Bossip
Video
No
matter
how
big
of
a
celebrity
someone
is,
negative
comments
still
seem
to
sting
just
as
much.
Source:
Kevin
Mazur
/
Getty
One
star
who
is
no
stranger
to
getting
hate
online
is
Blue
Ivy,
who
has
been
getting
critiqued
on
the
internet
since
she
was
born.
More
recently,
the
11-year-old
appeared
at
select
shows
on
tour
with
her
mother,
which
also
drew
criticism
from
fans
who
thought
her
dancing
was
subpar.
In
her
new
Renaissance
World
Tour
concert
film, Beyoncé
revealed
that
after
her
eldest
daughter
joined
her
onstage,
she
was
affected
by
online
critiques
of
her
performances.
Related
Stories
PEOPLE
reports
that
the
singer
revealed
that
Blue
Ivy
read
some
of
the
negative
comments
about
her
dancing
after
her
first
surprise
appearance
onstage
in
Paris
back
in
May.
Bey
said
that
her
daughter
was
determined
to
prove
any
naysayers
wrong,
devoting
herself
to
working
even
harder
on
her
dancing
from
that
point
forward.
Beyoncé
also
revealed
that
the
idea
of
Blue
Ivy
joining
her
onstage
was
not
something
she
was
too
eager
about.
In
the
beginning,
the
idea
was
that
the
11-year-old
would
make
just
one
onstage
appearance–but
even
that
wasn’t
something
Bey
was
excited
about,
insisting
that
performing
in
front
of
tens
of
thousands
of
people
was
no
place
for
someone
as
young
as
Blue.
Beyoncé
said
in
the
Renaissance
film,
“She
told
me
she
was
ready
to
perform,
and
I
told
her
no,”
PEOPLE
reports.
The
“CUFF
IT”
singer
also
said
she
almost
passed
out
the
first
time
her
daughter
joined
her
onstage.
Back
in
July,
Blue
Ivy’s
grandma,
Tina
Knowles-Lawson,
revealed
to
PEOPLE
in
July
that
Blue’s
confidence
soared
“to
the
sky”
following
her
first
performance.
“She
is
11
years
old,
and
she
had
one
week
to
prepare,
and
she’s
just
getting
better
and
better,”
said
Knowles-Lawson,
69.
“So
I’m
the
proud
grandma,
always.”
She
continued,
“This
is
a
heels
family.
You’re
trained
early
to
walk
in
heels,”
before
adding,
“She’s
having
the
time
of
her
life,
and
I
couldn’t
be
more
proud
of
her
because
she
really
worked
hard.”
In
October,
Jay-Z
echoed
that
same
pride
for
his
daughter,
telling
Gayle
King
on CBS
Mornings,
“I
still
get
goosebumps
seeing
her
walk
onstage.”
“She’s
been
born
into
a
life
she
didn’t
ask
for.
So
since
she
was
born,
she’s
been
in
scrutiny
and
the
public
eye
and
everyone
having
an
opinion
of
even
a
little
girl,
how
she
keeps
her
hair,”
the
rapper
said.
“So
for
her
to
be
on
that
stage
and
reclaim
her
power,
and
the
song
is
called
‘My
Power,’
you
can’t
write
a
better
script.”