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Just when the Beckham family saga seemed to hit its emotional peak, Victoria Beckham’s 2001 solo single Not Such An Innocent Girl has suddenly resurfaced on at the top of the charts, thanks to a fan-led social media campaign that gained momentum in the middle of her ongoing fallout with son Brooklyn Beckham.
The renewed attention follows Brooklyn’s recent Instagram posts, where he appeared to distance himself from his parents, David and Victoria Beckham, while reflecting on his upbringing and personal boundaries. The remarks quickly sparked debate online with social media users inevitably choosing sides.
In response, fans rallied behind Victoria, resulting in a highly effective streaming push to boost her solo music. The campaign saw Not Such An Innocent Girl climb the iTunes charts in both the UK and Ireland, with supporters determined to finally secure Victoria a solo number-one moment, a feat she never achieved during her post-Spice Girls career.

For many, the campaign wasn’t just about chart positions but a digital show of support for a woman who has often been reduced to headlines about her family rather than her own work.
Victoria herself has not publicly addressed the campaign or Brooklyn’s comments directly, maintaining her typically reserved stance when it comes to family matters. Brooklyn, meanwhile, has continued focusing on his life in the US with wife Nicola Peltz, largely staying silent as the internet debates unfolded around him.
What this moment really highlights is how modern celebrity narratives are now shaped in real time by fans, algorithms, and emotional alignment. A family disagreement becomes a chart revival. A pop song becomes a statement. And a decades-old track turns into a form of digital solidarity.