Acting Like That | |
Type: | single |
Artist: | Yungblud featuring and Travis Barker |
Album: | Weird! |
Written: | December 2019 |
Released: | 2 December 2020 |
Genre: | Pop punk[1] |
Length: | 3:03 |
Label: |
|
Producer: | Travis Barker |
Chronology: | Yungblud |
Prev Title: | Mars |
Prev Year: | 2020 |
Next Title: | Patience |
Next Year: | 2021 |
"Acting Like That" is a song by English musician Yungblud featuring American musicians Machine Gun Kelly and Travis Barker, released on 2 December 2020 as the sixth single from the former's second studio album Weird!.
The song was written about a night the two vocalists spent together after the death of the mutual friend Juice Wrld. According to Yungblud, despite being saddened by the event, they cheered one another up by deciding that they were "way too cool to be acting like that".[2] The following morning, they wrote the song.[3]
The song is the third collaboration between the three musicians, following 2019's "I Think I'm Okay" and 2020's "Body Bag", which also featured Bert McCracken. The release of the song was announced on 30 November 2020,[4] which was followed by Yungblud began releasing teasers for the song on social media in the following days.[5] The song was officially released on 3 December 2020, as the sixth single from Yungblud's second studio album Weird!.[6]
A music video for the song was released on 21 January 2021.[7] [8] [9] The video parodies the different reaction to the then-ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, through the metaphor of a zombie apocalypse. Because of the pandemic, Yungblud and Machine Gun Kelly's segments of the video were filmed separately in Greenwich, London and Los Angeles respectively.[10] The video also features a cameo from social media influencer Abby Roberts, as a zombie who infects Yungblud.[11]
The Guardian writer Issy Simpson perceived the song to be objectifying, stating that "Being a woman in 2020 can be tough, but luckily for us girls, there's always a man around to tell us exactly how to behave" and that "they're wrong, because there's no attractiveness barrier to being a complete mess: it's an equal-opportunities activity".[12] Clash called it a love it or hate it song but contended that that's where both artists do best.[13]
According to an article by NME, users on TikTok drew comparisons between the song's chorus melody and that of Metro Station's 2008 song "Shake It". In response, Metro Station tweeted they felt "honored".[14]
Credits adapted from Tidal.[15]
Musicians
Technical
Peak position | ||
New Zealand Hot Singles (RMNZ)[16] | 14 | |
---|---|---|
US Hot Rock & Alternative Songs (Billboard)[17] | 16 |