OK, she's not whining about it. Demi Lovato is just being, like, matter of fact. The latest tween princess in the Disney empire seldom gets to, um, act her age.
"I'm doing the job of an adult; I work with adults," Lovato, 16, said last week when she had the nation's No. 1 album, "Here We Go Again." That job means: getting up in the morning to sing on "The View," calling music writers old enough to be her father and signing autographs at the mall (she'd rather be shopping, starting at Bath & Body Works, thank you).
The only time Lovato feels 16 is when she's home: "My mom goes, like, 'Go clean your room.'"
Lovato is coming to the Twin Cities for a concert Saturday at Target Center. Of course, she'll spend time meeting fans at the Mall of America (from 1 to 3 p.m. Saturday) and autographing her second album, which sold 109,000 copies in its first week, topping releases by Daughtry, Maxwell and tween queen Miley Cyrus.
"I was surprised, for sure," she said of her debut at the top of the charts. "I was, like, freaking out."
Lovato is actually arriving here a day early to make some public service announcements about bullying for Pacer Center, a Minneapolis agency that specializes in children's issues and is launching a new website, TeensAgainstBullying.org, this weekend.
"Giving children and teachers the outlet of finding out what to do if you're bullied is really important to me," she said.
Lovato felt so verbally bullied in seventh grade in a Dallas school that she insisted that her mother home-school her instead. Girls at her school "were really vicious. They would say things and they had, like, a hate petition. It was just ridiculous. I'd rather not talk about it."