This tells you all that you need to know:
Public statistics have been disabled.
The only logical reason to disable statistics is to hide the fact that you got a disproportionate number of mobile or Facebook views. The number of likes/dislikes is also very low compared to the views, especially for her other obviously botted video with 82 million.
She now has over 100,000 subscribers, which isn't much compared to the YouTube bigshots, but is certainly enough to make a decent income if she were to consistently post videos. I've heard that a lot of the juggernauts of YouTube used methods like this as a springboard. NOMS is the only video I ever botted, because I was afraid of getting my account shitcanned, but maybe I was wrong about that. YouTube thus far hasn't been super vigilant about punishing people for doing this. I'm still not going to take my chances, but if I could change one thing, I would have picked a much better video. When done correctly it can really pay off.