
Sabrina Carpenter unveils alternate album art amid controversy
Carpenter posted the new cover and cheekily added that this second take is 'approved by God' - a reference to the pearl-clutching accusations of sexism after the release of the first image, which depicts the artist kneeling on the floor as an unidentified person stands over her and pulls her hair.
Some criticised the suggestive – but hardly explicit - cover, shot by Bryce Anderson, as being 'regressive' and leaning on 'tired tropes that reduce women to pets.'
Others defended the Grammy-winning artist's choice, saying it was satirical and a commentary on power dynamics. Or as one viral postput it: 'Let women be horny.'
We said in our 20 Most Controversial Album Covers Of All Time article that Carpenter 'has every right to express herself and her sexuality – in this case what some may perceive as a submissive kink - in any way she sees fit and crucially, without being policed or harassed.'
Still, now fans have options – with a black and white photograph of Carpenter leaning on a suited man. It's a gorgeous image. If somewhat less playful.
Here is the original – and controversial cover:
And here's the alternate:
This is not the first time Carpenter has received complaints about her MO, which has always been pop-horniness and a desire to distance herself from the self-seriousness of the current pop landscape.
Carpenter's live performances often see the singer embrace her sexuality, playfully striking suggestive poses. This year at the BRIT Awards, the singer's racy performance proved controversial, prompting some viewers to joke about OFCOM complaints.
Some viewers expressed that the provocative moments were 'unnecessary', with one viewer writing: 'It's like watching live pornography. It's supposed to be a family show.'
Despite the controversies, Carpenter refuses to be shamed, and has responded to criticism by saying: 'My message has always been clear – if you can't handle a girl who is confident in her own sexuality, then don't come to my shows.'
'It's always so funny to me when people complain,' she told Rolling Stone. 'They're like, 'All she does is sing about this.' But those are the songs that you've made popular. Clearly you love sex. You're obsessed with it.'
Carpenter added: 'I don't want to be pessimistic, but I truly feel like I've never lived in a time where women have been picked apart more, and scrutinized in every capacity. I'm not just talking about me. I'm talking about every female artist that is making art right now.'
Elsewhere, the leader of a New York City church where the pop star filmed 'provocative' scenes for a music video was stripped of his duties last year after church officials said an investigation revealed other instances of mismanagement.
That part was hardly Carpenter's fault.
Sabrina Carpenter's new album, 'Man's Best Friend', drops on 29 August. It comes just one year after the global success of her album 'Short n' Sweet' - which features the chart-topping hits 'Espresso', 'Taste' and 'Please Please Please'.
Check out our article on the 20 Most Controversial Album Covers Of All Time.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Euronews
5 days ago
- Euronews
Convicted fraudster Billy McFarland (under)sells Fyre Festival on eBay
Billy McFarland, the scam artist and convicted fellon who gained notoriety for the disastrous 2017 Fyre Festival, has officially sold the rights to the event's brand on eBay for $245,300 (approx. €211,135). The auction, which reportedly drew a 175 bids, included intellectual property, trademarks, and social media accounts tied to the Fyre name. The identity of the buyer remains unknown. In a livestream during the eBay auction, McFarland appeared disappointed with the result, commenting: 'Damn. This sucks, it's so low.' According to Rolling Stone, the sale will barely make a dent in his outstanding $26 million (approx. €22.3m) restitution order tied to his criminal conviction. Nonetheless, the disgraced founder took to social media after the sale, saying: 'Fyre Festival is just one chapter of my story, and I'm excited to move onto my next one.' He continued: 'The auction became the most-watched non-charity listing on eBay during its run, proving once again that attention is currency, and views are the root of attention. That belief is at the core of what I'm building next.' McFarland then shared that he's working on a 'tech platform designed to capture and power the value behind every view online.' Cue: death by a thousand eyerolls. Une publication partagée par Billy McFarland (@pyrtbilly) McFarland was given a six-year prison sentence in 2018 for wire fraud related to the original Fyre Festival. He was released early in 2022 and attempted to relaunch the event multiple times - without success. What happened at Fyre Festival? McFarland founded Fyre Festival with rapper Ja Rule. As part of their advertising scheme for the supposed luxury music festival, they employed influencers including Kendall Jenner, Bella Hadid and Emily Ratajkowski to post on Instagram about the festival. The influencers didn't clearly disclose that it was a paid advert. McFarland also falsely claimed that the festival's location was on Pablo Escobar's private island. In reality, it was located on a beach in the Bahamas, and when the glamorous (and wannabe glamorous) flocked to McFarland's promised luxury event in 2017, all was not as it seemed. When the punters arrived, they were confronted with unfinished stages, tents instead of fancy accommodation, and a notoriously rubbish welcome meal of some pre-sliced cheese and a depressing-looking salad on dry bread. As for the star-studded line-up of acts including Pusha T, Tyger, Blink-182, Disclosure, Migos, and Skepta... They all pulled out. To make matters worse, the 500+ guests were stranded on the island, as flights were cancelled by the Bahamian government. The ordeal was captured in the Netflix documentary FYRE: The Greatest Party That Never Happened, as well as the Hulu doc Fyre Fraud. McFarland and Ja Rule were hit with multiple lawsuits for fraud and other charges seeking damages. McFarland was investigated by the FBI for mail fraud, wire fraud and securities fraud. After pleading guilty to two counts of wire fraud, he was sentenced to six years in prison and ordered to hand over $26 million. Since his release from prison, McFarland reportedly arranged meetings with rappers for Donald Trump's most recent election campaign – in a bid to reach and appeal to more Black voters. Une publication partagée par Billy McFarland (@pyrtbilly) And because once a scammer, always a hardened scammer, McFarland has tried to revive the festival – adventurously named Fyre Fest II. It was announced that the second edition of the festival would be taking place on a tropical island off Cancún, Mexico. However, it was soon revealed that the permit McFarland had obtained only allowed for a 12-hour listening party that only could have fewer than 300 people. McFarland set the tickets for between $1,400 (€1,200) and $25,000 (€21,500) – with 'premium packages' priced as high as $1.1 million (€947,000). As you can guess, the Fyre Fest II never took place. Now that the rights to the Fyre brand have been sold, anyone else fearing the outcome of McFarland's new tech platform 'designed to capture and power the value behind every view online'?


Euronews
6 days ago
- Euronews
Superman kissing scenes cut by India's censor board sparks backlash
Indian audiences watching the latest Superman film were left confused when the action abruptly skipped ahead - not once, but twice - just as the Man of Steel (David Corenswet) leaned in to kiss Lois Lane (Rachel Brosnahan). India's Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC) had cut the kissing scenes, including a cinematic mid-air floating kiss in the film's final moments, branding them 'overly sensual' and unfit for Indian cinemas. The decision has reignited debate around censorship, hypocrisy, and outdated moral codes in the country. Critics have slammed the CBFC for routinely allowing films filled with graphic violence, sexual assault, and misogyny - often in movies granted a "U" (universal) rating - while censoring something as tame as a consensual kiss in a PG-13 Hollywood comic book movie. "CBFC would allow horrific scenes of violence and sexual assault in a U certified film that kids are freely allowed to watch, but won't allow consensual kissing in a U/A comic book movie that kids should watch under adult supervision" wrote one user on X. Another said: 'The "morality" of censorship aside, the way they've managed to mangle the flow is atrocious. Awful editing job all around by the CBFC.' The CBFC has increasingly come under fire for what critics describe as politically motivated and inconsistent decisions. Last year, it blocked The Apprentice - a biopic of Donald Trump - after its director, Ali Abbasi, refused to comply with demanded cuts. 'I ran away from Iranian censorship only to meet corporate censorship of the US. Now India. Really?' Abbasi said. 'Censorship seems to be an epidemic at the moment.' The board has also made headlines for forcing other bizarre and overly cautious edits, such as digitally replacing a middle-finger emoji with a clenched fist in the Brad Pitt-led F1 movie, and cutting several nude scenes from Christopher Nolan's Oscar-winning Oppenheimer. Meanwhile, viewers have called out the board's glaring double standards. While a kiss between Superman and Lois Lane is deemed too provocative, Bollywood films like Animal - which was widely criticised for glorifying misogyny and toxic masculinity - are released with ease. Similarly, controversial films such as The Kashmir Files and The Kerala Story, both accused of promoting Islamophobic narratives and distorting history, were greenlit with little resistance and even received support from political figures. xxx In our review of Superman, we said: "By ditching not only the doom and gloom of the Snyderverse but also the tiresome need for an umpteenth backstory, Gunn starts in medias res to better embrace the spirit of the seemingly bygone era of campy comic books. And it works. This fast-paced adventure looks and feels like a comic book transposed onto the big screen, with all the unapologetic strangeness, colourful palette and intentional corniness that befits a 'naive but well-intentioned" boyscout who will take the time to save a squirrel in peril." Read our full review here.


Euronews
6 days ago
- Euronews
Beyoncé's unreleased music stolen during 'Cowboy Carter' tour
Hard drives containing unreleased music from Beyoncé have reportedly been stolen out of a rental car at the singer's Cowboy Carter tour in Atlanta. Local authorities received reports of theft from a vehicle on 8 July – two days before the first of her four concerts in the city. The vehicle in question was rented by Beyoncé's choreographer Christopher Grant, who had arrived in Atlanta early to prep for the singer's mini-residency. Along with the unreleased music on five thumb drives were footage, show plans and concert set lists. Two MacBook laptops, Apple headphones, as well as luxury clothing and accessories were also reported stolen. The Atlanta Police Department said in a news release on Monday it has secured an arrest warrant for a suspect whose identity was withheld. Beyoncé kicked off her tour in late April, taking her Grammy-winning album 'Cowboy Carter' to stadiums in the US and Europe. Her record-breaking album made our Best Albums of 2024 list, in which we said: "Beyoncé's 'Cowboy Carter' lassos American country music's stale stereotypes in a powerful reclamation of the genre's Black roots. (...) It's a topic that's addressed from the outset: 'AMERIICAN REQUIEM' is a slow-burning choral rebellion against outdated, racist ideologies that seek to pigeonhole artists and erase those that contributed to a genre purely because they don't fit its heavily politicised image. The rest of the 27-track album is a tour de force of tearing it all apart, melding genres and utilising the familiar (on tracks like Beatles' cover 'BLACKBIIRD') to remind listeners of the ways in which Black peoples' stories have been claimed by white people." Beyoncé will end her tour with two Las Vegas nights on 25 and 26 July.