White House Responds to Sabrina Carpenter's 'Evil' Remark

  1. HOME
  2. ENTERTAINMENT
  3. White House Responds to Sabrina Carpenter's 'Evil' Remark
White House Responds to Sabrina Carpenter's 'Evil' Remark

Sabrina Carpenter has joined numerous musicians in requesting the removal of her music from a government video. Her popular 2024 track, Juno, was recently featured in a montage depicting ICE operations, used without her consent.

Carpenter Criticizes Unauthorized Usage

The singer and two-time Grammy nominee expressed strong disapproval on social media. Addressing the White Houses official X account, she wrote, This video is evil and disgusting. Do not ever involve me or my music to benefit your inhumane agenda.

The clip included repeated lines from her song alongside visuals of people being forcibly detained, which prompted Carpenters firm reaction.

Official Response from the White House

Representative Abigail Jackson commented on the controversy to CNBC, stating, Heres a Short n Sweet message for Sabrina Carpenter: we wont apologize for deporting dangerous criminal illegal murderers, rapists, and pedophiles from our country. Jackson also referenced Carpenters song Manchild and added, Anyone who would defend these sick monsters must be stupid, or is it slow?

So far, Carpenter has not publicly responded to these remarks.

Other Artists Facing Similar Issues

Carpenters case is not unique. The White House has previously used tracks from Taylor Swift in similar videos, though Swift has remained silent. In October, Kenny Loggins demanded the removal of his song Danger Zone from a government video, stating that he had not given permission and requested immediate removal.

These incidents highlight a growing trend of artists protesting the unauthorized use of their music by governmental and public institutions worldwide.

Author: Logan Reeves

Share