William Hung: Difference between revisions
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| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1983|1|13|mf=y}} |
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1983|1|13|mf=y}} |
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| birth_place = Hong Kong |
| birth_place = Hong Kong |
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| death_date = {{Death date and age|2013|4|18|1983|01|13|mf=yes}} |
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| genre= [[Pop music|Pop]] |
| genre= [[Pop music|Pop]] |
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| occupation = [[Civil engineering]] [[university]] [[student]], [[singing|singer]], [[actor]], technical crime analyst |
| occupation = [[Civil engineering]] [[university]] [[student]], [[singing|singer]], [[actor]], technical crime analyst |
Revision as of 17:51, 28 June 2013
Template:Infobox Chinese-language singer and actor
William James Hung Hing Cheong (Traditional Chinese: 孔慶翔, Simplified Chinese: 孔庆翔, Cantonese Yale: Hung2 Hing3 Cheung4, Pinyin: Kǒng Qìngxiáng; born January 13, 1983), commonly known as William Hung, is an American singer who gained fame in early 2004 as a result of his off-key audition performance of Ricky Martin's hit song "She Bangs" on the third season of the television series American Idol.
Hung's spirited audition to be the next American Idol inadvertently won the support of many fans. Hung became popular enough to perform on many popular shows, and even secured a record contract with Koch Entertainment in 2004. His fame became the subject of much controversy as both he and his fans were accused of promoting and endorsing racial stereotypes against Asians, although he did not seem to notice or even care about the possible implications of his popularity, believing he was living his dream.
He brought his own career as a musician to an end when in 2011 he accepted a job opportunity as a technical crime analyst, and decided to pursue it instead of music. Since then, Hung has reflected positively on his pop music career, and has moved on.
Early life
Originally from Sha Tin, Hong Kong, Hung moved to Camden, New Jersey in 1993 and graduated from the John H. Francis Polytechnic High School in Los Angeles. He was a student at University of California, Berkeley, and later dropped out to pursue his music career.
Career
Initial fame
While studying civil engineering at the University of California, Berkeley, Hung auditioned for the third season of American Idol in San Francisco in September 2003. He was the final auditioner on the January 15, 2004, installment, the coup de grâce of an hour-long episode that showcased other would-be pop stars, mostly lacking in talent.
"I want to make music my living," said Hung, before he started singing and dancing to Ricky Martin's "She Bangs". As judges Randy Jackson and Paula Abdul tried to restrain their laughter, judge Simon Cowell dismissed Hung's performance, remarking "You can't sing, you can't dance, so what do you want me to say?", to which Hung replied, "Um, I already gave my best, and I have no regrets at all." Jackson and Abdul applauded his positive attitude, with Abdul remarking, "That's the best attitude yet." Hung's response to Cowell's criticism starkly contrasts with the often confrontational rejoinders of other contestants. Hung added, "...you know, I have no professional training of singing and dancing," eliciting mock surprise from Cowell, who replied, "No? Well, this is the surprise of the century." Hung was not admitted through to the next round.
Cult following
Hung rapidly gained a cult following. A William Hung fan site, set up by realtor Don Chin and his wife Laura, recorded over four million hits within its first week. Hung subsequently appeared on several television programs including Jimmy Kimmel Live!, On Air with Ryan Seacrest, Entertainment Tonight, George Lopez, the Late Show with David Letterman, Countdown with Keith Olbermann, The Howard Stern Radio Show, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, Dateline NBC, Arrested Development and CBS's The Early Show. Hung was featured in several national magazines and newspapers; he was parodied on Saturday Night Live and appeared on Celebrity Deathmatch. He was reportedly invited to perform at MTV's Asia Awards held in mid-February.
Remixes of Hung's audition performance topped song request lists at a number of radio stations. An online petition to get Hung back to American Idol included more than 100,000 signatures by late February. Hung was brought back to American Idol as part of a mid-season special titled Uncut, Uncensored and Untalented, airing March 1, 2004. The special documented what it was like to experience the audition process and, in Hung's case, emerge as an inadvertent celebrity. Hung was crowned the Artichoke King of 2006 in Castroville, California's Artichoke Festival, an honor previously bestowed on Marilyn Monroe.[1]
2004 "Hung Hoax"
In July of 2004 internet rumors of the American Idol reject William Hung, famous for singing Ricky Martin She Bangs was found dead on July 13th, 2004 apparently because of a overdose on heroin. The announcements of his death sent shockwaves to the tens of people who still found him funny. Ironically, William Hung was found by a VH1 camera crew sent to begin filing "William Hung: Behind the 'Music.'" Viacom immediately decided to rename the special: "William Hung: fifteen minutes till death." The status of this 2004 Hung Hoax is considered to be false.
Record deal
William Hung was offered a $25,000 advance on a record deal from Koch Entertainment in 2004, and released three albums on that label in 2004 and 2005. His first album was titled Inspiration and was produced by Giuseppe D. It was recorded over a March 2004 weekend with Hung singing vocals over karaoke music. To promote it, Hung performed before nearly 20,000 fans during half-time at a Golden State Warriors game on April 6 and performed "She Bangs", included on the album, on such shows as The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. The album received highly negative reviews,[2][3][4] but ultimately went on to sell about 200,000 copies and reached Number One on Billboard's Top Independent Album Chart.[5][6] His two follow-up albums were far less successful, as Hung for the Holidays (a Christmas album) only sold 35,000 copies and Miracle: Happy Summer from William Hung (another karaoke cover album) only sold 7,000.[6] In a February 2006 interview, he said he was in the work 5 or 6-track fourth album,[7] though as of June 2013, there has been no source published if the album will ever be released or if the project was scratched.
Television, commercials and movies
Hung appeared in commercials for the search engine Ask.com, the Game Show Network (spoofing Freddie Mercury and singing an off-key "We Are the Champions"), as well as the mobile phone service provider Cingular Wireless.[citation needed] He also appeared to sing "Take Me Out to the Ballgame" in May 2004 at the Rogers Centre for the Toronto Blue Jays.[8]
His first movie, a low-budget Hong Kong period comedy called Where is Mama's Boy (2004), was released in January 2005. Hung played a good-natured village kid who sells Chinese pancakes to pay his mother's medical bills. His character gets discovered as a singer, and helps a woman protect her business from her jealous, conniving elder sister. In the film, Hung played opposite veteran Hong Kong actress Nancy Sit and parodied his own American Idol performance with the song "Siu Beng" (Cantonese) ("Chinese Pancake"), an allusion to his American Idol audition song, "She Bangs." Despite solid financial backing and the involvement of Nancy Sit, the film was a box office flop.
Lampooning his own career, Hung later made appearances in Airline,[9] The Fairly OddParents, Arrested Development, Celebrity Deathmatch, and George Lopez.[citation needed]
Retirement from music
In 2011, Hung became a technical crime analyst for the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, and retired from music. Hung remains optimistic about his new career path, and states he does not regret that his music career has ended. "I showed that even the Average Joe could succeed," he remarked on his short-lived time as a pop star.[6]
Controversy
Commentator Emil Guillermo claimed that Hung may have not gained much attention had he been of another race, and his popularity may be derived from his being a representation of the Asian stereotype, characterized by nerdiness, bucked teeth, studiousness, speaking with a strong "fresh off the boat" accent, and lacking singing talent or rhythm. Documentary filmmaker James Hou commented, "As Asian Americans, we look through this racial lens, and we see this guy who embodies all the stereotypes we're trying to escape from."[10]
Some analysts have argued that Hung's career arose out of mockery, and that the media exploited him as a joke rather than as a talented or inspirational figure.[11] Ron Lin, former editor in chief of the UC Berkeley's Daily Californian asserts: "It's really difficult for Asian American males to break through and (Hung) may not be the most appealing example."[12]
Alternative viewpoints
Amber Eliza Watts suggested that Hung's cult following derived from him being the antithesis of everything Idol represented, with his lack of musical talent and odd looks, and how unlike other audition failures he was not arrogantly expecting to be made a pop star, he just wanted to sing.[13]
In a 2008 American Idol Extra, in response to the question, "Why do you think it is that people gravitate towards William Hung so much?", Hung stated, "I believe it's my attitude and charisma, I tell people constantly, media, every where I go, just never give up on your dream."
Discography
Year | Album | Peak | Sales | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
US | US Indie | ||||||||
2004 | Inspiration
|
34 | 1 |
| |||||
Hung for the Holidays
|
— | 22 |
| ||||||
2005 | Miracle: Happy Summer from William Hung
|
— | — |
| |||||
"—" denotes the album did not chart. |
Hung's Death
On Thursday April 18th,2013 William Hung was pronounced dead at the age of 30 years old. Ironically he died of Heroin addiction as that happened as a rumor in July 2004. Hung's body was taken to Desert Springs Hospital Medical Center in Las Vegas Nevada where he died at 7:21 PM. that evening. Hung's Funeral was a week after the musical pop star's death it was on April 25th, 2013. At his funeral many of his friends, family members, and his fans came. The music at the funeral was Hung's inspirational music such as "Just Do it" and "I believe I can fly" "She Bangs" was also played on the days of William Hung's funeral.
References
- ^ Attention: This template ({{cite doi}}) is deprecated. To cite the publication identified by doi:10.1080/03007760802217725 , please use {{cite journal}} (if it was published in a bona fide academic journal, otherwise {{cite report}} with
|doi=10.1080/03007760802217725
instead. - ^ Allmusic review
- ^ IGN review
- ^ Entertainment Weekly review
- ^ "Inspiration - William Hung". Billboard. Retrieved 2012-01-07.
- ^ a b c d e f Grossman, Samantha (January 19 2012). "American Idol's William Hung: Where Is He Now?". TIME Magazine. Retrieved September 10 2012.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|accessdate=
and|date=
(help) - ^ Catching up with William. ecentral.my. February 21, 2006. Accessed from June 27, 2013.
- ^ ESPN - Blue Jays wanted Hung for Opening Day http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=1812698&CMP=OTC-DT9705204233
- ^ Airline DVD news: A&E's reality show gives us a behind-the-scenes look at the flying biz
- ^ Guillermo, Emil (2004-04-06). "Hung Out to Dry". The Village Voice.
- ^ AsianWeek.com
- ^ "William Hung: Racism, Or Magic?". San Francisco Chronicle. 2004-04-06.
- ^ Watts, Amber Eliza (2008). Laughing at the World: Schadenfreude, Social Identity, and American Media Culture. ProQuest. pp. 24–30.
External links
{{{inline}}}
- William Hung at IMDb
- William Hung Official Site
- Wittmeyer, Alicia. "Berkeley Junior Shot Down in American Idol Tryout." Daily Californian. Monday February 2, 2004.
- Bulwa, Demian. "UC's accidental pop star / 'American Idol' reject is hot item on campus -- and far beyond." San Francisco Chronicle. Wednesday February 11, 2004.
- Guillermo, Emil. "William Hung: Racism, or Magic?" San Francisco Chronicle. Tuesday April 6, 2004.
- Navarro, Mireya. "Trying to Crack the Hot 100." The New York Times. March 4, 2007.
- William Hung at Rolling Stone
- 1983 births
- Living people
- Actors from Los Angeles, California
- American male singers
- American Idol participants
- American Internet personalities
- American musicians of Chinese descent
- E1 Music artists
- Hong Kong emigrants to the United States
- Musicians from Los Angeles, California
- Musicians from New Jersey
- Outsider musicians
- People from Camden, New Jersey