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How bad was Ariana's blaccent? on a scale from 1 to 5


How bad was Ariana's blaccent?   

72 members have voted

  1. 1. how bad

    • 5 - extremely bad
      27
    • 4 - bad
      11
    • 3 - kinda bad, normal for the time
      14
    • 2 - a little tiny bit bad
      10
    • 1 - not bad at all
      10


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Posted

i don't remember her accent being this dense so this video cames as a shock to me 

 

 

 

  • Haha 4

Posted

And now she's a sensitive UwU woman that cries every second

  • Haha 11
  • Confused 1
  • Thumbs Down 1
Posted

okay, i personally voted for kinda bad, normal for the time.

 

considering literally everyone was using terms like "on fleek" or "bye felicia" - let's not pretend she was the only one. 

 

plus, Ari never said anything outrageous. had she been dropping the n-word or something, i would've voted 5. 

  • Like 2
Posted

It wasn't bad, she was actually pretty good at it :heart:

  • Haha 13
Posted

Anyway, I'm gonna say #3 since I feel like she wasn't the only one using AAVE back then. I fully thought that was just her voice at the time nnn

Posted

2, but 7 rings was a 3 :eli:

  • Haha 4
Posted

2.699999999992

shes a method actor though so I forgive

  • Haha 4
Posted

Actors and creative people are often unconscious mimics (ex. Madonna's British era) and Ariana's always had a love for Black culture so I don't see anything wrong with it. That spray tan on the other hand was crazy

  • Haha 3
Posted

How many people answering this question are Black Americans

  • Like 7
Posted

Bad or not it was iconic and very fitting for the era

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Posted (edited)

the first two :deadbanana4: i don't even remember her voice being that deep shjddjdjdjdjd the testosterone 

Edited by Bussea
  • Haha 5
Posted (edited)

She said

 

On-topic as a black American, I'd give it a 2.5 :dies: I don't know much about Ariana (very casual listener) but a lot of people in the US come from cultural melting pots.

 

 

 

Edited by Reginald
  • Haha 6
Posted
50 minutes ago, glitch said:

I quote "Kyomi getcho ass in here, come awn gurl" all the time :dies:

ugh i wish it was to me

 

  • Haha 2
Posted

🗣️ c'mon GWORL

Posted

2. It was never that deep. She didn't do it in an offensive way like a woah Vicky. Honestly nobody outside of chronically online people actually care 

  • Like 1
  • Thanks 1
Posted

This is like a different human than Glindariana :deadbanana4: Now I get the "your culture is not my costume" saying.

  • Like 1
Posted

She's a Black woman so 0. She's been open about her North African heritage. 

  • Thanks 1
  • Haha 7
Posted

ngl she had me fooled for a second there back then when I was younger :deadbanana2:

  • Haha 1
Posted

FrXQckaWwBkXUsM.jpg

 

This was a 5

  • Like 1
  • Haha 7
Posted

Honestly everyone at my high school pretty much talked like this despite hardly anyone being black so I never thought it was THAT bad but in contrast to her Galinda voice it's… a huge difference :deadbanana4:

Posted

It was cute up until TUN, after which it started to get really weird and she didn't seem like herself at all.

Posted

honestly very weird and cringe, even for the time. 3.5.

Posted (edited)
24 minutes ago, By the Water said:

FrXQckaWwBkXUsM.jpg

 

This was a 5

(The way this is the best part of the song and absolutely popped off live dddd)

 

Spoiler

 

--

 

As a white American, my opinion doesn't really matter on it and I think even as a fan there should be space for those - including some fans - who were uncomfortable with general adoption of AAVE by greater pop culture at the time, whether it was people on Vine or pop stars.

 

It was interesting as a fan though with all the leaks that have happened to hear what specific lyrics came about naturally and that her working closely with largely black female co-writers was what influenced specific choices. Like to hear where she kept things the same (like Muni asking her if 'skrrt skrrt' made sense for her to say when writing Six Thirty) vs when she changed them cause it clearly wasn't natural for her own vernacular (changing 'no cap' to 'no ****' from Nija's pitch chorus for Obvious).

 

As someone who loves TUN + Positions, it was personally nice to see that her stopping the over-tanning and AAVE usage (acknowledging that an actual formal acknowledgement would have been better for those who feel she should have actually addressed it) didn't come with some sonic shift for ES.

 

 

Edited by Communion
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