Alison Gold: Chinese Food Song Is Called Both Racist And "Worst Song Of The Year"

Alison Gold: Chinese Food song is called racist by Wired Magazine and also "Worst Song of the Year" by Eric Dodds, writer of Time magazine.

The song was released on October 14 and quickly became famous on Youtube, gathering millions of views in a matter of days.

The song has verses like: "I love Chinese food, you know that it's true, I love fried rice, I love noodles, I love chow mien, chow mo-mo-mo-mo-mien!"

The video showcases the young Gold singing her love for egg rolls and wanton soup while filming in a restaurant. A man dressed as a big panda appears. Alison Gold: Chinese Food song is called racist by Wired Magazine and also "Worst Song of the Year" by Eric Dodds, writer of Time magazine.

The song was released on October 14 and quickly became famous on Youtube, gathering millions of views in a matter of days.

The song has verses like: "I love Chinese food, you know that it's true, I love fried rice, I love noodles, I love chow mien, chow mo-mo-mo-mo-mien!"

The video showcases the young Gold singing her love for egg rolls and wanton soup while filming in a restaurant. A man dressed as a big panda appears.

Wired magazine notes the racist tone in the music video. The publication states,"When Gold and her panda friend watch noodles float through the sky like clouds, those noodles are udon. Udon is Japanese food, not Chinese food. Later in the video, Gold and her friends dance around a barbecue. The dancers are made up to resemble geisha and they're wearing kimonos; geisha and kimonos are Japanese, not Chinese."

Producer and rapper Patrice Wilson wrote the song. He also makes a cameo in the video, dressed as a panda. He was also behind "Friday" by Rebecca Black which became a huge viral hit in 2011.

British publication The Independent wrote Black was very popular on Twitter. The video has 59 million YouTube hits.

Wilson founded the Ark Music Factory in 2010, a musical composition and production company with its main office in Los Angeles. , California. His partner in the company is  producer and multi-instrumentalist Clarence Jey.

Jey eventually left Ark Music Factory and created his own production company called Music Intersection. Wilson eventually created his solo company Pato Music World.

He has another viral hit with Alison Gold and Chinese Food.

Wired magazine notes the racist tone in the music video. The publication states,"When Gold and her panda friend watch noodles float through the sky like clouds, those noodles are udon. Udon is Japanese food, not Chinese food. Later in the video, Gold and her friends dance around a barbecue. The dancers are made up to resemble geisha and they're wearing kimonos; geisha and kimonos are Japanese, not Chinese."

Producer and rapper Patrice Wilson wrote the song. He also makes a cameo in the video, dressed as a panda. He was also behind "Friday" by Rebecca Black which became a huge viral hit in 2011.

British publication The Independent wrote Black was very popular on Twitter. The video has 59 million YouTube hits.

Wilson founded the Ark Music Factory in 2010, a musical composition and production company with its main office in Los Angeles. , California. His partner in the company is  producer and multi-instrumentalist Clarence Jey.

Jey eventually left Ark Music Factory and created his own production company called Music Intersection. Wilson eventually created his solo company Pato Music World.

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