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Fakin' It (K. Michelle song)

"Fakin' It"
K. Michelle - Fakin' It.jpg
Single by K. Michelle featuring Missy Elliott
from the album What's the 901?
Released September 17, 2009
Format
Recorded 2009
Genre R&B
Length 3:50
Label
  • Jive
  • Hitz Committee LLC
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s) Blac Elvis
K. Michelle singles chronology
"Self Made"
(2009)
"Fakin' It"
(2009)
"Fallin'"
(2010)
"Self Made"
(2009)
"Fakin' It"
(2009)
"Fallin'"
(2010)
Missy Elliott singles chronology
"Work"
(2009) Work2009
"Fakin' It"
(2009) Fakin' It2009
"Get Involved"
(2010) Get Involved2010

"Fakin' It" is a song by American R&B singer K. Michelle, featuring guest vocals by Grammy Award–winning female rapper Missy Elliott. It was co-written by Michelle, Elliott and Ester Dean. The song attained slight media attention for Michelle and was intended to serve as the buzz single for her debut studio album, originally titled Pain Medicine.

In an October 2009 interview, K. Michelle described "Fakin' It" as a fun record that is a "part that women go through," and went on to add that the remaining tracks of her debut weren't like that. Michelle also felt that the record went into detail about sexual issues in regard to relationships and stressed the need to bring it to light in the record.

In response to the male public discrediting the song for its "male-bashing" lyrics, Michelle stated that she wanted the song to be empowering for women as a whole and added that there may be women in relationships who might have a man who "lacks bedroom skills" or "common sense." She also implied that "Fakin' It" was a response to Young Money's "Every Girl," describing: "[Young Money] wanted to say, 'I wish I could fuck every girl in the world;' my thing was to say, 'Okay, well while you're doing it, we're faking [the orgasm].'"

The song first leaked to online urban blogs on August 15, 2009 and initially saw an official digital release on iTunes in September 17, 2009. The song was also featured on World Star Hip Hop in September 15, 2009 for its racy and "damaging male self-esteem" theme. During its radio airplay, an instrumental version of the song was featured on two Promo Only: Urban Club compilations in November and December of 2009.

The song met generally favorable reviews. Burmy of DJ Booth gave the song 3.8 out of 5 stars and praised the track for its completion "with a piano-loop beat by Blac Elvis," and its "catchy, creative" elements. He also believed the "cut is sure to be a hit—and a conversation-starter," for its synopsis and "female issues that don’t generally show up in R&B songs." Jermy Leeuwis of Music Remedy gave the song 4.5 out of 5 stars and cited the track as a "classic" and informed listeners to not "sleep on this joint."


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Wikipedia

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