

Patrice Wilson actually defended the music video, calling it an "art project".Featured peformers: Alison Gold (vocals), Patrice Wilson (producer, writer). The video ends with Alison shown dead on the electric chair. The video, which has been released on YouTube, features the American singer and actress Alison Gold whose parents are funding her already controversial music career. Genres: Teen Pop, Electropop, Dutch House. The dust then covers the people below as they suggestively dance. She then goes on to have a conversation with Patrice Wilson (who made this song, and runs the record label) before she jumps off a building towards a group of prisoners as she disintegrates into gold dust. He is the Overall Antagonist of the music videos as he is a major force in the Video Plots. She also gets wheeled around in a gurney at a mental hospital before being injected with gold dust. He appears in all three Alison Gold music videos originally to assist Alison and entertain her, however during the course of the trilogy he continues to assist only to reveal his absolute hatred for her. She dances around the jail house along with other scantly clad women and male prisoners. She gets arrested and gets the death sentence by electric chair, the video then cuts to her in a prison cell wearing skimpy gold clothing and caked in gold makeup. Gold robs a jewelry store and escapes while wearing tight and revealing clothing.First of all, we have to mention that Alison Gold was 11 YEARS OLD, when she sang and filmed this music video. I am thrilled to share the news that I will be moderating an upcoming signature speaker event hosted by The Motley Fool Foundation featuring Trish Costello. The music video is absolutely atrocious and inappropriate.The lyrics don't even make any sense whatsoever, it's just about Alison metaphorically on fire, and to turn up the music or just "shush up".There are just so much auto-tune on her vocals, that they almost sound unintelligible.Either crank it or just shush, shush, up, up, up
