As Childish Gambino's This Is America shakes the nation and rises to number one on Billboard's Top 100, one woman decided to remake the video through the eyes of a feminist.

Canadian YouTuber comedian Nicole Arbour, 32, remade the rapper's powerful music video, entitling it 'This Is America: Women's Edit.

However the video, posted May 12, has sparked fury with social media users accusing her of 'co-opting' the black rapper's message.

The four-minute video is shot and filmed in a similar manner to the original and Arbour's lyrics dub over the original soundtrack.

YouTuber Nicole Arbour, 32, has sparked fury for her remake Childish Gambino's This Is America through a feminist lens that she published on Saturday

In the video Arbour raps about what she thinks it means to be a woman in America, addressing public breastfeeding, drug rape culture, and beauty expectations

She addressed the gender wage gap, Arbour pictured right, handing over a minimum wage check to NFL cheerleaders

The scene mirrored Childish Gambino's slaughter of gospel singers in his This is America

She copied Gambino's backdrops and performed similar dance numbers as she rapped

The video was shot to mimic the imagery of Gambino's music video, pictured above

The music video beings with a black woman sitting on a chair, preparing to breastfeed a baby doll.

'We just want to be pretty / Pretty that's the goal / We just wanna smile / get a mammy home' the song begins.

After the sound of a gunshot the breastfeeding woman is taken away by two men.

'This is America / don't get you climbing up. This is America / got rape in my area / you got a drink / the roofies got into ya' the song continues as a woman is pictured being roofied and falling into the arms of a man behind her.

Arbour raps as dancers and people holding posters saying 'Right to Vote' pass behind her.

To mimic Gambino's video where a choir is pictured singing, a cheer-leading squad appears behind the YouTuber where they perform a pom pom routine.

Instead of shooting them, Arbour brings out a giant check that addressed to the NFL Cheerleaders for the amount of $8.50 with the message 'less than minimum wage' scrawled in the signature line.

'This is America / smile for the camera / c'mon girl where's your teeth / the pill will take care of ya,' Arbour raps.

'Look how I’m spitting truth out / I’m so trendy / I wear Fendi / I’m so sexy / Imma get it / watch me move / these my titties / that’s my tool,' she adds.

In the original music video Childish takes a moment of silence to light a blunt. Arbour puts on lip gloss instead.

She also replicates the end running scene, where she is chased by men and women.

To mimic Gambino's powerful pose with an extended arm, Arbour put on some lip gloss

In her rap she addressed how women are objectified for their bodies, but many fired back saying this music video was not the best space to speak on feminist issues

In the song many of her verses seemed irrelevant to her message such as: 'Look how I’m spitting truth out / I’m so trendy / I wear Fendi ... these my titties / that’s my tool'

The rapper is yet to comment on her rendition of his single which is number one in the US

She even mimicked his final running scene where she is chased by men and woman alike

The chilling scene in Gambino's music video stunned viewers who thought it paid homage to Jordan Peele's film Get Out

She closes out the video with the quote 'If I were a guy, would wouldn't be asking yourself, "I wonder who wrote that?"'

The video did not sit well with many viewers.

Arbour has also disabled the comments on her video.

One commenter critiqued the video saying it discredits the message Gambino worked so hard to achieve.

'This video removes all of that to just be a loud declarative statement about something that has little to do with the original, yet somehow they decided the same backdrop that represents a prison, and tried to replicate the South African cultural dance moves that were used for a video about women’s rights,' one user said.

Another added that it was a mistake for her to rewrite Gambino's black message.

'Nicole Arbour's 'This is America' parody is proof white people think black pain & oppression is funny. They're constantly joking about things they dont experience because they lack empathy. They laugh at our pain & deny our oppression, while stealin our culture for money. #Evil' one person said.

'The Women's Edit for This is American is dumb and I can't take it seriously for a number of reasons...You can't open up a commentary, then disable people's ability to comment on it without seeming hypocritical. That's what earned it my thumbs down,' another added.

'I'm sorry, but absolutely not. Get out of here with this mess. We seriously can't have anything or take anything seriously. Stop aligning Black plight with white feminism. Stop cheapening black art and creativity. Just stop,' one Twitter user wrote.

'I accidentally watched the This Is America (Women's Edit) video and now I'm going to go to bed and hope that I wake up tomorrow and it was all a bad bad dream,' another said.

'Who gave them the green light?' another added.

One Twitter user posted this image to show Arbour invaded a black space with the video

Twitter users were quick to fire back against her parody saying it was stealing black culture

One angry user wrote: 'Stop aligning Black plight with white feminism...Just stop'

One person wished the video was just a bad dream after seeing Arbour's feminist rendition

She has since responded to the backlash with the above statement shared on Twitter

Despite the backlash Arbour has responded to criticsm by saying the purpose of the video was to express 'my and many women's life experiences and truths'.

'It was created with every intention of bringing a light to women’s experiences such as the shaming of mothers breast feeding, common place date rape drugging, the labels put on us of 'prude or hoe,' pressures to create a family, workplace harassment, the glass ceiling, drug dependency, effects of social media on modern relationships and self, and included a nod to the cheerleaders who have come forward demanding at least min wage from the multi million dollar corporations they work for,' she said.

'It was a tongue in cheek way to give additional glory to what I believe is the most impactful piece of art in recent years,' she added.

However she admitted to understanding why her piece turned out to be so controversial.

'In retrospect, due to the sensitive nature of the original, I understand why some people are wrongly portraying this as white vs black. However, this was not the intent or theme at all,' she said in a statement posted on the video and on social media.

This isn't the first time the Youtuber has sparked controversy.

On May 4 she angered Twitter users by writing: 'I'm so sick of people mad at slavery. It's the past, we weren't there. We didn't do it. But what we CAN do is fix our economic slavery. Focus on the now'.

In 2015 she also made headlines when her ex-boyfriend fellow YouTube star Matthew Santoro claimed she abused him.