Could Ashley Alexandra Dupré, the aspiring singer embroiled in the prostitution scandal surrounding former New York governor Eliot Spitzer, have a music career? Top A&R executives are weighing in on her chances after the 22-year-old racked up millions of MySpace views and launched much-sought-after new songs on AmieStreet.com since the Spitzer story broke.
See Also:Before Dupré’s MySpace page was deleted today (March 13), it had received 4,612,397 views and her song “What We Want” touted 711,334 plays. According to the New York Times, two tracks Dupré released to AmieStreet.com this week received thousands of listens and their prices rocketed from free to the maximum price of 98 cents on the priced-by-demand site today. The number of blog posts mentioning Dupre also rose over 750% in the last 48 hours according to Nielsen BuzzMetrics. Here is what some major label executives told Billboard.com about her prospects: "I think her song is absolutely terrible. If people are interested in signing her, then they shouldn't be in the music business. It'd be a shame to exploit her talent based on the unacceptable reality that she was involved in. Most importantly, it destroyed multiple families. I don't think the scandal will help her at all. In fact, I think the public is a bit smarter than we think they are. Even though she's had over a million hits on her MySpace, I think people are just going there to see her pictures and laugh at her attempt to pursue a music career." -- Chris Anokute, Capitol Records Senior A&R Director
"The funny thing about this is that I read the story this morning, about [Dupré] wanting to be a singer, and I thought to myself that I really wanted to reach out to her. I'd be interested in what the music sounds like. I sit around hours and hours every day trying to figure out ways to break new artists. Right now, she has a platform to reach the masses, which is the toughest thing for a new artist to attain. Whether it's a good platform or a bad one, either way she has it. It all comes down to the music at the end of the day. If the music is good, she'll be able to get it heard." -- Brian Bergen, Atlantic Records A&R Manager
"As an A&R [person] I wouldn't be interested in her music solely because of… Spitzer. But people do say any publicity is good publicity and her recent headlines would help get her some exposure. She has a platform; its just a matter of spinning off negative and making it positive.
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