Jump to content

William Hung: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
ATR2093 (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
ATR2093 (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Line 79: Line 79:


== Death ==
== Death ==
Febuary 5th 2007,Hung was found dead in a Las Vegas Room of an apparent intentional heroin overdose.Ironically, Mr. 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.”
Febuary 5th 2007,Hung was found dead in a Las Vegas Room of an apparent intentional heroin overdose.Ironically,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.”


Friends of Mr. Hung say he had become despondent in recent days.
Friends of Mr. Hung say he had become despondent in recent days.

Revision as of 00:36, 7 February 2007

William Hung

William Hung (Traditional Chinese: 孔慶翔, Simplified Chinese: 孔庆翔, Cantonese Yale: Hung2 Hing3 Cheung4, Pinyin: Kǒng Qìngxiáng) (born January 13, 1983) is a Chinese American college student and musician who gained fame and notoriety in early 2004 as a result of his poorly received audition performance of Ricky Martin's hit song "She Bangs" on the third season of the television series American Idol.

Originally from Sha Tin, Hong Kong, Hung moved to Southern California, United States in 1993 and graduated from the John H. Francis Polytechnic High School in Los Angeles. He enrolled at the University of California, Berkeley, in 2001.

Initial fame

While a civil engineering student at University of California, Berkeley, Hung was inspired to audition for the third season of the reality talent search program American Idol in San Francisco during September 2003 after winning a talent contest at his dormitory. The President of the Hall Association and the Publicity Director at the Clark Kerr dormitory invited Hung to sing during meetings and events, including an end-of-semester auction.

American Idol producers never told him that his audition would be broadcasted, and he only found out about it when it aired four months later. His was the final audition on the January 27, 2004 installation, the coup de grâce of an hour-long episode that showcased other would-be pop stars, mostly lacking in talent.

"Um, I really like music. It is very good. I want to make music my living." This was Hung's statement before he started singing Ricky Martin's "She Bangs!". As judges Randy Jackson and Paula Abdul tried to hold back their laughter, judge Simon Cowell dismissed Hung's performance outright: "You can't sing, you can't dance, so what do you want me to say?" Hung defended himself, stating, "Um, I already gave my best, and I have no regrets at all." Jackson and Abdul applauded his positive response, and Abdul said, "That's the best attitude yet." Hung's response to Cowell's criticism was in stark contrast to earlier contestants' often angry, confrontational rejoinders. Hung also remarked, "And you know, I have no professional training of singing and dancing," eliciting a response of mock surprise from Simon Cowell, saying, "No? Well this is the surprise of the century." Hung was not admitted to the next round.

File:William Hung Promo.jpg
This picture is featured on a magnet and is one of the many Hung products available today.

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 as a guest on a number of television programs including Jimmy Kimmel, On Air with Ryan Seacrest, Entertainment Tonight, 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. He was also featured in numerous magazines and newspapers nationwide and parodied on Saturday Night Live and Celebrity Deathmatch. He was reportedly invited to perform at the MTV Asia Awards held in mid-February. Remixes of his performance topped song request lists at a few radio stations. An online petition to get Hung back on the show claimed 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, which aired March 1, 2004. The special documented what it was like to go through the audition process and, in Hung's case, emerge as an inadvertent celebrity. There is a degree of irony in the situation, as Hung has become more prominent in the public eye and modern culture than most other previous American Idol contestants. His unconventional looks, good attitude, and eagerness gained him many fans.

Record deal

Hung was offered a record deal from Koch Entertainment and a surprise $25,000 check from the Fuse music channel on February 18 after reprising his rendition of "She Bangs" at a volleyball game at University of California, Berkeley. On March 8, Koch Entertainment announced that Hung had decided to sign the record deal he was offered in February. Hung's first single, a cover of The Village People's "YMCA," debuted on March 19. Hung's debut album, Inspiration, recorded over the weekend of March 6, was released on April 6 and includes covers of Ricky Martin's "She Bangs" and "Shake Your Bon Bon" and Elton John's "Rocket Man," as well as a 40-minute DVD documenting the making of the album called A Day in the Life of William Hung. The album has sold 195,000 copies. This sales total tops season 2 Idol winner Ruben Studdard's third studio album

To promote his album, Hung performed before nearly 20,000 fans during half-time at a Golden State Warriors game on April 6. Several of his songs reached the top 10 on Apple's iTunes charts, and his album reached #3 on Amazon.com's sales rankings. With the release of his album, Fuse also aired a half-hour special called Idol Worship: The William Hung Story, featuring Hung in his first music video, another rendition of "She Bangs".

Hung released a Christmas album, Hung for the Holidays, on October 19 2004.

Hung's third album, Miracle: Happy Summer from William Hung, was released July 12 2005 and sold poorly.

Television, commercials and movies

Hung has appeared in commercials for the search engine Ask.com, as well as the mobile phone service provider Cingular Wireless.

His first movie, a HK$10 million (US$2 million) Hong Kong period comedy called My Crazy Mother (2004), was released in January 2005. Hung played a good-natured village kid who sells Chinese pancakes to pay his mother's medical bills. The character gets discovered as a singer, and helps a woman protect her business from her jealous and scheming older sister. In this film Hung played opposite veteran Hong Kong actress Nancy Sit and parodied his own American Idol performance with the song Siu Beng (Cantonese)/Shao Bing(Mandarin) (Chinese Pancake), a deliberate allusion to the title of his American Idol audition song, She Bangs.

Hung was also the subject of a documentary called William Hung: Hangin' with Hung, an hour and a half long film documenting Hung's sudden rise in fame.

In February 2006, Hung played himself in an episode of the television series Arrested Development, as part of the fictional band "William Hung and his Hung Jury", the house band of the show "Mock Trial with J. Reinhold".

He has also made a cameo appearance on The George Lopez Show.

Controversy

Some people have argued that Hung has been used to perpetuate historical American racist stereotypes of Chinese and Asians in general, and Hung may have not gained so much attention had he been of another race. Some have argued that there is a lack of positive portrayals of Asian males (particularly Asian-American males) in the U.S. media, and William Hung may serve as a focal point for minority groups.[1] [2] Additionally, some have also argued that Hung's career arose out of others making a mockery of him, and that the media exploited him as a joke, rather than as a talented or inspirational figure.[3]

Trivia

  • William has gained a great deal of weight since his initial rise to fame, and photos of the much heftier William can be seen on his website.
  • William Hung was in an episode of Airline when he arrived in Los Angeles.
  • William Hung appeared and performed on the Fox Box.
  • On April 6, 2004 William Hung sang during halftime at the Houston Rockets/Golden State Warriors NBA game at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas. He gave his rendition of Elton John's "Rocket Man" but instead of saying "man" he localized the song by singing "Rocket fan" and got a rousing ovation. He even announced shortly that he was a fan of the Rockets, and states his favorite player is Yao Ming.
  • William Hung was crowned the Artichoke King in Castroville, California on May 21, 2006. The town is labeled as the "artichoke capital of the world." Marilyn Monroe was the first Artichoke Queen, crowned in 1947. [4]
  • While he was in Castroville, California, William performed his infamous version of "She Bangs." He also performed his own version of "Surfin' USA."
  • A William Hung dancing game is a reward for users who finish the survival horror game "Uninvited" on Albinoblacksheep.
  • William's name came up in an episode of The Office: when character Todd Packer's license plate on his red Corvette was revealed to be WLHUNG (alluding to his penis size), he is asked "Are you a big William Hung fan?" to which he responds "Why does everyone always ask me that?"
  • The situation with Hung's fame is spoofed in the episode "Disregarding Henry" of the show My Gym Partner's a Monkey.
  • Impersonated by Jimmy Fallon on Saturday Night Live.
  • In The Fairly OddParents television movie "Fairy Idol" (A spoof of American Idol), a fairy resembling Hung can be seen auditioning.
  • William Hung is an avid player of the Pokémon Trading Card Game, and is a journalist for Pokémon TCG fansite pojo.com.[5]


Death

Febuary 5th 2007,Hung was found dead in a Las Vegas Room of an apparent intentional heroin overdose.Ironically,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.”

Friends of Mr. Hung say he had become despondent in recent days.

Discography

See also

External links and sources