Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
YouTube Rewind 2018 is the single most disliked video on YouTube, receiving over 19 million dislikes since its upload on December 6, 2018. [1]This list of most-disliked YouTube videos contains the top 42 videos with the most dislikes of all time, as derived from the American video platform, YouTube's, charts. [2]
The official music video for "Baby" was the most disliked clip on YouTube until 2018. [161] It was voted the worst song ever in a 2014 Time Out poll. [162] "Miracles", Insane Clown Posse (2010) CraveOnline deemed this the worst rap song of all time and the most embarrassing rap moment of all time. [163]
Crazy Frog (originally known as The Annoying Thing) is a Swedish CGI-animated character and Eurodance musician created in 2003 by actor and playwright Erik Wernquist. . Marketed by the ringtone provider Jamba!, the character was originally created to accompany a sound effect produced by Daniel Malmedahl while attempting to imitate the sound of a two-stroke
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
The original music video was removed from YouTube on June 16, 2011, due to legal disputes between ARK Music and Black. [7] By then, it had already amassed more than 167 million views. [8] [9] The video was later re-uploaded to YouTube on September 16, 2011. The music video for the song is one of the most disliked YouTube videos of all time. [10]
On YouTube, many comments are jokes about how the song is annoying and irritating: "My friend had been paralyzed from the waist down, but upon listening to this track he rose to his feet and walked out of the window" or "I set this song as my wake-up alarm tone, and now I wake up two hours early to make sure the alarm won't go off."
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Upsweep is an unidentified sound detected on the American NOAA's equatorial autonomous hydrophone arrays. This sound was present when the Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory began recording its sound surveillance system, SOSUS, in August 1991. It consists of a long train of narrow-band upsweeping sounds of several seconds in duration each.