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There's no letting this go on.The mother is so pathetic for letting this go on this long already
The mother was initially on the show cuz she isn't a good mother and doesn't know how to discipline her child.
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There's no letting this go on.The mother is so pathetic for letting this go on this long already
This girl being only 13 is disturbing to me.
This girl being only 13 is disturbing to me.
It should be disturbing to America
I worked with juvenile female offenders when I was younger. You'd be surprised. Murders, home invasions, rape, drugs. None of them were older than 16-17. Youngest was 13.This girl being only 13 is disturbing to me.
The mother is so pathetic for letting this go on this long already
There's no letting this go on.
The mother was initially on the show cuz she isn't a good mother and doesn't know how to discipline her child.
Yeah, just because someone is 13 doesn't mean she can't be a scumbag or a problem child. Shoutout to other talk shows who had problem teens a decade or so before and those drill sargeants would get on the stage and yell in their faces.
They had money but that's not why they became famous. Kim was kinda famous while being paris's sidekick but the real fame came when the sex tape dropped and we all had to tune in to see the trainwreck. We've already skipped past the SEx tape and are already witnessing the everyday life trainwreck of this girlDey Finna be da next kardishians
The kardashians are from a wealthy family, unless you mean the white trash version?
That's because in society today getting attention on a national level, profiting off a wild child is quite lucrative when how many likes and followers you have is "important".The mother is so pathetic for letting this go on this long already
There's no letting this go on.
The mother was initially on the show cuz she isn't a good mother and doesn't know how to discipline her child.
What u mean .. mom is part of the promo for this chick. Advertising and tell folks when they gonna be on Dr. Phil again, smiling n cuttin up with her out in public.
Kid saw her 15 min show up after dr phil, schooled mom on how this will turn in to $$$, got some kind of low-e d agent to give some tips and told her to keep the storyline going.
And the damn country will create all the hype and pub for them just keep acting out and mom keep playing the victim
No doubt. We're the best country at celebrating morons.Thats not why I said that.I knew 13 year olds that did way more **** than this lil girl.
What's funny is how she's being celebrated like some celebrity.
I actually give her credit for creating a trademark slogan. A lot of entertainers wish they had one and this teenager on dr phil came up with one from yelling at someone.
They say that exact phrase? They should've went on dr phil. Not everyone can make something a slogan or a catchphrase. Never heard it before until I saw this thread and watched the show clip. Thought it was funny.
the real fame came when the sex tape dropped
He already makes money off the tape, they don't owe him sh from the show.They owe my man ray j royalties. If it wasnt for him piping kim, i guarantee the entire family wouldnt have been relevant in the entertainment biz.
Pay that man his money.
We have to talk about Bhad Bhabie. We didn’t want to. But here we are. The label system in place that give her a shot over the number of passionate, die-hard rappers currently grinding in rap’s eroded middle class, should be called out by name — Atlantic Records has forced our hand by reportedly forking over millions of dollars on a multiple album deal for the viral star born Danielle Bregoli.
And it seems as though she may have semi-legitimate shot at becoming much more than the absurd “ghetto”-acting “Cash me ousside, how bout dah,’ white girl hashing out her troubled adolescence on The Dr. Phil Show. Her debut single (which continues with the appropriated slang spelling) “These *****” is already doing numbers on Youtube, to tune of 28 million views, and a followup track called “Hi Bich/Whachu Know,” also dropped, both of which she’s received a flurry of online attention.
But, looks can be deceiving. For one thing, the only reason anyone knows about her is from the Dr. Phil clip gone viral, and her fame is predicated on behavior that shouldbe out of character for a 14-year-old white girl in America, which is exactly why people were so intrigued to begin with. Bregoli, who comes from predominately white town of Boynton Beach in Florida is adopting a persona fashioned from the distanced perusal of another culture, and from a lifestyle she probably doesn’t really know except through reality TV and Worldstar videos. It’s not a reach to look at this teenaged redhead with a belly button piercing suddenly rocking cornrows and rapping about **** and bring up cultural appropriation.
Still, when the viral fame hit, Bregoli hired a management team, who openly waffled about how to extend her fifteen minutes, entertaining nightclub appearance offers despite her alleged underage status, and a reality TV show deal. In the end, rap seemed to be the most convenient avenue for making a little extra money out of her unexpected rise to stardom (it appears to have worked too, if TMZ’s estimations about her label deal are accurate). It shouldn’t be discounted that they settled on a typically “Black” genre after numerous blogs pointed out her initial fame piggybacked on the sensationalism of a white girl who “acted Black” and trap remixes sampling her catchphrase began hitting Youtube.
However the hip-hop lifestyle has been glamorized to seem desirable and attainable by the internet, the truth is that young white women who are immediately handed the keys to the kingdom by label heads tend to burn out quickly. There was a time teen rappers didn’t even cuss, let alone title their songs with demeaning slurs toward an entire gender. At fourteen years, Bregoli is still just a kid, but she’s being cast as much older to present the illusion that she’s the one making all the decisions, not being steered toward money-making opportunities by potentially predatory adults.
In light of this, it’s hard not hear “These *****,” with its menacing, trap-rap nihilism declaring Bhad Bhabie “ain’t nothing like these ****,” as a too calculated cynical cash grab that her team pulled just because the money was there. Bregoli shows no indication that she ever wanted to be a rapper; she never talked about writing rhymes and dreaming of hip-hop stardom, her claim to fame was stealing cars and “mushing” her mom in the face. She doesn’t even look like she’s having fun, stone-facing her way through her videos, barely inflecting the probably-ghostwritten lines, and in general going through the motions of “how to rap” 101. Her “Don’t compare me to no one” demand seems like a grainy Xerox of the sort of thing a rapper would say, not her own voice.