Olivia Rodrigo Slams Songs Criticism: ‘I’m A Teenage Girl’ – Hollywood Life

Olivia Rodrigo Slams Critics Of Her Songs About Young Love: What Do You Want Me To Write About?

To those who have criticized Olivia Rodrigo for only writing ‘songs about boys,’ she has one thing to say to that: ‘I’m a teenage girl.’ Duh.

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If you don’t count the promotional singles that Olivia Rodrigo has put out under the High School Musical: The Musical: The Series banner, then the 18-year-old singer has…two songs to her name. They have both been major hits – the chart-topping “Drivers License” and Top Ten hit “Deja Vu” – and they both seem to be about relationship drama. This has resulted in, as Olivia told The Guardian, in some “sexist criticism of songwriters like me being told that they only write songs about boys,” which seemingly left her rolling her eyes.

“I’m a teenage girl, I write about stuff that I feel really intensely – and I feel heartbreak and longing really intensely – and I think that’s authentic and natural,” says Olivia. “I don’t really understand what people want me to write about; do you want me to write a song about income taxes? How am I going to write an emotional song about that?”

Olivia Rodrigo performs during a Feburay 2020 episode of The Tonight Show (NBC)

Olivia will release her debut album, Sour, on May 21. The project feels “intrinsically young,” according to the HSM star. Something I’m really proud of is that this record talks about emotions that are hard to talk about or aren’t really socially acceptable especially for girls: anger, jealousy, spite, sadness, they’re frowned-upon as bitchy and moaning and complaining or whatever. But I think they’re such valid emotions.” According to The Guardian’s Laura Snapes, songs on the album are “rife with deep insecurity,” with Olivia “brutally comparing herself with the new girlfriend, defeated by a boy’s impossible standards, scrolling social media and feeling sick with envy.”

Olivia Rodrigo poses at the Disney + launch event promoting High School Musical: The Musical: The Series at the London West Hollywood hotel  in 2019 (Mark Von Holden/Invision/AP/Shutterstock)

“I think there’s a lot of strength in saying: I don’t know anything, and I feel so insecure and unwanted,” adds Olivia. “If I were a younger person looking up to my favorite songwriter, I’d be really moved by that, so I hope I can provide that.” Olivia also noted that the “sexist claims” that she only writes about boys were lobbed against her favorite songwriter, Taylor Swift. “[W]hich is just BS in my mind,” said Olivia.

At the end of April, High School Musical: The Musical: The Series shared a clip of Olivia and Joshua Basset – the alleged ex supposedly at the heart of “Drivers License” – singing a duet, “Even When/The Best Part” – over the phone, conveying the struggles of a long-distance relationship. “Nini [her character] goes through a lot of changes in season two,” Olivia told HollywoodLife in December. “She is a little bit stressed out and confused. There are a lot of different balls in the air for her in season two, so I think the audience is going to be really invested in how her story turns out.”