“9 years later and just as awkward hahaha @nataliemariduena,” David wrote on his TikTok account, adding on Twitter that it was “still the biggest regret of my life.”
The YouTuber and his BFF/assistant showed off their new furry friend on Instagram on Friday (April 3).
“Natalie decided to foster a puppy so i had the pleasure of naming her,” David captioned the slideshow below. “Everyone say hello to Iron Man.”
“The best part about calling her Iron Man is that when she misbehaves, I can call her by her real name, and that’s Tony Bark,” he added in his Stories.
David Dobrik just revealed if he would date a fan…
The 23-year-old YouTuber surprisingly said yes but he had a few conditions!
“I feel like this is a tricky question because you would want to date someone that is a fan of your stuff…I would definitely date a fan that was a fan of the stuff I make, 100 percent,” David told on E! News.
David added that he wouldn’t be interested in dating an “obsessed” superfan though!
“That’ll just get scary because you don’t know their intentions. It could be something really scary,” David explained.
Through tears, David and Liza told fans that they still planned to be best friends.
“People that are my friends now, that I hang out with every week, they tell me that the way they found me is through that breakup video. So their first impression of me was me crying in Liza’s living room,” David told WSJ. Magazine.
Madison Beer had the ultimate bash for her 21st birthday!
The newly 21-year-old songstress invited all of her closest friends to celebrate at a party hosted by Abyss By Abby on Thursday night (March 5) at Delilah in West Hollywood.
David Dobrik wants to be taken seriously as a YouTuber.
The 23-year-old social media star says the biggest downside to his job is not being respected by major industry executives.
David says he’s often disappointed watching “the interest completely flutter away from the eyes” of older industry players once he says he’s a YouTuber.
“They’re like, ‘I hate YouTube. YouTube is stupid,’ because there’s just so much content going on for different people and it’s all mixed,” David told Paper magazine.
He added, “So people don’t get a very positive feel when they’re on it. The problem with YouTube is if I want to watch something serious, I can click on it, but in two seconds, I’m also going to be greeted with some video about some guy surprising his kid with a baby cat. They get angry and frustrated.”
Despite some people’s negative perceptions of YouTube, David says that things moving forward are “unchartered territory” and he has hope for the future.