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Safiya Nygaard (born July 16, 1992) [1] [2] is an American YouTuber.She gained prominence through her work with BuzzFeed, creating the series LadyLike.She is now known for her solo YouTube channel, containing content such as her Bad Makeup Science series.
"Lady Like" received widespread acclaim from music critics. Goldfine praised Andress' lyricism and vocal delivery. Goldfine praised Andress' lyricism and vocal delivery. She described the song as "a classic girl power anthem", likening it to other tracks with feminist themes such as No Doubt 's " Just a Girl " and Lily Allen 's " Hard out Here ...
Lady Like is the debut studio album by American singer-songwriter Ingrid Andress. It was released on March 27, 2020, by Warner Music Nashville. A country pop record, its tracks are inspired by Andress's real-life events. The album focuses on the themes of relationships, family and feminism.
On January 14, 2022, London released her first solo full-length project, a mixtape titled Lady Like: The Boss Tape; the mixtape consists of thirteen tracks, majority of them being freestyles. [12] A few months later, she released a single "What Is It Giving", produced by Kosine, alongside its music video. [13]
"Like a Lady" is a song performed by German girl band Monrose. It was written by Risto Asikainen, Zippy Davis, Veikka "DJ Ercola" Erkola and Alexander Komlew and recorded for their fourth studio album Ladylike (2010), with production helmed by Davis, Erkola and Komlew under their production moniker Tuneverse.
Ladylike was released to generally mixed reviews from music critics, many of whom praised the slower songs on the album but found the rest of the material too generic. On the charts, the album peaked at number ten on the German Albums Chart , becoming Monrose's fourth consecutive top ten album to do so.
Entertainment Weekly editor David Browne called Dion's cover an "overarranged stab at reggae dancehall" and "unintentionally amusing". [1] The New York Observer editor Jonathan Bernstein wrote, "She's fallen on her face before when attempting to be as one with the rhythm, but Celine Dion has never humiliated herself as comprehensively as she does when mashing it up in a dance-hall style on ...
Angela Stefano of Taste of Country wrote that the song was "a big ol' slice of girl power". [2] Writing for the same site, Cillea Hougton stated that "The summery track ditches the polite standards associated with the phrase the song is named after, instead following a single woman for a night on the town where she treats herself to the highest liquor on the shelf and dances like no one’s ...