LadBaby

Blogger

Birthday April 12, 1987

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Nottingham, England

Age 36 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#62595 Most Popular

1963

This made them the first musical act in British history to secure five Christmas No. 1 hits, surpassing the record set by the Beatles, who had four Christmas No. 1 songs in 1963, 1964, 1965 and 1967.

1987

Mark Ian Hoyle (born 12 April 1987), better known by his online pseudonym LadBaby, is an English YouTuber, musician, and blogger.

His content focuses on his experiences as a father and is usually filmed in collaboration with his wife, Roxanne.

Mark Ian Hoyle was born in Nottingham on 12 April 1987.

2015

He married Roxanne (née Messenger) in May 2015 after they eloped to Las Vegas.

2016

They reside in Nottingham and have two sons, Phoenix Forest (born 2016) and Kobe Notts (born 2018), with "Forest" being a reference to Nottingham Forest Football Club and "Notts" being a common nickname for both the city and football team.

While Roxanne was pregnant with their first son, Mark created a blog named "LadBaby", reflecting on the fact that he "was a lad and [he] was having a baby".

He used the blog to document his day-to-day life as a first-time parent.

, the LadBaby YouTube channel, Facebook page, and Instagram account respectively have over 1 million subscribers, 4.9 million followers, and 1.3 million followers.

LadBaby's video content, uploaded onto their Facebook and YouTube accounts, consists mainly of vlogs in which Mark demonstrates life hacks which help him to save money when faced with potentially costly parenting tasks.

2017

In June 2017, one vlog, in which he bought a toolbox from a hardware store to serve as a lunchbox for his son, went viral.

Other creations by him include a baby walker made of pipes, a makeshift paddling pool made from a skip and a makeshift baby gate made from half of a door.

It was the fastest-selling single in the UK charts since another charity record, "Bridge Over Troubled Water" by Artists For Grenfell, topped the chart in June 2017.

LadBaby became the third act to secure three consecutive Christmas number ones and one of the few acts to top the chart with their first three singles.

2018

The couple have had the Christmas No. 1 on the UK Singles Chart every year from 2018 to 2022 with the novelty songs "We Built This City", "I Love Sausage Rolls", "Don't Stop Me Eatin'", "Sausage Rolls for Everyone" and "Food Aid".

Other viral videos include two uploaded in February 2018, when the Hoyle couple had each other's cars wrapped with love heart stickers and photographs of their faces.

LadBaby is also known for the catchphrase "yes, mate!"

which is often said in the videos.

In October 2018, the Hoyles launched a spin-off YouTube channel, LadBaby & Sons, in which their sons take a more active role.

The channel generally focuses on toy testing and kid-friendly social media challenges.

On 14 December 2018, the Hoyles released their charity single, a parody cover of Starship's 1985 single "We Built This City".

The amended lyrics had a sausage roll theme with the refrain being changed to "We Built This City on Sausage Rolls".

Proceeds from the charity single went to The Trussell Trust.

The song debuted at number one on the UK Singles Chart, beating Ava Max's "Sweet but Psycho" and Ariana Grande's "Thank U, Next" to the 2018 Christmas number one, making the Hoyles the first British YouTubers to top the chart.

It also appeared in Australia's ARIA Digital Track Chart and the US Hot Rock Songs chart peaking at No. 31 and No. 47 respectively.

2019

On 13 December 2019, the Hoyles released a single entitled "I Love Sausage Rolls", a parody cover of Alan Merrill's "I Love Rock 'n' Roll".

Nick Southwood co-wrote the new lyrics with the Hoyles, produced, mixed and performed bass and lead guitar.

The single's cover is based on Abbey Road cover.

The song became the Christmas number one, beating the likes of Stormzy (No. 2), Lewis Capaldi (No. 3) and Dua Lipa (No. 4), and spent one week in the top 40.

The couple were the third act to have two consecutive Christmas number one singles and the first to have two successive novelty Christmas number ones in the UK.

On 27 December 2019, the record dropped from number 1 to number 57 and broke the record for the biggest ever drop from the top within the top 75 (as per The Guinness Book of British Hit Singles list, as "Three Lions" would have crashed out of the 'hit parade' by dropping to number 97 after it was number 1 in 2018).

As with their previous single, proceeds went to The Trussell Trust.

In a December 2019 interview with The Guardian, Hoyle declined to say who he had voted for at that month's general election; and when asked whether a government that introduced austerity would do anything to mitigate the issue of food poverty, he said the UK needed to have faith that the incoming Conservative government were "the right people", and said that "I'm sure they're gonna do a great job."

2020

On 13 December 2020, the couple announced their new Christmas single entitled "Don't Stop Me Eatin'", a parody cover of "Don't Stop Believin'" by Journey (which had got to number 2 in the UK charts when it was covered by the Glee Cast).

In the United Kingdom, its rivals in the race for the Christmas Number One were Russ Abbott's "Atmosphere", former chart toppers Justin Bieber and The Lewisham & Greenwich NHS Choir (teaming up for a version of Bieber's "Holy") and Liam Gallagher's "All You're Dreaming Of".

Again, LadBaby's parody version of "Don't Stop Believin'" had a sausage roll theme, with proceeds going to The Trussell Trust, whilst the design of the single's sleeve parodied Queen's Bohemian Rhapsody.

On 21 December 2020, LadBaby released an additional duet version of "Don't Stop Me Eatin'", which featured Ronan Keating performing the song with Roxanne.

On 22 December 2020, James Masterton (the chart analyst for Music Week) reported that the single had sold over 116,000 copies so far, a total which included both the original and the version with Ronan.

On 25 December 2020, Katie Thistleton on BBC Radio 1 revealed it was the number one for Christmas 2020.

It sold 158,000 to top the chart and 94% of its total figure came from paid-for sales (downloads and CDs rather than streams).