<< Latest News as they happen >> ^ 21st September, 2010 ^ * Susan Boyle new album track-listing and release date revealed - stv.tv * Mariah Carey set to go head-to-head with Susan Boyle - stv.tv * New Susan Boyle Album, The Gift, Arriving Tuesday, November 9 - PR Newswire (press release) * Susan Boyle 'reports prank phone calls' - Digital Spy * Susan Boyle Sings For Pope Benedict - MovieNewsMovieTrailers.com * Susan Boyle hounded by obsessed fan - stv.tv * ^ 20th September, 2010 ^ * Susan Boyle bombarded with crank calls from obsessed fan - Daily News & Analysis * Susan Boyle: `My mum was with me for Pope performance`- Monsters and Critics.com * Susan Boyle To Cover 'Don't Dream It's Over'? - Oh, The Scandal! * SuBo to appear as Glee lunch lady? - Ninemsn * ^ 19th September, 2010 ^ * Susan Boyle to cover Don't Dream It's Over by Crowded House - Mirror.co.uk * Susan Boyle secures trio of Guinness World Records - InTheNews.co.uk *
2009 April | Susan Boyle | Britain's Got Talent Sensation - Part 2
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Search Results Archives: April 2009

April 25, 2009

Last week, Susan Boyle didn’t know what YouTube was – now it has helped her win 200 million fans worldwide

by Flulpilla FlulpillaHQ — Categories: Susan, as I know — Tags: , , No Comments
Published Date: 24 April 2009

BRITAIN’S Got Talent star Susan Boyle is making YouTube history as her audition video tops a list of most-watched clips of all time.

Boyle’s rendition of the Les Miserables classic I Dreamed a Dream has already been viewed more than 93.5 million times on the video website.

But the number of times people have actually watched the clip, across all outlets, could be nearer to 200 million.

The three-minute clip has been posted on YouTube by over 1,000 members. Combined, the clips have been viewed more than any others in the UK.

One clip alone has been seen nearly 39 million times, putting it straight into the YouTube list of top ten “most viewed” videos in the UK.

Whilst other top-ten clips have clocked up views over long periods of time, Boyle’s audition has achieved the staggering number of hits in just 11 days.

Boyle “only learned what YouTube was in the last week” and does not own a computer. But her video is now more popular than clips from pop diva Leona Lewis and American President Barack Obama.

Sarah Wood, operations manager at Unruly Media, a video marketing specialist, said that in many ways the success had not been a surprise.

“It’s an uplifting piece of content that has made a strong emotional connection with millions of viewers. Where this clip differs is the speed at which it has spread across the internet.

“Susan Boyle was ‘discovered’ back in 1999, but this was before social media existed. If we’d had YouTube, Twitter and Facebook in 1999, she would have been singing with Elaine Paige long before now.”

Last week, people using Google in the US searched for “Susan Boyle” more than A-list celebrities Britney Spears, Paris Hilton, Angelina Jolie and Salma Hayek combined.

Niall McKinney, CEO of the leading trade marketing website, UTalkmarketing.com, said: “This whole phenomenon shows how much access people have to fame.

” To get the level of global promotion Susan Boyle has had would have previously cost record labels tens of millions of pounds and they wouldn’t have spent that on a little-known star like her.”

Dozens of websites have been set up by adoring fans, and domain names have been snapped up by people who hope to cash in on the “Susan Boyle effect”.

A-list celebrities around the world have shown their support, with Hollywood couple Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher posting links to her YouTube clip on social networking site Twitter.

But PR guru Max Clifford warned that with such rapid success, Boyle will have to be protected.

He did not rule out the option of working with Boyle in the future.

He said: “If she’s half as lovely as she seems, I’d love to guide her through the minefield that is stardom.”

Rare Susan Boyle charity CD sparks internet bidding war

by Flulpilla FlulpillaHQ — Categories: Susan Recordings — Tags: , , , 2 Comments

Published Date: 21 April 2009

Source: Reuters

RARE copies of singing sensation Susan Boyle on a charity CD have sparked a bidding frenzy on internet auction site eBay.

Copies of the 1999 compilation Sounds of West Lothian which features Miss Boyle’s version of Cry Me A River are attracting bids of more than £1000.

Meanwhile, the 47-year-old from Blackburn has become a bigger internet star than Barack Obama with her Britain’s Got Talent performance attracting 85 million online hits, compared to just 18.5 million for the US president’s election victory speech.

Only 1000 copies of the charity CD were produced and now those lucky enough to have one are about to start cashing in on the spinster’s whirlwind international success.

One being auctioned claims to be a personal gift from Miss Boyle, and comes complete with a Christmas card signed by the singing sensation. The CD was produced by Whitburn Community Council and supported by the West Lothian Herald and Post.

Its editor at the time, Eddie Anderson, who helped pull it all together, has donated his copy to Livingston FC to raise funds for the cash-strapped club.

Club chairman Angelo Massone said:”Like Livingston FC, Susan is an ambassador for West Lothian throughout the world and I would like to wish her every success.”

The singer from Blackburn has become an overnight global phenomenon after her rendition of I Dreamed A Dream on ITV’s Britain’s Got Talent. It has received 33 million views on YouTube, while Miss Boyle has also attracted more than 1.2 million fans on Facebook.

Miss Boyle has revealed that she has been for a meeting with music label Sony BMG.

It has also emerged that she paid £120 for a session in a recording studio in Edinburgh ten years ago. Livingston FC – which will put the money from the sale of the CD directly into club funds – said they would happily stage a live concert at Almondvale Stadium.

Experts say that Miss Boyle could make £3 million over the next year as a result of her sudden rise to international fame.

Celebrity publicist Max Clifford has already told the Edinburgh Evening News that he predicted she would follow in the footsteps of pervious Britain’s Got Talent winner Paul Potts and have hit albums across the world.

But despite her prosperous future and world-wide fame, Miss Boyle did not have an easy time growing up.

She revealed that she was called names as a youngster because of her frizzy hair and difficulties with keeping up in class.

She reportedly said: “Words often hurt more than cuts and bruises and the scars are still there. The ones who were mean to me then are now nice to me.

“I still see the kids I went to school with because we all live in the same area.

“They accept me now. And look at me – I’ve had the last laugh.”

Yesterday, the council gave her priority in a fence replacement programme, and installed a new gate at her home because of the hundreds of well-wishers and media beating a path to her door.

Interview: The prime of Miss Susan Boyle

Source: Reuters

Source: Reuters

Published Date: 23 April 2009
By Emma Cowing
STORM CLOUDS are forming over Susan Boyle’s house. It’s Tuesday afternoon and the weather has turned cold on this small council estate in the West Lothian village of Blackburn where, 12 days ago, a star was not so much born as made.
At the front gate, a man from the council is building a new fence, behind which several reporters and press photographers hover. They look anxious, huddled against the wind, hopeful even for a momentary glance of the unemployed, 48-year-old local who is, apparently, ‘bigger than Obama’.

It is not easy to get an interview with Susan Boyle now. In fact, it may be easier to get an interview with Barack Obama. The Scotsman has been trying to speak to her since 10 April, the day the first stories appeared about a middle-aged Scottish woman who had apparently impressed Simon Cowell during the Glasgow audition of Britain’s Got Talent, which was due to be aired on ITV1 the following night.

Most of the headlines focused on her appearance and the fact that she had confessed to being a virgin, before going on to mention that – almost unbelievably – she had a pretty good singing voice. It was a mildly curious local story, worthy of closer inspection, certainly, but not exactly front-page material.

You will know what happened next. In the intervening days, following the airing of Boyle’s audition and its subsequent showing on YouTube, Boyle went from minor oddity to major celebrity. In 12 days there have been 1,199 mentions of her name in newspaper stories alone. More than 50 million YouTube hits, making her video clip one of the most watched in the site’s history. At least 19 million Google search results. Offers of dinner with Piers Morgan and a duet with Elaine Paige. Heartfelt plaudits from Hollywood A-listers Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher. Interviews on Larry King Live and Good Morning America.

Commentators wrote that she had shown us how unimportant looks were when true talent prevailed. Others hailed her as the sole bright spot in a world made gloomy by debt and recession. The American talk-show host Rosie O’Donnell described Boyle’s audition as “something authentic in a world that is usually manufactured. It was a perfect moment which will never happen again.”

And the blunt comments about her appearance kept on coming. She was dubbed “the hairy angel”, “the virgin spinster”, “a freak” and “like Shrek come to life” (that one’s from O’Donnell, too). She was called “drab”, “dowdy”, “frumpy”, “fat” and “ruddy”. She was described as having “the hair of a shaggy dog”, “a cowboy-like gait”, “fuzzy eyebrows”, “a ghastly frock”, and “a hairdo from hell”. But, so the thinking seemed to go, it was OK to call her these things, because just wait until you hear her voice.

Meanwhile, the public-relations juggernaut swung into action. The show’s three judges, Cowell, Morgan and Amanda Holden, were wheeled out to proclaim just how wonderful she was. Newspapers, magazines and TV companies put in their interview requests, yet not all were granted – The Scotsman’s among them. The TV production company’s PR office complained that they, and Susan, were ‘overwhelmed’. A member of the production team was flown from London to Scotland and installed in Boyle’s house, to fend off unwanted press and let in a trail of American journalists, including one from the Washington Post, as well as those Larry King and Good Morning America cameras.

In the end, The Scotsman waited until Monday this week, when we were supposed to hear what time our interview would take place, at which point a snappy PR executive appeared to backtrack and claimed, to our surprise, that it had never been confirmed.

Finally, after much to-ing and fro-ing, it has been arranged for today. We’ve been granted 20 minutes. With most celebrities you get at least 45.

It’s a bit rich for the PR people to complain of being overwhelmed. Watch the audition clip and it is clear that this was the reaction Britain’s Got Talent’s production company, Talkback Thames, must have been hoping for all along. With the plodding, circus music, the patronising reactions of presenters Ant and Dec, the decision to use her comments about having “never been kissed”, it becomes painfully obvious just what sort of a Cinderella story they were trying to set up. The media reaction and subsequent rise in ratings (the following week’s show received a bump of two million) must be as manna from heaven.

Now there is a bandwagon. Internet pirates across the globe are registering Susan Boyle domain names (susanboyle.co.uk and susanboyle.us.com are just two) in an attempt to cash in on her fame. Alex Salmond, always one to spot a PR opportunity, wrote her a letter. T-shirts proclaiming “I love Susan” are available online. Just yesterday, a press release from previous Britain’s Got Talent winner Paul Potts’s PR people arrived here, informing us that he is “available to comment about Susan Boyle and her success”.

So what happens next? We will soon see her compete in the second round of Britain’s Got Talent, and she is already the bookies’ favourite to win. But what if she doesn’t? Cowell told the New York Times at the weekend that “of course there’ll be a record”, whether she wins or not. But is that as realistic a notion as Morgan actually wining and dining her at Nobu? Or is it merely hot air, said in the heat of the moment, because it’s what everyone wants to hear?

The career longevity of reality TV talent show winners – particularly those from Scotland – is poor. Leon Jackson, another West Lothian native who won X Factor a mere two years ago, has already been dropped by his record label. Another former X Factor winner, Steve Brookstein, is currently writing a tell-all book about the experience, entitled X Factor Nightmares, and vows never to sing again. The record industry is one of the most fickle in the world: even the most talented can be chewed up and spat out without a moment’s reflection.

Boyle is fragile. It has been repeatedly reported that she was starved of oxygen at birth, that she has mild brain damage and has been the subject of bullying in her village. At the weekend it was alleged that she recently threw a bike at a gang of teenagers in response to intense abuse, and that the local kids often shouted ‘Simple Susan’ at her. The Sunday after her audition was aired, she was apparently seen in her local Scotmid, punching the newspapers whose headlines screamed “48-year-old virgin”.

A knock on Boyle’s front door is answered by a cross-faced young black man, whose expression relaxes only slightly when I explain I have an appointment. The house is dark and silent, all the curtains and blinds drawn to keep out prying lenses. I am shown in to a dim back room with a small fireplace and there, sitting in the corner, looking stiff yet smiling, her face already so famous that it is instantly familiar, is Susan Boyle.

We sit and chat. Her answers are short and professional: she has, I suspect, been given a few lines to say by the production team. “You’ll have to keep watching” and “I haven’t anything further to add on that” fall uneasily from her lips as the young man living in her house, answering her door and phone and keeping the autograph hunters at bay, hovers in the doorway.

The same faux confidence that propelled her across the stage and caused her to wiggle her hips at Simon Cowell at the audition is again in evidence. She seems uncomfortable being questioned and looks as though she’d rather it was all over. In short, she is reacting as most of us would if we were suddenly thrust into the international media spotlight.

I ask her what she enjoys about singing.

“It’s the communication you have with an audience. I just like to show off. I’m a natural showoff.”

Did she always want to be a singer?

“I’d like to be doing this as a career, yeah, but it takes a lot of thought and a lot of maturity and I think I’m ready now.”

Does she get nervous before a performance?

“Everybody gets nervous before a performance, it helps you get it right. You don’t want to make a fool of yourself in front of your mum, do you?”

And what would her mum – with whom she shared this house, and who died two years ago – think of it all? “She’d probably be very proud of me. She’d be 100 per cent behind me. She wanted me to do well in my singing. This is a kind of tribute to her… a kind of payback.”

And the local support? “Oh, they’ve been very supportive. I’ve had lots of nice things said to me. The reactions have been very good. It’s lots of fun. That’s what it’s all about.”

Are you having fun, Susan?

“I’m having fun. It’s really good.”

We talk for a bit longer, but it’s clear she’s said all she wishes to say about herself. A question about her favourite singers elicits the response that there are “too many to go into here”, followed by an awkward silence. Enquiries about whether she’ll stay in Blackburn if her career takes off, or whether she really would like to do a duet with Elaine Paige, are met with the stock answer that it is “early days”.

I give up, feeling a little guilty for having put her through it, and prepare to leave. I tell her that I hope it all goes well and that as well as having Blackburn behind her, she has the whole of Scotland behind her. “Well, I’ll try not to let Scotland down,” she responds. It suggests just how heavy, already, is the weight of her newfound fame.

When the photographers leave (and they will), when the hoopla dies down (and it will), what will happen to Susan Boyle? It is hard to see her flying first-class, mingling with the stars, so far outside her comfort zone that she would never be able to relax. Yet staying here in Blackburn, no longer just Susan but celebrity Susan, Susan off the telly, will bring its own problems.

As I leave, one of the tabloid reporters swoops. Did I get a line? Have I done a deal? I shake my head and phone for a taxi. While I’m waiting, a neighbour wanders over. Susan is lovely, she tells me, but she’s not sure how she’s coping with all the pressure. She thinks she might have been a bit upset at all the reporters hanging about. The neighbour loves it, though. She’s had her face pressed up against the window for days now, she says, watching.

Suddenly, there is a commotion. The front door opens and Susan emerges, walking quickly, a new-looking leather jacket pulled over her brightly patterned knee-length dress, from which protrude a shapely pair of legs.

Seemingly from nowhere, four or five photographers appear, running after her, shouting her name. She quickens her pace, but then a car screeches round the corner and two young men, autograph hunters struck lucky, leap out. They grab hold of her, giving her hugs and kisses, and the photographers catch up, clicking madly.

She looks overwhelmed, confused. Finally she untangles herself from the young men, strikes one final pose with her arms outstretched, then pleads with the photographers to let her go to the shops on her own. They back off and, as she turns the corner out of sight, she looks like the person that until 12 days ago she always was: an ordinary woman, on an ordinary day, off to do her shopping.

Campbell has new spin on Susan Boyle phenomenon

Source: Reuters

Source: Reuters

Alastair Campbell believes politicians can learn from Susan Boyle’s ‘authenticity’

Published Date: 20 April 2009
By Stephen McGinty
ALASTAIR Campbell has announced that politicians can learn a valuable lesson from Susan Boyle, the middle-aged Scottish spinster whose unruly appearance but sensational singing on Britain’s Got Talent has attracted global media attention.
While Tony Blair’s former spokesman did not go so far as to suggest politicians serenade the electorate with a rendition of I Dreamed A Dream, from Les Miserables, as Ms Boyle has done to the delight of millions of viewers on television and via YouTube, he did advise them to recognise her “authenticity”.

In a post on his blog, Mr Campbell said: “If politicians tend to read the Sunday papers with a mix of horror and trepidation, one person who must read them week after week with a sense of his own skills in shaping the popular culture agenda is Simon Cowell.

“The overnight sensation that is Susan Boyle and her 25 million YouTube hits is the latest chapter in Cowell’s story.

“If there is a lesson from her success for politicians, it is authenticity. It is the only communication that works.”

As of last night her performance had been viewed more than 50 million times on YouTube.

And yesterday Ms Boyle’s singing teacher revealed that she was a serial talent show failure who had previously auditioned without success in the late 1990s for My Kind of People and abandoned the auditions for The X Factor when she realised people were being chosen for their looks. Fred O’Neil said that Ms Boyle’s audition for Britain’s Got Talent was her final throw of the dice.

He said: “I remember a phone call late last year when she said she was too old and that it was a young person’s game.”

Mr O’Neil urged her to reconsider and attend the auditions in Glasgow.

This weekend Elaine Paige sent a message of support to Britain’s latest and possibly most unlikely singing sensation.

Ms Boyle, 47, told the talent show she had dreamt of becoming as successful as Paige, who starred as the original Evita in London in 1978.

The veteran singer said there had been a huge reaction to Ms Boyle’s performance from listeners to her Radio 2 show.

In a message posted on her website, she wrote: “Ever since Susan’s appearance on Britain’s Got Talent my Radio 2 inbox has been flooded with e-mails. It seems her performance has really captured the hearts of everyone who saw it, me included … it looks like I have competition. Perhaps we should record a duet?”

Paige is not the only celebrity backing the unemployed church volunteer from Blackburn in West Lothian. Hollywood actress Demi Moore last week said she was reduced to tears by the performance.

Ms Boyle, complete with her distinctive curly locks, won over a sceptical audience to become a global phenomenon following her appearance on Britain’s Got Talent. Her performance was also watched by millions online.

She has been catapulted into the limelight in America, where her story has been featured on US morning television shows and news programmes.

She was interviewed by satellite from Scotland for the talk show Larry King Live. The show which will be broadcast on CNN International today.

Alex Salmond, the First Minister, has also sent a letter of support to the singer, who hails from the same area of West Lothian as the SNP leader.

The First Minister’s letter offered his “warmest congratulations” for what he describes as a “stunning performance”.

Makeover

by Flulpilla FlulpillaHQ — Categories: Personal life of Susan — Tags: No Comments

susan3sml

Susan Boyle has changed her mind: why not have a makeover, after all the talk that the way she appeared on the show is now part of her image and that it is detrimental to her success to change anything.  She got her hair dyed chestnut brown.

She did not want to make big changes, but actually she didn’t only change her hair color, she also refined the eyebrows on Tuesday.

We’ll see to which extent Susan will keep changing. One thing is pretty clear: Her voice will continue to express her personality and her singing skills, and that’s the main thing.

Peter Brand

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