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    Home»Business»Olivia Rodrigo’s new album ditches her iconic brand. Is it a marketing master class or a misstep?
    Business 4 Mins Read

    Olivia Rodrigo’s new album ditches her iconic brand. Is it a marketing master class or a misstep?

    Business 4 Mins Read
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    With her first two albums, Olivia Rodrigo established a pattern. Her signature color? Purple—which served as the backdrop for both covers. Her naming convention? Four-letter words—stylized in all-capital letters: SOUR for her 2021 debut and GUTS for her 2023 follow-up. 

    But on Thursday, April 2, Rodrigo shocked her fans with the announcement of her third album, titled you seem pretty sad for a girl so in love. The cover art, which features Rodrigo upside down on a swing and framed against a grayish-blue sky, has no shades of purple to be seen. The album’s title doesn’t just ditch her previous naming convention; it flips the script. Rather than a monosyllabic word, it’s a full-fledged sentence—and to top it off, it’s stylized in all-lowercase letters.

    The apparent message was clear: This is a brand-new era for Olivia Rodrigo, and fans are split on whether that’s a positive.

    View this post on Instagram

    Messing with a good thing

    Rodrigo’s previous albums were both smash successes commercially and critically, topping the Billboard 200 chart and nabbing Grammy nominations, including for album of the year.

    Rodrigo’s release of two consecutive albums featuring four-letter titles and purple backgrounds seemed to set expectations for fans. With such a surefire, instantly recognizable brand at her disposal, some are wondering why she’d break the pattern.

    “I have a bad feeling about this era,” one user wrote in a viral post after the album announcement. “She’s ditching all the things that make up her brand, and that rarely works.”

    Another lamented the missed potential of titling the album LOVE, saying it “would’ve been so chic” and also posting an edited version of Rodrigo’s Spotify page that showed what could’ve been.

    it would’ve been so chic but I do love the title she chose pic.twitter.com/jcRrNuSl5P

    — bia⸆⸉ | #1 florida!!! stan (@staybiautiful) April 3, 2026

    But other fans pointed out that Rodrigo is successful because of her music, not “because of purple and four-letter words,” as one user quipped. 

    the concept of believing that olivia is successful because of purple and four letter words https://t.co/jWffTvFopY

    — chloe (@chloesarcher) April 2, 2026

    “I like the 4 letter name album theme, but this would’ve been extremely boring,” another said in response to LOVE as a potential album title.

    Others said it was smart of Rodrigo to shake up her brand now, before she got stuck with unwieldy creative limitations. One fan celebrated that Olivia was avoiding the fate of artists like Ed Sheeran, whose commitment to using mathematical symbols as album titles meant that he essentially ran out of options after five records. (He’s since adopted a new theme of media control symbols, with his 2025 album, Play, marking the first entry in that collection of albums.)

    Another user agreed that Rodrigo wasn’t boxing herself in just to appease one side of her fan base: “That kind of thing can start feeling limiting quick,” they wrote.

    Embracing a new era

    Rodrigo’s choice to switch up her aesthetic is in line with a trend popularized by Taylor Swift and her Eras Tour: that every new album should come with a new “era” for the artist.

    That might mean a signature color, fashion style, musical sound, or all of the above. Whether Rodrigo will depart from the grunge-infused pop that was present on Sour and dominated Guts remains to be heard, with no single yet announced and the album’s scheduled release still months away on June 12.

    One thing’s for sure: Rodrigo’s new music has everyone’s attention. Her album announcement on Instagram immediately went viral, surpassing 3 million likes in just four hours and sitting at 5.7 million likes a day later.

    And despite a few vocal critics, most of Rodrigo’s fans have faith that no matter what color she’s sporting, her music won’t disappoint. “This is so different for her, and I’ve never been more seated,” one user wrote.

    The concept for You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love—which seems to be inspired by her recent relationship and break-up with British actor Louis Partridge—also has fans on the edge of their seats. As Rodrigo wrote in her latest newsletter: “No matter how hard I try to write love songs, they always come out laced with a little melancholy.” This makes fans of her ballads like “Drivers License,” “Traitor,” and “Vampire” especially hopeful for what’s to come.





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