Madison Beer glams it up as she sings along with a Lana Del Rey song in her native Long Island

Madison Beer glams it up as she sings along with a Lana Del Rey song while enjoying summer weekend in her native Long Island

Madison Beer sang along with Lana Del Rey’s Happiness Is A Butterfly, while lounging on a rooftop in a frame of her Instagram Stories on Sunday.

The 21-year-old model and singer sang along with the lyric from the 2019 song: ‘If he’s a serial killer/Then what’s the worst/That could happen to a girl/Who’s already hurt?’

The influencer, who was spending the weekend in her native Long Island, New York, was summer chic in a white button-down top with a necklace adorned with pearls and a golden ornament.

Stunning: Madison Beer, 21, sang along with Lana Del Rey’s Happiness Is A Butterfly in a frame of her Instagram Stories on Sunday

The Unbreakable artist had blonde streaks in her her brown locks and she reclined on the warm summer day in the luxe locale.

The Hurts Like Hell vocalist accessorized with gold hoop earrings and had a light layer of makeup on, using a starry filter for the post. 

It’s been an eventful summer for Beer – as she’s dealt with a number of controversies with poise and grace – as she continues as one of social media’s foremost influencers with 19.4 million followers. 

In June, the Good in Goodbye artist was slammed on social media after she said in an Instagram Live stream that she romanticized the 1955 Vladimir Nabokov novel Lolita, which is the story of a middle-aged man’s relationship with a 12-year-old girl.

Opulent: Beer showed off the well-manicured grounds of the Long Island residence she was at

Opulent: Beer showed off the well-manicured grounds of the Long Island residence she was at

Trendsetter: The Unbreakable artist had blonde streaks in her her brown locks and she reclined on the warm summer day in the luxe locale

Trendsetter: The Unbreakable artist had blonde streaks in her her brown locks and she reclined on the warm summer day in the luxe locale

Fashionable: The Hurts Like Hell vocalist accessorized with gold hoop earrings and had a light layer of makeup on, using a starry filter for the post

Fashionable: The Hurts Like Hell vocalist accessorized with gold hoop earrings and had a light layer of makeup on, using a starry filter for the post 

Asked on the stream if she romanticizes the infamous book, she said, ‘I definitely do; but we’re not going to talk about that.’ 

She apologized amid a #MadisonBeerIsOverParty hashtag circulating on Twitter, explaining her initial comments in tweets she’d later delete.

‘I said I romanticize it because to me it’s about a taboo relationship, not about the age,’ she said. ‘That’s just how it reads to me. The movie has a much different take and I just liked the storyline. I’d never condone pedophilia y’all… it’s a fake story and a made-up book.’

Beer pointed to a misunderstanding, claiming she had a similar stance toward the character Hannibal Lecter because he’s a fictional character and hasn’t actually killed a person.

‘I also have said I romanticize Hannibal [Lecter,] who plays a killer in a film. He’s a character in a film and that’s not real. I don’t romanticize KILLERS in real life. It’s a fake made up thing.’

After defending herself, she apologized to her fans, saying she ‘misspoke and would never condone [inappropriate] relationships of any kind.’

Top of her game: Beer, donning blue in a post earlier this week, has more than 19.7 million followers on the format

Top of her game: Beer, donning blue in a post earlier this week, has more than 19.7 million followers on the format 

She added: ‘I’m sincerely sorry for it seeming like i do. let me make it clear – i do not. have a good night.’

Beer also caught flak earlier this month after she was accused of staging protest photos atop a vehicle when she attended a Black Lives Matter protest in Los Angeles.

The singer stood up for herself, saying on social media she was ‘out here for one reason only,’ to protest against racism and police brutality, and would not ‘allow [the story] to be spun into something it never was.’