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Chappell Roan Isn’t Immune to the Internet: “Am I the Most Insufferable Bitch of Our Generation?”

SZA / Chappell Roan for Interview Magazine

Chappell Roan has been hailed as one of pop’s most exciting breakout stars—but with fame comes fire. The Grammy-winning artist behind The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess got candid about criticism in a recent sit-down with SZA, admitting that hate comments don’t just bounce off. In fact, they sting.

“I didn’t care about the backlash… until people started hating me for me and not for my art,” she confessed.

The quote hit hard—and viral. Roan’s off-the-cuff self-check—“Damn. Am I the most insufferable bitch of our generation?”—wasn’t a diva moment. It was raw honesty.

She explained that critiques of her songs don’t shake her—“Bitch, you can think whatever you want”—but when the focus turns personal, it cuts deeper. And it’s been happening more as her star rises. From offhand TikToks to unscripted political remarks, Roan has faced waves of internet backlash, often over things she never meant to be headline-worthy.

Unlike many artists who dodge discourse, Roan leans in. She told SZA that reading harsh comments “makes me cry.” SZA, in response, reassured her: it’s okay to care. It was a rare, real moment between two artists navigating the cost of being known—not just as musicians, but as personalities.

Roan’s vulnerability is part of what’s made her such a force in music. Her debut album dropped in 2023 and quickly positioned her as a sharp-tongued, glam-punk, Midwest-born voice—queer, theatrical, and unfiltered. With songs like Pink Pony Club, she turned personal liberation into pop anthems, blending honesty with performance in a way fans connect with deeply.

Now, that same honesty is redefining how she handles fame. Instead of pretending the hate doesn’t reach her, Roan is using it. She’s laughing at herself, questioning the commentary, and making space for discomfort without losing her voice.

So, who is Chappell Roan really? An artist, yes—but also a public figure daring to ask questions about visibility, identity, and the mental toll of constant scrutiny. The “bitch” line wasn’t self-pity. It was a challenge to the culture that expects stars to be unbothered.

And in 2025, Roan’s refusal to be untouched might be exactly why she’s becoming unstoppable.

https://www.instagram.com/p/DKZVzB8OHsU/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link&igsh=MTc0Z3VpMndjN2w2dg==


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