August 19, 2022
Snapchat has recently announced Snapchat Sounds Creator Fund, a monthly grant program of up to $100,000 awarded to independent artists distributing music on the platform...
Read moreAugust 15, 2022
Over the past few years, TikTok’s popularity has significantly increased resulting in 1 billion global daily users by early 2022. The app has also become extremely influential in the current music....
Read moreAugust 4, 2022
Charlie Puth has paired with Studio to create a 30-day online course that outlines the entire songwriting and production process for $279 USD. This hands-on learning experience has been marketed....
Read moreAugust 2, 2022
Whether you know Lexie Liu from her performance as Seraphine in K/DA’s “MORE” or her fourth-place finish on The Rap of China 2018, there’s no denying that the Chinese hip hop star is a global ...
Read moreJune 17, 2022
BTS is the most famous K-Pop band in the world now, and recently, they were invited to the white house to speak about anti-Asian hate crimes and inclusivity. Being the first K-Pop band to be...
Read moreJune 6, 2022
SEVENTEEN (세븐틴) is a 13 member Korean boy band under Pledis Entertainment. They are split into 3 teams, the Hip Hop unit (S.coups, Wonwoo, Mingyu, Vernon), the Vocal unit (Jeonghan, Joshua, Woozi...
Read moreJune 3, 2022
On May 20, Harry Styles released his new album Harry’s House, debuting at number one on the Billboard 200 albums chart. This is his third studio album in which all thirteen songs are in the top 30...
Read moreMay 26, 2022
The Song House is a songwriter house in Nashville, Tennessee where all levels of writers and artists come together to develop music. Every week, 12-15 songwriters are challenged to write a hook in...
Read moreMay 27, 2022
It’s been one year since the young pop-star, Olivia Rodrigo, released her first music album “Sour”. Since her debut, Olivia Rodrigo has won 3 Grammy Awards and named Women of the Year in 2022.
Read moreMarch 31, 2022
After a cancelled performance at the Asuncionico festival in Paraguay Doja cat received backlash from fans claiming the singer neglected them outside of her hotel. After the many complaints from...
Read moreApril 11, 2022
After a long 4 year’s K-pop group Big Bang makes a comeback to the music scene with the song “Still Life.” This song has become another banger from the group reminding fans of the music they once...
Read moreApril 6, 2022
The first theatre production highlighting the global takeover of the K-Pop industry will be making its Broadway debut later this year, with its opening night scheduled for November 20, while...
Read morePinkPantheress has once again cracked the code of Gen Z’s collective brain chemistry with her track Illegal. It’s short, it’s addictive, and it’s the kind of song that makes you feel like you’re doing something slightly wrong just by streaming it on repeat at 3 a.m. She’s basically serving us auditory contraband, and honestly? We’re all guilty of being repeat offenders.
Illegal feels like sneaking out past curfew, but instead of your mom catching you, it’s your Spotify Wrapped judging you for having it at #1 with 2,347 plays. PinkPantheress whispers her verses like she’s spilling secrets in the back of a high school cafeteria, then throws you into a hook that makes your brain feel like it just unlocked a cheat code. The production is her signature mix of nostalgic Y2K breakbeats and bedroom-pop softness, the kind of sound that makes you want to speedwalk through a train station in slow motion.
This song isn’t just trendy, it’s basically illegal not to vibe with it. TikTok has already turned Illegal into a meme factory: edits of people doing the most mundane crimes like “illegally parallel parking” or “illegally texting my ex at 2 a.m.” are soundtracked perfectly by the beat. It’s the anthem for everything low-stakes rebellious, like eating snacks before dinner or ghosting a situationship you never wanted in the first place.
What makes it different is how it balances drama with playfulness. PinkPantheress isn’t just singing about forbidden love or bad decisions; she’s romanticizing the tiny acts of chaos that make life feel cinematic. It’s not Bonnie & Clyde, it’s more like Bonnie & Clyde but the iPad kid version.
Part of the genius of Illegal is how it taps into that Gen Z energy of making everything a bit unserious. The lyrics sound like confessions, but the beat makes it feel like a vibe check. You’re left half questioning your own life choices and half thinking, “yeah, maybe being a little toxic is fine if it sounds this good.”
It’s trendy because it feels like it was made for the internet era, quick, hooky, and endlessly loopable. You can literally play it 10 times back-to-back and not even notice because it melts into your day like background chaos.
PinkPantheress didn’t just drop Illegal, she dropped the soundtrack to Gen Z’s collective mischief. It’s flirty, it’s rebellious, it’s the audio equivalent of sneaking candy into a movie theater. And like all forbidden things, the more you play it, the more addictive it gets.
She’s proved once again that nobody does short-form, diary-entry anthems like her. Illegal might not get you arrested, but it’ll definitely have you guilty of pressing repeat until your phone battery gives up.