Startup screen with apple logo and grey loading bar, then unexpectedly shuts down

Hey, I have a MacBook Pro from 2010 I believe with iOS Maverick installed. (MacKeeper is also on there, which I just found out is apparently malware)
So three days ago I was watching Netflix, the image froze, but the audio kept going. Figured my internet was slow, so I waited a little, nothing happened. pressed escape to leave the full screen mode, but nothing happened. None of the keys would do anything, not even the sound or brightness keys. So I did a force shut down by holding down the power button.
I waited a little, then decided to turn it back on. Start up sound played, white screen with grey apple logo and loading gear appeared together with a grey loading bar. I figured that this meant it had to repair something. But after about a minute or two it just went to a black screen/ shut down. I left it off for a day, tried it again, same thing. Next day I tried booting it up while holding the shift key to do the safe boot (I knew it wouldn't work since I already had the grey loading bar anyways), same thing happened.
Any suggestions? (note: I thought I had posted this yesterday, but apparently I didn't even register as a user, weird. So if this gets posted twice, I apologize)

If your disk cannot be repaired, your only options are to call the disk dead and order a new one or to try and erase and reformat the disk and try to install a system on it.
The latter is just something you can try - I doubt that it will work.
Boot into your Recovery partition once again and select Disk Utility. You should see your boot volume (usually named "Macintosh HD") in the left column of disks. Select the Erase tab and format the disk using "Mac OS Extended (Journaled)". If the disk will format, then you can go back to the main Recovery screen and try installing OS X.
If that doesn't work - and you'll probably know when trying to format the drive - you'll need a new drive.
Clinton
MacBook Pro (15-inch Late 2011), OS Mavericks 10.9.3, 16GB RAM, 960GB SSD, 27” Apple Thunderbolt Display

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