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5 commentsFriday, November 6, 2009
Why British Singer Matt Goss Likes Twittering with Fans
Uses Social Media to Expand Career in the U.S.-

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5 Comments
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Bros
Bros were shockingly bad. They were big (briefly) but let's face it, so were the Bay City Rollers.
I'm British and 35 - I can
I'm British and 35 - I can tell you Bros were massive.
I would say they were the original boy band. I hear people say how big Take That were, well they had nothing on Bros. I've seen girls pass out because of Bros, we had acts from the US come over "NKOTB" and they were small in comparison. Anyone my age must know who they were or been living in a cave. They didn't make it in the US, but not many acts did then - not many do now.
As for MC Hammer - when it comes to record sales in the UK, compared with Bros he sold next to nothing.
The sad thing about Bros was that when they finally released a good album, they vanished.
Probably because most of their fans were not really musical and it was beyond them.
Matt is actually a great singer, live too.
Who?
Matt who? I'm from England and I haven't a clue who he is.
Is he still singing?
Now maybe I'm missing something over here in little ol' England but I haven't heard of Matt Goss since I was about 8 years old during the mid 80s when he was with Bros. They were very popular at the time (I thought) but to say "in some places, like his British homeland, he is a star" is wrong... "in some places, like his British homeland, he WAS a star - two decades ago" would probably be more accurate.
I owned a Bros album at the same time as an MC Hammer album, let's compare the twitter follower volumes 20 years later:
Matt Goss - 3200
MC Hammer - 1,609,718
Would anybody still call MC Hammer a star? I'm not sure, but the numbers do the talking in my opinion - Of course Matt Goss is keen to connect with fans using social networking... I would imagine he would be keen to connect with anybody these days!
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