company - the song got so popular because it was so inane, no one is actually going to pay to watch it.
"FRIIIIIDAY! FRIIIIDAY! TAKIN' IT DOWN ON FRIIIDAAAAAY!"
The "Brock Dub" version of this song is amazing, and I implore you all to watch it!
"Heeeeeey Rebeccaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!!!"
.. Really? Last time I watched the video there were 454m views. When I went back the next day to watch it again (because I like the song THAT much), it was on 455m hits.
No lie!
Oh well. We'll need to find more 14 year olds driving cars and going to clubs on Friday. In America. I predict a british version where they
swig alcopops and jump on the roundabout at the local park.
'2.99 (£1.85) to watch Black parading around in a convertible and generally looking forward to the weekend' - BARGAIN ALERT.
This day forth shall be known as Black Friday.
nevermind...
you can always watch 'chundercats' instead.... its brightened up our friday...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJ6KNaf9zAc
BIG UPS ROSIE SWASH!!!!
gave me a good review once, she did...
...you sure?
"Yesterday was Thursday/ Today it is Friday/ Tomorrow is Saturday/ and Sunday comes afterwards"
..and my work blocks youtube, so this is from memory! Yes, I like the song THAT much, I sing it in the shower. No lie.
I'm sorry but even Shitney Spears get better lyrics written for her!
Frankly, 'Friday' represents a cultural step forward from many commercial successes of the 1980s. Take Agadoo: "Push pineapple; grind coffee" is no less inane than 'Gonna get my bowl, gonna eat my cereal', yet I don't think Black Lace suffered anywhere near as many death threats.
Poor kid.
"Gotta have my bowl, gotta have cereal".
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